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Thank you, Oregon!

Resonance Ensemble among the 621 cultural organizations awarded a total of $25.7 million dollars.

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Resonance Ensemble among the 621 cultural organizations awarded a total of $25.7 million dollars.

Resonance Ensemble is thrilled to share that we recently received over $43,000 from the Oregon Cultural Trust and Multnomah County Cultural Coalition. The funds, allocated to the Cultural Trust for Oregon cultural organizations facing losses due to the COVID-19 health crisis, were made available through a $50 million relief package for Oregon culture approved by the Emergency Board of the Oregon Legislature in July. 

We join 620 other cultural organizations in Oregon that were awarded a total of $25.7 million in Coronavirus Relief Fund Cultural Support grants. Thank you to local, state, and federal officials for their hard work in helping keep Oregon arts and culture alive.

Read the full press release on Oregon Cultural Trust’s website here.

These funds are life blood to Oregon’s cultural community. While they won’t replace all the losses suffered during the pandemic, they will ensure Oregon culture survives this crisis. We are deeply grateful to the Oregon Legislature for making this possible. - Chuck Sams, chair of the Oregon Cultural Trust Board

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PRESS RELEASE — Resonance Ensemble Announces its 12th Season: "Normal Never Was"

For immediate release: September 16, 2020
Media Contact: Liz Bacon Brownson | liz@resonancechoral.org | 971.212.8034

We will not go back to normal. Normal never was. Our pre-corona existence was not normal other than we normalized greed, inequity, exhaustion, depletion, extraction, disconnection, confusion, rage, hoarding, hate and lack. We should not long to return, my friends. We are being given the opportunity to stitch a new garment. One that fits all of humanity and nature.

Sonya Renee Taylor, award-winning performance poet, activist, and transformational leader
(reprinted with permission)

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Resonance Ensemble announces its 12th season, “Normal Never Was,”
featuring bold new works by composers and poets responding to this
moment in ways that only art can reflect. 

PORTLAND, OR — Normal Never Was, Resonance Ensemble’s imaginative 12th season, brims with performances that respond to the striking new challenges of the pandemic and to those that always were: racial and gender violence, inequality, and loss. 

From an exciting new video series under Portland’s historic bridges, to three major world premieres commissioned by Resonance, to a groundbreaking collaboration across Oregon, Resonance creates visionary art with world-class composers and musicians. 

“We were challenged this season to come up with ways to perform with our artists’ and audiences’ safety in the front of our minds,” says Resonance Artistic Director Katherine FitzGibbon. “We look forward to taking the stage once it’s safe to do so. Until then we offer other creative ways for our audiences to experience art that responds to the times, and we share these stories as we always do: through powerful new music written by innovative composers.” 

UNDER THE OVERPASS Video Series 
This series of videos celebrates Resonance’s hometown of Portland, Oregon, and the space it provides for Resonance artists to continue to create. Starting in the summer of 2020, singers and spoken word artists met in acoustic spaces around the city - six feet apart, masked, and yet together. Viewers will experience music performed in these gritty, hauntingly beautiful spaces. Resonance will produce four episodes beginning this October, free of charge and available for the whole world to enjoy.

COMMISSIONS FOR NOW Virtual World Premiere Series 
Resonance has commissioned three dynamic composers to create new works in response to this moment, as we face a global pandemic and envision a world free of racial and gender violence. Resonance will create powerful video premieres and release them for free. The composers are:

  • Jasmine Barnes, a brilliant up-and-coming composer based in Dallas, whose multifaceted works frequently address questions of race and religion

  • Damien Geter, who will share two “sneak peek” excerpts from his forthcoming work An African American Requiem, a bold, thought-provoking musical response to racial violence against African Americans (presented jointly with the Oregon Symphony)

  • Mari Ésabel Valverde, an award-winning composer who is openly transgender, who is creating a new work with author/playwright Dane Figueroa. Titled We Hold Your Names Sacred, this work will share perspectives of trans women of color and reflect on losses due to gender violence

Coming in Spring 2021: 

SIX FEET APART
In the face of loss, life continues. 
As a global health crisis continues to rage across our world, our communities are facing unprecedented challenges. Resonance Ensemble partners with Ashland-based Anima Mundi Productions to offer this evocative world premiere in an innovative video presentation, coming in Spring 2021. Six Feet Apart harnesses the power of music and poetry to give voice to communities and foster collective healing in times of crisis. Since the beginning of the pandemic, composer Ethan Gans-Morse and poet Tiziana DellaRovere have worked to collect stories from around Oregon and to set the resulting stories of hope, travails, and triumphs to music. This work explores these stirring stories and brings them all together in an innovative video presentation with striking visuals by one of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival's finest video designers.

