The Cohesion of Sound and Spirit: Making The Revival Album
Posted Oct 8, 2024
Troy Anthony, a Black composer and musician, stands in a wood-lined recording studio surrounded by mic stands and singers. He his laughing joyously as he plays a keyboard, wearing a striped t-shirt and headphones
Since premiering his performance The Revival: It Is Our Duty on Juneteenth 2021 as part of The Shed’s Open Call program, Troy Anthony has taken his music around the country and the world. He has also founded The Fire Ensemble, a group he describes as a “choir community.” In its first three years, The Fire Ensemble has been incubating at The Shed since 2022, assembling an intergenerational group of singers for rehearsals and performances at The Shed and elsewhere. Under Anthony’s direction, the ensemble has explored new ways of collaborating at the intersection of artistic practice and community-building.
Troy Anthony is seen from behind, his arm in the air leading a choir as they sing in a vaulted, wood-lined recording studio. The choir stands in front of Troy, facing him and us. In the foreground, Troy is reflected in the smooth black surface of a piano.
As a ritual performance rooted in what Anthony describes as a “church service without religious ideology,” The Revival has become foundational to The Fire Ensemble. In 2022, the choir presented a second production at The Shed. This summer, on June 15, Anthony gathered the choir in the recording studio to make an album. Within the vaulted, cathedral-like space of Power Station at BerkleeNYC, the group spent the day capturing the joyful connection they’ve created in rehearsal and their past performances.
Troy Anthony stands in front of choir members with his arms both spread out joyously above his head. The choir members are seen from behind, with their attention on Troy.
In the studio, Anthony can’t coach the choir as he would in rehearsal, so he has to find other ways to communicate, embodying the sound and its direction for the singers.
A row of choir members stands in front of a row of microphones, facing Troy Anthony (who we see from behind). The choir members where t-shirts and tank tops, casual summer attire, and are smiling and laughing as they pay close attention to Troy.
Over the past three years of developing The Fire Ensemble, Anthony has come to know the choir’s members, their stories, and why they have come to this community.
Choir members gathered in the recording studio stand in a row with eyes closed, heads slightly bowed, and hands crossed over their hearts.
In moments in the studio, he saw their stories reflected by their embodied performances.
A member of the choir, a Black woman wearing a flowy, blue-and-gold floral printed shirt, sings into a microphone. Her face is slightly upturned, and her eyes are closed in concentration. She holds her hands up in front of her chest, embodying the energy of her song.
Two worlds exist side by side in the process of recording an album. While the choir brought joy and song to the studio, the engineer and co-producer, Tom Gardner and Will Stone (who co-produced with Anthony and Sam Appiah), contributed their own rigorous dedication to their work in the booth. They were instrumental in translating what happened in the studio so that the album recording will best capture The Fire Ensemble’s own story.
Two men are seen from behind sitting in a recording studio booth. In front of them is a control panel and through a window they look out on a choir in the studio.
Since the recording session, Anthony has reflected on what that day means to the choir community he founded. The Fire Ensemble is proving that community-engaged artmaking leads to creative excellence, and that democratizing artistic space and process is, in fact, necessary to excellence. “The cohesion of sound,” in the words of Darren Biggart, The Shed’s director of civic programs, who is currently guiding the end of the ensemble’s incubation, “comes from the existing cohesion of spirits.”
Troy poses with the choir after the recording session. They are all smiling, holding up peace signs, and celebrating their work.

Get involved

The Fire Ensemble’s final season of rehearsals at The Shed runs through the end of the year. To join, fill out this RSVP form.

To support The Fire Ensemble in making The Revival album, learn more about donating to the group.

Photos: Tori Mumtaz.
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ONGOING COLLABORATION
An intergenerational choir community dedicated to using song and ritual as tools for collective liberation centering BIPOC and LGBTQIA+ folx
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