Tag: Choo Choo CHorus

Carrying the Tune

Written by Delaney Holman

Steve Grubb, president of the Chattanooga Chapter of the Barbershop Society, speaks about the Choo Choo Chorus. This is a male chorus that sings barbershop harmonies and performs melodies for the Chattanooga community by breaking out into quartets. He highlights how they are not just a barbershop harmony, but also a brotherhood.

There is a quiet, elderly community living in the alcove-like rooms at the Martin Boyd Assisted Living facility in Chattanooga, Tennessee. However, on Thursday nights at 7 p.m., the sound of brotherhood and song begins to float through the hall. The bellowing of harmonies comes from a group of men just down the hall in a community room. A sweater-vested, white-haired, sensible-sneaker ensemble is keeping an old art form alive in Chattanooga: Barbershop Quartets. 

As a collective, this group practices and gathers as “The Choo Choo Chorus,” an all-male chorus born from the Barbershop Harmony Society in Nashville, TN. Officially, the chorus performs in breakout barbershop quartets, a grouping of four men who blend a cappella singing to create a sound unique to this configuration. Each person is responsible for their own part. There is no standout lead singer; it is every member building a song together.

The Choo-Choo Chorus rehearses in the Martin-Boyd Christian Home Thursday at 7:00. They are available to anyone who wants to listen to them sing in a beautifully decorated environment. Thursday, February 5, 2026 (Photo by Conner Coady).

Jimmy Tompkins, the chorus’s charming and at times stern director, keeps the men’s pace with snaps and a wistful bounce in his step. During these practices, one of the men most on beat and best developed in his singing is Paul Blazek, a tall, jolly man who has settled into the risers after serving as director for 33 years and passing the torch to Tompkins.

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