About Us
Our mission is to restore the joy of singing to day-to-day life and to heal our community through singing.
Since November 1994, we have brought the thrill of singing to hundreds of people, and our concerts have entertained thousands more.
ABOUT | OUR TEAM | GALLERY | SONG REPERTOIRE | NEWSLETTER
OUR STORY
A PLACE WHERE EVERY VOICE HAS A HOME
For more than thirty years, our chorus has been a place where people of all backgrounds come together simply for the joy of singing.
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The idea for a chorus of everyday people — even those who believed they “weren’t singers” — had been forming in my mind for years when the Church of the Holy Apostles invited me to create their community chorus in 1994.
In the 1980s, I traveled throughout the U.S. and Europe leading vocal workshops. Many participants came because they thought they couldn’t sing or that they “had no voice.” I realized this had to be a modern phenomenon. A century ago, when families gathered around the piano to sing together, no one would have imagined they were unworthy to join in. Many of our greatest folk songs began as work songs — sung collectively by people at their labor. It’s hard to picture someone silently working on the sidelines because they thought they “didn’t have a good voice.”
Today, perhaps because technology has turned us into spectators rather than participants, or because modern life has grown more complex and anxious, few people have the chance to sing together.
When the Church of the Holy Apostles invited me to begin this work, I knew its long-standing commitment to social justice made it the perfect home for this experiment. What we’ve created here is a place where anyone can come to sing — without judgment, without auditions, and without fear. We believe everyone has a voice, and that singing should be open to all.
We embrace every musical style and include as many kinds of music as possible. Singing can be challenging, surprising, and profound — but above all, it should be joyful. We invite everyone who wants to rediscover that joy to join us in song.
Jack Eppler, Founder and Artistic Director
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Our logo reflects the spirit and values of our chorus — a modern, graphic interpretation of a treble clef. Its spiral form captures the heart of who we are, symbolizing inclusiveness, interconnectedness, unity in diversity, and the continual growth of our community. It represents more than music — it embodies the belief that every voice belongs and that, together, we create something greater than ourselves.
OUR TEAM
Jack Eppler, Founder and Artistic Director
Jack Eppler asked the Church of the Holy Apostles in 1994 to host a chorus open to anyone in the community without having to audition. The chorus has grown from a handful of people to nearly 100 singers and continues its original mission to restore singing to the day-to-day lives of ordinary people. The chorus has commissioned numerous new compositions over the years and presents two standing room-only concerts each year.
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As a professional chorister, Eppler sang under the batons of Leopold Stokowski, Zubin Mehta, Christoph von Dohnányi, Gerard Schwarz, Roger Norrington, and Kurt Masur, as well as with the New York City Opera. He was bass soloist at the acclaimed Bach cantata series at the Lutheran Church of the Holy Trinity in Manhattan. Operatic roles include Guglielmo in Cosi Fan Tutte with the Young Artists Opera, The Old Maid and the Thief with the Bay Chamber Opera, and Trouble in Tahiti with the Mannes Opera Theatre, all in New York City. He was soloist with the Birmingham (Alabama) symphony in a Porgy and Bess concert.
Eppler’s meticulous attention to text has earned him praise as a singer who can be understood. Numerous composers have written for him. His innovative recital repertory stretches from the twelfth through the twentieth centuries. He toured Israel and Japan in Dolmen Music by composer Meredith Monk, and sang the premieres of performance pieces by composer Tan Dun and choreographer Jerry Pearson.
He teaches voice at his Greenwich Village Studio, and is delighted to teach singing to acting majors at the New York University Tisch School of the Arts.
Ok Kyun Kang, Associate Music Director
Ok Kyun Kang is a pianist, composer, and music director from Seoul, South Korea who has worked with various ensembles and organizations in North America, Asia, and Europe. As a composer, her works include incidental music for Hamlet at La MaMa Theatre, the chamber opera Sleepy at Moon Theatre in Seoul and the musical Christmas Carolyn at the Cleveland Playhouse.
