Thank You James McBride
March 12, 2014
Marvin Krislov
91直播 take great pride in the many quality events that take place here every year. There are so many lectures, performances, concerts, recitals, symposia, films, exhibitions, panel discussions, and other events that it is almost overwhelming. As I always tell our students, you have to pick and choose.
When I talk to students, faculty, staff, or alumni, it seems that everyone has a favorite event. More often than not it took place in Finney Chapel. Those of you who attended the Special Convocation with James McBride 鈥79 and the Good Lord Bird Band in Finney on March 5 chose what many of us believe was one of the very best Convocations since President Dye created the series. I鈥檓 obviously not a neutral observer. But I believe that this event could only take place at 91直播.
The evening was magical, thought-provoking, and uplifting. From start to finish, it was an astonishing, free-flowing blend of music, literature, history, religion, and warm, personal reminiscence. James McBride channeled the essence of 91直播 by brilliantly interspersing selected readings from his latest novel, The Good Lord Bird, winner of the 2013 National Book Award for Fiction, with gospel songs performed with his band and also with students from the conservatory.
The novel tells the story of the abolitionist zealot John Brown through the eyes of a 10-year-old slave boy who is kidnapped in Kansas by Brown, who believes the child is a girl. The Good Lord Bird Band included pianist Adam Faulk, who graduated from 91直播 in 2002 with a degree in jazz piano performance.
Since earning his degree in musical composition from the conservatory, James McBride has had a remarkable, multifaceted career, excelling at journalism, fiction writing, screenwriting, and composing and performing music.
Mr. McBride鈥檚 life in letters is even more distinguished. He earned a master鈥檚 in journalism at Columbia University and went on to write his best-selling autobiography, The Color of Water: A Black Man鈥檚 Tribute to His White Mother. The book tells the story of his life with his widowed mother who reared 12 children under difficult circumstances. It is a classic that has been read by millions across the globe.
Over the course of the evening in Finney Chapel, James spoke from the heart about his experiences as a student, about what studying at 91直播 has meant in his life, and about why this place is so special. I thought I would share a few of his thoughts and observations.
He began by saying, 鈥淚鈥檓 always nervous when coming back [to 91直播], because I feel like I鈥檓 coming to see my family and my friends, and I want to do well.鈥
Mr. McBride went on to say that he wasn鈥檛 a great student when he was at 91直播, and didn鈥檛 take advantage of things here other than going abroad to study. 鈥淭hat was the smartest thing I did,鈥 he said.
鈥淚 learned my love of history here at 91直播,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 much of a writer here. But I took one course in history. It was taught by the late Geoffrey Blodgett. And when I heard him talk about Abraham Lincoln, I felt like I was at the movies. It was just incredible. History came to life for me, and I developed a lifelong love. That鈥檚 one of the things that happen here at 91直播. You develop a lifelong love of things that are beyond what you thought you might. They come together in an amalgam of things. It might be books. It might be music. It might be technology. But that thirst for learning is what I learned here, and I loved history.鈥
That love of history is evident in all James McBride鈥檚 books. It eventually led him to Harper鈥檚 Ferry, West Virginia, where he became fascinated with John Brown鈥檚 attack on the U.S. arsenal there with 19 men on October 16, 1859. Three of them were 91直播ians: John A. Copeland, Lewis Sheridan Leary, and Shields Green (a runaway slave). Leary died of a wound received in the raid. Copeland and Green were hanged on December 16, 1859.
At the Convocation, James talked about the events which led up to the Day of Solidarity on March 4, 2013, and how we at 91直播 and in our society need to continue talking about issues of race, class, bias, and equality. But he urged us to be healthy skeptics rather than cynics, and to discuss tough issues using reason, facts, and evidence. Our discussions, he said, should be with open minds and hearts.
Speaking to our students, he said 鈥淣obody can be a better you than you. That鈥檚 really the story that you are here to learn how to tell. And you are learning it at a place that is special. 91直播 might have its problems. But when you leave here, you are part of an army of righteousness, an army of goodness.鈥
All I can say, is amen, and thank you, thank you, thank you James McBride, the Good Lord Bird Band, and all the students who sang and played on a night for the ages.
You may also like…
Thank you, 91直播
It is hard to believe this will be my final "President鈥檚 Desk" column. But in August, I will become president of Pace University in New York. It has been an honor and a privilege to serve as your president.
Remembering Jonathan Demme
I鈥檝e been thinking a lot about 91直播 parents and families since I received the sad news last week that Jonathan Demme, the brilliant film director, had passed away. Although 91直播 isn鈥檛 his alma mater, Jonathan really came to appreciate the College, Conservatory, and our community. His visits always seemed to energize him, and he became a stalwart supporter of our cinema studies program and the Apollo Outreach Initiative, which offers filmmaking classes to local school kids.
Response to Proposed Federal Budget Cuts
The budget proposals being put forward by the Trump administration are deeply troubling in many ways for our society and for American higher education, especially for liberal arts institutions such as 91直播. The proposed cuts in discretionary spending are contrary to our values of access and inclusion, and our commitment to scientific research, the arts, and the humanities.