Seven Last Words of the Unarmed by Joel Thompson (21:19)
ANN ARBOR—Michael Brown. Trayvon Martin. Oscar Grant. Eric Garner. Kenneth Chamberlain. Amadou Diallo. John Crawford.
These
men are the subjects of a powerful multimovement work by Atlanta-based
composer Joel Thompson titled "Seven Last Words of the Unarmed" that was
debuted by the Men's Glee Club at the University of Michigan in October
2015.
Though
the song and accompanying documentary premiered nearly five years ago,
the recent deaths of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor have
led many to revisit or discover the work for the first time. ⠀
"It
is unreal to me that we worked on this project so long ago, yet somehow
resonates even more now than it did then," said Eugene Rogers, who
originally commissioned the work as former director of the Men's Glee
Club. "People have been sharing it again and reaching out—it has been
really overwhelming."
Since
premiering "Seven Last Words" and producing an award-winning film with
Michigan Media, Rogers has spent the last few years working with
scholars from other disciplines to create educational resources, which
were recently made available to the public at sevenlastwords.org.
"Right
now, people are looking for comfort, and they're also looking for
constructive, concrete ways to process these events and move forward,"
said Rogers, who is now director of choral activities at the U-M School
of Music, Theatre & Dance. "We have created in-depth, thoughtful
resources for those who want to use this artistic work to begin these
critical conversations in our classrooms, workplaces, places of worship
and homes."
On
the "Seven Last Words" project website, you can learn more about the
seven men and their stories, and view the 24-minute-long film "Love,
Life & Loss," which features a full performance of the song
alongside interviews with Thompson, Rogers and various student
performers.
The
website also provides a rich resource for those looking to teach or to
use the work as a catalyst for critical discourse in their personal
spaces of influence.
To
do this, Rogers enlisted the help of U-M law professor Margo Schlanger
to curate important information on U.S. policing and reforms, and U-M
School of Education design coordinator Darin Stockdill, who created
curricula for high school and university teachers, as well as discussion
guides for community and professional organizations.
Looking back
Looking back
Thompson
met Rogers while workshopping his composition in 2015. He was initially
inspired by Iranian-American artist Shirin Barghi's #lastwords project,
where he drew from more than a dozen of Barghi's illustrations
containing the dying words of unarmed black men shot and killed by
police or other authority figures. He then chose seven statements that
aligned most closely with the classical structure of Joseph Haydn's
"Seven Last Words of Christ on the Cross."
The song's seven movements represent the last words of seven different men:
-
"Why do you have your guns out?" – Kenneth Chamberlain, 66
-
"What are you following me for?" – Trayvon Martin, 16
-
"Mom, I'm going to college." – Amadou Diallo, 23
-
"I don't have a gun. Stop shooting." – Michael Brown, 18
-
"You shot me! You shot me!" – Oscar Grant, 22
-
"It's not real." – John Crawford, 22
-
"I can't breathe." – Eric Garner, 43
Each
movement is distinctly different, borrowing influences from musical
theater, Bach, Brahms, and even aleatoric music—a style of music where
an element of the composition is left to the spontaneity of the
performers, which can be heard as students repeat Oscar Grant's last
words "You shot me! You shot me!" in Movement V.
"'Seven
Last Words of the Unarmed is essentially a diary entry of the pain I
was experiencing," said Thompson, who is currently pursuing a doctoral
degree in composition at Yale University. "I'm literally where I'm at
today because Eugene took a chance on me and bravely chose to program it
and teach with it despite the risks involved."
"Releasing
the piece into the world has created a space where people have been
able to open their hearts up, and that part of this journey has been
fulfilling."
Thank you, Bill! We hope folks will use these important resources.
Warmest regards,
Eugene [Eugene Rogers, Faculty Member, University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre and Dance]
1 comment:
Thank you for highlighting Joel Thompson's extraordinarly moving and important "The Seven Last Words of The Unarmed"
It is perhaps the most profound work for this moment in history. May it inspire all of us to work for social justice and criminal justice reforms.
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