Nkeiru Okoye (Phil Marin, New York Times)
Voices Shouting Out by Nkeiru Okoye
Columbia Orchestra
Howard County Center for the Arts
8510 High Ridge Road
Ellicott City, MD 21043
8510 High Ridge Road
Ellicott City, MD 21043
NKEIRU OKOYE (born 1972)
VOICES SHOUTING OUT
Composed: 2001-2
Premiered: Norfolk, Virginia, 2002
Born in New York to a Nigerian immigrant and his African-American wife,
Nkeiru Okoye has brought an entirely new perspective to bear on American
musical life. She is, in both the usual and a very literal sense, the
musical voice of African America. While she is—of
course—African-American, she is also an American African. This dual
heritage has resulted in a musical personality of exceptional strength
and directness, and an immediately recognizable sound like no other.
Elements as diverse as Tamla Motown, hip-hop and traditional Yoruba
music can be heard—and, more importantly, felt—in her music, along with an almost Sousa-like sense of pride. And it is that pride that forms the core of Voices Shouting Out, Okoye’s response to the tragedy of September 11, 2001.
Those who expect an outpouring of elegiac sorrow in a work written in
the wake of 9/11 will be surprised. This piece is no Barber Adagio;
it is a hymn of celebration—an affirmation of unity and positivity in
the face of the ultimate negative. Okoye began by attempting to write
the expected memorial work, but soon found herself grinding to a halt,
forced to reconsider by a rebellion from within herself. Rather than
mourning the lost, she realized, the music needed to rejoice in the
living with the sort of ferocity that can only come to those who have
stood in the ruins of their own world and seen the future through the
smoke. As she herself writes:
“In the end, rather than ‘crying out,’ my official response was Voices
Shouting Out in freedom, as it were, through the music. It was a march
to acknowledge those fighting on behalf of our safety, and yet a
sparkling celebration of life for those of us who
continue living.”
Comment by email:
Hi Bill, Thanks so much. You’re awesome! Nkeiru [Nkeiru Okoye]
Comment by email:
Hi Bill, Thanks so much. You’re awesome! Nkeiru [Nkeiru Okoye]
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