And
then a rousing collective rendition of the Bill Withers 1972
song "Lean on Me" begins.
"It's amazing," said Robert Hornsby, director of fundraising at
the Peace of Heart Choir non-profit in New York City, after he
had finished playing the song from his window in Manhattan's
Upper West Side.
"The amount of energy that we've received, and the amount of
energy that we're giving, has really lifted the spirits of New
Yorkers, and we hope people across the nation, too."
Organizers of the "New York Sings Along" event said the goal was
to boost morale and honor all workers on the front lines
battling the COVID-19 pandemic, and to share the healing power
of music while obeying social distancing rules.
Every week, the nonprofit picks one song, and plays it after the
applause for essential workers on Thursday nights.
Last week, it was Frank Sinatra's "New York" and next week, it
will be the Ben E. King classic "Stand by Me."
U.S. coronavirus deaths have topped 48,000, with the number of
lives lost in April rising by an average of 2,000 a day,
according to a Reuters tally.
Withers, a soulful singer best known for the 1970s hits "Lean on
Me," "Lovely Day" and "Ain't No Sunshine," passed away at the
age of 81 from heart complications, his family had said earlier
this month.
(Reporting by Aleksandra Michalska, Editing by Karishma Singh
and Michael Perry)
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