Gospel singer and voice teacher Lois DeJean talks about the challenges that face New Orleans after the Hurricane Katrina disaster, and shares her personal experiences in the wake of that event.
Gospel singer and voice teacher Lois DeJean, a native of New Orleans, LA, talks with a seminar class at Loyola University, New Orleans about the roots of Gospel music in New Orleans and her career as a singer and teacher, and shares some tips on teaching novice voice students to sing gospel. She also speaks at length about her involvement in community recovery and preservation initiatives in New Orleans in the wake of the Hurricane Katrina disaster. She concludes the seminar with a performance of several classic gospel songs, like “His Eye is on the Sparrow” and “Keep Your Eyes on the Prize.”
Gospel singer and voice teacher Lois DeJean discusses her “community mapping” initiative, which seeks to catalog and preserve the contents and cultural fabric of her New Orleans neighborhood, so that time, development, or another Katrina-level disaster will not wipe out the area’s history and heritage.
Gospel singer and voice teacher Lois DeJean discusses strategies for dealing with performance anxiety, and ways to make stage nerves work to your advantage.
Gospel singer and voice teacher Lois DeJean performs the gospel classic, “Can’t Nobody Do Me Like Jesus” for a seminar class at Loyola University, New Orleans.
Gospel singer and voice teacher Reverend Lois DeJean performs a free-tempo version of the gospel classic, “His Eye is on the Sparrow” for forum at Loyola University, New Orleans.
Gospel singer and voice teacher Reverend Lois DeJean leads a seminar class at Loyola University, New Orleans in singing an impromptu gospel choral performance of “Amen.”
Gospel singer and voice teacher Lois DeJean discusses her personal history and background, how she got involved in the church, and why she got involved in community activism.
Gospel singer and voice teacher Lois DeJean recounts the last few decades of gospel music in New Orleans, and her central role in helping the movement flourish. She especially notes the importance of gospel performance as an educational opportunity for young singers, and as a mode for cultural exchange.
Gospel singer and voice teacher Lois DeJean draws on her experiences as a young singer with perfect pitch but no knowledge of music theory to emphasize the need for musicians to learn music theory – to “put names to what you already know” – in order to gain the respect of other musicians, and to make the most of your music career.
Gospel singer and voice teacher Lois DeJean performs the gospel classic, “Amazing Grace” for a seminar class at Loyola University, New Orleans, and uses the performance as a demonstration of how to work well with an accompanist.
Gospel singer and voice teacher Lois DeJean performs the gospel classic, “Just a Close Walk with Thee” for forum at Loyola University, New Orleans.
Gospel singer and voice teacher Reverend Lois DeJean discusses some of the strategies she uses when teaching beginning students, some of whom have absolutely no foundation in singing or music.
Gospel singer and voice teacher Lois DeJean performs the song “Keep Your Eyes on the Prize” for a seminar class at Loyola University, New Orleans, and shares the deeper meaning of the song as relates to the city of New Orleans and its recovery from the disaster of Hurricane Katrina.