Req 3c — Ensemble or Solo Service
This option is about consistency. Music gets stronger when you show up again and again, listen to feedback, and learn how to perform even when you are tired, nervous, or not yet perfect.
Two Different Paths
You can complete this requirement in one of two ways:
- Serve for six months in an organized musical group such as band, choir, orchestra, worship team, drumline, or another structured ensemble.
- Perform as a soloist in public six times.
Both paths build discipline, but they train slightly different skills. Ensemble work emphasizes teamwork and blend. Solo performance emphasizes independence and confidence.
What Counts as Strong Evidence
Keep track as you go instead of trying to remember later
- Dates: Record rehearsals, performances, or public appearances.
- Role: Note your instrument, voice part, or solo type.
- What you worked on: New pieces, sight-reading, balance, memorization, or stage presence.
- What improved: Tone, timing, confidence, range, breathing, or accuracy.
- Who can confirm it: Director, leader, teacher, parent, or event organizer.
If You Choose the Group Path
Being part of a group means learning how your part fits the whole. Sometimes your job is to carry the melody. Other times your job is to support with harmony or rhythm. Either way, the group depends on everyone doing their piece reliably.
Key ensemble habits include:
- arriving prepared
- watching the director or leader
- counting rests carefully
- listening across the ensemble
- balancing your sound so you do not cover others
If You Choose the Solo Path
Public solo performances do not all have to be huge formal recitals. What matters is that you perform for other people in a real public setting. That could be a school concert, worship service, community event, talent show, or another approved setting.
Solo work teaches you to carry the full musical story by yourself. You must begin with confidence, recover from mistakes without stopping, and keep the listener engaged from first note to last.
Reflect on Growth
This requirement is stronger when you can explain how you changed over time. Maybe your tone became steadier. Maybe you learned to enter confidently. Maybe you became better at listening across the ensemble or better at calming yourself before a solo.
That reflection connects directly back to Req 1, where you focused on technique, phrasing, tone, rhythm, and dynamics. This option shows what happens when you practice those skills over months instead of days.
NAfME Music education resources that highlight ensemble learning, performance skills, and long-term musical growth. Link: NAfME — https://nafme.org/After looking at the performance path, the next option steps back and studies the people who shaped American music itself.