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Aria Code

Blanchard's Fire Shut Up in My Bones: A Boy of Peculiar Grace

Aria Code

WQXR & The Metropolitan Opera

Music Interviews, Music Commentary, Aria, Music, Arts, Metropolitan, Performing Arts, Code, Wqxr, Opera, Wnyc, Studios

4.82.6K Ratings

🗓️ 13 October 2021

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week we’re decoding with the man who wrote the code - Terence Blanchard, composer of Fire Shut Up in My Bones. Not only is it the work that reopened the Met after its 18-month pandemic shutdown, but it’s also the first opera by a Black composer ever to be performed there. Based on the 2014 memoir of the same name by New York Times columnist Charles M. Blow, Fire Shut Up in My Bones is a coming-of-age story about his childhood in a tiny town in northwest Louisiana.

From a young age, Charles knew he was different, not like his brothers or the other boys. After being sexually assaulted by his older cousin, he was consumed by shame, and especially when he began to feel attraction toward boys as well as girls. The South was not the place to be questioning one’s sexual identity as a Black man in the 1970s and 80s. But in the aria “Peculiar Grace,” he puts his questions aside and looks forward to a brighter future. Host Rhiannon Giddens and her guests explore the experience of feeling like an outsider, and the life-changing path toward self-acceptance.

Composer Terence Blanchard is a multiple Grammy-winning composer and jazz trumpeter. Fire Shut Up In My Bones is his second opera, and it premiered at Opera Theatre of St. Louis in 2019. He has scored countless films, and is known for his many collaborations with the film director Spike Lee, including most recently Da 5 Bloods and BlacKkKlansman. Each was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Score. He credits his father for his love of opera, and he has a particular fondness for Puccini’s La bohème.

Baritone Will Liverman is singing the role of Charles in the Met’s production of Fire Shut Up In My Bones. While he was sitting on his couch during the pandemic, wondering if he’d ever get to sing in front of an audience again, he was invited to send an audition tape and landed the role just a few days later. Will has collaborated with D.J. and artist K-Rico to create The Factotum, a contemporary adaptation of Rossini’s The Barber of Seville for the Lyric Opera of Chicago. He is an alumnus of the Ryan Opera Center at the Lyric Opera of Chicago.

Dr. E. Patrick Johnson is an artist, writer, and professor of Performance Studies and African American Studies at Northwestern, where he is also the Dean of the School of Communication. He is the author and editor of several award-winning books, including Sweet Tea: Black Gay Men of the South. His research for the book included dozens of interviews with men who were born, raised, and still live in the South, and he later adapted it into a staged-reading, Pouring Tea, as well as a full-length play and a documentary. He has received multiple awards both for his scholarship and his stage work.

Transcript

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0:00.0

I've never played a role where I saw so much of myself and my own story in it.

0:11.7

And there's a few times, you know, going through the score where you're fighting back the

0:17.6

tears because it gets so personal.

0:22.7

From WQXR in the Metropolitan Opera, this is Aurea Code.

0:26.2

I'm Rianne Giddens.

0:28.4

I identify with Charles's feeling of being other until I could then recognize that I could

0:37.8

use my otherness to my advantage.

0:41.0

Every episode we unwrap an Aurea to reveal the gifts inside.

0:45.1

Today it's peculiar grace from fire shut up in my bones by Terrence Blanchard.

0:50.2

Once you stop chasing something that you'll never be and accept that who you are is fine

0:59.3

and it's kind of cool, that can be freeing.

1:12.9

Now here on Aurea Code, we always hear from the singers, but never from the composers because

1:18.4

well they're usually dead.

1:20.9

But Terrence Blanchard is the composer of Fire Shut Up in My Bones and he's very much

1:25.1

alive and with us on the show today.

1:28.4

This opera is a collaboration with LeBretta's Casey Lemons and it had its world premiere in

1:33.2

2019 at the Opera Theatre of St. Louis.

1:35.9

It debuted at the Met this fall and it's a big deal for so many reasons.

1:41.1

Not only is it the first opera to take the stage at the Met after an 18 month closure due

1:45.7

to the pandemic, it's also the first opera by a black composer the Met has ever produced.

1:51.7

As in, ever.

1:53.6

Y'all, this was a long overdue.

...

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