We have just done our first Mixed Up Chorus concert since singing at the Union Chapel in January 2020, over two years ago
If felt wonderful to assemble on stage together, this time as part of Faithful Voices, an Interfaith Song Festival. It concluded on Sunday March 27th at the West London Synagogue.
After struggling to come up with what colours to wear, we moved away from black with sparkle to block colours of choice. As someone who assumed 'uniforms' for choirs is a sensible norm, I now welcome, for us, expressions of individuality within the overall unity of singing together.
Our host choir, the Zemel Choir, looked neat in their black with purple scarves. (They were amazing singers, of course) We shone out in a rebellion of colour, that somehow gave expression to our roots in wholeness and inclusion through diversity and difference.
We came together not in what we were wearing, but in the way we sang, under Jeremy’s trusting leadership. (He looked dapper in a red shirt, and black open jacket with a red hankie peeping out of his top pocket!)
How are we different to other choirs?
First off, is our sponteneity when it comes to the pre concert warm up. This time literally, with an exercise disco class in the room allocated to us. Pagan, a dancer and soprano, had most of us moving and grooving, which
did wonders for any last minute tension as we waited to take our seats in the performance space/synagogue. Peals of laughter rang down the corridor, as we gyrated, with finger clicks and clapping hands.
In that mood we took our allocated zig zag spaces and started things off with our rain shakers, before Peter came in with a solo of the Water Song. Carrying on from our riot of colour, we followed Peter with individually timed singing, creating spontaneous sound.
Jeremy’s magic touch when it comes to repertoire really came up trumps with our only song in Hebrew. It felt as though our voices filled the space despite our low numbers (two basses, three tenors, nine altos and seven sopranos). Hopefully the uplift from connection to somethingbeyond ourselves was reflected in our singing. If isolation was a feature of the last two years it felt that it need not be now.
Then the highlight of the evening.
Our regular guest singer, Hamsa Mounif, walked over to the microphone, as the soloist for Adinu, a Sufi song on the nature of love. Sitting in the front row nearest to Hamsa was the Zemel Choir cantor and the West London Synagogue Rabbi. As Hamsa stretched her arms up to the synagogue dome, sending her voice higher and higher, the historic connections between Arabic and Jewish musical traditions were clear. The common threads are usually hidden, but here they were being expressed in front of my eyes. There was a rapturous sponteneity about the audience’s response. Hamsa touched our souls.
It was a privilege to be present, and share in those moments of awe.
This is what the Mixed up Chorus is all about. Its the tingling spine as you realise, through music, that we all share a common humanity. On a planet that is crying out for us to come together and have our voices heard.
Our choir is a community. Not all choirs achieve that, and not all choir members need or want it. But as Singing Our Lives gets ready to gear up for next term, lets recognise that it is the community aspect of the Mixed up Chorus that is actively nurtured, and the result is inspired singing, with support and leadership from an amazing team.
Joining our community of singers with purpose is something to consider.
All are welcome. There are no wrong notes. We would love you to join us!
Gill
(Soprano, Mixed Up Chorus)
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