Our Story

 

Vision Statement

We envision a caring city where vulnerable persons are encouraged and affirmed through the arts.

Mission Statement

The Norfolk Street Choir project will engage the community to encourage and support our neighbors in need through service and arts opportunities in a joyful, affirming and safe environment.

Programs 

The Norfolk Street Choir

o  Year round activity

o  Weekly Tuesday morning rehearsals and instruction

o  Performance and collaborative opportunities

o  Participants earn bus passes at every rehearsal

o  Led by Artistic Director Robert Shoup

Expressive Arts Collaboration with EVMS

o  Year round activity

o  Weekly Friday morning group art activity

o  Opportunity to paint, draw and create individually and collaboratively

o  Collaborative projects with the Choir including performance components

o  Participants earn bus passes for participation each Friday

o  Led by EVMS Graduate Art Therapy program faculty member Matthew Bernier

Breakfast

o  100-160 served each week morning prior to Choir and Art

o  supported by community based team of volunteer partners

Showers

o  NSCP provides showers in our 4 unit shower trailer each Tuesday and Friday with support from community organizations and volunteers

Mail Service and Document Assistance

o  Through our dedicated Outreach Coordinator, Stephanie Van Leeuwen, our neighbors are able to reliably receive mail and get help in a number of areas including phone acquisition, ID and other document services, and connection to other sources of assistance.

Liason to services 

o  Freemason Street Baptist Church’s clothing closet

o  Case workers and representatives from the City of Norfolk/Community Services Board

o  Eastern Virginia Medical School Street Medicine services

o  Haircuts

Possible expanded programming (in development)

o  Advanced musical training for select NSC members

o  Neighborhood sings for jail/prison/hospital communities

o  Support for recently housed individuals

 

 
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A Valentine’s Day Origin

By Robert Shoup

Not every organization or program has such an easily pinpointed beginning as ours. On February 14, 2016, I was co-directing a brass choir concert program at Freemason Street Baptist Church, a congregation situated in the heart of Downtown Norfolk. The date had been the only one available to the musicians involved, so we constructed a program that would express love not in a romantic Valentine’s Day context, but in the vein of agape love – universal love for all of humankind. To set the tone for this event, a student from Old Dominion University was invited to speak about the role of music in marginalized communities. At the moment I heard her speak the words “homeless choirs,” my imagination was immediately energized. After more than two decades of leading choirs of all kinds, I had never heard of – let alone considered leading – a choir comprised of people experiencing homelessness.

That was the spark – and in the months that followed, research led me to discover exceptional individuals around the world who were at the forefront of a new and exciting movement. With direct and generous input from Jonathan Palant of the Dallas Street Choir and Dónal Noonan of Atlanta’s Homeward Choir, a proposal was presented to the leadership of the church that summer, and The Norfolk Street Choir was launched in September. From the beginning, we have been gifted with involvement and input from the greater community, a hallmark that remains vital to our operation.

 
 
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Our People

 
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We are

your

NEIGHBORS

We are your neighbors. We live near one another whether in houses, shelters, apartments, in cars or on streets.

We are sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, mothers and fathers. We have families, aspirations, and dreams.

We may be experiencing homelessness, physical or emotional health challenges, financial crisis, or addiction. We have abilities and disabilities. Some are employed, others are without jobs or unable to work.

We are charismatic and shy, courageous and determined, talented and hard-working. We laugh and cry and worry and believe. We feel anger and compassion, joy and despair.

We awake every day and keep moving… to persevere, to rise up, to fully live in the neighborhood we inhabit.

We are not defined by our challenges, but by our personhood. Our worth is not determined by our status or power, but by our having been created as complete persons… just like you.

We are William. Karen. Cliff. Mike. Bob. Tracy.

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Our Streets

are Songs

We all travel on streets. On them, we get from one place to another, moving from here to there. Streets are a pathway of journey, discovery, and experience.

From wherever we began, through whatever obstacles we have faced, we have lived the stories of the songs we sing.

We sing of dreams and identity. We sing of betrayal and hurt. We sing about leaning on one another and about feeling alone. We sing about the promise of better days, and the determination to see today through.

The roads and streets and boulevards we have traveled are songs.

We know this because every week we sing them with full-throated conviction, with vibrating air carrying our stories from our hearts and lips to the world around us.

