Anna Crusis Women's Choir

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Anna Crusis Women's Choir, "Stand UP! Sing OUT!", December 7, 2014
Anna Crusis Women's Choir, poster by Gale B. Russo for June 14, 1980 Concert
External video
video icon Anna Crusis Women's Choir, I Ain't Afraid, with Holly Near, 2017
video icon Anna Crusis Women's Choir, The Anna Crusis Women's Choir: A Feminist Choir, MIND TV

The Anna Crusis Women's Choir is the oldest existing feminist choir in the United States, and is considered to be a founder of the North American LGBT choral movement.[1][2][3][4] It was established by Catherine Roma in 1975 in Philadelphia, in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.[1] Including both lesbian and straight women,[5] Anna Crusis is the earliest formed of the Gay and Lesbian Association of Choruses (GALA)[6][7] and the first women's chorus to become a member of GALA.[8]

The choir is named, not for a person, but for anacrusis, a musical term for "the unaccented – or 'feminine' – upbeat that sets the stage for a downbeat."[9] The choir focuses on music by, for and about women, and has commissioned pieces from a variety of composers.[10] It also recovers and performs historical pieces by women composers.[11]

Politics and Process[]

Signer James Rowe applauds, December 7, 2014

Anna Crusis has a strong educational and social mission, performing music from all over the world and addressing issues of peace, justice and equality both on stage and off.[3][12] They have a long history of supporting LGBT issues, frequently performing with other groups at events such as International Women's Day[13] and Philly Pride.[14]

An amateur community choir, performing a cappella, Anna Crusis places a strong emphasis on inclusiveness, welcoming female singers of all ages and sexual orientations.[5][15] The choir has included both physically impaired and hearing impaired singers, and traditionally includes a sign language interpreter at its concerts.[16] Although singers must audition, the choir includes singers of all levels of musical training ranging from those who do not read music, to those with professional training.[17]

Artistic Directors[]

Catherine Roma, 1975-1983[]

External video
Anna Crusis Catherine Roma June 6-7 2015 40th Anniversary concert.jpg
video icon Catherine Roma, Anna Crusis in Philadelphia is where all the sparks began to happen, GALA Choruses

Catherine Roma was born in Philadelphia and attended Germantown Friends School, a Quaker School. Roma earned degrees in music (BA) and choral conducting (MM) at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and became involved in lesbian and feminist politics while studying there.[18] While in Wisconsin she worked with historian Ann D. Gordon to identify music by and about women throughout history, creating the folk opera American Women: A Choral History for the United States Bicentennial.[11] After returning to Philadelphia in 1975 to teach music at Abington Friends School,[18] she formed the Anna Crusis Women's Choir, which performed American Women: A Choral History at a number of colleges throughout the northeast.[19]

By starting Anna Crusis, the first feminist women’s choir in the United States, Cathy Roma became one of the founding mothers of the women's choral movement.[20] Her beliefs in feminism, social justice, and Quaker models of leadership fundamentally shaped the mission and direction of Anna Crusis.[18] Decisions were often made through a process similar to Quaker consensus, in which all members had a voice.[21]

Cathy Roma left Anna in 1983 to pursue a graduate degree in music at the University of Cincinnati's College-Conservatory of Music, receiving her Doctor of Musical Arts Degree in 1989. In Cincinnati Roma founded .[18]

Jane Hulting, 1983–2005, sabbatical 2003[]

Jane Hulting, 2015

With the departure of Cathy Roma, the future of Anna Crusis became uncertain.[5][22] However, the choir was able to connect with Jane Hulting, originally from Minnesota. A graduate of the Conservatory of Music in Kansas City, Hulting moved to Philadelphia in 1983 to attend the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania. She became musical director of Anna Crusis in 1984.[23] Under Hulting's direction, the choir's repertoire continued to be innovative, including a wide variety of languages and musical styles.[17]

Jacqueline Coren, interim 2003, 2005-2011[]

External video
Anna Crusis Jacqueline Coren June 6-7 2015 40th Anniversary concert.jpg
video icon Jacqueline Coren, The Anna Crusis Women's Choir: Directing a Choir , MIND TV

Jacqueline Coren's first involvement with the Anna Crusis Women's Choir was as a singer. When Jane Hulting went on sabbatical, Jackie stepped in as interim director. When Jane left, Coren auditioned for the choir's board of directors and was eventually selected as the new musical director of the choir. Jacqueline Coren holds both a master's degree in choral conducting from Westminster Choir College in Princeton, New Jersey and a master's degree in divinity from Quaker Earlham School of Religion. In addition to her work with Anna Crusis, she worked as choral director at the George School, a Quaker school in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and formed the . Anna Crusis continued to perform a broad range of music, often reflecting political and social concerns of choir members of the choir who supported Anna Crusis' mission of social change through music. The choir continued to collaborate with other groups, including performing with Holly Near in a concert, participating in GALA's Equality Forum, and singing in a merged chorus with the Philadelphia Gay Men's Chorus and the Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia.[17]

