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Terence Blanchard - Dallas Symphony concerts to air on KERA-TV / The Dallas Morning News

Oscar nominee, six-time Grammy-winner and 2018 USA Fellow trumpeter/composer Terence Blanchard has been a consistent artistic force for making powerful musical statements concerning painful American tragedies – past and present.

From his expansive work composing the scores for Spike Lee films ranging from the documentary When the Levees Broke, about Blanchard’s hometown of New Orleans during the devastation from Hurricane Katrina to the epic Malcolm X; and the latest Lee film, Da 5 Bloods which was released by Netflix on June 12, Blanchard has interwoven melodies that created strong backdrops to human stories.

Blanchard received an Oscar nomination for his original score for Spike Lee’s BlacKkKlansman. He was also BAFTA nominated for his original music for the film. He won a Grammy for Best Instrumental Composition for writing “Blut Und Boden (Blood and Soil)” a track from BlacKkKlansman.

Grammy 2More recently, Blanchard has composed his second opera, Fire Shut Up in My Bones, based on the memoir of celebrated writer and The New York Times columnist Charles Blow. The libretto was written by Kasi Lemmons and commissioned by Opera Theatre of Saint Louis where it premiered in June 2019. The New York Times has called Blanchard’s opera “inspiring,” “subtly powerful” and “a bold affecting adaptation of Charles Blow’s work.” The Metropolitan Opera will premiere Fire Shut Up in My Bones on September 27, 2021 to open their 2021-22 season in New York, making it the first opera composed by an African American composer to premiere at the Met. Blanchard’s first opera, Champion also premiered to critical acclaim in 2013 at OTSL and starred Denyce Graves with a libretto from Pulitzer Prize Winner, Michael Cristofer.

With his current quintet The E-Collective, featured on the score to BlacKkKlansman with a 96-piece orchestra, Blanchard delivered “a soaring, seething, luxuriant score,” The New York Times. In Vice Magazine, Blanchard elaborates, “In BlacKkKlansman it all became real to me. You feel the level of intolerance that exists for people who ignore other people’s pain. Musically, I can’t ignore that. I can’t add to that intolerance. Instead I have to help people heal from it. “

Some of Blanchard’s other film and television credits include Spike Lee’s Jungle Fever, Summer of Sam, 25th Hour, Inside Man, and Miracle at St. Anna; Kasi Lemmons’ films, Eve’s Bayou, Talk to Me, and Harriet; George Lucas’ Red Tails; Tim Story’s Barbershop; the powerful documentary On the Record which was directed and produced by Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering and premiered on HBO Max in May 2020; and the critically acclaimed drama series Perry Mason starring Matthew Rhys with episodes directed by Tim Van Patten which premiered on HBO in June 2020.

TB-shot01-062_FPO 2Blanchard scored One Night in Miami which marks Regina King’s feature directorial debut and was acquired by Amazon Studios and premiered at the Venice International Film Festival in September. The film opened in theaters on December 25, 2020 and launched on Prime Video on January 15, 2021. Blanchard also wrote the music for the upcoming feature film Bruised which is the directorial debut for Halle Berry who also stars and premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival.

Regarding his consistent attachment to artistic works of conscience, Blanchard confesses, “You get to a certain age when you ask, ‘Who’s going to stand up and speak out for us?’ Then you look around and realize that the James Baldwins, Muhammad Alis and Dr. Kings are no longer here…and begin to understand that it falls on you. I’m not trying to say I’m here to try to correct the whole thing, I’m just trying to speak the truth.” In that regard, he cites unimpeachable inspirations. “Max Roach with his ‘Freedom Now Suite,’ John Coltrane playing ‘Alabama,’ even Louis Armstrong talking about what was going on with his people any time he was interviewed. Herbie Hancock & Wayne Shorter who live by their Buddhist philosophy and try to expand the conscience of their communities. I’m standing on all of their shoulders. How dare I come through this life having had the blessing of meeting those men and not take away any of that? Like anybody else, I’d like to play feel good party music but sometimes my music is about the reality of where we are.”


The Grammy-winning trumpeter performed twice with the DSO in February. Fans who missed out will get a chance to see the shows this week.

The Dallas Morning News - Thor Christensen writes…..If you missed trumpeter-composer Terence Blanchard’s concerts earlier this year at the Meyerson Symphony Center, you’re in luck. The PBS show Terence Blanchard in Dallas premieres Tuesday, Sept. 5, at 8 p.m. on KERA TV and repeats Sept. 8 at 11 p.m. and Sept. 10 at noon.

The hourlong program is a mash-up of two February concerts. The first featured the Dallas Symphony Orchestra in the first orchestra performances of Blanchard’s Fire Shut Up in My Bones. The opera — based on columnist Charles M. Blow’s memoir about sexual identity and betrayal — was the first work by a Black composer to be staged by the Metropolitan Opera of New York.

The second Dallas concert starred Blanchard with his E-Collective jazz band performing alongside the Turtle Island String Quartet. The PBS show also includes interviews with Blanchard and other musicians.

In February, the New Orleans-raised Blanchard told The Dallas Morning News he’s trying to erase opera’s fusty image and attract new fans.

“I try to tell people it’s musical theater at its highest form, and I try to take it out of the realm of opera. ‘Opera’ is a buzzword, just like ‘jazz,’ where people hear them and think of negative stereotypes. I’m trying to demystify those stereotypes.”

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