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The Choir Director Podcast

The Choir Director Podcast

By: Russell Scott
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The Choir Director Podcast is the essential resource for choir directors, conductors and vocal leaders who want to build stronger choirs, run better rehearsals and create outstanding musical experiences.


Hosted by international conductor and festival producer Russell Scott, each episode shares practical strategies for rehearsal technique, vocal training, repertoire choices, choir recruitment, leadership, performance preparation and managing real-world community and amateur choirs.


Whether you lead a school choir, church choir, community choir or professional ensemble, this podcast gives you actionable ideas you can apply immediately — from improving blend and tuning to motivating singers and growing your choir.


Featuring expert interviews with leading conductors, vocal specialists, composers and choir educators, alongside solo coaching episodes packed with real solutions for real choir challenges.


If you’re a choir director who wants practical tools, musical insight and leadership strategies to help your singers thrive, this is the podcast for you.

© 2026 Russell Scott
Art Music
Episodes
  • Ep #17: Susan Cox: The Art of Nurturing Mature Voices
    Jun 10 2026

    The fastest way to improve a choir is not a new warm-up or a clever baton trick. It is building trust so singers feel safe enough to actually sing. Russell Scott sits down with Susan Cox, director of the Grand Union Community Choir, to explore what community choir leadership looks like when you take confidence, wellbeing, and real life seriously, especially in mixed ability groups.

    Susan shares what she has learned from decades in music education and choral directing, including how different ages can experience rehearsal in different ways. We talk about why some older singers need more repetition, clearer visual cues, and a little more time, and how anxiety and self-belief can matter as much as raw musical capability. If you lead singers who bring past criticism, learning differences, or performance nerves into the room, you will find practical, compassionate approaches you can use straight away.

    We also tackle one of the most sensitive topics for choir directors: singing off book. Yes, performing without sheet music can boost audience engagement and presence, but the push to memorise can create stress that stops people singing. Susan explains how to introduce off-book singing gradually, how to use a “safety net” without losing connection, and why there is no one-size-fits-all model across community choirs, SATB ensembles, and more traditional reading groups.

    Along the way we dig into self-awareness, imposter syndrome, rehearsal planning, and why filming yourself can reveal habits your choir sees instantly. If you want better rehearsals, a healthier choir culture, and a more confident ensemble sound, subscribe, share with a fellow choir leader, and leave us a rating and review.

    Contact the Studio

    Support the show

    ***

    Resources:

    The Choir Director Podcast — helping you build stronger choirs, run better rehearsals, and create outstanding musical experiences.

    • Website: thechoirdirectorpodcast.com
    • Mailing List: Join our Newsletter


    Follow Russell Scott:

    • Website: russellscott.org
    • Instagram: @russellscottofficial
    • Facebook: facebook.com/russellscottofficial
    • X: @russellscottuk

    (c) Russell Scott 2026. All rights reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    36 mins
  • Ep #16: Maria A. Ellis: What If Classical Music Is A Pop Secret?
    Jun 3 2026

    You can feel when a choir rehearsal has real trust, and you can also feel when singers are holding back. Maria A. Ellis, St Louis-based choral conductor, educator, and founder of Girl Conductor, joins us to get practical about how we create rehearsal rooms where singers take risks, learn faster, and actually enjoy the work.

    We talk through high-impact rehearsal strategies that start with comfort and connection, then build towards excellence. Maria shares her “favourite auntie” leadership mindset, why children often lean into new ideas more easily than adults, and how we can normalise mistakes without lowering standards. One line lands especially hard: make the mistake loud, because we cannot fix what we cannot hear. If you lead a youth choir, school choir, community choir, or chamber ensemble, these ideas translate straight into better pacing, clearer feedback, and stronger sound.

    From there, we move into inclusive repertoire and genre crossover with integrity: gospel, classical, pop, and musical theatre. Maria’s Bach And Beyoncé approach shows how to make classical music relevant by revealing its fingerprints in modern music, film scores, and sampling culture. We also dig into teaching music theory and intervals using references students already know, treating style as the character of the music rather than a box labelled “genre”, and helping singers connect to lyrics even when the text sits outside their belief system.

    If you’re ready to sharpen your choral conducting, expand your repertoire choices, and help young singers find confidence and style, press play. Subscribe, share with a fellow choir director, and leave us a rating and review so more conductors can find the show.

    ***
    More about Maria A. Ellis:

    website: www.girlconductor.com
    Facebook: @girlconductor
    Instagram: @girlconductor

    Contact the Studio

    Support the show

    ***

    Resources:

    The Choir Director Podcast — helping you build stronger choirs, run better rehearsals, and create outstanding musical experiences.

    • Website: thechoirdirectorpodcast.com
    • Mailing List: Join our Newsletter


    Follow Russell Scott:

    • Website: russellscott.org
    • Instagram: @russellscottofficial
    • Facebook: facebook.com/russellscottofficial
    • X: @russellscottuk

    (c) Russell Scott 2026. All rights reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    48 mins
  • Ep #15: Oliver Rudin: What Does It Take to Build a Choir That Genuinely Surprises People?
    May 27 2026

    A choir can sing accurately and still leave an audience cold, so what actually creates a performance that feels alive? We sit down with Oliver Rudin, a Basel-based artistic director who works deeply with youth ensembles and the Basel Boys Choir, to get practical about the decisions that make a choir sound confident, expressive, and genuinely surprising.

    We talk choral programming across styles, including how to introduce contemporary choral music to singers and listeners who prefer familiar repertoire. Oliver’s answer is not “pick safer pieces” or “market harder”. It is clarity: build a strong artistic idea, create bridges between styles, and choose music you love enough to lead with conviction. That authenticity, he argues, is the quickest way to get singers to commit emotionally, not just intellectually.

    From there, we go into rehearsal craft. Oliver shares fast ways to unite a large group, including simple listening-based warm-ups like finding a shared pianissimo hum, then expanding towards harmony. We also unpack intonation as a focus and body issue as much as an ear issue, plus why stepping back can help singers listen, breathe together, and self-correct. Finally, we explore choir competitions and the World Choir Games: what adjudicators listen for, how repertoire choice can highlight a choir’s strengths, and why you “cannot fail” if the real aim is growth.

    Subscribe for more practical choral conducting conversations, share this with a fellow choir director, and if it helps you, please leave a rating and review so more singers and conductors can find the show.

    ***

    More about Oliver Rudin:

    Website: www.oliverrudin.com

    Instagram: @oliver.rudin

    Contact the Studio

    Support the show

    ***

    Resources:

    The Choir Director Podcast — helping you build stronger choirs, run better rehearsals, and create outstanding musical experiences.

    • Website: thechoirdirectorpodcast.com
    • Mailing List: Join our Newsletter


    Follow Russell Scott:

    • Website: russellscott.org
    • Instagram: @russellscottofficial
    • Facebook: facebook.com/russellscottofficial
    • X: @russellscottuk

    (c) Russell Scott 2026. All rights reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    43 mins
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