The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Declaratio­n of Human Rights inspires music

- SARAH MILLS

LONDON — Composer Max Richter's new album Voices features narrators reading parts of the 70-year-old Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights, which he believes can stir hope in a world where we "lurch from crisis to crisis".

His piece starts with the voice of Eleanor Roosevelt, first lady of the United States from 1933 to 1945, who was instrument­al in setting up the Declaratio­n in 1948 after the Second World War.

Roosevelt explains the Declaratio­n is "for all peoples and all nations." Actor Kiki Layne then reads Article One, which begins "All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights," to a musical accompanim­ent.

"I wanted a young voice to read this Declaratio­n because for me, the Declaratio­n is about the potential of the future, the potential of that text," Richter told Reuters.

Other voices, crowd sourced by Richter, read in their native languages further parts of the text, which asserts that every person has the right to life, liberty and security without any type of distinctio­n, such as by race, colour, social origin, religion or politics.

A classical pianist with a love of German electronic band Kraftwerk, Richter was born in Germany but grew up in Britain. He has sold over one million albums and is renowned for his minimalist yet

The topic of human rights is relevant all the time ...

Max Richter Composer

melodic and emotive style.

"One of the starting points for the piece really was my sense that the promise and hopefulnes­s of that Declaratio­n ... was evaporatin­g before our eyes," he said.

The piece was conceived when Richter thought about the U.S. Guantanamo Bay detention camp — opened to hold suspects captured by the United States overseas after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, and his sense that "the world had gone wrong in a new kind of way."

"The topic of human rights is relevant all the time and as we lurch from crisis to crisis different aspects of it are highlighte­d and brought into focus," he said.

The Black Lives Matter protests following the death of George Floyd in the United States are a reckoning he said, over what is fundamenta­lly an issue of human rights.

Voices will be published on July 31, while the track All Human Beings taken from the album has just been released.

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