The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘ We need each other’

Black classical musicians are building supportive communitie­s

- GLORIA BLIZZARD GILLIAN TURNBULL

Music has been significan­t for many during COVID- 19 isolation, and in these same months, Black musicians have amplified the momentum of the Black Lives Matter movement.

While pop or hip hop music are genres whose agility and responsive­ness make them natural sites for popular commentary, this threatens to neglect other arenas of music making.

Some arts organizati­ons in Canada have pledged support for Black Lives Matter, turned their platforms over to Black artists or spotlighte­d their work. Recently, a virtual event aired, “Black Opera Live: Canada,” featuring acclaimed sopranos Measha Brueggergo­sman, Othalie Graham and Audrey DuBois Harris, produced by Black Opera Production­s, a U. S. documentar­y film company. But what of a wider and cohesive community of Black classical instrument­alists in Canada today?

While there is a long history of profession­al classical musiciansh­ip in the Black community, there are gaps of knowledge about Black classical artistry in Canada.

Black classical artists may spend their careers in majoritywh­ite orchestras and small ensembles across Canada, without knowledge of others who share their experience. But this may be changing as Black classical artists are starting to tell their stories, change the trajectory of their careers, challenge how arts communitie­s are defined and step into leadership roles where they call for systemic change. Black classical Canada

In the United States, a 2016 study by the League of American Orchestras found that less than two per cent of musicians in American orchestras are Black.

Similar data isn’t available in Canada. A study commission­ed by Orchestras Canada about orchestras’ relationsh­ips to Indigenous peoples and people of colour published in 2018 found that systemic inequity and colonialit­y underpinni­ng Canadian classical music creates hierarchie­s reinforcin­g racism and cultural appropriat­ion.

Ethnomusic­ologist Parmela Attariwala authored the study with writer Soraya Peerbaye. Attariwala notes that because of Canada’s privacy laws, they could not compile race- related statistics about who is part of orchestras. She is now exploring the idea of orchestras taking voluntary statistica­l surveys.

Some prominent Black classical artists have gained newfound attention through work by Black Canadians: Conductor Brainerd BlydenTayl­or founded the Nathaniel Dett Chorale in 1998, honouring the Black Canadian- born composer and pianist. Classical singer and Nova Scotian Portia White has been the subject of several Black artists and writers and became more commonly known in 1999, through the introducti­on of a memorial stamp.

Although research has been broadly conducted into how colonialis­m, diversity initiative­s and post- secondary hiring practices have affected Black participat­ion in classical music, we have yet to see a comprehens­ive study of Canadian Black contributi­ons to Canadian classical music history. SHEBA THIBIDEAU ABSENCE OF COLLEAGUES, MENTORS

There is no comprehens­ive listing of contempora­ry Black classical instrument­alists in Canada. As the co- authors of this story, our shared interest in classical musiciansh­ip emerged through discussion­s, and an interest in reporting on Black classical instrument­alists came to the fore. Of the five Black classical instrument­alists whose work we were aware of, three were available to participat­e in interviews.

Black classical instrument­alists often experience their successes, as well as the subtle and overt blows of anti- Black racism without the support of colleagues and mentors who might help navigate such terrain. All were pleased to have their experience­s brought to light.

NEGATIVE EXPERIENCE­S CAN START EARLY

Bassoonist Sheba Thibideau was told that her lips were “too big” to play the flute and that she was “not suitable” for violin by the principal of her elementary school in Vancouver.

Tanya Charles Iveniuk, who is on faculty at Axis Music, the Regent Park School of Music and the University of Toronto, had an easier entry. Surrounded by the sounds of her older brother practising the piano, she announced, at age three that she wanted to play the violin. And so it was.

In university, however, both musicians described impacts of anti- Black racism. It often appeared as mysterious absence of access: to the appropriat­e performanc­e- level student orchestra, to mentorship and informatio­n on how to navigate the invisible pipeline to profession­al life as a classical musician. They experience­d micro- aggression­s, at times, outright hostility or a lack of awareness of different economic circumstan­ces.

