TRIANGLE JEWISH CHORALE

Sunday, Nov. 17,ย  3 p.m., free |ย Levin Jewish Community Center, Durham

Sunday, Dec. 8, 4:30 p.m., free | Beth Meyer Synagogue, Raleighย 


This Sunday, the Triangle Jewish Chorale is holding the first two fall concerts. The shows mark a milestone: the groupโ€™s โ€œTwenty-Fifth-Anniversary Gayla.โ€ The name pays homage to Gayla Halbrecht, who founded the group in 1994.

โ€œThe decorations and the refreshments are going to be fabulous,โ€ TJC Board Secretary Judith Ruderman says before a rehearsal at Durhamโ€™s Levin Jewish Community Center. It sounds like something my aunt Sara Lee would say. As it turns out, Ruderman knows her.

โ€œAre you one of the Jewish Cassells from Greensboro?โ€ she asks, shaking my hand.

The TJC, which is made up of fifty-one singers, is a democratic organization. Many members hold titles. Singer Xavier Richert, for instance, has served as chorale librarian. Although he isnโ€™t Jewish, Richert says that he has always had a โ€œtender heart for the Jewish culture.โ€

TJC members are quick to celebrate the fact that at least a dozen of the groupโ€™s singers are not Jewish, including the choraleโ€™s president, Marie Hammond, and her husband, Sam. This enthusiastic openness is what appealed to Richert. He loves music, but in joining the chorale, he was looking for connection, too.

โ€œI wanted to join a club that would have me as a member,โ€ he says, inverting the old Groucho Marx joke.

Richert, who is originally from France, has spent much of his time in Durham thinking about the meaning of community. When he first moved to the area, he threw himself into activities: a game group, a cinema club, a French conversation group. In TJC, he found his warm welcome. Recently, Richert won the Green Card lottery and, three weeks ago, became a U.S. citizen. The whole chorale celebrated at practice, singing โ€œGod Bless Americaโ€ and cutting a cake with an American flag on it.

TJC also tries to keep other barriers to entry low; it offers a scholarship to encourage younger singers to join. (The current recipient is Jordan Taylor, a UNC-Chapel Hill sophomore.) The group, Ruderman says, is the โ€œonly group around [North Carolina] that sings Jewishly inspired music in a non-liturgical setting.โ€ For that reason, if aspiring members can sing in key and show up to practice, TJC will almost certainly accept them.

โ€œItโ€™s important to keep this kind of music out there in the public, alive,โ€ Ruderman says. โ€œWe may not be the best chorale around, but we are totally committed to our cause.โ€

The upcoming concerts will feature a retrospective of some of the TJCโ€™s all-time favorite choral pieces. They also serve as a reminder of how far the chorale has come.

โ€œWe started with ten people,โ€ says Gayla Halbrecht, the founder and honoree, sitting in the Levin JCC lobby. About thirty-five other members are already stretching and doing lip trills, but Halbrecht assures me she doesnโ€™t mind skipping this part of rehearsal. โ€œI donโ€™t need to warm up,โ€ she says. โ€œI have been singing all dayโ€”I just do. I play golf, and I sing on the golf course. Myย friends say, โ€˜Oh, here comes our entertainment for the day.โ€™โ€

Halbrechtโ€™s relationship with music goes back to her mother, who played violin in the Vermont Symphony. The music enthralled Halbrecht, who would often accompany her mother to rehearsals. As an adult, Halbrecht joined a choir โ€œas a hobby,โ€ which then turned into performances at Carnegie Hall and a tour in Europe; sheโ€™s sung Handelโ€™s Messiah so many times that she knows it by heart. (Sheโ€™s also been a biochemist, a shop owner, and an interior decorator.)

The genesis of TJC lies with her mother, who asked her one day why she didnโ€™t sing more from the Jewish canon. Halbrecht took the words to heart and, a few years later, founded the chorale.

Twenty-five years later, the group has exceeded anyoneโ€™s expectations. It has grown in membership and quality; it has a board of directors and hires professional conductors. It has commissioned local composers and performed as far away as Argentina, where its beloved current conductor, Lorena Guillรฉn, is from. The program for the upcoming concerts consists of twelve former repertoire favorites. Three songs will be directed by the former conductors who originally led them.

Guillรฉn will, of course, lead the rest. The music covers a wide range of styles. โ€œFrom the vast array of Jewish music availableโ€”thousands of years of historyโ€” we have lots of choices,โ€ chorale member Bernie Most says. The definition of โ€œJewish musicโ€ is wide open to interpretation, too: โ€œIf the composerโ€™s father was Jewish, or if he had a neighbor who was Jewish, that counts.โ€

Among the selections are Yiddish show tunes and labor union songs; gentle Hebrew and Spanish hymns; a selection from Nabucco, Verdiโ€™s opera about the plight of Jewish slaves under Nebuchadnezzar; the African-American spiritual โ€œDidnโ€™t My Lord Deliver Daniel,โ€ and two different versions of โ€œHallelujah,โ€ one of which is backed by a Middle Eastern drum.ย 

The rehearsal I visit happens to end on just such a โ€œHallelujah.โ€ Members filter out slowly, laughing with each other. While one singer is showing me her sheet music, weโ€™re all interrupted by Richert.

โ€œExcuse me!โ€ he calls out. Heโ€™s holding an object over his headโ€”a tin-foil-wrapped apple pie another member made for him. โ€œIโ€™m going home to eat my American pie! Thank you, everybody!โ€

[email protected]