Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Songs in prisoners’ hearts

Music can transform forgotten people and places

- Kathleen Parker Look at me now/I’m not who I once was/The trials in my life/Have come to make me strong/So look at me now. Kathleen Parker is a syndicated columnist for The Washington Post.

Lee Correction­al Institutio­n, South Carolina’s largest maximum-security prison, gets plenty of bad press — from a riot and a lockdown in February to drone-delivered contraband a few days ago.

But within the walls of this all-male complex, something rare and beautiful is also happening.

On a recent serendipit­ous visit to the prison with a friend, renowned cellist Claire Bryant, and a group of her fellow New York musicians, I was privileged to witness the transforma­tive power of music scored with human kindness.

Claire, whom I’ve known since she was a kid, is the poster child for giving back. Each year, she brings her enormous talent, her gargantuan heart and several artists — the Carnegie Hall affiliate ensemble “Decoda” — to forgotten places and people.

Few are more forgotten than the men at Lee, many of whom have committed violent crimes, many of them sentenced to life imprisonme­nt. But a life behind bars needn’t mean the end of one’s humanity.

For four half-days and one full day of rehearsal, the musicians worked with inmates writing original music that was then performed in a concert for fellow inmates, prison staff and a half-dozen invited civilians, including me.

If I knew then what I know now/I’d never stop believing/That I can do anything/I can change/I can be transforme­d.

So goes the chorus to one of the songs written by Keith, Don and DX in collaborat­ion with Decoda. The theme of the five-day project was, you may have guessed, transforma­tion, which is an equally apt word to describe this particular group of 30, all part of a special group of 256 within the prison (total population 1,700).

They call themselves BLIC, for Better Living Incentive Community. Created after a riot in 2012, BLIC members are selected based on good behavior and housed in a separate dorm. As an inmate described it to me: “He wanted us to think as free men rather than as incarcerat­ed men without hope.” (“He” refers to BLIC creator Michael McCall, deputy director of the South Carolina Department of Correction­s.)

The program is peer driven, faith-based — and ought to be replicated in every prison. It works. In the past two years, there have been no infraction­s among BLIC members. This means, among other things, that inmates leave their cell doors open, their lockers unlocked and, significan­tly, they don’t have to worry about being stabbed — a near-daily occurrence elsewhere in the prison, inmates told me.

Such comity also means that the musicians — and I during rehearsals — felt comfortabl­e among inmates with only a single guard in sight. Indeed, there was great camaraderi­e and affection between the two groups.

If you doubt that within every person resides a divine spark, listening to prisoners express their joys and sorrows — ever-luminous even in this dark place — may cause you to reconsider.

The 19 songs created and performed came from deep places many had never explored before. With a few notable exceptions, many had no prior musical experience. Don, a quiet, selfcontai­ned 24-year-old serving his sixth year, began learning to play guitar three years ago. He learned from Rob — BLIC’s maestro — whose father taught him to play at 10. Rob now runs a music program for 70 inmates.

“With music,” says Rob, “I can travel all over the world without leaving my cell.”

The concert brought jubilation and left few dry eyes. A young man in his 20s rapped his heart out in homage to his grandmothe­r, who suffered Alzheimer’s while he was away chasing dreams. She didn’t remember him upon his return 10 years later — until, tending a boyhood vow, he fed and tucked her in bed the way she used to do him.

Another performed a heartbreak­ing memoriam to his little girl who had died, a song he tearfully testified had finally brought him peace.

Unlike inmates who claim they’re innocent, each man I spoke to accepted full responsibi­lity for the actions that put him behind bars. All insisted that they had changed.

From the outside, it’s easy to snicker at that sentence — and perhaps there was a con artist or two in the bunch — but there was something transcende­ntly good at Lee Correction­al on that Sunday afternoon.

The final chorus that brought all to their feet tells the rest of the story:

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