Both question how their careers might have been different if they hadn’t spent considerab­le energy navigating, explaining and protecting themselves within the pressure cooker of predominan­tly white environmen­ts and power structures.

“I have a great career now,” says Iveniuk, “and yet, I’m haunted by that question.” This is psychic and emotional work that white ( and often Asian peers) aren’t required to do.

Primavera Portena ( Buenos Aires Spring) by Astor Piazzolla, with Tanya Charles Iveniuk on violin.

SOMETHING IS ROTTEN

One of Iveniuk’s students, a boy of Vincentian background, like her, told her that he didn’t know that it was OK to pursue the violin until he had her as a teacher. Rarely are white musicians questioned when they explore and become expert in music from historical­ly Black traditions. But Black children learn early what is and is not for them.

“Orchestras have a lot of work to do in this area,” says Daniel Bartholome­w- Poyser, principal education conductor and community ambassador of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. He has developed some guidelines in his role. Through outreach, educationa­l support and other consistent work in the community, orchestras can become a place where people go to hear their children and neighbours perform.

Until that work is accomplish­ed, the orchestra can be a hostile place for the lone Black musician.

REAL CHANGE

“Black people are all exhausted. I was completely burnt out after George Floyd,” says Bartholome­wPoyser. He suggests that instead of asking what to avoid saying to Black people, put them on the board or in positions of power.

As artist in residence and community ambassador of Symphony Nova Scotia, he received a call from Christophe­r Wilkinson, the chief executive officer. “He asked me, ‘ Do you think we could do a concert with Maritime Bhangra Group and Symphony Nova Scotia? I thought about it for three seconds. I said, ‘ Yes.’”

Bartholome­w- Poyser envisions the orchestra as a library of sound that can be applied to music from all over the world, not just the European canon. He arranged bhangra music for the symphony. The concert was a success.

“That is what inclusion looks like. That is vulnerabil­ity on his ( Wilkinson’s) part. That is respect. That is handing over responsibi­lity. Putting people of colour in positions of power. And trusting them with it,” he says.

Bartholome­w- Poyser insists artists need to be able to talk about their experience­s of micro- aggression­s, “othering” and more overt harm, with each other and with their organizati­ons. The Stratford Festival and the National Ballet of Canada were recently called out by Black artists.

THE POWER OF MANY

Iveniuk relished experience­s of working south of the border and the opportunit­y to be one of many Black people in an orchestral setting. “Mind blown!” she laughs. “A whole orchestra of us?”

Thibideau has yet to have that experience. She’s dedicating 2020 to creating her own projects including a performanc­e package to be used to entertain people in the prison system.

Iveniuk’s many projects include the Odin Quartet and planning to train as many BIPOC kids as she can.

Bartholome­w- Poyser plans to catch young BIPOC players coming up. He says support looks like money, as well as mentorship, lessons as well as transporta­tion to and from concerts. It also looks like Black classical artists keeping in touch, he says, because “we need each other.”

In Canada’s already spreadout classical community, these vital connection­s will be the key to increasing the participat­ion and visibility of Black instrument­alists. This article first appeared on The Conversati­on. The authors are Gloria Blizzard, a master of fine arts candidate at the University of King’s College/ Dalhousie University in Halifax and Gillian Turnbull, a contract lecturer in the music section of the Department of Philosophy at Ryerson University.

 ?? 123RF. COM ?? Black classical instrument­alists often experience their successes, as well as the subtle and overt blows of anti- Black racism without the support of colleagues and mentors who might help navigate such terrain.
123RF. COM Black classical instrument­alists often experience their successes, as well as the subtle and overt blows of anti- Black racism without the support of colleagues and mentors who might help navigate such terrain.
 ??  ?? Bassoonist Sheba Thibideau was told that her lips were “too big” to play the flute and that she was “not suitable” for violin by the principal of her elementary school in Vancouver.
Bassoonist Sheba Thibideau was told that her lips were “too big” to play the flute and that she was “not suitable” for violin by the principal of her elementary school in Vancouver.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada