Music has always been part of Jack Bennet's (BA鈥17, JD鈥23) life. After graduating from Dal鈥檚 Fountain School of Performing Arts, he led choirs and worked as dean at the Maritime Conservatory of Music when he became interested in law. He enrolled at Dal鈥檚 Schulich School of Law, and now pursues both passions鈥攁rticling by day, arranging songs at night. Once a month he co-hosts , a Halifax event that teaches singers of all levels a pop song in three-part harmony.
10 a.m. I鈥檓 working on a file review while humming Beyonc茅鈥檚 Texas Hold 鈥橢m, which we鈥檒l sing tonight at The Big Sing. My two co-hosts (wife Rachael Delano (BA鈥18) and friend Caitlin Bowers) and I rehearsed last night and it鈥檚 still in my brain today as I focus on this civil litigation file.
12 p.m. I walk on the Halifax waterfront. It鈥檒l be my only break today, as I head straight from my articling position to the Basement of the Economy Shoe Shop, our Big Sing performance venue. I鈥檓 thinking about how music training gave me skills I draw upon now as an aspiring lawyer: the discipline to prepare, creativity to improvise and think on my feet, and public speaking skills.
2 p.m. I鈥檓 working on a legal memo regarding recent appellate decisions. I鈥檓 fascinated by justice and enjoy the intellectual challenge interpreting and聽applying the law presents. When I started law school, I didn鈥檛 think I would article or take the bar course, but that鈥檚 changed. I鈥檓 exploring becoming a criminal defence lawyer and am satisfied by the new direction of my career.
6 p.m. Rachael, Caitlin, and I grab a bite at the Economy Shoe Shop to go over final notes. Tonight鈥檚 Big Sing is another sellout. It doesn鈥檛 matter how much raw talent or vocal experience the crowd has, the process somehow always works, and we create a community experience that literally brings people together in harmony. We鈥檝e likely done over 100 Big Sing events since we launched seven years ago, from Halifax to Qu茅bec City.
7:30 p.m. The 250 singers have all chosen one of three parts, lower, middle, or upper, and are grouped on the floor facing us. It鈥檚 a challenging arrangement and to keep the mood light I offer this advice: 鈥淪ing strong and wrong!鈥 Our goal is creating a welcoming space, not technical perfection.
8:56 p.m. We鈥檙e ready to do the final run-through which we鈥檒l video-record and post on social media and YouTube. I look out at all those expectant faces and their mouths as they open to sing the first line as I lift my hands to cue them.聽
9:04 p.m. Success! We sounded so good. I see smiling faces all around the room. We all applaud ourselves for pulling it off and bid everyone good night.
.
This story appeared in the聽DAL Magazine Spring/Summer 2024聽issue. Flip through the rest of the issue using the links below.