This MLK Weekend marked the 6th anniversary of my participating in the interfaith Shabbat service that brings together The Temple and Ebenezer Baptist Church here in Atlanta. It’s an electrifying, meaningful, and important evening of interfaith prayer, music, and connection. I look forward to it every year because I help lead the band that accompanies […]
Rise Up
HG&P 2017 Year in Review
2017 was a great year for Hello, Goodbye, & Peace. The year started off with our annual MLK Interfaith Shabbat Service where HG&P serves as the house band, accompanying the joined choirs of Ebenzer Baptist Church and The Temple. Including 3-4 original HG&P compositions is always a personal highlight but nothing beats joining arms and […]
Rise Up Baltimore!
When my colleague, Rabbi Sarah Marion, from Oheb Shalom in Baltimore reached out and asked for the music to Rise Up I was delighted. At the same time, I wondered if there’d truly be enough time before Rosh Hashanah to rehearse the song with their local church partner and pull it off. Lo and behold, […]
Every song writer’s dream
I logged in to Facebook today to find that I’d been tagged in a post. But it wasn’t just any post. It was a post from my NC based songleading colleague, Penny White. And it included a video of her teaching my song, Rise Up, at her community camp in NC. As you might imagine, […]
A Joyful Noise at #CCAR17
The Central Conference of American Rabbis just wrapped up a truly inspiring convention here in Atlanta. With deep themes of social justice, the power and importance of the rabbinate, the need to build coalitions across and beyond faith lines, and more, the more than 500 conference attendees (myself included) returned to our home communities energized […]
So honored to be on NPR
Last week I had the unique privilege and honor of being interviewed on 90.1 WABE: Atlanta’s NPR station. I want to thank Lois Reitzes for her gracious questions and for shining a light on “Rise Up”, The Davis Academy, and my music more generally. As an avid listener and supporter of NPR there’s really no […]