Brad Posted May 12, 2018 Report Posted May 12, 2018 From Japan to Harlem A Gospel Singer is Born The former pop star TiA, after giving up on pop, has become a gospel singer, after living next door in Harlem to a church. Quote
CJ Shearn Posted May 13, 2018 Report Posted May 13, 2018 (edited) Very interesting! Apart from the religious aspects, it's very interesting how the music could captivate someone from the other side of the world. I think more than ever Japanese artists are expressing their own voice. Edited May 13, 2018 by CJ Shearn Quote
Brad Posted May 13, 2018 Author Report Posted May 13, 2018 I thought it was a bit unusual but it does show how the feeling is infectious. Quote
Rooster_Ties Posted May 13, 2018 Report Posted May 13, 2018 (edited) 11 hours ago, Brad said: I thought it was a bit unusual but it does show how the feeling is infectious. I saw this thread last night, and read and shared the article and video with my wife. But it wasn't until I just saw your comment, Brad, about "the feeling is infections" that I remembered an experience I had 100 years ago, back in college (circa 1990), my junior year. I'd sung in the college choir every semester since I was a Freshman, and had taken private voice lessons more often than not during that time. I was a Computer Science major, but I took a whole bunch of music classes, to the point where I ended up getting a double-major (not my aim, but that's how it turned out). So one semester, I did a half-credit independent study on blues, and one of my assignments was to go hear some real gospel in a couple African American churches in town (small town of 35K, in upstate IL). So I went one Sunday to an AME church near campus, and discovered they were having a "music revival" all afternoon the next Saturday, which was perfect timing for me. Long story, short -- I went. And I really got moved by the whole experience. I'd long gone to various churches as I was growing up (long story, but United Church of Christ, Presbyterian, Lutheran, and I was a hired gun in a paid choir all through high school at a Catholic Shrine near where I lived, which was DAMN good money I might add, $15/hour back when the minimum wage was like $3/hour), and I was also a paid choral section leader at the local Congregational Church all through college. BUT, I was decidedly an agnostic, in terms of actual belief (and an atheistic-leaning agnostic, at that - always have been). So I get to the AME "musical revival" -- little 20-year old me (who's white, I might add) -- and I'm totally swept up in the music. To the point where -- I swear this is true (I'm sure I've told this here before) -- I get up and sing (solo!) some spiritual I knew from my college choir experience (something I knew like the back of my hand, because we'd memorized it the previous spring for a college choir tour over spring break). That was all 30 years ago, but I think I must have had a solo in the piece (when my choir did it), which must have given me the courage/chutzpah to get up in front of an all-Black congregation of probably 300-400 people, and sing something from their tradition, and solo at that. "Infectious" indeed. I can attest to that personally. Edited May 14, 2018 by Rooster_Ties Quote
Brad Posted May 13, 2018 Author Report Posted May 13, 2018 That is a great story, RT. You must have written a great paper for the course. Music has a way of sweeping you away. I’m agnostic too (never was barmitzvah’ed) but can see myself getting carried away. Of course, I can’t sing for crap, but that’s not what’s it’s about, singing ability. Quote
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