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Terence Blanchard [Talks Back]

OffBeat Magazine

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November 2019

In June, the Metropolitan Opera announced that it will stage an opera by an African-American composer for the first time in the company’s 163-year history.

- John Wirt

Terence Blanchard [Talks Back]

New Orleans jazz trumpeter Terence Blanchard composed Fire Shut up in My Bones, the Met’s historic choice. “He’s a brilliant composer,” Peter Gelb, the Met’s general manager, told The New York Times following the announcement. The opera may premiere in New York as soon as the 2020-2021 season.

Times classical music critic Anthony Tommasini reviewed Fire Shut up in My Bones’ world premiere production at Opera Theatre of Saint Louis. “Vocal lines,” Tommasini wrote in June, “flow from lyrical wistfulness to snappy declamations; dense big-band sonorities in the orchestra segue into lighter passages backed by a jazz rhythm section. And there are rousing evocations of gospel choruses at church, blues and, during a fraternity party, a rhythmic chorus of spoken words, finger snapping and dance steps.”

Kasi Lemmons based the Fire Shut up in My Bones libretto on a memoir by Louisiana native Charles Blow, a New York Times opinion columnist. Blanchard previously composed musical scores for Lemmons’ films Eve’s Bayou, The caveman’s Valentine and, opening November 1, harriet, a biopic about Underground Railroad conductor Harriet Tubman.

This year has been a big one for Blanchard, including his sixth Grammy Award and UCLA’s announcement that he has been named the first Kenny Burrell Chair in Jazz Studies at the Herb Alpert School of Music. The Met and UCLA announcements follow the Oscar nomination Blanchard received in January for Spike Lee’s BlacKKKlansman. Lee and Blanchard have collaborated on more than a dozen films since the trumpeter composed the music for 1992’s Malcolm X.

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