Blog

At the Stanley Isaacs Beacon Center

Concert isn’t exactly the right word for what happened tonight. It was more of an interactive demo to these young kids, ages 10-13, about what choir singing is about.

We were warming up on the stage of the empty auditorium (which seemed like a good fundraiser venue, should we ever tire of Hunter) when they started filing in.  We waved and some waved back as they took seats in the first two or three rows, a few adults from the Junior League scattered among them.  When we paused between licks, they clapped, so we told them those were just warmups. They were attentive as we continued, even as they moved around in their seats and one boy picked his hair with an Afro comb.

 

Then Rene announced that we were starting. He told them a little about the choirs he conducts and about how POHC formed and what our mission was. When he described the different voices—S1, S2, A1, A2, T/B, B—he turned to us and we raised our hands when he got to our sections. They were very interested in this.  I got the feeling they sing everything in unison and it was a new concept for them. We followed with “Bright Morning Star,” as an illustration of parts—women begin, men join, and the whole rounds out beautifully.

Rene told them a bit about the types of music we sing.  He mentioned that we were rehearsing “Empire State of Mind.”  They got very excited at this and wanted to hear it.  Rene said it was new for us and wasn’t ready yet, and they said oh, please, just sing what you know so far. Rene again demurred, saying we needed a rapper.  Unprompted, Anthony complied by reciting all the rap lyrics.  When he finished, Rene said we would do a song we had just learned, “Oseh Shalom,” and that it was in Hebrew, a language that hadn’t been spoken for thousands of years and just got revived in the 20th Century. They clapped along as we sang, and when we finished, a few of them said they learned a Shalom song when they were in third grade.  They couldn’t think of the name of it, so we asked them how it went. It turned out to be “Od Yavo,” and we joined them, with Rene conducting us both. They had been attentive before, but this was when we truly bonded.

They asked a lot of questions throughout the evening, among them, did we ever sing songs that we wrote ourselves.  We mentioned Marv, Brian, Wilfred, and Jeff. After “Siyahamba,” one girl asked how we learned to sing with such class.

Rene had us do the me-meh-mah-mo-mou chords, to show them how he shaped the color with his hands, indicating when to get softer and when to swell. They looked riveted as they watched an listened, so after we did “Aquarius”—which they loved—we invited them onstage to do warmups with us. Rene led our now double ranks through the entire series, including the-tip-of-the-tongue-the-teeth-the-lips, which made them laugh, but they did it.  He also led them through the me-meh-mah-mo-mou chords and they were right with him, shaping the sounds according to the movement of his hands.

After two sing-alongs and also “Give Us Hope,” which it turned out they knew and sang with us, we switched places—POHC went down to the audience and they stayed on stage and sang “Girl On Fire” for us.  It took them a few minutes to get the giggles out, but once they started, they went right through in fine form.

As we said our goodbyes, it was clear that each group had gotten so much from the other. This was truly an amazing evening.

- Peace of Heart Choir Singer

It has become a tradition for a member of POHC to do a post-concert write-up. It started when our Sign-up Coordinator began emailing her summaries to the other members in order to entice newer members to sign-up to sing at community concerts held early in the season. It didn’t take long for Concert Write-ups to become greatly anticipated amongst our members, so we share them here in hopes that you’ll join us at a future concert. 

At the International Vigil for Peace

 On Saturday, September 21 about 20 members of the choir sang at the International Vigil for Peace Concert in Central Park.  It was a lovely, windy afternoon, lots of people were hanging out or walking by and pausing to listen, with some sitting in the several rows of chairs in front of the Bandshell.  The flags of many countries flapped in the breezes.  It was a beautiful, sunny Fall day.

The choir slowly gathered a little after 1:00pm , and around 1:30pm we warmed up, well away from the stage.  Several members of the Streetsingers (Cheryl's group) joined us, and while we began with just two altos, by the time we were on stage we had two more.

We started singing right on schedule, at 2 PM and opened with a rousing rendition of Siyahamba which quickly caught the audience's attention.  We then sang Peace Salaam Shalom, Aquarius, Imagine and Give Us Hope - with Rene's music at times flapping in the strong breezes. The audience loved the songs.   It was a wonderful concert, full of good energy and the celebration of values that matter to both our choir and the audience: peace, harmony, oneness in the world.

