One Night Only

Cadogan Hall, London

The ‘One Night Only’ concert was alto Nicki’s first experience of performing with the Pinkies. Here she relives how she ‘popped her cherry’ and how being a part of the choir has transformed her life.

Performing with the Pink Singers on 4th June was my first concert in over 20 years and what a way to re-ignite my passion for music. All those years ago I studied piano at the Royal College of Music but I wasn’t one of the stars and unfortunately the experience sapped my confidence and with it my love of music. For the past couple of years I’d started to think about doing something musical and had thought about joining a choir, but I didn’t want anything too stuffy or serious. So soon after a friend of mine suggested that joining the Pink Singers would be a laugh, there I was auditioning.

The day of the concert itself was long, but I wouldn’t have changed any of it. We started the rehearsal and sound check at 12.30 and with only about an hour’s break before the concert we were already shattered and I can’t imagine how those of the choir who had built the stage beforehand were feeling. It must have been pure adrenaline that kept us all going. Just before the concert there was a ‘cherry-popping’ session where all of us newbies were given our pink rose – and we had the chance to get 1 of our 5 a day!

My first hurdle was getting onto the stage, which was alright on the night. Thankfully we had the rehearsal first and this was my opportunity to trip over the speaker without too many people seeing. When we finished the opening number and I hadn’t messed up the choreography and the audience broke out into hearty applause, I knew it was going to be OK. Despite several things going wrong in the run through somehow it all came together and between us we remembered all the notes and the words. The soloists and compéres did an amazing job, and one of my friends even said that no-one got the dance moves wrong. I’m not sure that’s true, but if the audience didn’t notice we’re not saying anything….

I had persuaded my mum and stepfather to come along on the night. My mum is very supportive, but bearing in mind that she is definitely not into choirs and got 9% in her school music exam I was nervous to know what they would make of it. I needn’t have worried though because I’ve never seen them so enthusiastic, and it continued for a good 30 minutes on the phone the following day!

So with the concert over and us all on a high it was time for the after show party. Although I’d only been with the choir for a few months I’d already been to a couple of the parties and I had an idea of what was to come. The play list had clearly been selected to include every choreographed song that the choir had ever done. At one point I found myself surrounded by about 50 people all swooping down around me as “Ain’t no mountain high enough” belted out of the speakers. I escaped early – at about 2am – because I knew I had to be up for the Pinkies brunch the next day. There’s officially no rest for a Pinkie….

😉

So less than three years after joining I’ve made so many amazing friends, I’ve travelled to India and Germany with the choir, arranged a song, led a project to re-organise how the choir runs and set up a band with two fellow Pinkies. Three years ago I couldn’t have imagined how my life would have transformed. Thank you Pinkies you’ve made me very happy. 

Timeline datestamp: 04 June 2016

Popping my pinkie cherry for the very best of causes…

Abi Kay Fresh-faced Pinkie Abigail gives us the low down on what the Pinkies have been up to this week!
Learnt the words? Check.
Know the choreo? Check.
Dressed in black? Check.
All warmed up? La-la-la check!
I was ready to get up and give it my all.
A few days ago, on Tuesday 17 May, a group of about 25 Pink Singers came together on the ninth floor of EY’s riverside building, and, against a stunning backdrop of the Thames, performed a set drawn from our summer concert’s all-glitz, all-glamour repertoire.
This wasn’t just any old corporate performance, though. We were there as guests of Unity, EY’s LGBT network, to help them celebrate IDAHOBIT – International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia.
1You may have heard it called IDAHO, IDAHOT or IDAHOBIT, but whichever acronym you use, 17 May is a powerful day which highlights the discrimination and violence which LGBTQ people face across the world and calls upon those with the ability to lead and make change to step up to the task. It was quite something, then, to stand as part of a group of 25 out-and-proud people and make our voices heard.
It was a very special evening for me on a personal level too, though. I joined the Pink Singers as a Soprano in February, not having sung properly in about six years, and it was my first performance with the choir!
May 2016I certainly didn’t imagine, two years ago at my first ever Pride, shortly after coming out to family and friends, that the choir I watched perform on the main stage would one day take me under their supportive wings. I remember turning to my best friend and saying, ‘you know, maybe I could do that.’ Well, now I’ve popped my Pinkie cherry – and I even got the choreography right…
This is just the beginning for me, and for us. Now I know I can perform while being upstaged by the Tower of London, I can’t wait to see what we can pull off for One Night Only on Saturday 4 June!

