Adriane Thompson-Bradshaw performs with Ohio Northern University's Gospel Ensemble.

Ohio Northern Universitys Gospel Ensemble is celebrating its 35th anniversary with a special performance on Saturday, April 2 at 4 p.m. in McIntosh Centers ballroom. The event, which is free and open to the public, will also be part of the Universitys sesquicentennial celebration.

For Saturdays performance, current members will join with alumni and special guests.

The music presented will feature a wide range of pieces that are favorites of past Ensemble members and audiences. A large number of selections were written and recorded by our guest director, Bishop Terence M. Sykes, says Gospel Ensemble Director Adriane L. Thompson Bradshaw, Ph.D., who is also 蹤獲扦s vice president for student affairs and dean of students.

The event will include about 20 singers and four musicians.

The group was founded in 1987 for what members believed would be a one-time performance: a Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration on campus in January 1988. Since then, it has graced multiple stages to entertain multitudes. It includes 蹤獲扦 students, faculty and staff.

Thompson-Bradshaw says there will be a nice combination of participants on Saturday. For instance, one alumni will have his 15-year-old daughter with him who is learning the pieces and will sing with the group. A brother and sister who both participated in the ensemble while they attended 蹤獲扦 will also be performing. One of the earlier members of the group will be bringing her granddaughter.

I am so excited that we are able to celebrate this milestone, says Thompson-Bradshaw. From the very beginning, the founders of this group wanted to create a space where they could share their faith and be themselves.Over the years, the size of the group has varied and the racial and ethnic demographicsof the group have been different every year, but no matter what, it has continued to be a space where students (and some years faculty and staff) can share their faith and just be themselves.

Even the pandemic didnt silence the Gospel Ensemble.

During this pandemic we had the same kind of challenges as every other group and there were times I thought we might go on a hiatus, but the students insisted that we power through. That power (from on high) has carried us through and I know this weekend is going to be a special blessing for all who participate, Thompson-Bradshaw says.