As a conductor, I feel that those in my profession have the potential to be community builders, to enable our love, joy and passion for music to build bridges where none have previously existed. There’s something about communal singing that reaches into the dawn of human history and speaks to us in a way that transcends many boundaries and enables something innately human to manifest itself – the sense of belonging, of sharing, of being part of a team and a bond of camaraderie. We breathe together, we pore over the music together, we harmonise and clash and struggle and work in the service of the song and yet, somehow, it all flows. We are left with a feeling that cannot be measured in any quantitative way but we know in our hearts that something in us has been profoundly shifted.
Choirs very quickly bring people together in ways that are both mundane and beautifully poetic. Whether it’s the tedious committee meetings and washing the tea cups, the arguing over the outfits and ticket sales, the endless debates over the choice of the music and the quality of the biscuits, millions of people all over the world put their differences aside because they know that the act of making music together for a couple of hours will allow them to transcend the usual slings and arrows of daily life. Choirs allow you to glimpse something that only becomes possible when done in a group, when you forgive your neighbour their trespasses and both act to serve the very simple cause that is making something beautiful and moving.