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Event details

Apr
23

Choral Workshop with Sweet Honey in the Rock

  • Training/Workshop,
  • Arts,
  • Music, Music Theater, Musical Performance
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Join students from Princeton's departmental choirs in a collaborative workshop with the internationally acclaimed, three-time Grammy-nominated "Sweet Honey in the Rock" (founded in 1973). The workshop will include an intro conversation, an opportunity to learn music that the group will teach by ear and sing all together, and a Q&A.

In addition, don't miss Sweet Honey in the Rock's Performance: Celebrating 50 & Beyond at McCarter Theatre on April 24. Discounts available to Princeton students by emailing: solon.snider@princeton.edu.

Learn more

About Sweet Honey in the Rock

Sweet Honey in the Rock are a dynamic, virtuosic, all-female a cappella group with a repertoire rooted in African choral, blues, gospel, and jazz. Earning an international following since their inception in 1973, the group use only body- and hand-held percussion to accompany their vocalizations, if using any accompaniment at all. Formed in Washington, D.C. by , then vocal director of the D.C. Black Repertory Theater, the ensemble has changed membership over time, with over 20 women having contributed to a lineup usually numbering four to six. Sweet Honey in the Rock perform arrangements of popular and traditional works but compose much of their own music, which often focuses on women's issues and topics of social injustice, while also addressing family, community, and personal development-minded themes, including children's music. Their eponymous debut album was released in 1976 and was followed by 1978's B'lieve I'll Run On, 1981's Good News, 1983's We All…Every One of Us, 1985's The Other Side and Feel Something Drawing Me On, and the 1988 live album Breaths before they issued Live at Carnegie Hall later that year. The group also appeared on the Grammy-winning compilation Folkways: A Vision Shared - A Tribute to Woody Guthrie & Leadbelly in 1988 with their version of 's "Grey Goose." "A celebration of the roots, history and future of African-American culture," All for Freedom arrived in 1989. They continued to perform live and release material throughout the '90s, which saw In This Land, Still on the Journey, I Got the Shoes, Sacred Ground, and the compilation Selections 1976-1988. The children's album Still the Same Me was released in 2000, as was their soundtrack with for the TV movie Freedom Song. In 2003, they issued The Women Gather and Alive in Australia, which was followed by another live album in 2004, Endings & Beginnings. They released Raise Your Voice in 2005 and Experience…101 in 2007, a collaboration with the Alvin Ailey Dance Theater titled Go in Grace in 2008, and Are We a Nation? in 2010. Tribute: Live! Jazz at Lincoln Center appeared in 2013, a year in which they also performed at 's national memorial service in Washington, D.C.'s National Cathedral. Still going strong after over 40 years, their social networking-inspired #LoveInEvolution (including the single "IDK But I'm LOL") arrived in early 2016. ~ Marcy Donelson, Rovi

Ticketing for Workshop

Open to the Princeton University Community + the public (Free, Unticketed)

Event Details

University programs and activities are open to all eligible participants without regard to identity or other protected characteristics. Sponsorship of an event does not constitute institutional endorsement of external speakers or views presented.

View physical accessibility information for campus buildings and find accessible routes using the Princeton Campus Map app.

Date

April 23, 2026

Time

4:30 p.m.

Location

McAlpin Rehearsal Hall, Woolworth Center

Audience

  • Open to the Public
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