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Recent music direction credits include Voyage: Musical Vignettes at the Spoleto Festival in Italy and Dido and Aeneas at the National Theatre of Korea in Seoul. She earned her BM and MM in Music Composition from Yonsei University and her MFA in the Graduate Musical Theatre Writing Program at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University. Currently she works at New York University and Barnard College/Columbia University as a collaborative pianist.
Sean Manucha, Director of Development & Operations
Sean Manucha is a New York City-based arts administrator. He has been serving as the Director of Development and Operations at the New York City Community Chorus since 2023, and he is constantly inspired by the community’s commitment to sharing joy through music.
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He has worked in various arts administration roles at his alma mater, NYU, as well as in the Executive Office of the Metropolitan Opera. Sean is passionate about the Chorus and believes in its mission of restoring joy to the day-to-day lives of New Yorkers. He holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from NYU Tisch School of the Arts.
Balancing Accessibility and Artistic Challenge
OUR MUSICAL APPROACH
We always include music that is accessible for our singers, many of whom are untrained, while also choosing pieces that offer a meaningful artistic challenge. Over the years, a number of composers have enriched our repertoire with newly commissioned works and arrangements, contributing to the depth and variety of our musical seasons.
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As a non-professional, non-audition music ensemble, the New York City Community Chorus has commissioned an extraordinary number of new pieces. Sixteen commissions in 20 years! We do this for several reasons: 1) we want to support the work of professional composers/arrangers; 2) we want our members to have the stimulating experience of creating new music; and 3) from time to time we need special music in support of our eclectic, theme-driven programs.
Ok Kyun Kang
Ain’t I A Woman
David Brunetti, Arranger
Varsity Drag, arrangement of the song by Ray Henderson, Lew Brown, and Buddy DeSylva
Philip Corner
Counterpoints: Winter Holiday
Organ Om
Well, Come Well!
Thomas Garber
The Divine Teachings of St. Francis of Assisi
Adoshem Roi, arrangement of The Lord Is My Shepherd by Antonin Dvoràk
Blessing for the Kindling of the Chanukah Lights, arrangement of the traditional liturgy
Chanukah, arrangement of the song by Sholom Secunda
Fond Memories of Ivye: Three Chassidic Tunes
How Ya’ Gonna Keep ‘Em Down on the Farm, arrangement of the song by Walter Donaldson
Daniel Goode
Again and again, based on Noch Amol Un Take Noch Amol, traditional Yiddish children’s song
Say Your Piece
John McDowell
Woods Suite (commissioned for our tenth anniversary)
Marcel van Rootselaar
Song of Praise
Michael Wimberly
Kosayambey
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I Never Felt Such Love In My Soul Before
Tell All My Father's People Don’t You Grieve for Me
Come and Go with Me to That Land, arr Pamela Warrick-Smith
Couldn’t Hear Noboby Pray, arr. William Dawson
Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel
Do don’t touch-a my garment
Dry Bones
Great Day
Swing low, sweet chariot
The Blind Man, arr. William Grant Still
This Joy that I have, Gullah song
This Old Hammer, arr. Walter Ehret
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Lead me, guide me, Doris Akers
O Holy Night, Gospel version, arr. J. David Williams
Sweet, Sweet Spirit, by Doris Akers
Walk Him Up the Stairs, from Purlie, by Gary Geld
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If Music Be the Food of Love
