A Black composer finally arrives at the Metropolitan Opera
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, November 17, 2024


A Black composer finally arrives at the Metropolitan Opera
A scene from a rehearsal of the opera “Fire Shut Up in my Bones” at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, Sept. 17, 2021. Terence Blanchard, best known for scoring Spike Lee films, reopens the 138-year-old opera company with “Fire Shut Up in My Bones.” Sara Krulwich/The New York Times.

by Zachary Woolfe



NEW YORK, NY.- In 1919, William Grant Still was in his 20s — many years from the eminence he would later enjoy as the widely acknowledged “dean” of Black American composers.

But he had already begun to write operas, and he boldly approached the nation’s most important company: the Metropolitan Opera in New York. We have no evidence he got an answer.

Two decades later, Still was far more established, with his “Afro-American Symphony” widely performed. In 1935, he sent the Met “Blue Steel,” its music infused with jazz and spirituals.

“Not worthy of consideration,” a company official wrote in an internal submissions ledger.

Then Still wrote another opera, “Troubled Island,” about the Haitian revolution, with a libretto by poet Langston Hughes. “The Metropolitan was our first target, logically enough,” he later recalled. That, too, was dismissed.

“It would be a mere waste of time,” a 1942 entry in that submissions ledger went, “to go into details about this opera which is an immature product of two dilettantes.”

The Met, the country’s largest performing arts institution, opened in 1883 and in its 138 years has put on some 300 titles. Not one has been by a Black composer.

Until now. Closed for a year and a half by the pandemic and rocked by the nationwide uprising for racial justice, the company will reopen Monday with “Fire Shut Up in My Bones,” by Terence Blanchard, a jazz trumpeter and composer best known for scoring a host of Spike Lee films.

“It’s a phenomenal honor, and it’s an overwhelming thing,” Blanchard, 59, said after a recent rehearsal. “But at the same time it’s bittersweet. I was just in St. Louis and heard the William Grant Still piece.” (Still’s one-act “Highway 1, USA” was done there this summer.) “And I’m like, OK, he was around. I’m honored, but I’m not the first qualified person to be here, that’s for sure.”

Still and other Black composers asked and asked, submitted and submitted. But finally it was the Met — and its general manager, Peter Gelb — contacting Blanchard, rather than the other way around.

“I knew that there was a possibility, but I was like, nah, I don’t see it happening,” Blanchard recalled. “And then all of a sudden, Peter called me, and he goes, ‘Hey, man, I think I want to bring “Fire” to the Met.’ It’s one of those things where, you know, while you’re on the call, you’re trying to be cool. There’s a whole sense of disbelief. Is this really happening? Is this how this happens? Just that quick? I get a phone call, and then my opera’s going to the Met?”

That was in 2019, following the work’s premiere at Opera Theater of St. Louis. The Met had committed to bringing “Fire” — based on New York Times columnist Charles Blow’s memoir of his turbulent upbringing in Louisiana, with a libretto by writer, director and actress Kasi Lemmons — to New York.

But at the time, it wasn’t clear whether the Met would present it at its 3,800-seat theater at Lincoln Center or as part of its initiative to collaborate with other presenters, such as the Brooklyn Academy of Music. “Fire” certainly wasn’t planned as a season opener, let alone as the symbol of the company’s resurrection after the longest closure in its history.

Given opera’s glacial planning cycles, Gelb was waiting to present it until fall 2023, in a slot that has lately been given to contemporary works. (Matthew Aucoin’s “Eurydice” takes that spot in November.) But demands for greater diversity in the arts convinced him it would be an appropriately grand and meaningful gesture to bring the Met back with the piece.

“Without doubt, the Black Lives Matter movement had a big impact, at a time when theaters and opera companies were being looked at under a microscope in terms of their sense of social responsibility,” Gelb said in an interview. “It felt like it was important for the Met to respond.”

Gelb, once the head of Sony Classical, had worked with Blanchard on three albums around the turn of the 21st century. “He was obviously a prodigious talent,” Gelb said. “But I had no idea that he was going to be writing an opera for the Met.”

Blanchard never thought of himself as an opera composer, either, but the art form runs deep in his ears. As a young man, his father fell under the sway of Osceola Blanchet, a high school chemistry teacher in New Orleans who evangelized for classical music on the side.

