“Never underestimate the power of a small group of people to change the world. In fact, it is the only thing that ever has!” Margaret Mead Rebecca Solnit explored this notion in her essay Preaching to the Choir (in Call Them by Their True Names, © 2018). She explained that change is created when enough people get together who feel passionate about an issue and find a way to move it along. She noted that in the early 1960s the majority of Americans did not support the Civil Rights Movement and less than a quarter of them approved of the 1963 March on Washington but that march helped to usher through the 1964 Civil Right Act. “The choir is made up of the deeply committed: those who show up every Sunday, listen to every sermon, and tithe like crazy. The time the choristers spend with one another, the sum of their sympathy and shared experience, is part of what helps them to sing in unison and in tune.” (p. 76) While Solnit was speaking metaphorically, I am proposing that it is not only the bond of being with like-minded people but the actual act of singing together can strengthen our connections with one another. Making music and singing can create positive changes in our individual physical and emotional state. Singing together and creating harmony can be a deeply moving shared activity. It can also just be fun and help us lighten some of our personal and shared burdens. There is much talk of how polarized we are in the United States and elsewhere around the world. Many reports can be found of neighbors and family members, who are on opposite ends of the political spectrum, no longer able to have civil conversations. What if music can help bring us back together? Can singing together help us recognize a common sense of our humanity? The choir can help us focus on that which unites us, rather than focusing on what divides us. Singing together can help us feel like we are not alone, and encourage us to go further than we would alone. We do not have to be on the same political page to sing from the same page of a songbook. Common Sounds is my new project (created with my colleague, Samantha Sinai). We are inviting two choirs from different faith groups (e.g., Jewish and evangelical Christian) to come together for a 3-hour workshop that includes singing interspersed with meaningful conversations. Both choirs are also invited to participate in an evening concert where each group sings separately and together. We are drawing on the belief that our connection to music and singing can help us also find a way to get to know and understand each other in a more truthful and meaningful way. Participants in Common Sounds workshops recognize the power of music and hold a belief that increased understanding of one another is a good thing. For more info: http://www.commonsounds.net I know that feeling deep in my heart when I am singing or playing a musical instrument, when all else ceases to exist and I am floating with the music. I understand how precious that feeling is, the power of that feeling. Others who are in the Choir also get that. Preaching to the Choir recognizes the musical connections we experience, from heart-felt personal experiences to human-to-human connections. People who listen to music understand the powerful feeling they get when they hear music. Beautiful singing with the choir can move a person to tears and to action. “In finding people to walk with - and talk with - we find power as well as pleasure.” (Solnit, p. 80) Preaching to and singing with the Choir holds potential to reach across divides that threaten our sense of a shared humanity. SING with the CHOIR!
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AuthorDr. Barbara Dunn: Archives
May 2021
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