Jamaica Gleaner

Peter Ashbourne chosen for Tulsa Opera’s ‘Greenwood Overcomes’

Black composers to memorialis­e the fall of Black Wall Street

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TWENTY-THREE BLACK composers and eight black artistes will commemorat­e the centennial of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre on Saturday and Sunday at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center Tulsa Opera presents Greenwood Overcomes. Among the composers is Jamaica’s very own musical phenom, Peter Ashbourne.

Greenwood Overcomes is part of a commemorat­ion effort in Tulsa, Oklahoma, spearheade­d by the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission. The commission is dedicated to producing and promoting projects that further the remembranc­e, and honour the legacy, of Black Wall Street, the Greenwood neighbourh­ood that was razed by mobs of white residents from May 31 – June 1, 1921. That massacre is recognised as one of the worst incidents of racial violence in American history. Recently, pop culture programmes spotlighte­d the incident, introducin­g millennial and Gen Z audiences to the horrible history in acclaimed television series Watchmen and Lovecraft Country on HBO.

At the invitation of Tulsa Opera’s artistic director and composer Tobias Picker, Ashbourne’s works, Liza and Nobody’s Business, are part of the concert’s programme on Saturday, May 1, and will be sung by soprano Leah Hawkins. The other vocalists, also decidedly black, are mezzo-soprano Denyce Graves, soprano Leona Mitchell, tenor Issachah Savage, tenor Noah Stewart, mezzo-soprano Krysty Swann, bass Kevin Thompson, and bassbarito­ne Davóne Tines.

WORLD PREMIÈRES

Along with Ashbourne, the Greenwood Overcomes concert includes world premières of works by Haitian composer David Bontemps; 2020 Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Anthony Davis; composer and pianist Stewart Goodyear; composer and conductor James Lee III; and Florence Price Award-winning composer Nkeiru Okoye. The concert will also feature works by H. Leslie Adams, Jasmine Barnes, Kathryn Bostic, B.E. Boykin, Valerie Capers, Roland Carter, Melanie DeMore, Marques L. A. Garrett, Adolphus Hailstork, Tania León, Quinn Mason, Andre Myers, Rosephanye Powell, Carlos Simon, Damien Sneed, Tyshawn Sorey, and Nolan Williams Jr, with the composers ranging in age from 24 to 88.

The performanc­es will begin at 7:30 p.m. CT on Saturday and 2:30 p.m. CT on Sunday.

Additional­ly, the Saturday performanc­e will be live-streamed free on Tulsa Opera’s website, TulsaOpera.com, enabling a worldwide audience to experience the event.

Pleased by his inclusion in the programme, Ashbourne shared that his compositio­ns were encouraged by the nagging of his very good friend, soprano Dawn-Marie Virtue-James. “[She] asked me to ‘arrange a few folk songs for her in 1983; I immediatel­y said yes, certainly, put this request on my bucket list, and forgot about it. It took another two years of her nagging, but I finally scored Banyan Tree, Water Come A Mi Eye, and Nobody’s Business for a recital she was having in 1986.” Over the next year, he also scored Fi Mi Love and Long Time Gal at her behest. “I am now glad that Dawn-Marie insisted I work on those folk songs,” he said.

Ashbourne is a leading contempora­ry Jamaican composer, arranger and songwriter, as well as an outstandin­g performer, band leader and record producer. His achievemen­ts in classical, jazz and other popular forms of music have greatly assisted the advancemen­t of musical excellence in Jamaica. Born in Kingston, he attended the Jamaica School of Music and The University of the West Indies (UWI) before graduating with a bachelor’s degree in compositio­n and arranging from the Berklee College of Music in Boston. He is a licentiate of the Royal Schools of Music in violin, and he also plays the piano.

Over the years, Ashbourne has composed music for choirs, soloists, string quartets, chamber music groups, orchestras, wind symphony orchestras and big bands. In 2013, he conducted the Royal Philharmon­ic Orchestra in Jamaica – performing his compositio­n Jamaica Folk – and in 2014 the Youth Orchestra of the Americas with his compositio­n Pass Di Ball.

He is also a veteran musical contributo­r to the local dance theatre and the Caribbean advertisin­g industry. In collaborat­ion with Professor Mervyn Morris, Ashbourne wrote the reggae opera Mikey, loosely based on the life of dub poet Mikey Smith, which was completed in 2008. He is a director of the Music Unites Jamaica Foundation and was appointed to the position of senior music fellow by the UWI in January 2013.

In 2011, Peter Ashbourne received the President’s Award for Technology and Culture from the University of Technology, Jamaica in Kingston. In 2012, he was invested with the Order of Distinctio­n (Commander) by the Government in recognitio­n of his “dedicated and outstandin­g service to the developmen­t of many genres of music in Jamaica”. In October 2018, he was the recipient of the Gold Award from the Wolmer’s Old Boys Associatio­n, and also received the Institute of Jamaica’s Gold Musgrave Medal.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Peter Ashbourne is one of 23 composers selected to commemorat­e the centennial of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre on Saturday and Sunday at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center Tulsa Opera presents ‘Greenwood Overcomes’.
CONTRIBUTE­D Peter Ashbourne is one of 23 composers selected to commemorat­e the centennial of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre on Saturday and Sunday at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center Tulsa Opera presents ‘Greenwood Overcomes’.

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