“He was adamant about teaching Black kids opera,” said Blanchard, whose father ended up selling insurance but remained a passionate amateur singer who tried to get his son — already obsessed with jazz artists like Clifford Brown — to listen to “Carmen” and “La Bohème.”

“I came home, and my dad would be sitting at the piano, playing the tenor part and singing the baritone part,” he said. “I was like, this dude is nuts. And then all of a sudden, this opportunity comes, and all that music starts popping back in my head.

“That’s the reason my music has a certain type of melodic quality to it,” he added. “It stems from that. The modern opera stuff hasn’t had that effect on me, the minimalist stuff. I hearken back to those other periods, just because it’s been ingrained in my brain since I’m a little kid.”

“Fire” does echo Puccini and Bizet. But its unabashedly emotive tale of family troubles, sexual abuse, self-discovery and self-acceptance also recalls the savvily sturdy mid-20th-century operas of Robert Ward (“The Crucible”), Douglas Moore (“The Ballad of Baby Doe”) and Carlisle Floyd (“Susannah”).

Its lushness and lyricism, a sophisticated yet accessible clarity, has long been evident in Blanchard’s jazz and film work, too. “A Tale of God’s Will,” his 2007 album inspired by his score for “When the Levees Broke,” Lee’s HBO documentary about Hurricane Katrina, broods with aria-intense emotion.

It was that intimate yet larger-than-life quality that appealed to James Robinson, the co-director of “Fire.” When Robinson joined Opera Theater of St. Louis as its artistic director in 2009, there were vague plans to collaborate with a jazz artist, perhaps on a small-scale production outside the company’s regular summer season.

“I knew his film work,” Robinson recalled, “and I was a big fan of ‘A Tale of God’s Will.’ I sensed that there was something inherently dramatic about his music.”

As the project expanded from an offseason trial to a main-stage commission, discussions first circled around Katrina. But Blanchard demurred; that tragedy still felt too close. He and the company settled on the story of closeted gay boxer Emile Griffith; “Champion” premiered in 2013 and was well received, though the work sometimes felt, even to Blanchard, more like a procession of numbers than an integrated whole.

It was also his first time composing for voices. “When you write for cello, you write for cello,” he said. “But no baritone is the same; no tenor is the same. And all those voices, where do they bloom in their registers? So being able to control that and manipulate it, that’s been a huge learning curve.”

Conducted at the Met by the company’s music director, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, “Fire” feels like a step forward, with a freer, more cinematic structure, more subtle orchestrations (a collaboration with Howard Drossin) and more comfortable vocal writing.

“‘Champion’ was an excellent first effort, but ‘Fire’ is a more mature work,” Gelb said. “I think it’s more nuanced. It’s not as big a story, in the sense that it seems a less likely candidate for grand opera than ‘Champion,’ but I think it feels like a bigger work.”

Lemmons’ libretto poignantly personifies the qualities of Destiny and Loneliness (both sung at the Met by soprano Angel Blue), among other poetic riffs on Blow’s book — encouraging the dreaminess in Blanchard’s music. The early drafts of “Champion” came across stiffly when the singers did the notes precisely as written, but Blanchard has worked at conveying in notation some of the looseness and groove he’s searching for.

“When I was first learning it, I was getting all the pitches and rhythms correct,” said baritone Will Liverman, who stars as Charles. “But it wasn’t until I lived with the music and heard the orchestra underneath that I realized there is a lot of flexibility in it. He’s used to writing something and having a jazz musician take it and do their own thing. Terence said to us from the start that a lot of us grew up with church music and R&B. We’ve been taught as classical singers to get rid of it, and he wants to bring it back.”




Jazz technique is the foundation of Blanchard’s composing style, which begins with charting the rhythms of the text and a series of chord progressions, from which the melodies emerge. (One result is a notably more natural setting of English than in many contemporary operas.) Even with a jazz quartet in the pit alongside the orchestra — Blanchard’s answer to a Baroque continuo — there’s little classic swing in the mix.

“I didn’t want people to come in and think they were going to hear the Basie band,” Blanchard said.

Reviewing the St. Louis premiere for the Times, Anthony Tommasini wrote, “Restless vocal lines shift from plaintive lyrical phrases, to sputtered outbursts, to a style that seems a jazz equivalent of Italianate arioso.”

