["Public Radio International co-host Celeste Headlee shares with Lawton Elementary students stories about her grandfather, William Grant Still on Jan. 13." Photo courtesy of Christy Potter.]
Ann
Arbor Public Schools
By
Tara Cavanaugh, AAPS News Service
Special guests at Lawton Elementary’s Martin Luther King, Jr.
celebration brought history to life on Friday, Jan. 13.
Public
Radio International
co-host Celeste Headlee, conductor John McLaughlin Williams and vocal
performer Daniel Washington taught students a valuable lesson about
the history of African Americans.
Headlee is the granddaughter of William Grant Still, who is
regarded as the “Dean of African American composers.” She told
students about the challenges her grandfather faced in order to
become a respected composer. He dreamed of writing classical music at
a time when the only acceptable music for African Americans was jazz
played in honkey-tonks, Headlee explained.
Through persistence, luck and education, Still did become a famous
composer. His accomplishments were numerous, but he was still
affected by the discriminatory laws of his time. Headlee shared one
example: Still won a contest to compose the theme music for the 1939
World Fair, but in order to attend the fair outside of “Negro Day,”
he needed a police escort for his safety.
Headlee told the students that when considering the
accomplishments of someone like her grandfather or Dr. King, “you
have to remember that doing it then was so much harder than now. That
can help you be a little more grateful for what we all have. And it
also makes us aware of what you are able to accomplish. Because if
they did that then, think of what you can do now.”
A classically trained soprano, Headlee performed two songs,
“Citadel” and “Brown Baby,” her silvery voice soaring
effortlessly through the cafeteria without the help of a microphone.
Williams, the first African American conductor to win a Grammy,
accompanied her on the violin
.
Washington, who also serves as the Associate Dean for Minority
Services at the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre and
Dance, read excerpts from “I Have a Dream,” his voice booming
with the powerful words of Dr. King’s famous speech
“There is no such thing as ‘black history,’” Headlee told
the students. “You can’t look at William Grant Still’s life and
say, he did all of this by himself in isolation. He did not. If there
were not people of every color who were willing to help him all along
the way, then he no one would know the name of William Grant Still.
“That’s why I have to tell the story every time. Because
William Grant Still was not just black, he was mixed race. He was
black, and Cherokee, and Spanish, and Scotch-Irish. He was a lot of
things. So when you say things like ‘black history’… you also
have to remember that we’re just talking about Americans.”
Eventually, Headlee said, she hopes that there is no need for a
specific “Black History Month” in February. “All of us oldsters
in this room are counting on you guys to make that happen—to make
it so that we don’t need February set aside anymore as a special
month. That’s your job, and I’m going to be checking in on you in
30 years!”
[
WilliamGrant Still (1895-1978) is profiled at AfriClassical.com, which
features a comprehensive Works List by Prof. Dominique-René de
Lerma,
http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com]
No comments:
Post a Comment