'AROUND TOWN A Song In Their Hearts Members of the Bel Canto Choral Society have a real love of vocal music Denise Ogden directs. DONNA RAPHAEL Special to The Jewish News 0 n a warm Monday even- ing in June, the halls of Southfield-Lathrup High School are alive with the sound of music. The 35 members of the Bel Canto Choral Society are rehearsing. Accompanist Rochelle Barr plays the chords, as musical director Denise Ogden leads the women's voices up and down the musical scales. Her body and hands moving gracefully with the music, Ogden almost dances as she guides the singers in harmony. The women standing in three lines form an arc around the director. When their vocal exercises are com- pleted, they move on to a work by George Gershwin in preparation for an upcoming performance. The women of the Bel Canto Society come from a wide range of professional backgrounds — law, teaching, social work, marketing. Their ages range from the 20s to the 60s. Jewish and non-Jewish, they come together for the sheer joy of making music. Members say the group is an outlet for their creative musical expression. Bel Canto is an Italian phrase meaning "beautiful song." For 40 years, the Bel Canto Choral Society has been bringing beautiful songs to audiences from Flint to Cleveland. Specializing in Yiddish and Bel Canto performed recently at Beth Shalom. Hebrew songs, the ensemble has become a mainstay in the Detroit Jewish community, playing hundreds of concerts at synagogues, temples, organizations, nursing homes and the Jewish Home for Aged. Last spring, the group was the on- ly choir invited to perform at a pro- gram sponsored by Temple Beth El to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the State of Israel. Now the group is achieving recognition beyond the Jewish com- munity. Its Chanukah concert last year at the downtown branch of the Detroit Public Library was so well received the group was invited to per- form again last spring and already has a concert date at the library for this December. "It was a wonderful, heart- warming performance," says Leonard Kniffel, assistant to the coordinator of library branch services. "Their pro- gram encourages a sense of unity and desire for world peace. It was inspir- ing to listen to." Dedication is the glue that has kept the group together through the years. "We have had a nucleus of peo- ple dedicated enough to carry it through or else we wouldn't have lasted this long," says Freda Mendelson, of Southfield, a member since 1972. Enthusiasm and pride are hallmarks of the women who make up the Bel Canto choir. "We have increased the degree of difficulty of the works we perform as we have become more discerning through the years," says Mendelson. Barbara Cash, of Oak Park, a member for more than 30 years says: "There is a certain degree of challenge in the Bel Canto Choir. If we are not the major leagues, we cer- tainly are good semi-pros." Through the years, the chorale has built a solid reputation. "This has always been an all-women's group singing a singular repertoire, in- cluding Yiddish and Hebrew material, along with arrangements of popular and classical numbers," says Cash. Bel Canto has performed for countless organizations in the Jewish community. "It provides a good ser- vice to the community and is always on tap to groups who are looking for good entertainment," says Daniel Braude, of Farmington Hills, who served as musical director for 14 years, from 1971 to 1985. Members express a need for the THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 47