Charlottesville Women’s Choir celebrates three decades of activism
(Charlottesville, Virginia)
Charlottesville Womens Choir celebrates three decades of activism
Shea Gibbs
5/27/14
A recreational choir, started by amateur singers around a coffee shop piano, shouldnt last 30 years. The demands of everyday life and the challenges of finding new members simply shouldnt allow it.
But dont tell that to the ladies of the Charlottesville Womens Choir...
...The daytime homeless shelter in downtown Charlottesville is perhaps the ideal place for the Charlottesville Womens Choir to celebrate three decades of harmonizing. The groups goal is to sing uplifting music about womens rights, peace, justice, and equality. Over the years, the members have lent their voices to HIV/AIDS walks, racial justice rallies, peace vigils, and sexual/domestic violence marches, among other events. Annually, they sing for their fellow females at the Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women...
...One of the correctional facility favorites is Uh Huh, a jaunty, defiant number about passing the buck for ones woes. Most of the songs the women sing, though, have a more sober tone and message. For Phillips, the song that has resonated most over the years is Gracias a la Vida. MORE at link posted above.