UNiTE to End Violence Against Women

This morning I got to shake hands with the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-Moon. That was kind of cool.

My chorus, the Empire City Men’s Chorus, was invited to sing at an event at the United Nations honoring the Secretary-General’s UNiTE to End Violence against Women campaign. The piece we sang was called “You Shall Not Go Down,” written by Dorothy Hindman, using text from Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass. Our piece led off the morning’s events. It’s not every day you get to sing for an audience that includes the UN Secretary-General.

After we sang, we took our seats, and then there was a series of speeches hosted by Good Morning America’s Juju Chang. the Secretary-General spoke, followed by the representative from Barbados, Joseph Goddard; former Chilean president Michelle Bachelet; and Debi Nova, a Costa Rican singer-songwriter.

After the speeches, the Secretary-General had to leave for another event, so he walked down the center aisle of the room toward the exit. I happened to be sitting on the aisle, so I got to shake his hand as he walked past.

Our chorus has also been invited to become part of the Network of Men Leaders, which means that we will officially support the efforts to end violence against women worldwide. Violence against women won’t end unless men commit to ending it.

It was an interesting event and I’m glad we were able to take part.

If you’d like to hear our chorus sing in person, please come to one of our two concerts next month, on Friday, December 10 or Tuesday, December 14. We’ll be singing a slew of gospel and spiritual songs. It should be fun.

Prothalamia

I sing with a gay men’s chorus called the Empire City Men’s Chorus, and I really should plug our upcoming spring concerts, where we’ll be premiering a newly-commissioned work about marriage equality.

The name of the piece, Prothalamia, translates as “songs in celebration of marriage.” In concept it’s a bit subversive: its structure mirrors the Latin mass (its five movements are called Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, Agnus Dei), but the texts are secular, by Walt Whitman, Gertrude Stein, the ancient Roman writer Martial, and others. The music, by Charles Norman Mason and Dorothy Hindman (who are themselves married), is very modern and complex and quite beautiful.

We’re doing two concerts:

Sunday, May 23, 2010, 3:00 pm
Riverside Church
490 Riverside Drive, New York, NY

Tuesday, May 25, 2010, 8:00 pm
Church of St. Ann & The Holy Trinity
157 Montague St., Brooklyn, NY 11201

You can buy tickets online or at the door.