Marti Newland (YouTube.com)
Shannon LaNier
is the sixth great-grandson of Thomas Jefferson and African-American slave, Sally Hemings (Amazon.com).
MELODEON:
Music of Injustice and Revelation
The Moan of the Forest, or the Cherokees’ Lament – Anthony Philip Heinrich 1840
From the Diary of Sally Hemings – William Bolcom/Sandra Seaton 2001
Sunday, November 3rd, 2013 at 7 p.m.
Christ & Saint Stephen’s Episcopal Church, 122 West 69th Street, NYC
Tickets:
$20 GENERAL/$15 STUDENTS, SENIORS
Music of Injustice and Revelation
The Moan of the Forest, or the Cherokees’ Lament – Anthony Philip Heinrich 1840
From the Diary of Sally Hemings – William Bolcom/Sandra Seaton 2001
Sunday, November 3rd, 2013 at 7 p.m.
Christ & Saint Stephen’s Episcopal Church, 122 West 69th Street, NYC
Tickets:
$20 GENERAL/$15 STUDENTS, SENIORS
Marti Newland, soprano, Artis Wodehouse, piano
George Spitzer, narrator
Shannon LaNier, guest commentator, Jefferson and Sally Hemings
George Spitzer, narrator
Shannon LaNier, guest commentator, Jefferson and Sally Hemings
About Music Of Injustice and Revelation
Sally Hemings
(1773-1835) was one of Thomas Jefferson’s slaves at Monticello. After
the death of Jefferson’s white wife, Martha, Hemings (who through
miscegenation was also the half-sister of Martha) became Jefferson’s de
facto mistress, and with Jefferson produced six children. While
speculation about their relationship emerged during his first term as
president, it was verified only in the 1990s when DNA evidence traced
the genetic lineage back through generations of Jefferson's
African-American descendants. Hemings is not known to have actually
written a diary, but Bolcom and Seaton have taken all the known historic
facts about Heming’s life and reconstructed her experience through a
fictional/poetic first-person voice.
The Cherokee
attempted to use diplomacy and legal argument to protect their
interests. During the 1820s, as they enjoyed one of the most promising
periods in their history—developing a written language, adopting a
constitution and building a capital city -- white settlers kept coming.
Unforgivably, the newly minted US state governments did little to
discourage these settlers, ignoring federal treaties and abetting the
theft of Indian land through bribery, fraud and coercion. The Cherokee
turned to Washington for redress, which proved futile.
The Cherokee finally succumbed in 1838, when they were marched 800 miles into an extremely bitter winter across the Mississippi to Oklahoma. This mass exodus was a communal tragedy that came to be known as “The Trail of Tears”. Composer Anthony Phillip Heinrich (1781-1861), an émigré composer from Bohemia and utterly sympathetic to the plight of the Cherokee, wrote "The Moan of the Forest or the Cherokee’s Lament" in response to this monumental injustice.
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