We will announce the date of this virtual world premiere later this fall, with an opportunity for supporters to participate in a live Q&A with the creative team on its release date. The video, and an accompanying compilation of the pandemic stories, will thereafter be shared free of charge. 


AN AFRICAN AMERICAN REQUIEM 
Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall
Date to be announced

The eagerly-anticipated world premiere of An African American Requiem by Resonance’s Artistic Advisor Damien Geter

Oregon Symphony and Resonance Ensemble join forces to present the world premiere of An African American Requiem, Portland composer Damien Geter’s bold, thought-provoking musical response to violence against African Americans in the United States. Combining traditional Latin Requiem texts with civil rights declarations, poetry, and the famous last words of Eric Garner and now George Floyd, “I can’t breathe,” this performance will honor past and present victims of racial violence and spur reflection on how to build a more hopeful future. 

Resonance and the Oregon Symphony will announce a newly rescheduled date shortly, for a time when our community can all come together in person, post-pandemic, to share this significant and necessary musical work. Our mailing lists will be the first to know.


About Resonance Ensemble

In its twelfth season, Resonance Ensemble, a professional vocal ensemble based in Portland, Oregon, creates thoughtful programs that promote meaningful social change. Resonance Ensemble works to amplify voices that have long been silenced, and they do so through moving, thematic concerts that highlight solo and choral voices, new and underrepresented composers, visual and other performing artists, and community partners. 

Under Artistic Director Katherine FitzGibbon, Resonance Ensemble has performed challenging and diverse music, always with an eye toward unusual collaborations with artistic partners from around the country: poets, jazz musicians, singer-songwriters, painters, dancers. The Resonance Ensemble singers are “one of the Northwest’s finest choirs” (Willamette Week), with gorgeous vocal tone, and they also make music with heart. 

The groundbreaking work that Resonance Ensemble has been producing over the last few years has been noted by local media and national arts organizations. In Oregon Arts Watch, Matthew Andrews described Resonance as “Part social commentary, part group therapy, and part best damn choir show in town." (June 2019)  Chorus America honored Artistic Director Katherine FitzGibbon in the summer of 2019 with the Louis Botto Award for Innovative Action and Entrepreneurial Zeal for her work rededicating Resonance to promoting meaningful social change, and for the meaningful community partnerships she creates. For the tribute to Dr. FitzGibbon, please visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oaJMVozrcPo

#NormalNeverWas
#Resonance2021

About Dr. Katherine FitzGibbon
About Artistic Advisor and composer Damien Geter
About composer Jasmine Barnes
About composer Mari Ésabel Valverde
About Anima Mundi Productions

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Meet the newest member of the Resonance Team: Tia Bangura!

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Resonance Ensemble is excited to welcome Tia Bangura to our growing Resonance team as the Communication and Artist Coordinator.

Originally from Portland, Tia believes that the arts have the power to positively transform lives and communities. As an administrator, she finds joy in managing behind the scenes operations and seeing artists and audiences engage with art and each other.

Tia’s past work experiences have primarily been in museums. She has worked at the Portland Art Museum, The Studio Museum in Harlem, and the Tenement Museum in New York City. While Tia is still interested in the visual arts, she is excited to learn more about music and build a stronger connection to the performing arts through her work with Resonance Ensemble.

Tia holds a Master of Arts degree in Arts Administration from Teachers College, Columbia University, and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Anthropology and Black Studies from Portland State University.

As our Communication and Artist Coordinator, Tia will be responsible for contracting musicians, creating social media content, keeping our music library organized, and coordinating our volunteers.

Fun facts about Tia:

“I love to travel! Whether I'm in a different city, state, or country, I enjoy being in a new environment and exploring all it has to offer.”

Favorite foods: Pancakes, burgers, and ice cream.

