news&views Winter 2025 | Page 32

“ You’ re always learning new songs and trying to remember them. My memory isn’ t what it used to be, but it stretches that muscle. It’ s been good for me.”
– Don Werner
seniors homes, and hospitals to spread joy in the community. Among them is retired teacher and ARTA member Don Werner, who has been a dedicated member and a lead in the chorus for nearly twenty years.
“ I like the four-part harmony,” Don says.“ Somebody blows a pitch pipe, you take that note and then separate it into whatever part you’ re singing.” Barbershop is an arranging style built on close, four-part a cappella harmony. The four parts are lead, tenor, baritone, and bass. The lead carries the main melody, while the tenor harmonizes above it. The baritone adds richness by filling in the middle notes of the chords, often singing close to the lead’ s range. Providing the low-end harmonies, the bass anchors the sound.
Some members of Grove City, like Don, are now retired, but there’ s no minimum age requirement to join. The chorus also has younger singers and university students who help carry on the legacy of barbershop harmony.“ I’ m the oldest in the group,” says Don,“ but I haven’ t been singing barbershop the longest— some of the guys started when they were very young and have been part of a chorus for almost forty years!”
Rehearsing weekly for barbershop has been fulfilling for Don in his retirement.“ I think it has helped me physically and mentally,” Don says.
“ You’ re always learning new songs and trying to remember them. My memory isn’ t what it used to be, but it stretches that muscle. It’ s been good for me.”
Don finds barbershop singing deeply rewarding, not just for the music itself, but also for the many heartfelt moments it brings. He recalls one Christmas when the chorus visited a local hospital, singing carols and hymns to bring holiday cheer to patients and their families. At the end of the evening, a nurse approached them with a special request from a family whose father, an elderly German man, wanted to hear“ Silent Night.” One of the members sang a verse in German,“ Stille Nacht,” moving the family to tears. A few weeks later, Don was stopped in a grocery store by one of the family members who recognized him.“ You don’ t know what that meant to us,” they said. Their father had passed away shortly after Christmas, but the song had brought him peace in his final days.
The joy that singing can bring to others is one of the most meaningful parts of barbershop harmony, a feeling that keeps members of the chorus coming back week after week.“ There’ s a camaraderie,” says Don.“ It’ s a good bunch of guys that like to get together to sing and make music.”
If you are interested in joining or want to learn more, you can visit the Grove City Chorus website at ebhchorus. ca / join-us.
32 | arta. net JOY