Four community choirs from Islington, Camberwell and Essex, who all have a shared mission to break down barriers through song, have joined forces through the ‘Singing Our Lives’ project to create a powerful new song, which will be released in an online global premiere to mark World Peace Day (September 21).
The Mixed Up Chorus brings people together across cultural, religious and political divides, the Sing for Freedom choir unites refugee survivors of torture and their allies from across the UK. Both are based in Islington.
The Mind and Soul Choir rehearse at the Maudsley Hospital and promote mental wellbeing through singing, and Thames Opera Company in Thurrock exists to enable everyone, regardless of their background, to participate in opera and make a difference in their local community.
They have come together through
Singing Our Lives, a ground-breaking project which brings displaced people and those seeking sanctuary and local communities together with professional musicians to compose new music and perform together.
Each choir has overcome numerous obstacles to stay together during the pandemic, distributing devices so that people could get online, rehearsing and recording on zoom and maintaining a strong sense of community that many say has been a lifeline and provided a much-needed boost to their wellbeing and mental health.
Choir member Kate says:
“What would I have done without the warmth, enjoyment and togetherness of the Sing For Freedom Choir during these tough times? I think I would have fallen apart, been really isolated and started to feel old”.
A surprising bonus of lockdown was that the choirs have expanded to welcome members from across the UK and around the world. The Sing for Freedom Choir have had members zooming in from Cornwall to Edinburgh, and the Mixed Up Chorus have welcomed singers from Romania, the US, Germany and Palestine.
With composer Mike Roberts and lyricist Tess Berry-Hart, the choirs have created a new piece ‘The Circle’, which reflects on their personal and collective experience of the last 18 months, and explores both what divides us, and what unites us, through the lens of the global pandemic. The music video, created by Kolbassia Haoussou, Alexander Mulugeta F and Louise Stevens, follows the journeys of choir members as they unite for their first rehearsal together in-person after lockdown.
Accompanying the music video is a short documentary, in which members of the choirs share their experience of the pandemic, and what being a member of their choir has meant to them.
Holly Jones & Jeremy Haneman, Directors of Together Productions, which runs Singing Our Lives, as well as the Mixed Up Chorus and the Sing for Freedom Choir said:
“When lockdown hit, one of the first things many people did was to connect through singing. We all remember the videos of people singing from their balconies in Italy. We’re so delighted to have been building community across the UK and around the globe through the power of music and song, which connect us all at such a fundamental level and keeps us going through some really tough times”.
The Mixed Up Chorus and Sing for Freedom Choir are currently recruiting for new members, and will be holding free taster sessions which will be taking place in-person in Islington, and simultaneously online, in a pioneering hybrid rehearsal model.
Taster sessions are taking place on September 21st, 23rd, 28th and 30th – find out more
here.