The songs we sing are the stories of our streets. And they are the stories of your streets, too.

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we find

Connections

When you or I sing in a group with others, we recognize that we don’t have to walk alone with our burdens.

When we sing in a group with others we realize that we have something important to offer – something beautiful and worthy of our effort.

When we sing in a group with others we understand that we don’t have to be perfect to belong… that we can grow and learn and be valued even with our imperfections.

When we sing in a group with others, we have a community that is safe, where we can contribute to something bigger than us.

We are connected with our fellow singers… and with our leaders and volunteers and partner organizations.

We are connected to our audiences and our entire community.

We are a choir… connected by life and song.

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Partnerships

 
 
 

Volunteers & Service Partners

In addition to tending to the needs of our neighbors’ hearts and spirits, we continually collaborate with many organizations who provide care and guidance for individuals affected by homelessness:

The Dream Center Organizes showers and distributing basic hygiene items and providing new undergarments

Eastern Virginia Medical School Student led Street Health is onsite every Friday providing medical care and assistance

Ghent Area Ministry

Freemason Street Baptist Church Provides a biweekly clothing closet for our guests

Norfolk Community Services Board Case workers are on site every Friday helping with housing and other needs

Bright View

Gateway

 
Norfolk Street Choir performing at annual Project Homeless Connect at the Scope Arena in Norfolk, VA

Norfolk Street Choir performing at annual Project Homeless Connect at the Scope Arena in Norfolk, VA

Special Project

Partners

From new, original arrangements, live performance projects, a feature-length documentary film, and other collaborations, we have been inspired by the collaborative spirit of our many colleagues!

EVMS Art Therapy Graduate Program Essential partners in the production of our Expressive Arts Program which offers creative opportunity every Friday morning

Glen McClure Celebrated photographer and creator of a portrait book, Neighbors

James Hosay Composer, arranger, recording artist

Local Musicians and Artists including drummer Warren Weiss, bassist Berkeley Smith, poet Larry Giddens, artists contributing to the NSCP store, and professional singers including Brandy Bollen, Sarah Haigh, Caroline Morse, Gary Montgomery, and Matt Kelly.

WHRO Producers of a feature-length documentary film about NSCP and Emmy-Award winning short feature, “Curate 757: When Art is Born of Struggle”

CAPS Coalition Against Poverty in Suffolk, fundraising event collaborators

The Planning Council Annually we plan and host the Longest Night Vigil for the Tidewater SCC Region

City of Norfolk

National Alliance for Music in Vulnerable Communities (NAMVC) National organization built by program leaders from across the United States, including our own NSCP.

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our Staff

Robert Shoup, Founding Artistic Director

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Mr. Shoup also serves as Director of Music at Second Presbyterian Church, as well as Chorus Master and Staff Conductor for the Virginia Symphony Orchestra.  For more than two decades he has led a wide variety of amateur and professional choirs, and has been featured in commercial recordings, television broadcasts, and large scale events like the 400th Anniversary of Jamestown, the Virginia International Tattoo, and many collaborations with the Virginia Arts Festival and other arts organizations.  “It is a privilege to work with our NSC singers each week… while I hope to teach them something of singing and telling their stories, they teach me every week about hope and perseverance.”

Stephanie Van Leeuwen, Executive Director and Outreach Coordinator

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Stephanie oversees both the administrative aspects of the NSCP and its various service-related aspects including our breakfast and shower trailer programs, as well as coordination with our many service partners from the City, including the Community Services Board, EVMS Street Health, Ghent Area Ministry, Freemason Street Baptist Church’s Clothing Closet and New Life Church. She is also active photographing/posting activities of the Choir and Art Programs.  Stephanie’s heart for our community experiencing homelessness led her to complete training and work with city officials to process clients seeking assistance for housing and other services.

Matthew Bernier, EVMS Art Therapy Program Faculty

Matthew is working with us in cooperation with EVMS where he works with students who are earning degrees in Art Therapy. Matthew was a key contributor to the launch of our Expressive Arts program in the fall of 2020 when our choir was unable to sing due to the Covid 19 pandemic, overseeing the graduate students who created and operated the program in its first year. Matthew joins us more directly in 2021 to run the program in collaboration with our staff, bringing many years of passionate work in Community Arts work to bear. Matthew has created programs in theater for individuals who have experienced incarceration, and is passionate about the art of puppetry!

Patrick McCleese, Operations Manager

Patrick is the newest member of the NSCP Staff, and brings a great deal of experience to his role which includes supporting the overall operations of our many programs. Patrick has been a presence with us for some time as a part of the shower trailer team, and his new position as part of our staff extends his work to include engagement throughout our operations. We are very excited to include Patrick and his kind-hearted, thoughtful presence to our staff!

Steve Kolb, Street Choir Accompanist

Steve is a familiar face in the music community of Hampton Roads, having performed and taught throughout the region in a variety of capacities. Equally at ease playing classical, jazz, or popular styles, Steve brings a passion for teaching and sharing to his role with the Street Choir, and - aside from lending musical support - helps to create an atmosphere of joy and laughter to rehearsals (often musically!).

Carl Warren, Chorus and Food Manager

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Carl’s unique blend of experience and skills allows him to serve two very important roles in our programs.  As Food Manager, he prepares and oversees the kitchen and volunteers for weekly breakfast service to our community, and prepares food for NSC singers when special events take place near meal times.  As Chorus Manager, Carl processes singers’ check-in and check-out every Friday, distributes bus passes and other items, and supports logistics for concert and other special events at which the NSCP has a presence. “I am grateful to have experienced the growth of the NSC from its modest beginning to the success it has become. Each of our members have unique gifts and talents that they give to create a positive community experience.”

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SCROLL DOWN to see all news items

 

Post-Covid Brings Active Schedule to Choir October, 2022

After more than a year of no singing, then several months of “easing in” to a rehearsal routine, this fall has seen our Choir return to a very high level of activity, appearing in both NSCP produced events and private invitational conferences. October brought the inspiring Opening of the Glen McClure “Neighbors” exhibit at the Slover Library, and November will feature the Choir’s second “Sing” of the year in the parking lot at Freemason Street Baptist Church. Both of these events were organized and produced by the NSCP, but the choir is also responding to numerous invitations from area organizations. In October, the Choir sang at the Virginia Librarians Association Conference at the Norfolk Marriott (their third appearance at this event in the past several years), and in November the Choir will open the Governor’s Tourism Summit at The Main in downtown Norfolk.

After so much change, growth and adaptation, it is a joy to see the Choir making its mark on our community once again in so many places!

Singers to Appear at Prime Plus August, 2022

Just two days after the SUMMER SING program at 2nd Presbyterian, a small group of singers from the Choir will appear at Primeplus Senior Center in Norfolk to sing and talk about “Why We Sing.” We are excited to have been invited to share the story and music of the Choir with seniors in the Norfolk community who look to Primeplus as a source of support in their pursuit of social, emotional and intellectual wellness. We are honored to be a part of that effort by this important United Way Agency!

SUMMER SING! The Choir Returns in its first Post-Covid Public Event - Including Expressive Art! August, 2022

It’s been a long time! While the Choir sang last December for Norfolk’s annual Homelessness Vigil, they have not appeared in a public event of their own since 2019, before the pandemic forced a long hiatus from singing. Also marking the Choir’s first-ever summer event, the singers will present “Summer Sing” at Second Presbyterian Church in Norfolk at 4 p.m. on August 14. This fun new format will invite everyone who attends to sing along on every song, and will also include contributions from guest instrumentalists and our partners from across the USA.

In another exciting first, the program will incorporate elements of the Expressive Arts Program, an ongoing collaboration between the NSCP and the EVMS Graduate Art Therapy Program. The stage area will be flanked by colorful banners that were created by our participants, and there will be performance elements (including puppets!) that were made to reflect messages in the choir’s songs. We are grateful for Matthew Bernier and his collaborative spirit as the Expressive Arts director, and are excited about a day that we know will be full of joy!

Arts Programs Extended to Year-Round Operation June, 2022

The Street Choir and Expressive Arts programs have been offered in the past from September through May each year, taking a break through the summer months as food and service programs continued during all 12 months. Recognizing both the need these programs meet for the community and the NSCP’s capacity to extend these programs, 2022 marks the first time that all of its programs will follow a 12 month schedule, assuring that continuity of participation and access can take place. The impact of this expansion will be felt in many ways, most importantly in the joy and meaning they provide to our neighbors.


Artistic Director to Present at VMEA Conference November 2, 2021

Artistic Director and Choir founder Robert Shoup will be presenting a session about our organization to music educators from across the Commonwealth on November 18 at the Marriott Hotel in Downtown Norfolk. This session will provide the NSCP a chance to share its story and vision with musicians who may not be aware of the kind of work that is possible with choirs in their communities. The session will share information about the unique challenges and opportunities that characterize our work, and will hopefully inspire the larger musical community to think about ways they might address needs in their towns and cities.


Choir Member Johnnie Driggins wins Songwriting Prize October 20, 2021

We are excited to announce that one of our Choir’s charter members, Johnnie Driggins, has been selected as a winner of a national songwriting competition that was sponsored by the Dallas Street Choir. The Competition theme was “Home Is,” and was designed as an “effort to further [The Dallas Street Choir’s] mission to bring art to those affected by homelessness.” Johnnie’s winning song was “Don’t Give Up” which our audiences may recognize from NSCP concerts and the documentary “City Voices: from Homelessness to Hopefulness.” Congratulations, Johnnie!


Welcome to two exceptional new leaders! September 8, 2021

As we launch our fall programming with an expanded schedule, we are also excited to welcome two gifted leaders to our artistic programming staff. Matthew Bernier is a faculty member of the EVMS Art Therapy program and a passionate advocate for community arts. He oversaw graduate students who helped us to launch our Expressive Arts program last year, and we are delighted to report that he will now be in charge of this program, leading our friends in art projects every Friday. Matthew brings a wealth of experience and knowledge to this role, and we are already learning what a wonderfully collaborative, creative, and compassionate colleague he is.

Also joining our team this fall is one of Hampton Roads’ most exceptional pianists, Steve Kolb. Steve is joining the choir as its new accompanist, and brings a breadth of unique skills to bear. He is an excellent teacher, gifted improviser, and caring collaborator who will support our singers both musically and in spirit.

We are thrilled to have Matthew and Steve as part of our team - welcome!


THE CHOIR IS BACK! September 7, 2021

After a 17 month hiatus due to the Covid 19 pandemic, our beloved choir is finally singing again! We have waited a very long time to welcome our friends back to a singing experience, and are overjoyed to again be filling the air with inspiring sound. Because risks remain, we are taking a number of precautions to protect our participants, including mask wearing and the use of two powerful HEPA filtration units. We will return to songs that the choir has loved the past few years, but will also introduce some new material including Bruce Springsteen’s “The Rising,” and more! We don’t know when a return to public performance will be possible, but in the mean time we are grateful for the chance to encourage and lift up one another each week in rehearsal!


Now Tuesdays and Fridays! SCP Doubles Program Profile September 1, 2021

As vaccinations and increased availability of tools allows life to resume a bit more normally, the NSCP is excited to launch a new expansion of its outreach to the community by adding Tuesdays to our program profile. Since our inception in 2016, we have offered services each Friday. This weekly addition of help for our neighbors will increase safety, comfort, health and opportunity for those who need assistance and help to find it. Both days will offer breakfast, showers, and artistic programming, and Fridays will continue to offer access to the FSBC Clothing Closet and EVMS Street Health services.


Supporting Our Neighbors: NSCP Grows as a Hub for Homelessness Service November 24, 2020

While the tenet of “Supporting Our Neighbors” is at the very heart of The Norfolk Street Choir Project, its importance has grown during this pandemic. Over the last 7 months, we have been well positioned to bring together resources across the community and provide a safe place for our neighbors to receive care and support in ways that would otherwise be closed or difficult to access during this pandemic.

On Friday mornings, in addition to our warm breakfast, mail pickup, refuge from the weather, and art programming, one can expect to find access to:

  • A warm shower and basic clothing needs (t-shirt, underwear, and socks) thanks to the generosity of our friends at Soap Chips, New Life Church Ghent Campus, and Hospital Services

  • Clothing closet access to things like pants, shirts, coats, and shoes thanks to the kindness of our friends at Freemason Street Baptist Church

  • Doctors via a Telehealth program and in-person basic medical care thanks to the continued presence of our friends at EVMS Street Health

  • Housing and other City Services thanks to the continued support and presence of the Community Services Board of Norfolk

  • Computer-based and basic identification services thanks to the heart of our friends with Ghent Area Ministries

  • Snack bags thanks to the compassion from our friends at Grace Bible Church and First Baptist of Norfolk

  • And at scheduled times, access to flu shots thanks to aid from our friends with the Bon Secours Care-A-Van and haircuts thanks to various barbers in the area

We could not be more thankful for the growing list of partners and their willingness to work together to provide access and care for our community.



Beauty Is in Their Hands: Art Program Invites Expression & Community November 24, 2020

Our organization was born through the vision of forming a choir - and developed quickly into a laboratory for self expression and community building as singers gathered each week to rehearse, learn, and work together to add beauty to the world around them. The Choir is not an end, but a means of providing encouragement and affirmation in a community that too rarely experiences such support.

When our Mission Statement was developed, we intentionally embraced a vision broader than the choir, opening possibilities for other avenues of encouragement as our young organization prepared to step out on its own.

Mission Statement

The Norfolk Street Choir Project

will engage the community 

to encourage and support our neighbors in need 

through arts opportunities 

in a joyful, affirming and safe environment.

This decision appears to have been providential with the arrival of Covid19, which has forced all group singing to come to a painful and unwelcome halt. We are all eager to get back to singing when it is safe. Fortunately, we had already planned for our organization to expand our artistic offerings, and so were well positioned to pivot to a new program that would encourage and support our neighbors.

The Expressive Arts program that was launched in September is another example of community collaboration that has been a hallmark of NSCP’s operation since its start. Led by Art Therapy graduate students in cooperation with our staff, this effort has been a welcome point of joy in the midst of a pandemic that is particularly hard on those affected by homelessness. Our community partners do all they can to help alleviate practical needs, but this program helps to lift spirits and remind us all that there is beauty in community, and community in making beauty.

One recent Friday project involved making art of our hands - and it was inspiring to watch our friends express their identities and experiences through their hands. Many are colorful and vivid, others more realistic. All of them are beautiful, and reminders of the wonder and possibility that lives in us all.



Meet Tyrone November 24, 2020

Tyrone’s smiling face has been a steady presence in with our Expressive Art Program. While Tyrone is a man of few words, his art speaks volumes.

Tyrone grew up attending school and playing sports in Norfolk. He shared that he studied art at Norfolk State University for awhile. He loves the foundation of art and thinking about the underlying reasons the artist creates a particular piece. His desire to look beyond the surface of different pieces of art explains why his art pieces have become a favorite with the other Expressive Art Program participants.

“My favorite thing about the Friday Art Program is the variety of materials that you have available. Each week we are given a new project and access to so many different materials to create our art. You didn’t just give us crayons and paper, but you allow us access to really explore art in different ways.”

Tyrone’s advice to everyone is to “Pay more attention to your health and less attention to things and to always be respectful to your mother.”

 

 

A Piano Has a New Home… at the NSCP! November 24, 2020

The community that is served by the NSCP has been shown generosity in many forms, from financial gifts and donated materials to devoted volunteers and community partnerships. Generosity found a new expression recently when a beautiful Yamaha P2 piano was gifted to our organization, providing us with a new and exciting way to encourage our community in need through music! Our generous donors, Joyce and Bill Wooldridge, have long supported efforts in their community. Joyce served as principal of Community School in Roanoke and her church work has included service as Elder, development of Stephen Ministry and writing curriculum for Sunday School, which she also taught. Bill has served as a Trustee of the Virginia Historical Society, President of the John Marshall Foundation and of the Norfolk Historical Society, and on the boards of WHRO and the Library of Virginia Foundation.

Reflecting on their decision to donate this beautiful instrument, Joyce wrote,

“Music was always part of my family: my grandmother on one side was a concert soprano in New England, and on my father’s side barbershop quartets were always practicing downstairs as I went to sleep.  But my parents couldn’t afford the piano lessons (or piano) that I craved.  When my grandfather died in 1981, he left me some money, and I knew that I would buy a piano.  I did, and have both enjoyed it and struggled to learn to play it. It has been loved and cared for, and I can not think of a better home for it than the Street Choir, whose members also crave music.  It has found a good home!”

Bill is a retired vice president of Norfolk Southern Railway, and author of Mapping Virginia, From the Age of Exploration to the Civil War. Joyce and Bill are soon to be former residents of Suffolk as they move into their new home in Norfolk.

We at the NSCP are deeply grateful to the Wooldridges for a gift that has been thoughtfully and personally donated so it could bring joy to others. From the bottom of our hearts, thank you for this beautiful and supportive act of generosity and care for our neighbors in Norfolk!

 

 

Meet Board Member and Treasurer Terry Shaw November 24, 2020

Role with NSCP: Treasurer, Board member

Profession: Fiscal Administrator, Chesapeake Transportation System, City of Chesapeake

Resident city: Norfolk

I was first introduced to the Norfolk Street Choir in 2018. That year, I was a member of a church choir which sang along with the NSC in concert, and it was an eye-opening experience for me. I was so moved by the joy, camaraderie, and sense of purpose that the NSC displayed as they sang. The looks on the faces of the choir members when the audience applauded their efforts brought me to tears.

The Norfolk Street Choir Project was designed to provide for the physical, emotional and spiritual needs for those in our Norfolk community who are most vulnerable. This program gives the participants a chance to express their creativity, along with an opportunity to give back to the community by using their gifts and talents to bring joy to others. It instills them with dignity, usefulness, and self-worth.

When the time came for the NSCP to become an independent nonprofit entity, I was honored to be asked to serve as the NSCP’s Treasurer. I am privileged to be a part of this organization and to be able to utilize my skills and resources to further the mission of this project.

- Terry Shaw

 

Providing supplies

Providing supplies

Preparing breakfast

Preparing breakfast

Portable shower facility

Portable shower facility

Welcoming volunteers

Welcoming volunteers

Expressive Arts Hands Project

Expressive Arts Hands Project

Expressive Arts Hands Project

Expressive Arts Hands Project

Expressive Arts Hands Project

Expressive Arts Hands Project

Expressive Arts Hands Project

Expressive Arts Hands Project

Tyrone creating a heart design

Tyrone creating a heart design

Tyrone’s name art

Tyrone’s name art

Tyrone’s clay art

Tyrone’s clay art

Beautiful Yamaha P2 piano re-homed to the Norfolk Street Choir Project!

Beautiful Yamaha P2 piano re-homed to the Norfolk Street Choir Project!

Bill and Joyce Wooldridge

Bill and Joyce Wooldridge

 
NSCP Treasurer Terry Shaw

NSCP Treasurer Terry Shaw

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 Media

Coverage

Norfolk Street Choir infuses dignity with a dose of music - Baptist News Global, June 5, 2019

‘City Voices’ concert features individuals impacted by homelessness - WVEC-TV, May 19, 2019

Concert to support Suffolk’s Homeless - Suffolk News-Herald, April 5, 2019

Norfolk Street Choir: Curate 757 (Video) - WHRO, December 19, 2018, 2019 Emmy Award Winner

Norfolk Street Choir Shares Hope Through Music - WHRO, May 1, 2018

Norfolk Street Choir joins other voices for “Street Requiem” to honor the homeless who’ve died - The Virginian-Pilot, Nov 9, 2017

They may not have homes, but members of this Norfolk choir have voices - The Virginian-Pilot, April 15, 2017, Award winning feature, Society for Features Journalism’s Excellence in Features

Norfolk Street Choir has a voice (Video) - The Virginian-Pilot, April 14, 2017, Award winning feature, Society for Features Journalism’s Excellence in Features

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National

Alliance

 
 
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NATIONAL ALLIANCE FOR MUSIC IN VULNERABLE COMMUNITIES

The NSCP is proud to be a charter member of the NAMVC, newly incorporated as a 501(c)3 non-profit service organization in 2019. Our Founding Director, Robert Shoup, serves as the NAMVC’s first Vice-President, and was an active participant in the organization’s conception and creation, contributing to meeting in Dallas and Los Angeles with directors from across the country. Created to advocate for and educate about the work of groups like the Norfolk Street Choir, the NAMVC hopes to engage leaders from all over the United States to encourage the creation of choirs and other musical opportunities for vulnerable communities.

Click here to learn more!

 
 
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