Annual Boston All-Day Sacred Harp Singing is Saturday, May 10, 2025 at First Church JP, 10:00 am - 3:00 pm
Welcome to Sacred Harp Singing in Boston!
Join us to sing from the Sacred Harp and other shape-note tune books in Boston and beyond!
No performances or rehearsals, commitment, experience, or ability required, just a wide variety of people coming together for singing, fellowship, and food. Free and open to all, loaner books are always available!
To connect with other Boston-area Sacred Harp singers join our Facebook Group; for upcoming local and regional weekly reminders, join the Boston Sacred Harp email list.
Saturdays before the first and third Sunday: Jamaica Pond Bandstand, 2-5pm (From Sacred Harp 1991 and Shenandoah Harmony)
Second Sundays: St. John's Church in Charlestown; 3:00 - 6:00 pm
Second Mondays: Church of the Redeemer in Chestnut Hill, 7:30 - ~9:15pm (From Sacred Harp 1991 and The Norumbega Harmony)
Third Sundays: Our Lady of Hope Parish in Ipswich 2:30-5PM, Sept through June
Saturday before the fourth Sunday: Nathan Tufts Park, Somerville; 10:30 am - 12:30 pm
Other Related Links
Fasola.org (national Sacred Harp singing web site -- directory of singings, minutes, resources, and more)
Camp Fasola (week-long Sacred Harp singing school -- youth & adult camp in July)
Awake My Soul (feature-length documentary on Sacred Harp singing)
BostonSing.com Shapenote Resources (recordings, re-typeset tunebooks)
What is Sacred Harp?
Sacred Harp music takes its name from a series of American tunebooks called The Sacred Harp. It’s participatory, non-instrumental, choral music that anyone is invited to sing — there is no rehearsing for performance — with strong roots in the early music of New England and the deep South, and which has spread throughout the United States and to Canada, Europe, and Australia.
The Sacred Harp uses a system of musical notation, called shape notes, that allow even relatively new singers to sing tunes at a first reading. Singers typically sit in a square, by parts, and everyone is invited to lead from the center of the square.
If you’re not religious, or Christian, worry not — people from many traditions (and lack thereof) enjoy this music for its power and depth and for the joy of singing together.
More information is available at fasola.org. But the best way to learn about Sacred Harp is to join us in singing what just might be America’s oldest continuing choral music tradition.