The Day

St. Mark’s celebrates with gospel

- By KIMBERLY DRELICH Day Staff Writer

— The voices of gospel singers Mystic filled St. Mark’s Episcopal Church on Saturday.

“God is the joy and the strength of my life,” sang the Lisa Clayton Singers, as audience members listened, sang along or nodded their heads. “He moves all pain, misery and strife. He promised to keep me, never to leave me. He’ll never ever fall short of his word.”

The Rev. Lisa Clayton, a gospel musician, and the Lisa Clayton Singers performed that song and many others to filled pews of the Mystic church during a concert and lecture on gospel music to celebrate Black History Month. The lecture traced the history of gospel music and its notable performers and songs.

The Lisa Clayton Singers are a collective of musicians from Connecticu­t, with about half alumni of the University of Connecticu­t’s Voices of Freedom Gospel Choir.

Clayton said that as she was preparing the lecture, she recalled Thomas A. Dorsey, or “Georgia Tom,” who is credited with starting gospel music, and she thought of a message.

“Everybody may not understand or approve what you are doing, but as long as God has ordained it, you have the opportunit­y to change the world,” Clayton told the audience to applause.

During the concert, the musicians performed songs, such as “Oh Happy Day” and “We Shall Overcome.”

Clayton also performed one of her own songs called “Can’t Live.”

“This was very moving, very educationa­l, and very inspiring,” said JoAnn Miller of Oakdale said of the event. She added that it was an excellent way to highlight Black culture and to talk about what the music means and the stories the music tells.

Clayton is the director of the Uni

The Lisa Clayton Singers are a collective of musicians from Connecticu­t, with about half alumni of the University of Connecticu­t’s Voices of Freedom Gospel Choir.

versity of Connecticu­t’s Voices of Freedom Gospel Choir, an adjunct professor, and a music educator in Bloomfield Public Schools.

Clayton, who was born and raised in Georgia, told The Day that her experience of music from her community and family, the passion she has had for music since she was a child, and her personal relationsh­ip to God made her the musician she is today.

Among her other roles, Clayton also is the worship music coordinato­r for the Seventh Episcopal District of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church covering South Carolina to Massachuse­tts, and chorister director of music at Phillips Metropolit­an CME Church in Hartford, according to her biography. She also served for a time in the music department of the Shiloh New London Church.

Mystic resident Niel Spillane attended the event with his daughter, Nancy Spillane, who are both members of the church. He said his son is the head of choral department­s at Yale University, so he has heard the Lisa Clayton Singers before, and enjoys hearing them singing. He said he and his family have been in choirs and choruses all their lives.

Portia Bordelon, a Groton resident who is a member of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church and also serves on the Town Council, told the audience at the beginning of the event that she is excited to see so many friends, neighbors and community members, and maybe some people she hadn’t met.

Bordelon said she grew up in Mystic and to find an event like this, she typically had to go to Hartford, New Haven, Bridgeport, New London, and “it’s so important that we celebrate culture, diversity and our community every day, not just in February.”

Bordelon said she was touched and moved by Clayton’s ability to relate to the community and the youth in Ledyard after she saw Clayton perform at a celebratio­n for Martin Luther King, Jr. at Ledyard High School, so Bordelon reached out to the Rev. Adam Thomas, rector at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church about the idea of inviting her to Mystic.

Thomas told The Day that the church would love to have more events like this in the community.

The church also formed an Anti-Racism Team in 2019 to find ways to come together around dismantlin­g systemic racism, he said. The team came to be in response to the Episcopal Church in Connecticu­t’s statement of racial healing, justice and reconcilia­tion.

The concert and lecture was free, and people could make donations to the Martin Luther King Jr. Scholarshi­p Trust Fund. Donations for the scholarshi­p fund can be made at https://stmarksmys­tic.breezechms.com/give/online.

 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY ?? The Lisa Clayton Singers perform Saturday during a Black History Month celebratio­n at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Mystic.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY The Lisa Clayton Singers perform Saturday during a Black History Month celebratio­n at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Mystic.

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