Miriam Davidson, interim 2011, 2012–[]

External video
Conductor Miriam Davidson 2014-12-07 DSCF0928 Crop.jpg
video icon Miriam Davidson, Women feel like Anna gives them a place to be strong, to have a voice, to have a sense of sisterhood, GALA Choruses

Like Jackie Coren, Miriam Davidson's first connection to Anna Crusis was as a singer, in the 1980s. Beginning in 1995, she performed as part of the duo Wishing Chair.[24] When Jackie Coren went on sabbatical, Miriam temporarily replaced her as interim director. When Jackie Coren retired as musical director, Miriam replaced her as the new musical director of the choir.

Discography[]

  • But We Fight For Roses Too, 1989, remastered in 2010
  • Fresh Cut, 1993
  • Spaces Between the Stars, 2000
  • The song Visions of Children, on Seeds: The Songs of Pete Seeger, Vol. 3, 2003
  • Anna Live: Raising Our Voices, 2007
  • Sing Truth to Power, 2018

Works commissioned[]

  • Sappho, composer Anna Rubin, 20 minute piece for women's choir, 7 instrumentalists and narrator, first performed June 1978.[25]
  • Eurydice (1978), composer Chester Biscardi, text by H.D., for women's chorus and seventeen instruments, first performed 1 December 1979.[26]
  • Oda a las Ranas (Ode to Frogs), composer Vivian Fine, text by Pablo Neruda, first performed 13 June 1980.[27]
  • Betty Crocker, composer ,[28] text by , first performed 5 June 1982.[29]
  • Wind Horse (A Sound Mandala), composer Pauline Oliveros, first performed 1992.[30][31]
  • Daughter, Awake With the Moon, composer , text by , first performed, 1992.[10]
  • Word of Mouth (Ode to Yemaya), by , first performed June 1994.[32]
  • Sophia (In memory of Ray Henry), composer , text by , first performed 19 November 1994[33]
  • My Voice: a work in 3 movements for women's choir and percussion (My Voice, Vines Entwined, Don't Mess with Me), composer Jennifer Higdon, first performed 1995. (3d mvt, "Don't Mess With Me" premiered, whole piece the next June.)
  • No One Has Imagined Us, composer , text by Adrienne Rich, first performed 1997
  • New Face, composer Janika Vandervelde, text by Alice Walker, first performed July 2000, GALA Festival with , and Anna Crusis Women's Choir[34]
  • Finding Her Here, composer Joan Szymko, text by , first performed 14 May 2005[35][36][37]
  • She Sweeps With Many Brooms, composer , text by Emily Dickinson, for women's voices and saxophone quartet, first performed 14 May 2005[36]
  • The Oldest Feminist Choir (A Quilobet), composer Judith Palmer, text by , first performed 14 May 2005. (Many other works by choir member Judith Palmer have been performed by the choir over the years.[17])
  • The Shape of My Soul, composer Andrea Clearfield, text by , for women's voices and string quartet, first performed 14 May 2005[36][38]
  • Madrigals for the Information Age, vt. The Cell Phone Madrigals, composer , text by , first performed 2006
  • Consider Krakatau, composer , text by , co-commissioned and first performed by the Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia, Philadelphia Gay Men's Chorus, and the Anna Crusis Women’s Choir, May 1, 2009.[39][40]
  • Into the Light, composer , text by , co-commissioned and first performed by the Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia, Philadelphia Gay Men's Chorus, and the Anna Crusis Women’s Choir, May 1, 2009.[40][41]
  • Voyage: I, Too, Can Sing a Dream, composer Cynthia Folio, co-commissioned and first performed by the Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia, Philadelphia Gay Men's Chorus, and the Anna Crusis Women’s Choir, May 1, 2009.[40][42]
  • Blessed be, composer Joan Szymko, text by Robin Morgan, first performed June 2015 (40th Anniversary)
  • Her Name Was, written by SistaStrings, Minneapolis, MN. Adaptation for full choir first performed on December 14, 2019.[43]

Main Concerts / themes / guest artists[]

Anna Crusis Women's Choir, poster with Pete Seeger and Reggie Harris for January 27, 1995, concert

Anna Crusis sings a variety of concerts throughout the year, often with other organizations. Its main performances are its winter concert, usually held in November or December, and its spring concert, usually held in May or June. Concerts have included:

Miriam Davidson[]

  • December 14 & 15, 2019, "Keep Hope Alive" with Sister Cities Girlchoir.[43]
  • June 1 & 2, 2019, "Beyond Boundaries" (Also a joint performance with Philadelphia Gay Men's Chorus June 22, 2019 to commemorate 50th Anniversary of Stonewall)[44]
  • December 8 & 9, 2018, "Declaration of Inter Dependence"[45]
  • June 2 & 3, 2018, "Sing Truth to Power"[46][47]
  • December 2 & 3, 2017, "Song is a Traveler", with Moira Smiley[48]
  • April 21, 2017, "Now More Than Ever", with Holly Near[49][50]
  • December 10 & 11, 2016, “This Land is Our Land”
  • June 3 & 4, 2016, "Stronger for the Struggle"
  • December 5 & 6, 2015, "Sound Mind: Your brain on music"
  • June 6 & 7, 2015, 'Reclaiming the “F” Word', 40th anniversary concert, with all four conductors[51][52]
  • December 6 & 7, 2014, "Stand UP! Sing OUT!" with special guest [53]
  • June 7, 2014, "Beauty Unmasked: Songs of Strength, Wisdom and the Beauty Inside"[24]
  • December 7 & 8th, 2013, "Hungry for Justice" in partnership with Philabundance and .[54]
  • December 1 & 2, 2012, "Simply Love: A Marriage Equality Event" with members of Philadelphia Gay Men's Chorus and [55][56]

Jacqueline Coren[]

  • December 10 & 11th, 2011, "Breaking News: 'Anna'dotes to the Headlines," with guest .[57]
  • June 12, 2010, "35 years of singing for social justice," artistic director Jacqueline Coren, with guest conductors Catherine Roma and Jane Hulting.[16][58]
  • November 14 & 15, 2009, with guests and .[59]
  • May 30, 2009, "All Our Children Can Fly," with guest .[12]
  • June 2007, "In the Cradle of Our Land"
  • December 2, 3, 4, 2005, "And All the Earth Shall Sing"

Jane Hulting[]

  • May 14, 2005, "Finding Her Here", last concert with Jane Hulting[36][60]
  • Dec. 4,5, 2004, "Seasons of Love"
  • Dec. 6, 7, 2003, "All the Wild Wonders"
  • Dec. 7, 8, 2002, "Workin’ for the Dawn of Peace"
  • Dec. 1, 2, 2001, "Something Inside So Strong"
  • Nov. 11, 12, 2000, "Sounds of the Spirit Where Angels Live", with guest Harold Smith on didgeridoo
  • Nov. 13,14, 1999, "Higher Ground"[61]
  • Nov. 14 15, 1998, "Coming into our years – 150 yrs. of feminism in Action", a Musical Celebration of the 1848 Women’s Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, NY
  • June 6, 1998, "No one has imagined us", Anna Crusis Women's Choir with Renaissance City Women's Choir (Pittsburgh), ACCO, A Chorus Celebrating Women (Allentown), and Central Pennsylvania Womyn's Chorus (Harrisburg)[62]
  • Nov. 15, 16, 1997, "When Choirs Sway"
  • June 7, 1997, "Anna Gumbo"
  • Nov. 8, 9, 1996, "Mama, I Want to Make Rhythm"
  • June 8, 1996, "Reach Across the Lines"
  • Feb. 26, 1996, reception for The Women's Leadership Forum of the Democratic National Committee and the Five County Democratic Women's Coalition, honoring First Lady Hillary Clinton and Tipper Gore
  • Jan. 27, 1995, "Common Threads" – The Concert! with guests Pete Seeger and Reggie Harris
  • Nov. 10, 11, 1995, "Celebrating 75 yrs of Women’s Suffrage", with Sacred Ways Dance Company
  • Nov. 9, 1994, "Joyful Recognition of the Feminine in all our lives", performed Sophia by Julia Haine
  • June 11, 1995, "Women's Voices: Women's Strengths", performed Word of Mouth by Nehassaiu deGannes.[32]
  • April 1992, "A Harmony of Voices," with guests Karen Saillant and Don Kawash, in partnership with the Bucks County commissioners' Advisory Committee on Women[10]
  • June 8, 1991, "PeaceWorks", protesting Operation Desert Storm.[31]
  • April 26, 1985, 10th anniversary concert
  • June 8, 1984, first spring concert with Jane Hulting

Catherine Roma[]

  • June 11, 1982, final concert with Cathy Roma as director[22]
  • June 1978, with first commissioned piece, Sappho by Anna Rubin[25]
  • June 1977, with guest conductor Kay Gardner[25]
  • 1975 American Women: A Choral History, a Bicentennial folk opera[63]

The Themis Award[]

As of 2009, the Anna Crusis Women's Choir created the Themis Award, named for the Greek goddess of visionary justice, to honor women dedicated to social justice, equality and peace, from the greater Philadelphia area.[12] The following women have been honored:

  • Jane Golden, 2009, Executive Director of the Philadelphia Mural Arts Program[12]
  • and (posthumously), 2010, Jewish real estate brokers who worked to ensure that the Mount Airy neighborhood of Philadelphia was diverse and racially integrated.[9][16][64]
  • First United Methodist Church of Germantown (FUMCOG),[65] 2011, a reconciling church, for its commitment to being inclusive, diverse, and activist.[66]

Awards Received[]

References[]

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External links[]

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