Sumer Is Icumen In
April is in my mistress’ face
Ave Verum Corpus, W.A. Mozart
Come let us start a joyful song
Evening Prayer, from Hansel and Gretel, Engelbert Humperdinck, arr. Thomas Garber
Gesú Bambino, Pietro Yon
Glory to God, from Messiah, by G.F. Handel
Gower Wassail, arr. Jerome Epstein
He Watching Over Israel, from Elijah, by Felix Mendelssohn
The Heavens are Telling, Ludwig Beethoven
L’Homme Armé, arr. Jerome Epstein
My Man’s Gone and Leavin’ for the Promis’ Land, from Porgie & Bess, by George Gershwin
O Felix Anima
Nativity Carol, by John Rutter
Peace, be still, Philip Corner
Psallite, Michael Praetorius
Salvation is Created (Russian)
Song of the Hebrew Slaves, Giuseppe Verdi
Two Hallelujas, Philip Corner
Watchman, Tell Us of the Night, by Alan Hovhaness
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Satisfaction
Purple Rain
I Fought the Law
Help
We’ll Meet Again
All I Want for Christmas Is You
Ain't No Sunshine
Let's Stay Together
You Are the Sunshine of my Life
A minuit fut fait un réveil, 16th century French noël
Ah ya Zeen, Arabic folk song
Ain’t Misbehavin’ by Thomas Waller, audience
Angels we have heard on high
Blowin’ in the Wind, Bob Dylan
Blue Skies, Irving Berlin
Bye Bye Blackbird
The Christmas Song (Chestuts roasting…), Mel Tormé
Frosty the Snowman
The Gospel Train
Go Tell It on the Mountain
God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen
Hit the Road Jack
Home for the Holidays
Il est né, le divin enfant
Jingle Bell Rock
Joe Hill
Joseph est bien marié, 16th century French noël
Joy to the World
Les bourgeois de Châtre, 16th century French noël
Let all mortal flesh keep silence
Let the Sunshine in
Let there be peace on earth
Lift Every Voice and Sing
Look for the Silver Lining
Let the Sunshine in
Let there be peace on earth
Lift Every Voice and SingLook for the Silver Lining
Look to the rainbow
Of the Father’s love begotten, plainchant
Maoz Tsur (Rock of Ages)
Moscow Nights, V. Solovyov-Sedoy
Nér li
O Channukah
O Come, O Come Emanuel
O Ihr Kleine Lichtelech
Over the Rainbow
Pack Up Your Troubles
Goodbye! from The Producers
Rise up Shepherd and Follow
Simu shemen
Solidarity Forever
Stille Nacht
This Land Is Your Land, Woody Guthrie
Union Maid
Vine and Fig Tree
We Shall Not Be Moved
We Shall Overcome
We Wish You a Merry Christmas
Winter Wonderland
You’re the Top, Cole Porter
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A la Media Noche (Puerto Rican aguinaldo)
A la ru (Spanish folksong)
Acht Kleine Bruder (Yiddish folksong)
African Noël, arr. André Thomas
Alegría (Puerto Rican aguinaldo )
Bebe Jesu, O Betelehem (Nigerian)
Cuando el Rey Nimrod (Ladino folksong, arr. Matthew Lazar)
Dansaron, Catalan (Provençal)
De Tierra Lejana Venimos (Puerto Rican aguinaldo)
Down by the waters of Babylon (American round)
Drey Zikh, Dreydele (Yiddish)
Free and Equal Blues
Going Down the Valley (Mennonite)
Hard Times, Come Again No More (Stephen Foster)
Hava na shira, Hebrew
I am a Little Dreydl, Yiddish, arr. Zuckerman
Il est né, le divin Enfant!, traditional French, arr. Nicholas Burt
I’ll Take You Home Again, Kathleen, Irish
La Virgen Lava Pañales, Spanish
My Home the Beautiful Steppes, Mongolian national hymn
O Channukah, Yiddish
O men from the fields, Irish
Pastores a Belén, Puerto Rican aguinaldo
Quanno nascette Ninno, Italian
Si Me Dan Pasteles, Puerto Rican aguinaldo
Simple gifts, American, arr. Aaron Copland
Tum balalaika, Russian
The Virgin Mary Had a Baby Boy
The Voices That Are Gone, Stephen Foster
We Wish You a Merry Christmas
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Messe de Minuit pour Noël, Marc-Antoine Charpentier (1700)
Glory To God, Alan Hovhaness
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Aunt Dinah Has Blowed the Horn, Scott Joplin
Before the parade passes by, from Hello Dolly!, by Jerry Herman
