Grant funding has also made up fundraising deficits Orlando attributes both to the federal ripple effect and this year’s dual leadership transitions, as many grantmakers and individual donors value leadership consistency and thus shy away from giving to organizations with freshly minted leaders. The support has given the choir time and space to thoughtfully and intentionally move towards an organizational model deeply aligned with their mission, vision, and values. “We’ve been figuring out how to step away from a more conventional model of arts organization – an artistic director with a vision plans a season and gets everyone else on board – to a more committee-led model, where a group suggests songs, brings in songs from their traditions and life experiences, or writes and composes songs that speak to the moment. We’re learning how to organize and make decisions and reach consensus,” says Orlando. “Especially as things in the world have started changing, the idea of championing a new way to think about how arts organizations can be truly culturally responsive has become very interesting to us.” Drawing on his community organizing experience, Orlando has led the choir in establishing committees overseeing programming, partnerships, events, performance requests, and safety, which have already provided opportunities for singers to grow as leaders and take ownership over TRC’s trajectory.
While the year has certainly not been easy, Orlando and his choir feel galvanized rather than defeated. “To speak personally,” he shares, “when I joined [TRC], it just seemed like a really fun community choir. And that’s still true, but there’s an added layer now: There are narratives out in the world that we know are false and we need to counteract them by offering true stories of folks and their experiences that will help foster a better sense of community connection, a more welcoming attitude, more compassion. As bleak as things can look nowadays, when we all get together as a choir to rehearse, or sing at events in support of immigrants or refugees, our choir embodies and reflects back joy. That is our biggest superpower, and that’s what sustains and grounds us and keeps us coming back. We are joyful resistors.”