This month we shine our Spotlight on some meaningful thoughts from ENS Jake Lindow, USN, Class of 2020 Men’s Glee Club member, currently in Corpus Christi, TX in Flight Training. He shared with us how meaningful his music experience at USNA was, how it helped his professional development, and why it is important to him to give back:
Music programs are especially important to the mission of the U.S. Naval Academy and could not exist without FONAM. When I was at USNA, I was a member of the Men’s Glee Club for all four years and I appreciate this opportunity to reflect on the impact of my four years in this program. While my experience was limited to that of the Men’s Glee Club, my friends from the Women’s Glee Club and every music program at USNA have all shared similar thoughts on how impactful their program was during their time at USNA. For myself, virtually every experience I had happened because of the generosity of benefactors. I did not realize this until the final stanza of Biebl’s AVE MARIA during Spring Tour in Tampa, FL in March 2020, which would be the last notes we would sing together after four years of amazing memories. Now, as I reflect back on those memories, I am compelled to do my part in helping current and future midshipmen have the same amazing experience that my friends in the Men’s and Women’s Glee Clubs and I did.
I knew I was in for something special after the first rehearsal as a Plebe in Fall of 2016. The night before the first rehearsal 1/C Christian White (Class of 2017, MGC President) knocked on my door on 8-4 to welcome me to Glee Club, with the friendliness and demeanor as if I was joining a fraternity and not a choir. Little did I know that the Glee Club was in fact much more than “just a choir.”
The next day at rehearsal I found myself standing in the rehearsal room in Alumni Hall looking around at the 50 strangers that would soon become life long friends. Doc came in silently, simply took his place in the center of the room, and raised his hands ready to begin conducting. Did I miss something? Was I supposed to pick up some music from somewhere? Glancing around at the 15 other confused plebes in the room, I felt some consolation in that none of us had any idea what was going on. A few minutes later, a wall of what I recall as the most glorious sound I’d ever heard resonated around the room. “Though we roam the seas” bounced off the walls, leaving those previously confused plebes with their jaws on the floor. I had absolutely no idea what I’d gotten myself into.
Spring tour of my plebe year gave me my first glimpse at how important FONAM is to our mission, because that tour was almost cancelled due to a sudden decrease in funding. The amazing work of FONAM and donors (themselves former Glee Club members) made it happen, and we got to travel to Los Angeles and perform at a variety of venues and make memories that I am certain will still be retold decades in the future.
The first year in Glee Club was only the tip of the iceberg, and was followed by tours all over the country, to include Hawaii and annual performances with some of the premier symphonic organizations in the nation. For me, Glee Club was not about the destinations but rather the opportunity to make amazing music with people who are now my closest friends for life.
The Naval Academy is an experience that demands you find a break from the monotony of every day life as a Midshipman. I truly believe that the music programs at the Naval Academy are the greatest way to achieve such a necessity, and enriched my experience at USNA more than I could have imagined. The public outreach component of the Glee Clubs is an amazing tool to prepare midshipmen for life as an officer. The opportunity to represent the Naval Academy and the U.S. Navy publicly around the country demands a level of professionalism that develops you in a way no other program can. The perseverance and dedication required to learn music few other choirs do develops a skill set that I continue to use after graduation. Whether it is performing the entirety of Durufle’s REQUIEM from memory (much to our chagrin) or simply showing up for a 2-hour rehearsal after a 6-N, I truly believe that four years in a music program at USNA prepares a midshipman for officership in an incredibly impactful way.
None of these amazing experiences could happen without FONAM. Turns out traveling around the nation gets expensive quickly, but if our mission is to reach as many people as possible, it is critically important that we continue to travel to as many parts of our nation as possible. My decision to donate to FONAM was an easy one. The Glee Club will always be a part of me, and FONAM provides an opportunity to continue to feel like I am part of the Club. Glee Club is not just a choir; it really is a fraternity and lasting brotherhood, and one that could not exist without the work of FONAM and benefactors that believe in the importance of music at USNA.
No one came to USNA for music. No one in a music program at USNA is a music major. But every single one is there because of a passion they have for their program, a love for the people to their left and right, and a desire to spread joy to the rest of the country. To me, that is something special, and funding those experiences through a donation to FONAM is the moist important charitable donation I think I could make.