The Begat from Finian’s Rainbow, by Burton Lane and Yip Harburg
The Eagle and Me from Bloomer Girl, by Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg
The Farmer’s Daughter from Bloomer Girl, by Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg
Fugue for tinhorns from Guys and Dolls, by Frank Loesser
Hooray for What? by Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg
How Are Things in Glocca Morra from Finian’s Rainbow, by Burton Lane and Yip Harburg
It Was Good Enough for Grandma from Bloomer Girl, by Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg
Leave the Atom Alone from Jamaica by Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg
Oklahoma! Medley by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II
Music of the Night from Phantom of the Opera by Andrew Lloyd Weber
Seasons of Love from Rent by Jonathan Larson
Send in the Clowns, from A Little Night Music by Stephen Sondheim
Sympathy Waltz from The Firefly by Rudolf Friml
That Great Come and Get It Day from Finian’s Rainbow, by Burton Lane and Yip Harburg
There’ll Be No New Tunes on this Old Piano: A Twenties Medley
There’s no business like show business from Annie Get Your Gun, by Irving Berlin
Too Darn Hot from Kiss Me Kate! By Cole Porter
West Side Story medley, by Leonard Bernstein
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Somewhere Only We Know
With or Without You
Stairway to Heaven
Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go
Moonraker
Skyfall
Smooth Operator
Don’t Sleep in the Subway
Let It Be
Wild Horses
Life on Mars
Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
Your Song
Michelle
Because
We Are the Music Makers
You Keep me Hanging On
People Get Ready
I Heard It through the Grapevine
Don't You Worry 'Bout a Thing
Autumn Leaves
Baby, what you goin’ to be?, by Natalie Sleeth
By the Rivers of Babylon, B. Dowe and F. McHaughton
Do You Hear What I Hear?
From a Distance
Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor, by Irving Berlin
Good King Kong Looked Out, P.D.Q. Bach
Ho! Ho! Holidays
I Say a Little Prayer, by Burt Bacharach
In My Room, by Brian Wilson
O Little Town of Hackensack, P.D.Q. Bach
Play for me a simple melody, Irving Berlin
Respect, by Otis Reding
Samba Santa, Kirby Shaw
Sleigh Ride, arr. J. David Williams
White Christmas, Irving Berlin
Without a song
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The Lord's Prayer
Total Praise
Song of our Savior
A Prayer
L’chah dodi
At the river, arr. Aaron Copland
Away in a Manger
By the Rivers of Babylon, by Salamone Rossi
David’s Lamentation, by William Billings
Kol Haneshamah Tehalel Yah, by Bonia Shur
Let all mortal flesh keep silence, French plainsong
Maoz Tsur, transcribed by Benedetto Marcello
Ozi VeZimrat Yah, Yemenite Psalm
Prière Silencieuse and Lekha dodi from Service Sacré, by Darius Milhaud
Stille Nacht
Thus Saith the High, the Lofty One, William Billings
Wondrous Love, from The Sacred Harp
Chorus Newsletter
PAST HIGHLIGHTS FROM OUR COMMUNITY
Explore two milestone newsletters from our past, capturing moments that shaped our chorus—from our 25th anniversary celebration to our creative resilience during the pandemic.
Celebrating 25 Years:
Chorus Newsletter
Pandemic Edition:
Zoom Chorus Newsletter
I guess I have Google to thank for finding the Chorus; I have serious performance anxiety, so its no-audition policy made it the perfect fit.
From Day 1, I was wowed by Jack’s carefully curated mix of songs and 11 years later, I still feel incredibly accomplished when I master the more challenging pieces. But what I love most about the Chorus is how it manages to take 75+ people of vastly different ages and backgrounds and via the magic of singing together, create a real sense of joy, closeness and community. It happens every time!
MARY | ALTO | MEMBER SINCE 2012