Last movie Tia watched: Steven Universe: The Movie

Musical inspirations: I'm a big fan of Beyoncé, Solange, Sade, and Rebecca Sugar.

We are so excited to have Tia on our team. On behalf of all of us, welcome aboard, Tia!

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[UPDATE] An Open Letter from Resonance Ensemble and Members of the Portland Arts Community

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June 9, 2020

On May 25, 2020, George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, died handcuffed behind his back on a Minneapolis, Minnesota street, while white police officer Derek Chauvin knelt on his neck for almost nine minutes and three other officers watched. Local arts organization Resonance Ensemble immediately drafted an open letter in response to the devastating news, demanding that the state of Oregon and our leaders take action. Resonance invited arts leaders and citizens of our state to join us in stating unequivocally that BLACK LIVES MATTER and demanding that Oregon do better to protect the lives of our black citizens. The original plan was to deliver the letter to Governor Brown and Mayor Wheeler after a week of receiving signatures. 

Resonance Ensemble’s original open letter garnered over 1,000 signatures representing the Portland arts community, citizens, major arts leaders, and organizations who all stand together in support of tangible change to protect the lives of black people.

Since that time, there have been some changes:

  • Governor Brown has taken bold steps to acknowledge where the state has failed black people, has met with local leaders of color, and announced actionable steps the state of Oregon can take to do better. Governor Brown has stated, “We must do what we can right here in Oregon.” and “Words are not enough, we need action.” and finally, “Join me in co-creating a more just Oregon where black Oregonians can thrive.”

  • Mayor Wheeler has removed police officers from the Portland Public Schools and has signed the Mayor’s Pledge, President Obama’s call for mayors, city councils, and police oversight bodies to address police use of force policies. He has also met with local leaders of color and announced actionable steps the city of Portland can take.

Because of these recent changes, we have updated our letter (June 9, 2020) to clarify the accountability the arts community still demands of our state and local government officials. 

Read the updated Open Letter
Read the Oregon ArtsWatch Article on The Open Letter
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#REQUIEMSTORIES: "The music is alive and is already changing us."

May 23, 2020. Today is the day ‘An African American Requiem’ was supposed to premiere at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, with full orchestra, 4 world-class soloists, and a choir of over 100 singers.

We are asking everyone to submit what we are calling #requiemstories. Each day we receive another one - it has filled our hearts to read other’s experiences of this unfortunate delay. We will continue to post these stories as we get them. To submit your requiem story, please email us at info@resonancechoral.org.

Thank you to all who are with us on this journey. We stay hopeful and send you love.

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Katherine FitzGibbon’s #requiemstory

In an "alternate universe," today would have been the world premiere of Damien Geter's groundbreaking work, An African American Requiem. Damien's work is a powerful tribute to victims of racial violence against African Americans, from lynchings to police brutality. We need this work. We needed it when Damien wrote it, and sadly, we still need it. Ahmaud Arbery. Brionna Taylor. 

When we see injustice in the world, we speak out against it. As a musician, the way I process things and the "pulpit" I can use is musical performance. I've struggled these last two months with my feelings of loss — while recognizing that many other people have experienced loss on a vastly more significant scale than my own. But there is still loss; I have been part of the team of people bringing this work to life, raising funds, building awareness, for the last few years. I had conducted several choir rehearsals before we had to disband due to COVID. I "met" this work, movement by movement, as Damien was writing it, and I saw over and over how its very existence was galvanizing our community.

There is a lot we have lost by not performing this work today. (And we are comforted by the knowledge that we WILL perform this work in the future — hopefully in January of 2021!) We've lost, for now, our opportunity to use Damien's extraordinary music to respond NOW to racial violence against African Americans. We've lost, for now, the intentional community of choral singers that has come together, from all races and ethnicities, for what felt to us like a higher purpose. We've lost, for now, the incredible energy from our community partners on the African American Requiem Advisory Board who were working to create an entire curriculum around this concert, to build momentum in young people and Black Student Unions around the region, and (as Ombrea Moore at SEI said), to create Wakanda in the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall. 

But today is also a celebration. This music exists, and our hundred and ten voice choir has these amazing musical scores in our homes. We are still ready. The music is alive and is already changing us. We just have to wait a little longer for it to change our audience. 

