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An open thank you note to the people who taught my kids to sing

In the span of five days, my son and his a ccapella group sang from a rickety river deck in Wisconsin’s North Woods, for surprised patrons of the Washington Inn, to his grandma and our next-door neighbors in the living room of our house, and in University Hospital’s ICU ward.

They sing for the love of music, of people, teamwork, harmony and each other. They sing because someone, somewhere taught them well.

I watched them crowd into my house Sunday afternoon, all sweatshirts and giant shoes, and deliver a sweet concert to three people with the same enthusiasm I’ve seen them muster for a screaming, auditorium-filling, sign-waving crowd. Someone, somewhere taught them to sing with joy.

This past Tuesday, I asked them to perform on very short notice, for Vinnie’s step-grandfather. They dropped their plans, and assembled in the ICU, a bunch of college students with a thousand things to do. Someone, somewhere taught them to that there’s honor in the gift of music.

Consider this an open thank you note to the people who taught these men to sing:

Behind every member of my son’s a cappella group stands the person who taught him to sing and the infinite joy that gift offers us all.

Should an a cappella group stop by your house, keep cookies and herbal tea on hand.
The group crowded into our living room and enthusiastically sang for a crowd of three, my mom and our next-door neighbors, Doug and Janet.
They dance a little, too.
Someone taught each one of these guys the joy of singing.
I had the wrong lens on to get the whole group, but you get the picture.
Here they are in the kitchen, getting ready to hit the road.
A little love for Grandma.

Enjoy a little taste of the house concert:

And here they are singing just for fun on the Oconto River bank:

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