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6/21/2019 0 Comments

Pride Shift

I remember it like it was yesterday - I was 19 years old, waiting tables at an Irish pub in Midtown Memphis when the traffic stopped all of a sudden. The patio I was working slowly got gayer and gayer, and a few minutes later a Pride parade began! I'd never seen or been to one, but it left me so excited that I knew I had to be off work for the next one. Fast forward a year, and I was there, in short shorts and angel wings - it was a great time! I'd been out since middle school, but being out and about while being "out" was really affirming. When I think back to those days now long gone, I think about how misguided I was in many ways. 

Hear me out - I think Pride festivities are really important. There are tons of teens and young adults in rural areas that need to see and experience other people on the LGBT+ spectrum, but the festivals just feel different to me now. Looking back to my late teens/early twenties, it seems like there was only one acceptable way to be gay - the way we were taught by Will and Grace, Queer Eye, etc. Granted, I'm probably MORE forward about my sexuality now than I was back then, but in retrospect, my WHOLE identity wasn't affirmed at those festivities. 

Two or three years after going to my first Pride in Memphis, I discovered that the city had a (separate but equal) Black Pride festival! This is where I found myself. I saw people, engaged conversations, and heard music that addressed my experiences as a black queer man way more directly than "regular" Pride did, as me and my friends called it. One summer, there was a push to combine the two Prides, and it didn't go so well. As far as I know, Pride and Black Pride are still two separate festivals in Memphis.

It's really interesting for me to go into Target or ride the bus and see the Pride colors everywhere. I'm just old enough to remember when Pride wasn't so mainstream, so public affirmation (that's really capitalism targeted at the gays) is new for me. When I think about the commercialization of Pride, the lack of historical perspective much of Pride perpetuates, and the white-centricity of it all, it makes me just want to stay home. We so quickly forget the meaning behind the Pride flag. It's colored as a rainbow to represent people from the entire spectrum of humanity coming together to celebrate what we all have in common - LOVE. Is the spectrum of humanity's love showcased in Pride festivals these days, or is it just a Ke$ha concert sans Ke$ha? 

I'm going to Twin Cities Pride this weekend (if it doesn't rain), but reluctantly so. My boyfriend hasn't been out as bi for very long, so it still feels pretty fresh for him, and I think that's fair. For me, it just feels like something I barely recognize anymore. I guess I'm old. 

Tamika Mallory said it best: if the most marginalized of a community isn't the focus, the movement is false. She was referring to the Womens' March when she said that, but I think it applies very well to Pride as well. A black trans woman is why the movement began - whitewashing it with unicorn horns and rainbow-colored T-shirts seems to be the contemporary part of the movement, and a part of the movement I may have to dismiss myself from in the future. 
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6/13/2019 0 Comments

Juneteenth 2019 Preview

This is the first year I've created content, specifically, for Juneteenth! I'm so excited that I thought I'd offer a week-in-advance preview. This post, along with a Juneteenth episode of TRILLOQUY, and a 24 hour Juneteenth celebration (airing on your public radio station, or streaming here), will all happen next week, on June 19th. 
For many Americans, July 4th of 1776 was the ultimate day of freedom, but unfortunately, it wasn’t actually a day of liberty and justice for all. Across the southern part of the United States, Afro-Americans were still enslaved, and it wouldn’t be until June 19th of 1865 when they all would be freed.
It was on that day when a Union Army General rode down to Galveston, TX with news that the Civil War was over. That news meant all slaves must be freed at once – it’s a day still celebrated among Afro-Americans has a holiday called Juneteenth.
This Juneteenth, Your Classical is celebrating by featuring black classical music each hour! Here's some info on six of the twenty-four pieces that will be featured in this year’s Juneteenth Celebration: 
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Francis Johnson

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Composers of African descent were rare during America’s antebellum period, but Francis “Frank” Johnson still managed to make a name for himself. Born in Pennsylvania back in 1792, Frank would grow up to become a trumpet and violin virtuoso, all while writing dance-inspired music still performed and listened to today! For Juneteenth, we’re featuring two works by Francis Johnson – “The Philadelphia Gray's Quickstep”, and “The Princeton Grand March”. 
Margaret Bonds