After we left the stage we decided to give an impromptu concert over near the Bethesda Fountain - only to find a major chess tournament going on there and every available space filled with card tables covered with chess sets!  We walked on towards the Boathouse Restaurant and stopped on the path and set up to sing between the path and a huge willow tree by the lake.  It was a beautiful setting with many people walking by.  We sang the same repertoire again while one choir member's children passed out our Peace of Heart flyers.  We ended the day with lots of photo ops by the lake - the most popular of which was posing with Angela in her "Miss Plus America" banner and tiara!!

What a wonderful way to spend a Fall afternoon!

- Peace of Heart Choir SingerIt has become a tradition for a member of POHC to do a post-concert write-up. It started when our Sign-up Coordinator began emailing her summaries to the other members in order to entice newer members to sign-up to sing at community concerts held early in the season. It didn't take long for Concert Write-ups to become greatly anticipated amongst our members, so we share them here in hopes that you'll join us at a future concert. 

At Insomnia Cookies !

After performing our 9/11 commemoration concert at Central Park, some of us took the #1 train up to Insomnia Cookies on 110thStreet. We were to get a percentage of the day's profits, so we encouraged everyone in the street to buy cookies. There were only ten or eleven of us, but we held our own singing on the darkening sidewalk outside the cookie store. During a reprise of “Aquarius,” a passer-by, inspired by Gary’s singing in tongues, let her soul out through dancing. “Faster!” she kept saying to the choir as she twirled.  “Faster!” Then she danced over to Rene and said “Faster!” to him.  When we didn’t change tempo, she danced off down the sidewalk and was gone. When we finished singing, Anthony’s mom passed around a box of Insomnia Cookies that she had just bought. Thanks, Jeanette!

Tomorrow’s rehearsal may be the official beginning of the season, but in facet we have already begun.

- Peace of Heart Choir Singer

It has become a tradition for a member of POHC to do a post-concert write-up. It started when our Sign-up Coordinator began emailing her summaries to the other members in order to entice newer members to sign-up to sing at community concerts held early in the season. It didn't take long for Concert Write-ups to become greatly anticipated amongst our members, so we share them here in hopes that you'll join us at a future concert. 

At Central Park 9/11 Commemoration

We gathered around Rene’s piano in Central Park for our first warmup of the season.  It was hot and steamy, but we singers were in high spirits, glad to be together again after the summer break.  Passers-by video’d our vocalizing and song snippets.  They were delighted when we told them that was just the rehearsal – the concert was still to come and would be a few yards away, at the base of the statue. Rene was delighted, too – to find that even though we hadn’t had our first rehearsal yet, we sounded good. Kudos to all of us.

We began the concert proper with a rousing rendition of “Siyahamba.” Then came the rest of our core songs, including sing-alongs, and also the non-core “Aquarius,” in which Gary let his soul pour forth.  The crowd loved it. The wind came up, the way it does sometimes before a thunder storm, but we were lucky – no rain – just Rene’s music blowin’ in the wind. There were several POHC fans standing in a semi-circle in front of us--former choir members; new choir members; spouses, parents, and friends of choir members; an admirer from YAI.  They were giving out Insomnia Cookie coupons to passers-by, in preparation for our next gig of the evening. Behind them, leaning on bikes or on trees, were the unaffiliated, strangers who just got pleasure out of listening to us.

- Peace of Heart Choir Singer

It has become a tradition for a member of POHC to do a post-concert write-up. It started when our Sign-up Coordinator began emailing her summaries to the other members in order to entice newer members to sign-up to sing at community concerts held early in the season. It didn't take long for Concert Write-ups to become greatly anticipated amongst our members, so we share them here in hopes that you'll join us at a future concert. 

At Make Music NY, Hell's Kitchen Park!

Hell's Kitchen Park is not big by New York City standards--the long side of the rectangle runs from 47th-48th Streets--but it's home to a handball court, a children's area with an on-the-ground treehouse under an actual tree, and a main area that has benches lining the fence and an open concrete space good for skateboarding, walking with baby strollers, or as a stage for Make Music New York performers.

