The joy of musical resistance: Singing strengthens bonds, invigorates community


It was silent in the yoga studio that early Sunday morning, as about a dozen of us sat in meditation. After a certain amount of time, that silence cracked open when one of the women broke into song. While I don’t remember her name or what she was singing, I do remember the impact of her voice raised in song in that setting. It honoured the group and invited the collective to move from silence to active connection.

It was quite something — in the moment and, as my memory attests, it remains so in my mind and my heart all these decades later.

I can't really hold a tune, myself, but I love music and song, and I have been reminded of the power of both by watching what has been happening in Minneapolis. People are resisting in many ways, including by singing, which lifts my heart and moves me to tears.

A community organizer in Minneapolis was being interviewed by CNN’s Anderson Cooper about Singing Resistance, a group that organizes groups to sing together on the street and in public places. She broke into song to sing a brief excerpt of one of the pieces they sing. Oh, to have both the sweet voice and the glorious confidence to do that in a national television interview.

Locally here in Winnipeg, one university recently hosted a sister Singing Resistance event, in solidarity with Minneapolis. They acknowledged: “When the world feels unsteady, people gather to sing as an act of hope and solidarity … traditions of faithful voices choosing community over violence and hope over despair — part vigil, part community chorus ... the community coming together to raise voices in the face of injustice, fear, and the uneasy times we are living through. Singing Resistance is an open invitation to remember that even when things feel out of control, our voices still matter. And so does being together.” In a radio interview, one of the organizers said, “Signing together is a collective action; raising our collective voice is a physical thing, an embodied experience. It helps us process things.”

In the US, Bruce Springsteen wrote, recorded and released “Streets of Minneapolis” over just three days from start to end, then performed the song at the second Friday General Strike in that city last week. The video has already been viewed more than five million times.

Canada has our own songs of resistance, about which I know too little. You can listen to some here.

And then there is my perennial favourite with Patti Smith singing “People Have the Power” with Canada’s Choir! Choir! Choir! and a packed room of joyful-in-resistance singers. 

I still can’t sing on key or in tune, but I understand why raising my voice in song is both a viable way to resist and an important one.

NOTE: Winnipeg and Minneapolis are sister cities. Our Premier Wab Kinew and our mayor Scott Gillingham have both reached out to offer support to their counterparts across the border.

#iceoutnow 

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Land acknowledgement: I respectfully recognize that I live on the original lands of Anishinaabe, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation.

Photo by Олег Мороз on Unsplash

Comments

  1. Thank you Amanda. I needed an uplift this morning and you provided it. For sure the Boss has written a song that I predict we will all be singing by the end of the week.
    I can’t sing but Julie was a voice major in her undergrad work, voice like a choir of angels. I hope someday you can hear her.
    Xo

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    1. Oh, Ann, how I would love to hear Julie sing -- because that would mean I would be in your company, too, and wouldn't that be the finest of fine times... xo

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  2. Music has been my lifelong refuge at times when events in the world were too overwhelming for me to endure any other way. The words I wrote and the melodies I arranged around them always came with tears. Music has the power to drag me down into the dark abyss but then lift me back onto my feet with an insurmountable urge to fight, to change, to evolve. So I get it, as you have so eloquently orchestrated in your words today, the notes can be off-key, the melody can be simplistic, but it cannot defy the spirit that comes from the soul. Here is one of my own, written during a period when drought and disease were killing an entire continent. I wish I had one for Minneapolis, my birth city, perhaps I will have to work on that. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXJUSiN4M0E&list=RDUXJUSiN4M0E&start_radio=1

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    1. Steve - thank you for sharing the link to your YouTube page with all that music and song you have created. Wow, what talent you have, my writer friend.

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  3. Excellent article Amanda, thank you. My sister Sandra desperately wanted to sing in a choir. She applied to a choir in town, she took lessons from my other sister who can actually sing and teaches voice, she practised and practised. She went for the audition and was told that, no, she couldn't join the choir, she couldn't sing. When next she had a patient in her chair she told him about being turned down by a choir and she so dearly wanted to sing. He said, well, go to this choir, they take anyone....yes, it was that choir.

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  4. Amanda, I loved this!

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