Handbell choir keeps up ringing tradition at Othello church
JOEL MARTIN | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 1 month AGO
Joel Martin has been with the Columbia Basin Herald for more than 25 years in a variety of roles and is the most-tenured employee in the building. Martin is a married father of eight and enjoys spending time with his children and his wife, Christina. He is passionate about the paper’s mission of informing the people of the Columbia Basin because he knows it is important to record the history of the communities the publication serves. | January 14, 2026 3:00 AM
OTHELLO — It’s difficult enough for a director to keep musicians in line when they’re all playing at the same time. But when members take turns with just one or two notes each, well, then it gets complicated.
“You have to keep count,” said George Roper, who leads the handbell choir at Othello Christian Church. “You also listen to what everybody else is doing, because they’re also keeping the count. Because if you lose your count — and we’ve done that more than once — we’re lost.”
The choir, called the Heart of the Basin Ringers, currently consists of four people: Roper, his wife, Carol Roper, Pastor Adams Janes and his son, Trooper Janes. They practice once a week and give performances every few months. Their winter concert was Sunday, and the ringers shared the bill with piano solos and duets.
Roper has directed a bell choir at the church since 1986, he said, and used to have a much larger group.
“One year we had a four-octave choir,” Roper said.
The handbells themselves are of a simple design: a brass bell with a clapper inside on a hinge, and a looped handle, each tuned to a single note. But, as with many musical things, looks can be deceiving. Each player can hold a bell in each hand, and playing that way, the quartet has a range of one octave. If they pick up and set down bells, they can cover a broader range, but that gets complicated. They must know exactly where each bell is without looking and set it down in exactly the right spot, until it begins to look like a shell game with a disappearing pea.
In addition, players can’t just shake the bells to get the sound they want. You can ring it as it’s coming off the table or hold it to your shoulder and pull it away, or rotate it vertically or horizontally por wave it in circles in the air, each of which produces a different sound. Then you can leave it vibrating or damp it with your thumb, or on your chest, or on the table. Skilled ringers can hold multiple bells in each hand, positioned in such a way that a horizontal wave rings one, and a vertical movement rings another.
Pastor Janes, who has served at Othello Christian Church since 2016, said he’s been ringing handbells since the sixth grade.
“I have a degree in music,” he said. “My original plan was to do music, but God had other plans for me. And a sense of humor, because I still get to do my music.”
Trooper Janes has been playing with them since elementary school, Roper said.
“He used to ring just the high G,” Roper said. “That was it, one bell. He had to work to get his coordination going.”
“He’s a senior in high school now,” his father said. “He’s in the band and takes after his dad; plays just about every instrument. If he can get his hands on it, he’s going to learn it.”
Janes would love to see more people share in the bell ringing, he said.
“Anyone who wants to join us, we will teach,” he said. “We’ll teach them how to count, how to ring, how to do all the fancy moves. Music is part of the DNA of this church, and one of the things that we really want to be able to do.”
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