Otto Kahn, an influential Met board chair, wrote in 1925 that he had tried to interest popular jazz eminences like Jerome Kern, Irving Berlin and George Gershwin in writing operas for the company. In its audience-pleasing variety — expansive solos mingle with foot-tapping dances — “Fire” evokes what might have come had he succeeded.

But the creative team agreed that some tweaks were needed after St. Louis. “The piece has a lot of scenes; it’s very cinematic,” Robinson said. “What we learned is that it really needed time in certain places on either side of the scene change — more time to settle, so it’s not just a series of scenes together.”

Charles’ loving but struggling mother (commanding soprano Latonia Moore) was given more big moments in the second act. Some lines that were spoken in St. Louis are now sung. And the piece has grown to fit the vast Met. The role of the chorus has expanded, as have some arresting dance sequences, including a dream ballet of gay desire and a raucous fraternity hazing step routine. Camille A. Brown, who was the choreographer for Robinson’s staging of “Porgy and Bess” at the Met in 2019, has been brought on as his partner, making her the first Black director of a main-stage Met production.

The company’s neglect of Black composers, it should be said, is part and parcel of its general neglect of living creators — especially American ones — for much of its history. While its theater at Lincoln Center was inaugurated in 1966 with a world premiere, Samuel Barber’s “Antony and Cleopatra,” new operas were perceived as box office poison and arrived rarely.

They weren’t a priority for James Levine, who presided over only a few during his four-decade artistic reign. The revival elsewhere of Scott Joplin’s “Treemonisha,” in the 1970s, missed the company. With New York City Opera developing a reputation for presenting new music — in 1949, it finally gave the premiere of Still’s “Troubled Island” — the Met may well have considered itself off the hook. And while “Porgy” was written by white artists, it contractually requires a Black cast and could have seemed to check the “Black opera” box — for anyone who cared back then — after its Met premiere in 1985.

“It didn’t seem like the Met was a possibility,” said Anthony Davis, whose “X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X” was heard at City Opera in 1986.

The approach to contemporary work has changed significantly under Gelb, who was appointed in 2006. “When I first came to the Met, one of the first composers I approached about writing an opera was Wynton Marsalis,” Gelb said. “And he still promises to write it; we talk about it every year or so.”

This month the company announced that its second work by a Black composer would follow swiftly: Davis’ “X” will have its Met premiere in fall 2023, in the slot originally planned for “Fire.” Valerie Coleman, Jessie Montgomery and Joel Thompson are among the composers in the company’s dual commissioning program with Lincoln Center Theater.

The future seems brighter than the past, however absurd the belatedness. Gelb, who has offered sustained commitments to favored composers like John Adams, Thomas Adès and Philip Glass, said he’d like to plan more of Davis’ works, which include “Amistad” and “The Central Park Five,” the Pulitzer winner for music last year. And Blanchard is already mulling his evolution as an opera composer.

“If I do another one, I’d want to do a fictional story,” he said, “something that has an ethnic base, where I could bring in some other types of instruments. Even in this read-through, I’m not listening to the notes. I’m listening for, how can I make this better next time?”

“The key to all this for me is, I don’t want to be the token,” he added. “I want to be the turnkey.”



Highlights From the Career of a Spokesman for Jazz

Like Wayne Shorter — to whom his newest album, “Absence,” is dedicated — Blanchard is the rare jazz star whose renown as a composer almost overshadows his reputation as a daring and stylish improviser. Almost.

Blanchard rose as a jazz phenom in the early 1980s, taking over the trumpet chair in Art Blakey’s fabled Jazz Messengers after Marsalis left. Barely 20, he was a double threat even then: writing compositions of coiled energy and smartly woven rhythmic interplay, and improvising fiercely, cutting sharp turns and slipping into sly glissandos.

He soon became Lee’s musical other half, a relationship that helped to make film scoring into a primary vocation. And in the 21st century, he’s established himself as one of jazz’s most respected educators and spokesmen. Here are a few highlights from his discography.