​Over the course of American slavery, songs, known today as Negro Spirituals, were used to pass along secret messages of escape. At the end of slavery, the tradition of Negro Spirituals has been maintained through word of mouth, black church traditions, and in some cases, Music Education! Afro-American music educator and composer, Margaret Bonds, did her part in keeping Negro Spirituals alive by not only performing them on piano, but teaching them to her many students. A great example of this is found in Bonds’ Negro Spiritual-inspired, “Troubled Water”. 
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Adolphus Hailstork

In 1619, the very first slave ship arrived in the United States off the coast of Virginia in Chesapeake Bay. While much of Virginia’s history is dark, Virginia-based composer Adolphus Hailstork shines as a beacon of light toward the future of racial equity and equality. In addition to teaching the next generation of composers, Hailstork serves as Composer-in-Residence at Norfolk State University and Old Dominion University. In 1992, he was named Cultural Laureate of the Commonwealth of Virginia. This year’s Juneteenth celebration features a work he wrote after a very well-known spiritual – his “Fanfare on Amazing Grace”. 

Valerie Coleman

Being black in America is a challenge in itself, but being a black woman in America has proved to be even more of a challenge since the first Juneteenth. For a woman named Josephine Baker, the only option was to move to France, where she hoped to find a more equitable social climate. In 2006, Afro-American composer Valerie Coleman honored the legacy of Josephine Baker by musically depicting her life and work. The work, titled “Portraits of Josephine”, has since become a standard for the black chamber ensemble it was written for, known as Imani Winds. 

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Terence Blanchard

The official end of slavery was a joyous moment for many. Others, responded in a different way. Just months after Juneteenth, a group of Confederate veterans convened in Tennessee and formed an organization known, today, as the Ku Klux Klan. Over the decades, the organization grew, spreading hate and fear across America. Afro-American film director, writer, and producer “Spike” Lee decided to tell the story of a real-life infiltration of the KKK in a 2018 film he titled, BlacKkKlansman. He asked Afro-American film composer, Terence Blanchard, to write the score, and it’s an excerpt from that score that offers the most contemporary part of this year’s Juneteenth celebration. 

William Banfield

It’s important to recognize and celebrate the accomplishments of Afro-Americans for Juneteenth, and composer William Banfield does that year-round! He serves as a professor in the Liberal Arts Department and director of Africana Studies at the Berklee College of Music, and in addition to teaching his students black music history, he teaches listeners through his own compositions. Banfield’s Symphony No. 6, subtitled, “Four Songs for Five American Voices”, honors some of America’s most significant black musicians, including, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, and Sarah Vaughn. The opening movement of the symphony is an homage to Leonard Bernstein, who played a big role in the Civil Rights movement, 100 years after the first Juneteenth. 

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​On this, the 154th anniversary of Juneteenth, we hope you’ll use music to enrich your knowledge of black history, broaden your perspective of black present, and draw positive hopes for black future. Happy Juneteenth! 
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6/6/2019 0 Comments

Going Home

Dell and I celebrated our first official year here in Saint Paul this week! As I think about what this past year has looked like, I'm impressed. Considering that I'm a southern boy, you have to admit that it's at least a little impressive that I survived a really brutal winter (with only one tow). My radio show is doing well, and a project that I didn't think I'd be able to get done until later this year came into full fruition - the TRILLOQUY podcast is off to a great start! Be sure to go check out today's episode, featuring Brandon Coffer.

With all the good, comes a hint of sadness. Lots of random thoughts go through my mind all the time, and for some reason the sentence, "I want to go home" popped up earlier this week. I don't even know if I know where home is anymore. I'm from Memphis, but I haven't been there in so long I wouldn't even recognize my neighborhood, much less other parts of the city! The most time I've spent in a city that isn't Memphis was my five-year run in Knoxville - no shade, but I'll be damned if I ever call that place home. 

Los Angeles, New York, Detroit, and the other cities I've lived in (or frequented) aren't home, so I guess I AM home. What does that mean? I moved around so much, it's hard for me to imagine that this is the FINAL leg of the journey, but who knows? 

​That's all I have this week. I have more thinking to do. All in all, I'm really happy here in Saint Paul, but I definitely need to get back to Memphis sooner than later. I miss you, 901. 
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