One of my friends was reflecting this week about the way we can choose to identify and amplify the good things, the beautiful, the positive even against a backdrop of anxiety or loss. She asked, what is this? Is it grace? Is it hope? It's not just keeping a positive attitude about what may come, but it's choosing to see the beautiful things NOW. 

So, today, on what would have been the world premiere of An African American Requiem, I choose to see and embrace these truths. Damien has composed a work that is already doing what he set out to do. It is changing us. We have created a choir that never existed before, and we are brought together by our shared passion for this music and this message. We are forming new friendships. We are doubling down on our commitment against injustice. And we sense this shared energy and support from everyone who would have been in the audience tonight, and from our friends at the Oregon Symphony and AllClassical Portland. Can this seed of beauty and grace that already exists sustain us through our difficult time until it reaches its full flowering at its later world premiere? I know it can. 

—Katherine FitzGibbon, Artistic Director, Resonance Ensemble

READ ALL THE #REQUIEMSTORIES



Photo Credits: Rachel Hadiashar & Kevin Paul Clark

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Happy #GivingTuesdayNow, All.

We need each other every day of the week.

When the Giving Tuesday organization reached out to us to join them in this campaign we were hesitant to commit. At a time when so many are struggling to make ends meet, and arts organizations everyone need support, what is the right way to ask for support?

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We need each other every day of the week. 

When the Giving Tuesday organization reached out to us to join them in today's giving campaign, we were hesitant to commit. So many are struggling to make ends meet, and arts organizations everywhere need support.

But we realized this pandemic affects people's livelihood and it affects organizations we care about —  our community partners and our arts colleagues. #GivingTuesdayNow is an opportunity for people around the world to stand together in unity — to use their individual power of generosity to remain connected. We love that idea.

Would you consider giving today to organizations you support, including Resonance Ensemble? Your gift to Resonance supports paying fees to our artists *this month*, to replace income they are losing from postponed performances. Your gift funds exciting commissions of new and timely music that are already in the works for every concert next season. And your gift ensures that Resonance's mission continues to thrive through this difficult time, so that we can keep giving back to you and our community with relevant art that matters. 

On this day, we ask you show your generosity however you are able. Whether it's by helping your older neighbor get groceries, advocating for a local artist you love, sharing a skill, or giving to your favorite arts organization, every single act of generosity counts right now. You have gifts to give and the world needs you. 

Happy Giving Tuesday, all. (...and happy giving Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday, too.) We appreciate you every day of the week. 

With love,
From all of us at Resonance Ensemble

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An African American Requiem Postponed Until 2021

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Dear Resonance Supporters,

Resonance has been closely monitoring the COVID-19 research in order to ensure the health and safety of our audiences, artists, and community. We have made the hard decision, along with our partners at the Oregon Symphony and AllClassical, to postpone the African American Requiem world premiere until next season. The concert has now been rescheduled for Friday, January 22, 2021.
 
The Resonance team will continue to update you as we plan for this and other exciting events next season. In the meantime, if you purchased your AAR tickets through Resonance Ensemble, the following options are available for you:

  1. Your ticket can be converted automatically to a ticket for the same seat(s), for the Friday, January 22nd performance at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall. (This is the default option; we hope you’ll be able to come to the rescheduled date!)

  2. You can donate your ticket’s value back to Resonance (a tax receipt will be issued to you).

  3. You can request a refund.

Please let us know your preference by May 1st by emailing us directly at info@resonancechoral.org. If we do not hear from you by then, your ticket(s) will be converted to a ticket for the same seat for the Friday, January 22nd date.
 
If you ordered your tickets through the Oregon Symphony website, the Oregon Symphony will be in touch with you today with similar information.
 
Resonance cares. Mindful of the human and financial toll of this pandemic, we have committed to paying our artists a portion of their fees for this May’s concert. Donating right now, no matter how small, will help us support our musicians who find themselves suddenly without income.
 
To support this initiative, please click here. We appreciate your generosity.
 
We have hope that things will continue to improve. We’re putting the finishing touches on our upcoming season and look forward to the time when we will again share a space together in celebration of new music that promotes meaningful social change. Stay tuned for our 2020-21 season announcement!
 
Our hearts continue to go out to all those in our own community and around the world who are being impacted by this epidemic.
 