We straggled in by ones and twos and sat on whichever benches had room, a few of us here, a few there, listening to the man who was two acts before us play his guitar and sing.  I am not a big fan of amplified music that makes it hard to have a conversation with the person next to you, but the other bench-sitters and people standing around seemed OK with it.

The good thing about loud noise is that it creates privacy.  All we had to do was walk a few yards to the treehouse area and we were able to warm up without interfering with the performer. It's worth noting, just so you get an idea of his amplification, that our warmup included a full-volume rendition of Siyahamba.  It's also worth noting that our warmup was sans piano.  Rene had left his keyboard under the watchful eye of his daughter, Gina, who was sitting on the benches in front of the "stage."

After the warmups, there was still another act before us, so we used the time to take photos for the Facebook page. The treehouse was an ideal prop--some of us climbed the stairs and looked out from the landing, others gathered below on the ground.

Our turn. It took some time to get Rene's piano hooked up to the PA system.  Then Gary introduced us, and we were off with Siyahamba for real. As it always does, the song made everyone sit up and pay attention.

We followed with a succession of crowd-pleasers--59th Street Bridge, Imagine, Aquarius.  The audience shouted their approval after each song.  With Imagine, they even applauded after the first few measures, as soon as they realized what song it was.  People walking on 10th Avenue stopped, looked through the fence, then stayed.  The choir that was waiting to go on after us was off to the side, swaying and clapping to our singing.  Little children were dancing around, two of whom, I found out from Gina after the concert, were her cousins visiting from Texas--Rene's brother's children.

After 30 minutes, which we thought was our allotted time, the in-charge man said we had another fifteen minutes, so we threw in in Peace, Salaam, Shalom, The Lion Sleeps Tonight (kudos to Alex!), This Land is Your Land, and Give Us Hope.

The choir who followed us was pretty cool, too.  Their dress code was red and black--striking.  We sang one number with them--the one we rehearsed with Rene--and some of us stayed to hear their other pieces.  They did them all from memory and had a lot of enthusiasm.

The energy exchange tonight was palpable.  The audience was loving us, and were loving them back.  We truly did Make Music New York.

At Rivington House

Saturday afternoon, June 15th a smaller group of choir members gathered at Rivington House, a home for AIDS patients, where we sang in the penthouse, a very nice venue.  Here our audience was smaller, but the concert was just as beautiful.

The three sopranos held their own wonderfully and the audience thoroughly enjoyed the songs and joined us in the sing-alongs.  We did rousing renditions of New York/ New York, Feeling Groovy, Aquarius, Siyahamba, and  Stand by Me, along with a gentler Die Gedanken and the addition of Tumbalalaika.  We ended with Give Me Hope and Let There be Peace on Earth to much appreciation from the audience.  We could all feel what a lovely gift music is for folks who are struggling.

- Peace of Heart SopranoIt has become a tradition for a member of POHC to do a post-concert write-up. It started when our Sign-up Coordinator began emailing her summaries to the other members in order to entice newer members to sign-up to sing at community concerts held early in the season. It didn't take long for Concert Write-ups to become greatly anticipated amongst our members, so we share them here in hopes that you'll join us at a future concert. 

At The American Cancer Society

On Tuesday, June 11th, we sang at the American Cancer Society Hope Lodge, a residence for out-of-town families of cancer patients, where we sang in a lovely open room that has a wall of windows and a good piano.  With a large choir turnout we were able to share our songs with passion and vigor and the audience was deeply responsive.

Our audience started small, but grew as we sang, and in the end there were at least a dozen people.  Many sang with us during the sing-alongs, and they clearly knew many of our other songs. There was a very strong connection with them as we sang and we could feel them drinking up our words of hope and encouragement and reminders of joy--even though this time in their lives is particularly stressful.

After the concert they were very appreciative and some stayed around for a while to talk to the choir members.

- Peace of Heart Soprano

It has become a tradition for a member of POHC to do a post-concert write-up. It started when our Sign-up Coordinator began emailing her summaries to the other members in order to entice newer members to sign-up to sing at community concerts held early in the season. It didn't take long for Concert Write-ups to become greatly anticipated amongst our members, so we share them here in hopes that you'll join us at a future concert.