From an audition to a solo karaoke performance in just 2 weeks! My Newbie experience…

Newbie alto Zoe explains why she’s glad she chose the Pinkies when she decided to return to singing and how it didn’t take long before she found herself, microphone in hand, performing in front of the whole choir!

Newbie party Feb 2016
This season’s newbies!

To say I was nervous before my first rehearsal would be an understatement. I knew I wanted to join – I badly missed singing in a group – but I hadn’t sung ‘properly’ for over ten years, and I was frankly worried I’d forgotten how. Within moments of arriving, however, Rachel and her team of helpers were right there to welcome us, and I was swept along in a wave of positivity and friendliness – no room for nerves!
Newbie party Feb 2016From then on, it was great. Murray (our conductor) explained that while some of the songs were ‘old’, others were new to everybody, which helped me to relax even more, and stretch those rusty old sight-singing muscles. The choreography was a welcome break from sitting, and I was relieved to find I wasn’t the only one tripping over their own feet as we tried to follow along. Then the choir sang ‘Chandelier’ from their last concert for all us would-be newbies, and I was sold – this was why the Pinkies had stuck in my memory in the first place.
The audition itself couldn’t have been more friendly. Everyone wished us luck, and while my nerves had come back full-force as soon as I stepped back into the room with the panel, they were very sweet and understanding about that tremble in my voice. I fled to the pub once it was over, where once again all the Pinkies made an effort to be friendly, asking how the audition had gone and generally being supportive and lovely.
Newbie party Feb 2016There were so many people auditioning, I had to wait a whole week to hear whether or not I’d got in. By that time I’d been to a second rehearsal, and I knew I’d be really upset if the news was bad – but thankfully it was good! A few weeks down the line, I can’t imagine spending Sunday afternoons doing anything else. The whole choir has been nothing but friendly and welcoming, a feeling enhanced by the fabulous Newbies party, which gave me the chance to talk to people from other sections, as well as get involved in the (inevitable, in hindsight) karaoke…
Watch Zoe and the rest of the choir perform at our next concert, ‘One Night Only’, on 4 June at Cadogan Hall! Tickets are on sale now!

Popping the Pinkie Cherry

Rosie ThomasNewbie alto Rosie relives the ride that was her first season as a Pinkie…
As terrifying as the phrase sounds, ‘popping the pinkie cherry’ – or performing in your first concert – is nothing to be frightened of. Instead, it was a beautiful end to a whirlwind season.
Along with the other newbies, I started in September with trial sessions and auditions. I remember the excitement of those first weeks: watching the reunions after summer, listening to the repertoire for the first time, being welcomed at the post rehearsal socials, and having to face Monday mornings afterwards…

Newbies 2016
Last season’s newbies, from left to right: Rosie, Alicia, Clare, Eimear, Jamie, Ian, Phil and Paul.