‘Ninth Ward Strut’ (1988)

Throughout much of the 1980s, Blanchard led a band along with alto saxophonist Donald Harrison — a fellow 20-something New Orleans native and Jazz Messenger — that became one of the standard-bearing groups of jazz’s Young Lions movement. In “Ninth Ward Strut,” Blanchard pays tribute to his hometown’s signature sound with a swinging second-line rhythmic underpinning, while pushing his own identity as a composer. The track is rhythmically suspenseful and harmonically jagged in a way that would become characteristic.

‘The Nation’ (1992)

Lee tapped Blanchard to record the trumpet parts for Denzel Washington’s character in “Mo’ Better Blues” (1990), including on the film’s title tune, which became a kind of Young Lions-era classic. Lee soon began asking Blanchard to write scores — and he hasn’t stopped. “Malcolm X” (1992) was one of the first films Blanchard did, exploring an expanded palette of choral harmonies, strings and brass. He rearranged the music for jazz sextet soon after and recorded it as “The Malcolm X Jazz Suite,” a restless and ambitious album for Columbia Records.

‘A Child With the Blues’ (1997)

Blanchard recorded this track with neo-soul doyenne Erykah Badu for the soundtrack to “Fire Shut Up in My Bones” librettist Lemmons’ 1997 film “Eve’s Bayou.” Bantering with Badu, he pulls sassy glissandos from the horn and pushes her into pitter-patter rhythmic exchanges. (It later reappeared on a deluxe edition of the album “Baduizm.”)

‘Dear Mom’ (2007)

After scoring “When the Levees Broke,” Lee’s 2006 documentary about Hurricane Katrina, Blanchard adapted his compositions into a suite, as he had with the “Malcolm X” music. He released the results as “A Tale of God’s Will” the following year.

Katrina was deeply personal for Blanchard, whose mother lost her home in the storm. Adoration and enervation course together on “Dear Mom” as Blanchard plays a pas de deux with a large string section. The album won Blanchard the second of his five Grammys, for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album.

‘Can Anyone Hear Me’ (2018)

For years, Blanchard has put a premium on working with younger musicians, and in his current quintet, the E-Collective, he’s assembled a wrecking crew of cutting-edge improvisers who regularly reimagine how jazz-rock fusion might work. On “Can Anyone Hear Me,” from a recent live album, Blanchard’s horn is encased in an electric bodysuit of distortion and effects, but the precision and counterintuition of his soloing shines through.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

September 24, 2021

Jasper Johns: Divide and conquer

Island-hopping: Genetics reveal how humans settled remote Pacific

National Cathedral chooses artist to replace windows honoring Confederates

Art Basel fair breathes life back into moribund market

Hindman Auctions' Native American Art Auction realizes over $1 million

The Musée de l'Elysée in Lausanne adopts a new identity: Photo Elysée

In Rashid Johnson's mosaics, broken lives pieced together

MacDougall's announces "École de Paris and Russian Artists in France" sale

The Hepworth Wakefield acquires masterpiece White Relief by Ben Nicholson

Phillips announces highlights from the premiere Photographs Auction at new 432 Park Avenue headquarters

Melvin Van Peebles, champion of new Black cinema, dies at 89

New director for Mass MoCA

Wartime 1937 Mystery Bentley is for sale with H&H Classics

At the 'Human Library', everyone is an open book

AstaGuru's upcoming sale features over 85 leading artists and 120 impressive lots

Dia Art Foundation announces appointment of Jordan Carter as curator

The Micheal Gietzelt Collection of British and Irish Coins sells for £563,000 at Dix Noonan Webb

'Historic night' as Somalia screens first film in 30 years

Carmen Balthrop, soprano known for Joplin opera role, dies at 73

US filmmaker Gus Van Sant sets Andy Warhol's early life to music

Notre-Dame rebuild donations reach 840 mn euros: official

Miller & Miller's Firearms, Sporting & Canadiana auction is slated for Oct. 9

Maureen Paley opens a new exhibition by Hannah Collins

Balanchine, the teacher: 'I pushed everybody'

A Black composer finally arrives at the Metropolitan Opera

The Most Beautiful Paintings Inspiring By Gambling

7 Instagram Hacks That Will Boost Your Instagram Engagement rate

Different Types Of Knives Available In A Kitchen

Frame Numbers: A Guide to Eyeglasses Fitting




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Holistic Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful