|
|
Choir Schedules Chancel Choir Thursday Evenings at 7:15 PM
The adult Chancel Choir will meet for practice on Thursday nights at 7:15 PM in the Choir Room and you are invited to join. Just stop by on Thursdays at 7:15 PM or give Brian Plaugher, Director of Music Ministries a call at 823-2484 ext 11.
Handbell Choir Wednesday Evenings at 7:30
Handbell Director Karna Roa invites you to try your hand at ringing the bells. They practice on Wednesday evenings at 7:30 PM in the church sanctuary. If you have any questions, please call Karna or Linda Roa.
Brass Choir Thursdays at 6:00 PM
Children’s Choir Sunday Mornings at 9:30 AM The Children’s Choir will meet on Sunday mornings at 9:30 AM. All children ages 4-10 are invited to join us for practice and sing in worship about once a month. Call Andy DelMonte if you have any questions or the church office at 823-2484.
Folk & Acoustic Group This year, the Community Church Folk & Acoustic Group plans to have regular, semi-monthly rehearsals to be best prepared to play some great folk-based worship music on several Sundays throughout the year. If you play an acoustic instrument that lends itself to folk and bluegrass styles (banjo, guitar, mandolin, fiddle, stand-up bass, etc), and you’d like to rehearse and play, please contact Jan Kahdeman for more information
Something new in choirs! Check out the YAP Choir Why I am Not Calling It “Dixieland” Any More Brian Plaugher Director of Music Ministries The first form of that great American music called ‘jazz’ originated in the South, and had its epicenter in New Orleans. It was the sound of freedom: often with a peppy tempo, always with a jaunty syncopated rhythm and marked above all else, with boundless improvisation. It arose in the African American community, just a generation removed from slavery. But upon this liberating, lively music, this sound of freedom, was imposed the label of “Dixie.” To look back to “old black Joe pickin’ cotton” may be a treasured history for some in the South, but it was not a treasured history for our Black brothers and sisters. Dixie was the opposite of freedom for them, and not at all what this new music was about. I have not meant any harm, and few of us in these parts do, by using that label, but I am not going to use it any more. I had a friend some years ago who proudly displayed a Confederate flag. He claimed it was a symbol of Southern culture, not of racism. I am sure that was true for him. But the Confederacy, or Dixie, or whatever name we want to call the antebellum South, all carry the tragic stain of human bondage. So I am calling it New Orleans Jazz, or Traditional Jazz. We will be playing it in church on November 1, and you are invited to come to worship and enjoy the music.
|
|
Community Church of Sebastopol, UCC 1000 Gravenstein Hwy. North T P.O. Box 579 Sebastopol, CA 95473 (707) 823-2484 T fax (707) 823-9597 Click here for directions email: office@uccseb.org
This page was last updated on: 01/30/2012
|