As great as the Pinkies people are, and they are really great, I think it is the music that really draws you in: it’s what you devote four hours to every Sunday. I was really looking forward to singing Chandelier as it’s one of my favourite songs, and Sia is one of my favourite artists. As one of the younger members of the group, I also think I had a bit of a headstart on this number as one of our more ‘modern’ pieces… However, I’ve also loved discovering songs from before my time – Kate Bush and Joni Mitchell are now firm fixtures on my playlists – as well as learning poignant contemporary pieces such as bass Chris Chambers’ Quando Desinet.
We also had a baptism by open-mic fire at the weekend away in Carroty Wood, where Eimear, one of the other newbies, blew us away with her solo. “There is a wonderful balance between the social aspect of being in a choir and the high demands of the work. I felt supported instantly when I joined, particularly when I participated in open-mic night at the weekend away!” Clare and Jamie, other newbies, also made brilliant solo debuts alongside a newbie group performance of Miley Cyrus’ The Climb. I am not a solo singer, and was quaking at the thought of this, but we were ably rehearsed and supported by our multi-talented tenor, Hsien.
Pinkies Blue SkyThe hard work definitely started to pay off after our first public performance at Selfridges. This was the first time we had sung without having our music with us, and was a big step towards being concert ready. It was encouraging seeing a positive audience reaction for the first time, proven by the amount of people recording us on their mobile phones as they travelled by on the escalators!
The concert itself was a another giant leap. During the tech rehearsal, even though we were concentrating like a sports team preparing for a big game, I just wanted to step back and take in the performance we were creating. I loved seeing it all fit together – the smoke, the lighting and the accompaniment. All too soon it was over, our kazoos could be put away, and we were back from the land of Zanies and scootering nuns to friends and family and post-show celebrations. However, for me at least, the season has been one long celebration of being proud of who we are and what we can do. Eimear again put it perfectly: “My experience with the pink singers has been eventful and positive from the beginning… One thing is for sure, I’ll be back next season to relive all the fun again!”

Reflections of my first season

JeremyWe’re holding auditions next week for new Pinkies! If you’ve ever wondered what it’s like for a newbie, read Alto Jeremy’s latest blog post which takes us on a journey of what his first season as a Pinkie has been like and reflects on how he has found his voice, in more ways than one…
Pride London in 2014 was wet. Very, very wet. Like many people I was caught in the downpour before the parade started, and consequently heard my sodden feet squelch with every step I took as I proudly marched with the amazing Diversity Role Models. Upon arrival at Trafalgar Square I sat with the team in the tent and had a great view through the back flap (ooh err matron…) of the main stage. Part of the line up was the Pink Singers themselves, and as soon as I saw them, I developed an itch I knew I had to scratch.
I sang in choirs at school and even did some singing at drama school, but since then, my vocal cords hadn’t known much warbling outside of lone, drunken attempts at recreating the rap from ‘Doin’ the Do’ by Betty Boo (dates me, doesn’t it).

Newbies, literally popping their Pinkie cherries...
Newbies, literally popping their Pinkie cherries…

After encouragements from housemates and friends, I got in touch with the Pinkies in February as they were looking for folk. I think I was more surprised than anyone during my voice test as I sang higher than ever before and discovered that the upper end of my range was workable (heck, I wasn’t sure my singing voice was workable at all any more). They offered me a place in the alto section which I readily accepted, glad of the double challenge of a new range and in singing at all. Even a couple of years ago, karaoke was out of the question as singing in public scared the living daylights out of me, but that was all set to change, as with my appointment to my new section, I was officially a Pinkie ‘newbie’.
The concert this year was entitled ‘Key Changes’. Without wanting to stray into mawkish sentimentality, it rather aptly mirrored the reality of the choir marking a key change in my own life. I had a paucity of LGBT+ friends and influences in my life, I’m not sure to this day how that came into being, but I suppose that even in this day and age we can’t escape having to go at least a few extra steps to find each other out. I declared on the 1st January that I wanted to get out more and I got my wish.

Jeremy with his 'wives' in Mallorca
Jeremy with his ‘wives’ in Mallorca

No sooner had I joined the choir than I was told we were going to Mallorca to sing in Spain’s first ever International Queer Choir Festival, and that there was even a subsidy programme open to everyone (including newbies) that may be able to help those on a lower income. I was able to go on the trip and to say we had a ball would be an understatement. Friendships were solidified amidst the buses that only turned up when they felt like it, the free radioactive cocktails in the papier mache castle, and the terrible moments where people lost their skirts, their left shoe and the entirety of their fancy brassiere collection in an errant plastic carrier bag. Songs from the old repertoire were hastily learnt, with me and my fellow newbies holding our own pretty well alongside the seasoned Pinkies. Singing outside a castle in Andratx overlooking a lush green valley will stay with me forever. It would be wrong of me not to also mention the fact that whilst in sunny Mallorca, I acquired 13 wives. That took some explaining when I got back home believe you me!
The rest of the season saw more adventure. The wonderful Hand in Hand festival in Brighton was a highlight, especially as the franchise was born by the Pinkies in 2013. I wasn’t around for that, but felt so proud of the people I stood on stage and sang with in Brighton for having got it all going, ever grateful to them all that it exists now and that I am able to be a part of it. The only thing I will say is that sharing a house in Brighton with fabulous Pinkies can have a slight downside when the most hardcore party animal comes home at 6.30 am…having forgotten his key. It’s OK though, I let him live.

Performing at our 32nd birthday party..
Performing at our 32nd birthday colour block party..

The social side of things has been transformative. I almost long for a quiet weekend to myself these days (almost!). The last seven months or so have been liberally peppered with curry nights, scratch nights, theatre trips (always in exemplary company) and of course, due to recent developments, marriage celebrations. I even got into dance classes through a resting Pinkie, Rachel Sparks. ‘Irreverent Dance‘ is Europe’s first gender neutral dance space where I have been studying the Charleston, so soon enough I will be an ‘all singing all dancing’ Pinkie. The Pink Singers are a gift that keep on giving.
I have already written a separate blog entry about Pride. The march, the party and performing on the main stage in Trafalgar Square will be in my memories forever, framed with pure and unadulterated joy. To be in a queer space such as the choir is nurturing and comforting in the extreme. The choir’s attitude simply seemed to be ‘be yourself and we’ll roll with it’. Just what I needed, really. Not having to explain yourself every five minutes like you do in other situations, especially when like me, your gender identity is as queer as your sexual orientation. I wish everyone could have a space like this, really.
I could gush for hours about the fun nights out with various new chums, hilarious Facebook musings with everyone and bizarre conversations about ‘elbow stimulation’ (or whatever it was Cilla was extolling the virtues of whilst singing to us on a hillock) but that could get a bit much. I want to thank the Pinkies for giving me a place, in every sense of the word. I never knew I could sing like this, and I really really love that I can. They’ve taken me in, accepted me and respected me, and there are no words for how that makes me feel.
JeremyIn the summer concert I was entrusted with writing and delivering a speech that helped to segue one section of the concert into another one. I slightly misunderstood the brief, I think, as I went slightly away from solely discussing the upcoming songs. I used it to speak of the themes and ideologies behind the coming section, speaking of individuality, identity and intersectionality. I also spoke of being spat on by Billy Bragg (he didn’t mean to, I was quite chuffed to receive my ‘leftie anointment’) and it went down rather well. I thought I would be told to change it, but I wasn’t at all. In fact, people liked its different and unique approach.
I was given a platform, trusted to use it well, and did so with all my fellow Pinkies right behind me, literally as well as figuratively. Disbelieve me if you will but people have come up to me in the weeks since and say they ‘recognise’ me from the concert and have chatted to me about how it all went, utterly bizarre but a lot of fun. If you’d told me a year ago that this would happen you’d have had a very highly-raised eyebrow out of me to say the least!
I have a new voice, in every way, and I look forward to using it in choir both as the new Alto Section Leader, (thanks for your votes everyone!) and in my support of the Community sub-group with the inimitable Sarah Coleman at our helm. This really was one of the best decisions I have ever made. I just need to learn the choreography a bit quicker this season!