The Trees Community was an Episcopal Church-affiliated Christian community and a music group. They were also known simply as The Trees, and originally as "The Symphony of Souls." They were at first a disparate set of unlikely young acquaintances that bonded in a sense of common brokenness and that resulted in a wide-ranging search for truth. From this simple beginning in a loft in Manhattan in 1970, the group evolved into a community with a formal, religious order. Based at The Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine in New York City, they were mentored by Canon Edward Nason West, sub-dean of the Cathedral, and novelist/Cathedral librarian Madeleine L'Engle Franklin.. The Trees also worked closely with James Parks Morton who was Dean of the cathedral at the time they were artists in residence there from 1973-77. Dean Morton described the community in thisTime magazine article: When the wrecking ball transformed their Manhattan loft into a parking lot, the original group left New York in a converted school bus which became home for the 10 people, 2 cats, a small dog, and 80 musical instruments. They termed this initial journey as a "pilgrimage with no destination". They made a host of contacts in Ontario and multiple US States. These included sojourns at a broad range of Christian communities ranging from farm communes to large evangelical church communities to Christian monasteries. Eventually the group gained enough musical proficiency to start formally booking concerts and the pilgrimage thus turned into a set of tours to the Western United States, New England and Southeastern US regions. Musically, the collective were known for their highly spiritual, ethereal vocals, with musical backing by a wide range of instruments from all over the world, such as sitar, tamboura, koto, Venezuelan harp, and bells. Almost all their music is original. They only released one album in their seven-year lifespan—1975's The Christ Tree—though there were other recordings made of the group, notably by the monks at the Abbey of Gethsemani and composer Calvin Hampton. In 2007, a fan of the group, Timothy Renner of , salvaged the LP master and these other recordings, digitally remastered them and produced "The Christ Tree Box Set.", of four CDs. He then produced . Other fans of the group, Anthony Derx, and brothers Anthony and Chris Hoisington at , will be re-releasing their music on vinyl and digital music services in 2019, The vinyl re-release will be a double LP from the Renner digital remasters, and will be distributed by Light in The Attic.