Springtime concert in the chapel

Our concert took place in the chapel at Crystal Hermitage (photo by Barbara Bingham)

Today was our Joy Singers concert at Crystal Hermitage Gardens (part of the Expanding Light’s “Springtime at Ananda” retreat). It was scheduled for exactly a week and a day after the Oratorio, which seemed fairly doable.

The problem, of course, is that week and a day went by really fast! I was just barely recovered from the Oratorio by the time we met for our only rehearsal on Thursday night.

Going into the rehearsal, I hadn’t yet found the time or bandwidth to review all the songs and was dismayed to discover just how many of them were either newer or harder than I remembered. Suffice it to say that by the end of the evening I was not feeling particularly ready, much less confident.

So today (concert day!) was about pulling it all together — alto parts, lyrics, researching Shakespeare songs, organizing the binder, finalizing the location, etc. — which finally got the energy really moving.

Of course, once the energy was moving the grace started to flow, and I’m very happy to report that the concert went very well and was enjoyed by all.

My favorite Seva memory

I finally have the bandwidth to share my favorite memory of Seva.

I had only moved to the Ananda Palo Alto community in 1999, so when I relocated to Assisi in 2002 to be part of a singing group touring Italy, I was still quite new to the path.

In January of 2004, Assisi was raided by the Guardia di Finanza, and nine of our key leaders were put in prison in March. Although it took something like seven years, the charges were eventually completely repudiated, but while it was happening it was a very intense situation.

Jyotish and Devi were visiting Ananda Assisi for a Kriyaban retreat followed by a big public event in celebration of Yogananda’s Mahasamadhi. They and many others stepped right in to cover for the leaders and teachers who were in prison so the event went off as planned.

Our choir director was among those arrested, so I was called upon to direct the choir, including for a large concert we had planned to do in Perugia later in the week.

And this is where Seva came into the picture.

You see, there was a large group of American devotees coming to Assisi on pilgrimage. Imagine their surprise when they arrived to the news of all that was going on!

To me, they were like the cavalry; a group of solid, seasoned devotees who came in and helped prop us up when we had been broadsided by circumstances. And Seva stood out for me, even in the midst of this amazing group of souls.

So, I asked her to sing the woman’s solo at the beginning of “Lift Your Hearts.” I remember her looking a little surprised, but she said yes. Later I discovered (I don’t recall exactly how) that Seva was not normally a soloist! I guess I had put her on the spot, but she didn’t hesitate. She simply did it.

And that is now a memory I cherish.

Here’s a recording of the song from that concert. Seva’s is the second solo voice you hear at the beginning.

“Lift Your Hearts” from the Ananda World Brotherhood Choir concert in Perugia, Italy (March 2004)

Bite off more than you can chew…

…then chew it!

That’s how I’m feeling right now about a wonderful (but big and getting bigger!) project that we’re working on for our Spiritual Renewal Week concert.

It’s one of those things where the vision was truly compelling, but because it’s something we’ve never actually done before (at least not at this level of magnitude), the closer it comes to manifesting the more we’re realizing just how big of a bite we have to chew! 😮

First time

Tonight the Ananda Village choir had the first of what’s sure to be many “firsts”: we met–and had a (very brief) rehearsal–in the new Temple of Light!

There’s still scaffolding on the dais and lots of work yet to do between now and the start of the 50th anniversary/Temple dedication event, but we were fully able to experience the temple acoustic…which is amazing!

We also spent some figuring out how we’re going to make room for one hundred twenty (120!) singers on the dais for the 50th anniversary concert.

Mamma mia! 🙂