[Kirk Smith, guest conductor for Gyro Productions Masters Series concert ‘The Great’ on January 19.]
Maestro Kirk Smith forwarded the link to this piece to the Center for Black Music Research at Columbia College Chicago. He has conducted its New Black Music Repertory Ensemble.
Karen Adams
January 14, 2013
I dial Kirk Smith’s Houston number with an impression from my
research is that he is a man who is passionate about music, fun, life,
and education. He answers warmly and without pretense, and I relax,
knowing that we are going to have an interesting conversation.
I start by asking his thoughts on a partial quote I recently discovered: that “…the pursuit of educational and professional excellence [is] a means of advancement within society…” and how he thinks it applies to music.
What we do is, and always has been, a part of our various cultures and societies, in terms of both communicating art, and communicating feeling.
His response is thoughtful and deliberate: “… some people,
when you tell them you’re a musician, ask, ‘… so what do you really
do,’ as though what we do isn’t important enough—even though it is often
very complex, very heartfelt, and very worked out intellectually. What
we do is, and always has been, a part of our various cultures and
societies, in terms of both communicating art, and communicating
feeling.”
Smith talks eagerly about educating students and older people, about
music being for all, not just for those belonging to a particular group.
He gives an example of a class he introduced a complicated and
difficult musical score to, and about how he was teaching them that it
was nevertheless taken on by professionals, high schools, and even
younger people.
Someone in the class made a comment, inferring that only younger
children of a certain ethnicity would take on such a difficult piece.
Smith says he took the time to educate the students right then and there
about not holding on to a closed-minded idea about any group of people,
or about any type of music, and encouraged them to experience life—and
ultimately music—without such bias. “Musical traditions and ideas cross
all cultures, and those kinds of closed-minded thoughts won’t be allowed
in this class.”
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