2022 Spoleto Festival USA program book

Page 10

FROM THE GENERAL DIRECTOR Mena Mark Hanna

“We sailed in the big Sea for a month and a half until we came to a place called Charleston.” These words, written in Maghrebi Arabic, are the words of an African who survived the Middle Passage through the Atlantic. They are the words of a man sold into bondage here in Charleston. They are the words of a scholar who spent a quarter century in west Africa studying Islam, mathematics, and astronomy before his enslavement. They are the words of Omar Ibn Said. This year, Spoleto Festival USA premieres Omar, an opera by Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels based on Omar Ibn Said’s autobiography. Omar’s account is the only existing example of an autobiography written in Arabic by an enslaved person in North America, and his words carry meaning far beyond the Carolinas. When Omar was asked to write “his Life” by his owners in 1831, it was meant to capture a “curiosity”: the curiosity that an enslaved man could write, the curiosity of a strange language, the curiosity of a heathen religion. Through the blanks on these scant pages, the gaps in his account, and the veiling of personal faith in Christian imagery, Omar preserved himself: linguistically, spiritually, and psychologically. Two hundred years later, that curiosity is stripped away, and the words of this enslaved man are brought to life through the emancipatory power of music, less than a mile away from Gadsden’s Wharf, where he and 100,000 other enslaved Africans were forcibly landed in the United States. That is momentous. Omar was commissioned by my predecessor, Nigel Redden, to be premiered for the 2020 Festival. Over the past two convulsive years, calls for justice rang throughout our communities; the opera was twice delayed by the pandemic and is now reimagined by director Kaneza Schaal. Omar in 2022 is different than Omar in 2020. That is true of all performing arts.

8

S P O L E TO F E S T I VA L U S A

Though it is hard to see through the dim cloud of an ongoing pandemic and a continual struggle for equality, we are living in a cultural renaissance. Artists are demonstrating how the past bleeds into our present while imagining a better future. Artists are embracing the multiplicity of human expression. Artists are reframing the canon through their perspective. Artists are unwavering in the belief that their practice—now more than ever—can bridge differences. The 2022 Festival is at the forefront of this renaissance. Omar is an opera by African American artists, told, in Michael Abels’s words, from a “Black perspective, telling the story of Black people in the United States.” In Unholy Wars, Karim Sulayman recasts the medieval crusades from the vantage of an Arab American through Italian baroque opera. Choreographer Reggie Wilson and his Fist and Heel Performance Group delve into the obscure history of 19th-century Black Shaker communities in POWER. The Festival Orchestra presents a premiere restoration of Rhapsodic Overture by Edmund Thornton Jenkins, a Charleston-born Black composer who died in Paris at age 32 in 1926, virtually unknown in his homeland. We express the indomitability of the human spirit in Lift Every Voice and Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony; witness tragic love told backwards in La bohème; and dance with every primeval fiber of our being to Youssou NDOUR, The War and Treaty, and Shakey Graves. Like Dael Orlandersmith in Until the Flood, art has the ca-


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Articles inside

Contributors

23min
pages 128-148

Committees and Volunteers

2min
pages 125-126

Institutional Contributors

1min
page 127

Administration and Apprentices

3min
pages 122-124

Charleston Symphony Orchestra Chorus

1min
page 121

Spoleto Festival USA Chorus

1min
page 120

Spoleto Festival USA Orchestra

2min
pages 118-119

Music Texts

28min
pages 108-117

A Community Engaged

2min
pages 106-107

Wells Fargo Festival Finale featuring Shakey Graves

1min
page 103

Conversations With

1min
pages 104-105

Cécile McLorin Salvant ^

1min
page 102

Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway

1min
page 101

Music in Time: The Street

6min
pages 95-97

Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony

9min
pages 98-100

Tyshawn Sorey/Aaron Diehl/Matt Brewer ^

2min
pages 91-92

Ravi Coltrane: Universal Consciousness ^

1min
page 90

Rhapsodic Overture

8min
pages 87-89

The War and Treaty

1min
page 84

Linda May Han Oh and Fabian Almazan ^

1min
page 83

Allison Russell

1min
page 82

Youssou NDOUR: Mbalax Unplugged ^

1min
page 77

Sounds Like Transcendence

6min
pages 74-76

Lift Every Voice

6min
pages 79-81

Nduduzo Makhathini

1min
page 78

Music in Time

5min
pages 72-73

Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi

1min
page 71

Tell Your Story: An Orchestra Project

3min
page 70

Bank of America Chamber Music

17min
pages 63-69

Machine de Cirque

3min
pages 60-61

Dusk by Fletcher Williams

1min
page 62

Storm Large

1min
pages 58-59

Until the Flood

5min
pages 56-57

Malpaso Dance Company ¤

8min
pages 50-53

The Approach

5min
pages 54-55

Ballet Encore ¤

7min
pages 46-49

Reggie Wilson/Fist and Heel Performance Group ¤

12min
pages 42-45

La bohème

20min
pages 30-35

Unholy Wars

18min
pages 36-41

Omar

24min
pages 22-29

What’s in a name?

6min
pages 16-18

From the General Director

4min
pages 10-11

From the Chair of the Board

2min
pages 8-9

Always a Creator

5min
pages 19-21
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