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What if the place you feel most yourself is the second row of a choir, sitting tall on the edge of the chair, breath matched to a hundred others? That’s where we meet Paige Sisk—grandmother, artist, and lifelong chorister—whose journey runs from a children’s choir in a small Methodist church to the bright lights of the Blumenthal with the Charlotte Master Chorale.
We talk about the people who forged her sound, especially the legendary Catherine Painter, and the habits that never left: posture, vowel shape, musical courage. Paige shares how she balanced life as “Jamma” with the pull to keep creating—art at home, errands and dance pickups, then nights shaped by rehearsal and community. The story broadens into the language of choral music itself: German that demands intention, Latin that steadies the line, Russian that carries weight, and spirituals that open a room in an instant. With conductor insights and smart rehearsal culture, she’s learning to hear the “why” beneath every phrase, from Duruflé’s Requiem to seasonal programs that stretch skill and heart.
The conversation turns to meaning. A surprising share of choral standards are sacred, even on secular stages, and Paige has watched those texts meet real needs—at nursing homes, shelters, and community concerts where a single line can move someone who hasn’t spoken all day. Choir becomes a social miracle: strangers align breath and become one voice. Along the way, we revisit weddings sung, youth tours chaperoned, and the small-world ties linking friends, conductors, and former colleagues across years.
If you love choir, mentorship, and the quiet ministry of shared song, you’ll find something here—craft, courage, and the reminder that music heals when we get out of the way. Listen, share with a friend who needs a lift, and subscribe so you never miss a story that keeps you singing.
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