At the YAI for Friday Night Fun!

We lined up in the hall while Peace of Heart Choir Tenor, Anthony went in to introduce the Choir. Applause. Then, from inside, René gave pitches for “Siyahamba,” but they reached the hall only faintly. So POHC member Angela took up the call, singing the soprano part loud and clear while she walked down the line. We picked out our own pitches and took up the song as we marched in. By the time we were all assembled in rows, we were singing full-strength, Zulu, English, Zulu, English, with René on the drum. There was rhythm in the room and joy on the faces of our young audience at YAI.Then came the rest of the songs, starting with Imagine.

The audience sang along sometimes, listened quietly other times. One young man recorded each song on his cell phone, somehow managing to hold the phone still in his hand while the rest of his body gyrated to the music—an isolate-that-muscle feat worthy of a subway entertainer. We always encourage our audiences to participate, but this time, I liked that the audience did not clap along to This Land is Your Land. Instead, they were holding the song sheets, reading and singing. Clapping might have distracted them and it was nice to join voices.

During that song, one girl in the front row pointed to us and herself every time we came to the line “This land belongs to YOU and ME.” They did clap along during Down by the Riverside, though, and they liked shaking hands with the choir members who walked through the audience during the verse that says “Gonna shake hands around the world.” We know this audience. We’ve sung for them many times, yet our connection with them always feels fresh.

They’re good listeners, good participators, and they enjoy the introductions as much as the music. They pick up the mood of the songs and reflect them back. During Bright Morning Star, one young lady who likes to speak and share comments during the performance, was quiet during the first part. For a moment, she thought the song was over and started to say something, but when she saw that it was continuing, she was quiet again. Our music hath charms to soothe...

It was nice to have our former director, Abby, in the audience. Also nice to see the man in a pin-striped shirt and tie in the back row. I have no idea who he was, but I enjoyed watching his face. He listened intently the whole time, but during the last song, Give Us Hope, he looked as if a spark had lit up his insides. And the German song, Die Gedanken, introduced by POHC Alto Susannah, was special for me after she had previously shared some thoughts about her daughter. What better place for our first concert of the season than YAI, where we’re always welcomed with exuberance. (That’s an understatement.)

- Peace of Heart Alto

It has become a tradition for a member of POHC to do a post-concert write-up. It started when our Sign-up Coordinator began emailing her summaries to the other members in order to entice newer members to sign-up to sing at community concerts held early in the season. It didn't take long for Concert Write-ups to become greatly anticipated amongst our members, so we share them here in hopes that you'll join us at a future concert.

At the Schervier Nursing Home

After I got off on at Bedford Park Blvd on the #4 train I was approached by Lexi (a new alto in the choir), and we've been waiting about 20 minutes for the #10 bus going to Henry Hudson Pkwy. It was a really long ride and we have to go pass more than about 7 stops. We were confused about which way to the nursing home after we got off at the right stop, but then we asked a nice friendly helpful guy where the Shervier Nursing Home is and gave us the right directions, and off we went.

Once we arrived we ask the security in the front desk if this was the right building where we were suppose to perform. It was and he gave a short direction to where the performance is, which is at the auditorium in the basement.

Before we arrived there Lexi and I already heard wonderful voices coming from the members who already arrived and Nancy (soprano 2) and Robert (bass) told us where to put our bags and coats. The microphone was quite powerful that they don't have to step into the mic to speak. We can hear them loud and clear. Lexi and I were about 15 min late, but it doesn't matter. There are some songs the choir hasn't done yet that we need to rehearse. Already in the mood, a male audience member in the wheelchair loved our voices and started dancing and acted as a conductor. It felt great watching him do so.

Larry began introducing the choir as he introduced "Siyahamba" afterwards. Not really a sing-a-long as it suppose to be and there was no space to walk on stage but the audience loved it anyways. The next song we sung was "Imagine" in which Alex introduced. Brian did the intro for "This Land is Your Land" and he also help us out by telling the audience to sing along, in which they all did! Next, we sang "Aquarius..." in which Deb introduced, then we did "Peace Salaam Shalom". Barbara did the intro for that. We also sang "Die Gedanken Sind Frei (pronounced Dee Guh-don-ken Sind Fry) introduced by Howard.Then Noella introduced "Love Train/Put a Little Love in Your Heart" and we sound great, in fact we sound great on all songs that we did.

