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Gospel Music Week: More than a Song
February 2 @ 9:30 am - February 6 @ 9:00 pm
School of Music
The BU School of Music presents More than A Song, a Gospel Music residency featuring Montréal-born singer, choral conductor, educator, researcher and CBC Radio host Frédéricka Petit-Homme and collaborators Myrtle Thomas and Alexandre Paquette. The week will culminate in a musical celebration and final gathering led by our guests and featuring the BU Concert Choir, Chorale and small jazz ensembles.
SCHEDULE OF OPEN EVENTS
Monday, February 2
9:30-10:30AM Opening Session, Kinsmen 1-20
5:15-7:15PM Masterclass/Rehearsal, Kinsmen 1-20
Tuesday, February 3rd
12:40-1:30PM Out of Bounds Lecture: Looking Back In Order to Move Forward: African American Sacred Music as a Pathway to Resistance, Resilience, and Renewal, 1-57
2:00-3:30PM Masterclass/Rehearsal, Kinsmen 1-20
7:00-8:15PM Conservatory Choir Workshop, 1-57
Wednesday, February 4th
5:15-7:15PM Masterclass/Rehearsal, Kinsmen 1-20
Friday, February 6th
10:00-11:00AM Coffee Meet & Greet, Faculty Lounge
7:30PM Musical Celebration & Gathering, Kinsmen 1-20; $10 tickets at door, free for BU students
Musical Celebration and Final Gathering
Friday, February 6th @ 7:30PM, Kinsmen Rehearsal Hall, Queen Elizabeth Music Building
Tickets:
Available at the door for $10, free for BU students.
Additional info:
Kinsmen Rehearsal Hall (Room 1-20) is located inside the Brandon University School of Music (Queen Elizabeth Music Building), with access from 19th street between Princess and Lorne. The space is wheelchair accessible through the main (South) doors to the School of Music, and the North door to the hall.
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Frédéricka Petit-Homme is a Montreal-born singer, choral conductor, educator, and researcher whose work brings together performance, pedagogy, and community engagement. She has taught at McGill University’s Schulich School of Music since 2005 and is a PhD candidate in music education focused on gospel choir practice in higher education, with attention to transformational leadership and the enactment of Black Dignity through collective music-making.
Her research and teaching inform her approach to building meaningful connections between academic institutions and the communities they serve. She is the founder and artistic director of Ensemble Nigra Sumand the creator of More than a Song, a gospel music workshop series that invites students, educators, and community members into shared musical practice through listening, singing, and reflection.
In recent years, Petit-Homme shared her work through an interactive Research Alive lecture at McGill University, an invited More than a Song workshop at the 4th International Possibility Studies Conference hosted at the University of Cambridge, and a co-authored paper selected for presentation at the 2024 Social Impact Music Making Symposium in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Beyond her academic and community-based work, she hosts Choral Concert, a weekly national radio program on CBC Music and CBC Listen, where she highlights choral music from across the Americas and Europe. Drawing on her experience as a first-generation Canadian, her work reflects a practice of artistic citizenship grounded in collaboration, and care.
Myrtle Thomas is a Montreal-born vocalist, multi-instrumentalist, and educator whose work spans performance, coaching, and music pedagogy. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts and a Graduate Diploma in Advanced Music Performance Studies in classical flute from Concordia University and a Master of Music in Jazz Performance from McGill University’s Schulich School of Music. Her musical development has been shaped by mentorship in both vocal and instrumental traditions, including study with vocalist Ranee Lee, American composer, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist Camille Thurman, and composer/arrangers Joe Sullivan, John Hollenbeck, and Christine Jensen.
Grounded in classical and jazz traditions and informed by deep roots in gospel music, Thomas approaches music education as a practice of translation across styles, communities, and ways of learning. Her interest in accessible and community-oriented pedagogy has led to collaborations with learner-centered initiatives and to the commissioning and publication of her first article, How to Improve Singing: The Ultimate Beginners’ Guide, by Musiprof, a modern music school serving learners across Canada. Working with students, she explores learning through listening and imitation, stylistic translation, and the body as a rhythmic engine. Her work emphasizes curiosity, adaptability, and the development of an integrated musical voice across traditions.
Alexandre Paquette is a Montreal-based bassist, musical director, arranger, and educator whose work spans performance, production, and collaborative music-making. Over the past three decades, he has built a wide-ranging career as a bassist on television productions, in recording studios, and on international tours. His performance and musical direction credits include work with artists such as Corneille, Lara Fabian, Oliver Jones, and Claude Dubois, as well as leading gospel ensembles including the Montreal Jubilation Gospel Choir, Jireh Gospel Choir, and the Montreal Gospel Choir.
Alongside his performance work, Paquette maintains an active practice as an arranger and producer. His projects span more than 50 album releases across diverse musical genres, reflecting a sustained engagement with collaborative production and music-making across a range of performance contexts.
Grounded in the gospel tradition, Paquette’s work is shaped by a commitment to collective music-making and artist development. His leadership and collaborative approach have led to longstanding roles as a musical director within Montreal’s gospel community, including his current position as musical director at Église Nouvelle Vie, the largest French-speaking church in Canada. In December 2025, he led a team of 60 performers, and production staff for La Symphonie de Noël, a sold-out Christmas production presented to a 7,000-seat audience.


