鶹Ƶ

Omar Tells His Story

October 11, 2024

Stephanie Manning '23

man wearing scarf on head holding a cane

woman with long hair leaning on armAs every 鶹Ƶ graduate knows, you’re bound to meet fellow Obies everywhere. And the initial workshop for , the first opera by , was no exception.

Conductor was there in New York City to witness the work in its early stages. “I said to Rhiannon, ‘You know, I went to 鶹Ƶ too.’ And then a couple of the singers said they did. And she was like, ‘Man, we gotta do it at 鶹Ƶ,’” he says with a laugh.

Years later, that vision will finally come true when the 鶹Ƶ Orchestra and choral ensembles present a concert version of Omar on December 6 and 8. The Pulitzer Prize-winning opera loosely follows the life of Omar ibn Said, a 19th-century Islamic scholar from West Africa who was enslaved in South Carolina.

Kennedy, who conducted the work’s premiere and a later production, will lead the students and a cast of 鶹Ƶ alumni soloists. Giddens herself will be among them.

man in dark sweater, smiling“I know it's extremely meaningful to Rhiannon that this be performed at 鶹Ƶ,” Kennedy says. It’s also a bit of a homecoming for himself, as he hasn’t visited campus in almost 15 years. After arriving in just a couple of weeks, he’ll rehearse with the students for more than a month to prepare for the big undertaking.

Rather than perform Omar’s Journey, a truncated version of the opera scored for a small ensemble, 鶹Ƶ will present the entire 170-minute work, minus the staging. Giddens, singing the role of Julie, will be joined by , , , , and .

“Opera is, first, music and singing, and it's sometimes really wonderful to distill an opera just to its music and to listen to it that way,” Kennedy says. He adds that the strength of the score speaks for itself. Giddens wrote the libretto and composed the music together with Michael Abels, who also provided orchestrations.

“I think that the two composers have accomplished something remarkable in sort of fusing the African American musical traditions that are so important to Rhiannon’s aesthetic with the idiom of opera,” Kennedy says. “To me, they're expanding what we might consider to be classical cultural traditions.”

Omar has a visceral and powerful impact on people."

He has especially high praise for Giddens’ gift for writing arias — “‘Omar’s Aria,’” he says, is “one of the great arias of the last hundred years” — as well as Abels’ ability to draw out different sounds from the orchestra. “There's no banjo. There's no kora. And yet the orchestra sometimes is able to evoke one in a really fantastic way.”

Though audiences won’t hear a real kora during the opera, they can on December 7, when performs on the West African instrument as part of the Artist Recital Series.

“I've actually been an admirer of Seckou’s music even before the Omar opportunity came up,” says Sally Takada, the Conservatory’s Associate Dean of Artistic Programming and External Relations. “However, it seemed like the perfect opportunity to bring him for the Artist Recital Series during our Omar at 鶹Ƶ weekend because we wanted to present the opera in the context of all the other topics and themes it covers.”

Two days before his performance, Keita will lead a lecture demonstration on West African music and performance practices. And that’s just one of numerous campus events that weekend open to the public.

The Contra Dance Club will host a lesson and dance session, 鶹Ƶ faculty will organize several academic panels, and the will have a specially curated collection of works on display —as will the . There will also be pre-and post-concert discussions around the opera’s December 8 performance at the .

Even with so much going on, Omar itself remains at the heart of it all. Kennedy recounts the music's effect on a singer who performed in the work’s premiere. During the first rehearsal, “he comes up to me at the break, and he goes, ‘This is the greatest opera I've ever sung in my life,’” the conductor says.

Whether the students will react similarly remains to be seen, but Kennedy is optimistic. “I think that Omar has a visceral and powerful impact on people. So it would surprise me if that doesn't happen again."


Stephanie Manning’23 completed her bassoon performance degree while finding her way into journalism as a classical music critic. She recently returned to Cleveland after finishing a graduate diploma in journalism at Concordia University in Montreal. Her writing has appeared in The Montreal Gazette, Early Music America, and ClevelandClassical.com.

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