I, Wilfred introduced "Down By The Riverside" and once again, Brian told the audience to sing along and also clap as well and they all did.When the "...shake hands around the world..." lyrics came up, most of us including myself went to the audience and shook hands with as many people as we could, several members saying "May peace be with you" while shaking hands as audience very well responded with "Thank you" or "And also with you." Nancy introduced "Feeling Groovy" with only a few choir members tried but it became tongue-twisting to them singing the lyrics "Ba ba dee ah ba doo..."

Few just made up their own doo wop lyrics as I heard but of course, we don't care. We just enjoyed singing and the audience, who didn't catch that nor did they cared seem to love it. Then we did "New York, New York" in which Robert introduced thinking it was the last song, which it wasn't, but we'll take that and use the next song as an encore song. Anyhow the whole audience sang along and the male audience member in the wheelchair who I spoke about before loved what we sang so much that he danced in most of the songs and was singing, yes including this one. The last song we did (or encore) was "Give Us Hope" and Rene was the last person to introduce that one. The audience enjoyed the whole performance with a big applause and the same audience member (wheelchair), told us to take a bow in which we have done. Thanks to Brian (tenor) for his help in making the audience feel good, as well as playing his guitar and playing the tambourine, although it kinda hurt my ears (lol). Well that's all the story I have right now. Keep practicing, be well and enjoy your week. See you all Thursday. -Wilfred, Peace of Heart Tenor Section Leader

It has become a tradition for a member of POHC to do a post-concert write-up. It started when our Sign-up Coordinator began emailing her summaries to the other members in order to entice newer members to sign-up to sing at community concerts held early in the season. It didn't take long for Concert Write-ups to become greatly anticipated amongst our members, so we share them here in hopes that you'll join us at a future concert.

High Notes on the High Line

It wasn’t exactly like singing in the subway.  Yes, we kept repeating our few good songs because the audience was fluid and transient.  But the High Line crowd was no in-a-hurry crowd. They were out for leisure, on an in-Manhattan getaway from Manhattan, taking a stroll on this road above the road, with wild grasses and flowers on either side.

Tucked away in a bend of the road, with the Hudson River behind us, our backs to the setting sun, was the Choir.  People streamed by from both directions, some turning their heads to look and listen even if they didn’t stop, others collecting at the railings to stay for three or four or five songs.  But even this stationary audience wasn’t like a regular audience.  They hadn’t come on purpose to hear us.  We just happened.

We did two sets--mainly repeats of Siyamba, Give Us Hope, Od Yavo, Down by the Riverside, and This Land is Your Land.  Our two brave a capella tries were Aquarius (René had to re-start us at the key change), and 59th Street Bridge (this one worked pretty well!).  In between the sets, and sometimes in between the songs, POHC Tenor Gary worked the crowd, announcing who we were and what our mission was, then walking among them to give out pamphlets.  They took him at his word when he said, “There’s only one thing we like better than singing, and that’s hearing other people sing, so please join us.”

A highlight of the evening was the little girl with the curly hair who stepped up to us, then stood still, staring at René.  He got down to her level, very close to the ground, conducting all the while.  All at once, as if a switch had been thrown, this still little girl began to jump up and down in time to the music.

Everyone, choir and audience, was in a good humor, and René didn’t seem to mind that he occasionally had to shield his eyes from the sun with one hand while he conducted us with the other. We’ve sung outside before, but always at ground level.  There’s something about being above it all while life goes on below that changes everything.

- Peace of Heart Alto

It has become a tradition for a member of POHC to do a post-concert write-up. It started when our Sign-up Coordinator began emailing her summaries to the other members in order to entice newer members to sign-up to sing at community concerts held early in the season. It didn't take long for Concert Write-ups to become greatly anticipated amongst our members, so we share them here in hopes that you'll join us at a future concert.