In his research laboratory at Fox Chase Cancer Center, Roland Dunbrack works passionately to analyze the structures of proteins in order to better understand how certain mutations cause cancer.
But away from the office he indulges another passion: music.
A member of the Philadelphia Voices of Pride, an LGBT vocal ensemble that performs a mix of classical and contemporary music, Dunbrack doesn’t remember a time when music wasn’t a part of his life. His mom loved to sing and always played opera in the house as he grew up in Waltham, Massachusetts, and as a child he learned to play the clarinet and piano.
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At first Dunbrack, 53, a computational structural biologist, concentrated on playing in bands and orchestras not singing. In high school and in college at Harvard, he played in both the marching band and the wind ensemble.
It wasn’t until he was studying chemistry and biochemistry at Cambridge University in England in 1985 and a friend cajoled him into joining a chorus there that he found his singing voice.
“I didn’t know if I could do it, but it was pretty easy to pick up,” he told PhillyVoice.
After returning to Harvard for graduate school in 1987 for a Ph.D. in biophysics, Dunbrack was a member of the Freedom Trail Band, an LGBT marching band and wind ensemble in Boston. And during his post-doctoral work at the University of California in San Francisco, he continued to play clarinet with the San Francisco Lesbian and Gay Freedom Band.
After moving to Philadelphia in 1997 to take up a faculty position at Fox Chase, Dunbrack joined the Philadelphia Gay Men’s Chorus and sang with them for years before joining the Philadelphia Voices of Pride in 2008. He has been singing with that group ever since.
“It is one thing to play the piano at home, but to sing or play with other people, everyone working together, is a profoundly moving experience," said Dunbrack, a South Philadelphia resident. "Both the music and the camaraderie are important to me.”
Besides bringing him closer to his fellow chorus members, the music has also brought Dunbrack closer to some of his colleagues at Fox Chase Cancer Center.
“Last spring, five people from my lab came to my concert,” he said. “I was really pleased and touched. They were surprised at the complex material that we covered.”
Dunbrack said he does not have a trained voice and has only taken about a dozen singing lessons to help him find the right sound.
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“Most of us in the Philadelphia Voices of Pride are not professional singers and many can’t read music," he said. "It is about the joy of singing together and the challenge of constantly pushing ourselves to reach new heights with our music.”
While it is the beauty and the emotion of music that mostly draws him in, Dunbrack said there is also a certain mathematical appeal as well.
“Algebra is a symbolic representation of information and that is what musical notes on a page are," he said.
While the sciences and the arts are still sometimes compartmentalized, Dunbrack doesn’t feel there is any contradiction to being both a scientist and a lover of the arts. Besides his work with the chorus, he is also an avid opera fan and always has season tickets for the Philadelphia Opera. He attends Philadelphia Orchestra concerts as well.
As the quintessential artist/scientist Leonardo da Vinci once said, “Principles for the Development of a Complete Mind: Study the science of art. Study the art of science. Develop your senses – especially learn how to see. Realize that everything connects to everything else.”
Dunbrack would agree.