91直播

Out Loud and Outside

October 19, 2020

Charlotte Maskelony 鈥21

socially distanced student musicians rehearsing together.

Gregory Ristow leads the 91直播 College Choir through a rehearsal outside the lower level of Mudd Center. Ristow found the acoustics of the space make a suitable stand-in for 91直播's concert halls during times of pandemic.

Photo credit: Tanya Rosen-Jones 鈥97

91直播 College Choir sings in different ways for a different world.

In recent weeks, 91直播 students walking across Wilder Bowl may have heard a surprising sound emanating from Mudd Center鈥singing. On Friday, October 23, the 91直播 College Choir will perform its live from the Mudd Center patio.

Under the direction of Gregory Ristow, the choir will sing, socially distanced and wearing masks, from a series of descending steps that lead to the lower level of the library. Singers will face in toward the library, and their sound will be projected back out toward Wilder Bowl.

The concert can be experienced on Vimeo, beginning at 7:30 p.m.

In selecting the program鈥檚 repertoire, Ristow was mindful of 91直播鈥檚 continuing efforts to foster a more equitable and diverse conservatory education, an initiative developed this summer in tandem with 91直播 College President Carmen Twillie Ambar鈥檚 Initiative on Racial Equity and Diversity.

Gregory Ristow
Photo credit: Tanya Rosen-Jones 鈥97

鈥淚t鈥檚 our responsibility as conductors to recognize that the choices we make in programming today will determine the canon tomorrow,鈥 says Ristow, director of conservatory vocal ensembles. 鈥淎s our nation responds to the killing of Black people in racist acts of violence, I wanted this program to seek greater racial equity, so that we can prepare our young performers to create a more compassionate and just music industry and world.鈥

The program includes Margaret Bonds鈥 The Negro Speaks of Rivers, derived from the famous poem written by a young Langston Hughes; Joel Thompson鈥檚 Hold Fast to Dreams and The Caged Bird Sings for Freedom, based on the Maya Angelou poem; and Adolphus Hailstork鈥檚 Three Dunbar Hymns, based on the poetry of the African American poet Paul Laurence Dunbar. 

Also included are pieces custom-made for outdoor, evening performance: Camille Saint-Sa毛ns鈥 Calme des nuits (鈥渓ike the night鈥) and Les fleurs et les arbres (鈥渢he flowers and the trees鈥), and selections from Felix Mendelssohn鈥檚 Im Freien zu singen, Op. 59鈥攚hich literally means 鈥渢o be sung outside.鈥

鈥淚 always think What is rep that needs to be heard right now?鈥 says Ristow. 鈥淢y goal, beyond pure academic education, is to select music that speaks to this moment in time. Because as performers and as audience members, thoughtful repertoire can guide how we experience music and how we experience life.鈥

In October 2019, the main library of Mudd Center was named the Mary Church Terrell Main Library in honor of the 1884 graduate, a founding member of the National Association of Colored Women (NACW) and the NAACP. 

鈥淚t feels especially important to sing these texts beneath the Terrell Main Library,鈥 Ristow says.

Many professors have adjusted their class goals to help students graduate with skills for the new remote world, and Ristow wants young musicians to understand the possibility for ensemble work.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been blessed with delightful weather as we prepare for this concert, and now I鈥檓 setting the choir up for the second part of the semester after the weather turns when we transition largely to online, improvisation-based singing,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o for each rehearsal, I鈥檝e been sprinkling in at least one improvisation exercise that we do in small groups, spread out throughout Wilder Bowl鈥攚hich has been a lot of fun.

鈥淎ll of us have something musical to say, and for many people, the trick is finding games that get us past the fear of saying those things musically. I hope it鈥檚 been a joyous experience for everyone and a chance for the choir to get to know each other in smaller groups, beyond the 40-some singers as a whole."

Perhaps now more than ever, finding joy amid times of fear is a goal well worth pursuing.

鈥淲e still have all the goals of a normal semester: building their performance skills, their collaborative skills, and their empathy toward one another,鈥 Ristow says. 鈥淣ow we have an additional focus on improvisation to highlight how much the students as performers bring to the performance process, and how much is possible in this new world.鈥

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