2007年VOA标准英语-African Children’s Choir Brings Joyous Music to(在线收听) |
By Greg Flakus
Backstage, she is too shy to answer many questions, but she will perform one of her favorite songs: “This little light of mine, I'm going to let it shine,” she sings. One of the adult supervisors on this current tour of the United States is Barnett Twesi Gomwe, who joined the choir when he was a child to escape a life of poverty. "I ask myself what would I have been? Would my life have been different? Of course, it would have been very different," he says. "Not all of them can come this way,” he says. “These ones are just ambassadors to show the people that there are so many more back at home who need their help." Help comes in the form of donations, as well as revenue from sales of children's choir merchandise. Here in the American South, singing in church is generally quite spirited, and the kids from Uganda were a big hit. One man amazed by the performance said, "It was outstanding. It was one of the best concerts I have ever seen inside a church - and I have seen my share, too!” The children, aged 6-10, continue their schoolwork as they travel. They also broaden their horizons by seeing other parts of the world and meeting people along the way. Barnett says each group that goes out on tour must learn all the songs, how to perform them and how to work together as a unit. "The children start from scratch, and it takes five months to put together the program," he says, adding that the experience changes them in ways that are apparent when they return to their home villages. The African Children's Choir mostly performs in churches and auditoriums when on tour, but they have also appeared on major U.S. television programs, and one of their songs was used on the soundtrack of the recent movie Blood Diamond. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/4/38106.html |