Thank you for supporting Resonance Ensemble.
 
Kathy FitzGibbon
Artistic Director, Resonance Ensemble

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DONATE TO RESONANCE NOW
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Your belief and support are needed now more than ever.

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Dear Resonance Supporters and Friends:
 
In the wake of the growing COVID-19 / coronavirus pandemic, I wanted to take a few moments to check in with you.
 
Resonance Ensemble is committed to walking our talk around social awareness. This is a challenging time for everyone. We are thinking particularly of individual artists and of arts organizations who are having to cancel events. This affects people’s livelihood and the sustainability of arts organizations. Your belief and support are needed now more than ever in our arts community. 
 
We have learned the importance of social distancing to slow the spread of COVID-19, to allow our health care system to have the capacity to treat all of those who need it. We will be rehearsing our African American Requiem choir remotely for the near future and will continue to make decisions with our artists at the front of mind. We are grateful to all of you for doing what you can to work from home when possible, and to help those who do not have that flexibility.
 
For the latest information regarding the virus, please visit the the Multnomah Health Department website and The World Health Organization website. 

Stay safe, keep yourself educated, and support your favorite arts organizations and individual artists when and how you can. Thank you for all you do as part of the Resonance community. We hope to see you at An African American Requiem in May.
 
Katherine FitzGibbon
Board President and Artistic Director
Resonance Ensemble

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COMPOSER SPOTLIGHT: Joe Kye

All my life I’ve listened. 

As an infant, I rode on my mother’s back, my ear pressed between her shoulder blades, the muffled hum of her lullaby enveloping me as I drifted off to sleep. 

Over the next few weeks, Resonance features composers and artists whose work will be performed at the Safe Harbor concert on March 1st.

We continue with celebrated Portland-based performer, violinist/looper, and composer Joe Kye. Resonance Ensemble will unveil Kye’s newly-commissioned work, integrating folk music from Kye’s native Korea with American folk music and improvisation.

My new work will have its world premiere on March 1st with my favorite Portland choir, Resonance Ensemble at Alberta Rose Theatre. Korean lullabies, folk rhythms with percussionist Darian Anthony Patrick, and uplifting choral harmonies...DON’T MISS THIS SHOW. I’m very proud of this piece, and I can’t wait to share it with you.
— Joe Kye, Composer, Violinist/Looper

Joe Kye’s new music video premieres on PopMatters today! “It's the American dream as it should be, Kye reaching across the divide with music to try and heal it - for everyone.” Take a watch:

All my life I’ve listened. 

As an infant, I rode on my mother’s back, my ear pressed between her shoulder blades, the muffled hum of her lullaby enveloping me as I drifted off to sleep. 

At age six, I first heard the guttural sounds of English and recoiled at its harsh “s” and t” sounds, uncommon in the Korean language. These tall, white Americans sounded like spitting snakes. 

In third grade, I remember my parents murmuring in hushed tones, wondering how they’d afford next month’s rent. In just two years in the United States, we’d whittled through our savings, the American Dream unveiling itself as but a tantalizing mirage. 

And before I left for college, I listened as my parents sat me down to apologize, wiping away tears for all they were unable to provide, the grief and regrets of first-generation immigrant parents poured out onto our dining room table.

It wasn’t until I’d graduated, four years into teaching high school English in Seattle, that I finally began to listen to myself. From lullabies to Sibelius, Korean sitcoms to Stevie Wonder, I’d lived my life in the margins, absorbing the eclectic, unsure of my place in the world. But as I watched my students dream, grow, and find their place, I realized I’d never given myself the opportunity to pursue the one thing that afforded me true joy: music. 

And so I left—a stable career, security and stability in the rearview, to synthesize and embark on a quest to give voice to my world, my identity. 

This past summer, when Resonance Ensemble approached me about composing for Safe Harbor, I was overjoyed. How could I write a collaborative piece that gave voice—quite literally, in this case—to the anxieties of little Joe? The regrets of mama and papa Kye? How could I recognize these disquiets while also reassuring listeners that there is a different way? That we, with our individual hopes and dreams, can come together to build a community that allows each to express and pursue these fully, regardless of race, gender, class, or sexual orientation? 

