It took 138 years.
After a year and a half of the curtain lowered because of the coronavirus, the Metropolitan Opera in New York found the public this Monday evening for a historic first which resounded as far as Harlem: a work composed by a black musician, the trumpeter Terence Blanchard .
In 138 years of existence and despite great African-American composers like William Grant Still, the prestigious institution had never shown one of their operas, unlike other stages in the United States.
It's been done since Monday, with "Fire shut up in my bones", a contemporary and flamboyant work, with jazz and blues accents, by Terence Blanchard, renowned trumpeter famous for having composed the soundtracks of many Spike Lee films .
The libretto, written by American filmmaker Kasi Lemmons, is based on the memoir of Charles Blow, a columnist for the New York Times.
It took the Metropolitan Opera 138 years to perform an opera by a Black composer.
Here's to Terence Blanchard, a New Orleanian genius who broke a massive barrier!
h / t @Dr_CMGreer pic.twitter.com/0JudxUDB35
- Bob Hardt (@bobhardt) September 27, 2021
"It was very powerful"
The latter tells about his coming of age as a black boy in the southern United States, struggling with the racism and trauma of a sexual assault perpetrated by a cousin during his childhood. And for the occasion, the work, performed, sung and danced in the usual lair of the Met Opera, at Lincoln Center, was also shown on a giant screen, in an outdoor amphitheater at Marcus Garvey Park in Harlem, where entry was free. After three hours of performance, concluded with heavy applause, 48-year-old designer Lara Rabkin had tears in her eyes.
“It was very powerful.
It is important that we talk more about men expressing their emotions, especially black men in our community, because there is often no place to talk about their traumas, their injuries, and to support each other rather than send back an image of hardness, ”she explained, very moved.
Long before the show, in the shade of the trees in the park, near 125th Street in Harlem, a long queue had formed to show his vaccination card and then sit on the benches in the amphitheater. of 1,700 places quickly filled.
"It should have happened much longer ago"
Before baritone Will Liverman sang the first notes, the orchestra, conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin, had sounded the American anthem, applauded by the standing crowd. At the end of 2019, the Metropolitan Opera announced that it was putting Terence Blanchard's opera, already performed in Saint-Louis, on its program, without specifying what place this work would take in its season. A year and a half later, and after the George Floyd affair, “Fire shut up in my bones” is on the bill for the post-Covid reopening, an even more important symbol. It "goes beyond me" had confided the 59-year-old Louisiana-born musician. Six times Grammy Award-nominated and Oscar nominated, he sees it as a sign that "says more about what's happening in our country and in the art world."
But for Linda Talton, a 54-year-old education consultant who lives in the Harlem neighborhood, "it should have happened a lot longer ago." “It’s a shame that he’s just the first. We are in 2021. We should be ashamed, as a country ”, adds this woman, short hair dyed in blond, who says herself nevertheless“ very happy ”. "Terence Blanchard is incredible, he is a legend, it is very beautiful that he honors this space," she said.
During the pandemic, the Met, the largest employer in the United States in the field of live entertainment with more than 3,000 employees, also had to face long social negotiations, against a background of wage cuts, to be able to resume.
An agreement was finally reached at the end of August: it provides for salary cuts for musicians, with management pledging to restore some of it when ticketing revenues reach 90% of the level before the pandemic. .
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