Calling songbirds, good and bad: Choir Bar harmonizes with group singalongs
June 2, 2018 | Tommy Felts
Kansas City’s new “Choir Bar” only works with a packed crowd, admits Matt Baysinger, but professional vocal talent isn’t required.
“There’s no sheet music, no judgement, no solos, and no pressure,” he said of the “reverse karaoke”-style event wherein the masses — not an individual — belt out a popular tune. “We’re here to sing alongside the best people on Earth and share an evening of good, clean fun.”
The latest concept from Swell Spark, a Kansas City-based innovator of interactive, experience-based entertainment, Choir Bar is set for a June 16 debut. It joins a growing catalog of offerings from the West Bottoms company, which includes popular brands Blade & Timber and Breakout KC.
“We’ll meet at the River Market Event Space with a few hundred strangers to learn a popular song as a three-part harmony, perform a few times as a big, amazing group, and upload a professionally produced video to share with the world,” said Baysinger, co-founder of Swell Spark.
Participants must be at least 18 to attend. Tickets are available online for $10.
“Choir Bar is really in line with our company culture. It’s getting people together for a shared experience,” Baysinger said. “We’re really excited about the potential to do something like this on a monthly or weekly basis — as long as we can get people to show up.”
One of the entertainment company’s simpler concepts, Choir Bar not only doesn’t require participants to necessarily be “good” at singing — they also don’t even need to know the song in advance, he said. In fact, the actual song planned for the June 16 event isn’t expected to be posted publicly until 24 hours before the social choir event.
“We might want to teach the song to them in a slightly different way than they’ve heard it on the radio, so there is a little bit of mystery to that aspect of it,” Baysinger said, noting the lack of preparation by potential singers is a good thing.
“There’s a big yearning for community for people who come from musical backgrounds,” he added. “And we’re excited to be able to cater to that with something pretty nonchalant and low-key.”
Swell Spark was named one of Startland’s Top Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2018, in part because of the rapid growth of its Blade & Timber axe-throwing concept, as well as the ongoing development of new business verticals.
The company opened a second Kansas City-area Blade & Timber location in May with 12 lanes at Leawood’s Town Center Plaza.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KC wants to be the nation’s most equitable hub for biologics; prestigious MIT pick could help
Biologics is the entryway to personalized medicine, said Sonia Hall, and Kansas City is aiming to create the most inclusive hub for the development, production and distribution of biologics as part of its acceptance to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Regional Entrepreneurship Acceleration Program. “When you talk about personalized medicine, you’re talking about greater equity…
PropTechHD looks beyond the façade of drone use to see sky-high potential for capturing high-quality data
A lot can go wrong when flying a drone around a high-rise building, acknowledged Andrew Patch. Think restricted airspace, pigeons, hawks, turbulence, swirling winds, pressure changes, trees, powerlines, and other unexpected obstacles. But behind the sticks of a controller, Patch steers into the challenge. In February 2017, he founded Heartland Drone Company, an Federal Aviation…
GiftAMeal posts food selfie milestone: 1 million meals donated through Missouri-made app
Foodie photos shared to social media through a Missouri tech startup’s app have provided more than 1 million meals — representing more than 1.2 million pounds of healthy groceries for families in need — thanks to GiftAMeal’s network of restaurant and food bank partnerships, the company said. St. Louis-based GiftAMeal this week announced the milestone donation…