This very moment, our country continues to rip children away from their mothers. Our country continues to incarcerate fathers and brothers for the purpose of profit. Our country continues to justify the sins of the violent and powerful, choosing instead to blame victims for their suffering. 

And so, in the face of these oppressions, I offer my voice—this collaborative performance with Resonance. I offer a meditation of empowerment, a dwelling place for the rekindling of compassion, a sonic clearing in which we can feel, together, what the alternative looks like. 

Mark your calendars, friends. March 1st. Join usall of us. 

Give Now

WE NEED YOU. Resonance Ensemble is able to commission artists like Joe Kye because of the generous support from listeners like you. Please consider donating to the Dinah Dodds Fund for the Creation of New Art today. 

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WHO IS JOE KYE?
Born in Korea and raised in Seattle, violinist- looper and vocalist Joe Kye has drawn rave reviews since launching his career, “discharging world[s] of emotion” and delivering “divine messages” with his lush string loops and eclectic style (Guitar World). Drawing upon his migrant upbringing, Kye blends indie-rock, jazz, classical, and pop to create a unique sound that “leaves everyone in awe” (Sac News and Review). With his innovative use of digital effects and looping, Kye weaves together diverse textures, catchy melodies, and rich, sweet vocals to create songs that groove, uplift, and empower listeners: "A single violinist...one mesmerizing symphony" (Sacramento Bee). A powerful storyteller with an inclusive sense of humor, Joe’s performances weave his immigrant narrative through his show, inspiring audiences to compassion and empathy in these divisive times.

For more information about Joe Kye, CLICK HERE

For more information about Darian Anthony Patrick CLICK HERE

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COMPOSER SPOTLIGHT: Sydney Guillaume | Réfugié, mon Frère

Over the next few weeks, Resonance features composers and artists whose work will be performed at the Safe Harbor concert on March 1st.

We continue with Haitian-American composer Sydney Guillaume. His moving work, “Réfugié, mon frère,” is a setting of text by his father, Gabriel T. Guillaume, and reminds us of the humanity of refugees that is often overlooked.

We are all travelers on the roads of the earth.
May I dare ask you not to forget
The humanity you carry within you.
My brother, whatever your refuge is, you are at home.
— Gabriel T. Guillaume
Composer Sydney Guillaume

Composer Sydney Guillaume

About “Réfugié, mon Frère”

“Réfugié, mon Frère” was written in 2017 at a time when DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) was being debated in the United States because of a suggested end to the program that granted temporary protection from deportation to nearly 700,000 young people. As an immigrant from Haiti who migrated to the U.S. with my family at 11 years-old, I was deeply affected by the uncertain future the “DREAMers” were facing through no fault of their own.

Since the premiere of the piece in 2018, there have been some gruesome acts against immigrants and refugees, including children being separated from their parents at the U.S. border. My hope is that this piece brings to focus a part of the immigration debate that is often forgotten – the humanity of the refugees fleeing their countries.

— Sydney Guillaume

Join us on March 1 to hear Resonance perform Guillaume’s “Réfugié, mon Frère.”

Sydney Guillaume will be attending Safe Harbor, and will participate in a Q&A talkback after the concert- so think of your questions!

Until then, please enjoy our friends at Lewis & Clark College performing “Réfugié, mon Frère” last winter:

About Sydney Guillaume

Praised by the Miami Herald for their “impressive maturity and striking melodic distinction”, Sydney Guillaume’s compositions are known to be intricate, challenging and yet highly spirited. They promote human values and are full of heart and passion. His compositions continually enthrall choirs everywhere and have been performed around the world. They have been featured at numerous conferences and international festivals like the American Choral Directors Association (ACDA), the World Choir Games and Ireland’s Cork International Choral Festival. He is an active member of the choral community as a composer, singer, clinician and conductor. In 2017, he was honored by the top music school in Haiti for his “great contribution in the expansion and the promotion of the music and culture of Haiti around the world.”

Sydney Guillaume graduated from the University of Miami in 2004 where his works were performed by the Miami University Chorale conducted by Dr. Jo-Michael Scheibe. Originally from Port-au-Prince, Haiti, he is currently residing in Portland, Oregon working as a full-time composer, conductor and clinician. For more about Mr. Guillaume, click here.

For more information about Safe Harbor click here.

TICKETS FOR SAFE HARBOR
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