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4 Teams Head Into Finals Of Collegiate A Cappella Championship

The Harvard Opportunes is one of the four groups to advance to the final stages of UpStaged National Collegiate Performing Arts A Cappella Championship.
Dylan Zhou
/
Twins Talent Casting
The Harvard Opportunes is one of the four groups to advance to the final stages of UpStaged National Collegiate Performing Arts A Cappella Championship.

It's Pitch Perfect meets March Madness.

Well, almost.

The competition might lack the drama, stage fright and screaming fans of a live singing competition, but hundreds of collegiate a cappella groups from across the country submitted their best videos for the UpStaged National Collegiate Performing Arts A Cappella Championship.

Organizers announce the final four teams heading into a championship round Wednesday:

  • The Harvard Opportunes with their version of "All For Us" (Labrinth ft. Zendaya)
  • The Vanderbilt Melodores with an Ariana Grande medley
  • BYU Vocal Point from Brigham Young University with "Circle of Life" from The Lion King
  • Penn Masala from the University of Pennsylvania with a mashup of Ed Sheeran's "Castle On The Hill" and the Bollywood song "Ilahi"
  • An audience that topped 150,000 people voted these groups into the Final Four, the competition's organizers say.

    Annette Philip, one of the judges during the earlier rounds, says she was "overwhelmed and really just feeling so much joy" over the four finalists. Philip is a member of the Berklee College of Music faculty and a longtime a cappella singer with the group Women of the World. "The four final entries really spoke to the amazing diversity and the richness of a cappella music that is today," she says.

    Some of the vocal groups submitted videos that were made before the pandemic. UpStaged judge Christopher Diaz says he was thrilled to see other groups take on the challenge of making videos during lockdown. Even though it didn't reach the Final Four, one of his favorites was the Doox of Yale arrangement of the Nick Jonas song "Levels," which was made on a Zoom call. "They have all these flashing boxes with really kind of creative things happening in each of the boxes," Diaz says excitedly. "And it made me feel like, 'Wow, this is on Zoom, but this is the kind of Zoom call I'd like to be on.' "

    The UpStaged competition was as much about video producing and editing skills as it was about singing. Brigham Young's video was shot in the spring of 2019 on the Salt Flats in Utah with the singers surrounded by gorgeous mountains.

    BYU senior Carson Trautman says the group has tried to find ways to rehearse during the pandemic. For a while they did it in the school's football stadium.

    "So we were like 20 feet apart," he says. Using in-ear monitors, he says they could hear themselves and one another when they sang into the mic. "But then it started getting really cold," he laughs.

    Now Trautman says they're practicing indoors, wearing masks and staying socially distant.

    The Harvard Opportunes are not singing together at all right now. "It's really sad. I miss it so much," says singer and junior Ben Dreier.

    He also misses competing in person. While the group is very proud to be in the final four of UpStaged, he says the video competition didn't produce "the same butterflies" as performing in-person does. But he notes "You can't have that right now." During this pandemic, "we've been grateful to have any amount of competition," he says.

    A cappella groups that make it to the final rounds win cash prizes for charities of their choosing.

    Rose Friedman edited and Ryan Benk produced this story for radio. Meghan Sullivan edited and produced for the Web.

    Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

    Elizabeth Blair is a Peabody Award-winning senior producer/reporter on the Arts Desk of NPR News.

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    Federal funding is gone.

    Congress has eliminated all funding for public media.

    That means $2.1 million per year that Connecticut Public relied on to deliver you news, information, and entertainment programs you enjoyed is gone.

    The future of public media is in your hands.

    All donations are appreciated, but we ask in this moment you consider starting a monthly gift as a Sustainer to help replace what’s been lost.

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