Tag: Umoja

Making a statement

The need for self love and self care is crucial, and working to help uplift and show care toward other Black people is a vital part of this work. As a member of the national board for the National Association of Negro Musicians (NANM), here is a statement I have crafted about our work:


“With gratitude and reverence for the pioneers who have come before and for those who are with us now; with sober focus and determination to carry on the work of honoring and advancing our legacy; in the face of all manner of trials and tribulations in our midst: the National Association of Negro Musicians is firmly committed to its mission of promoting, preserving, and supporting all genres of music created or performed by African Americans.”

Core Messsage Concepts:

To all creators, performers, and educators who identify as Black, African American, Negro, or Colored;

To all those who seek to promote, preserve, and support all genres of music created or performed by African Americans:

WE CARE FOR EACH OTHER – Here’s what NANM provides… 

  • scholarship money;
  • a platform for cultural engagement and celebration;
  • educational/historical/cultural resources;
  • a space for those who identify as members of the African diaspora to be seen and to process shared experience.

WE SEE EACH OTHER – Here’s who NANM honors for already doing the work…

  • Our heroes, past and present.
  • Visit nanm.org to learn more.

WE APPRECIATE EACH OTHER – Here’s who honors and supports NANM’s work… 

  • Our donors and members

WE NEED EACH OTHER – Here’s who we need to help continue NANMs legacy…

  • solicitation of scholarship applicants;
  • calls for scholarly papers and articles;
  • calls for presenters and performers at national convention.

I’m working on building the infrastructure that enable us to more effectively fulfill our organizational mission, thereby strengthening and uplifting ourselves so that we may be sustained in the fight against racism alongside our non-Black siblings.


Composition

I’ve had so much inspiration to work on new projects that I can hardly figure out where to begin. I’ve also had numerous requests for scores from my catalogue of completed works. If you would like to peruse a score or purchase a license for one or more of my works, please use the contact form on my website at zanaidarobles.com. Sometimes it takes me a couple days, but I’ll respond as soon as I possibly can. I’m excited to share my music with you!

In the meantime, here’s a recent recording I made of my work “Umoja” for treble voices. I added a few things to spice it up! 

Umoja , arranged and sung by Zanaida Robles

Conducting

As I prepare to go back to the “virtual” choir room this fall, I’m working on shoring up my conducting skills. Conducting is such a magical art form to me, and I grieve the loss of the ability to practice my art due to COVID-19. However, I’ve decided to commit to continuing to work on my craft and to use my skills in the service of my ensembles through video. Some works I’m hoping to video record myself conducting this fall include “Sanctus” from Requiem by Maurice Duruflé, “Hehlehlooyuh” by James Furman, and my very own composition “Kyrie.”

As I prepare for this fall, I have been reviewing texts and notes from my doctoral studies at USC. I’ve also been reading choral music publications and paying attention to the current work of my colleagues in the field of choral music education. One of the most delightful things I’ve found was my friend Dr. Christopher Gravis’s video introduction to instrumental conducting. His video was absolutely inspirational to me, reminding me how amazingly complex our art form can be and how we have a responsibility to put in the work to thoroughly study and fully comprehend the music we conduct, regardless of whether it’s instrumental or choral.  Here’s the video:

Instrumental Conducting:  Introduction to the Orchestra, the Score, and Transposition — by Christopher Gravis, posted June 2020.

Singing

When I’m not recording vocals for various professional projects, I’ve been singing through my 24 Italian Art Songs and Arias, trying to work on my legato phrasing and vowel alignment. (I enjoy playing them on my flute, too!)

I’m also playing around with GarageBand to create new music. Here’s a recording I did not too long ago of “Karitas Habundat” by 12th century composer and mystic Hildegard von Bingen.

Karitas Habundat by Hildegard von Bingen, sung by Zanaida Robles

For Fun

My daughter is really into K-Pop right now. I love watching her dance to this music because she moves with such effortless style and confidence. I’m in awe of how easily she picks up these dance steps; she’s such a natural dancer (complete opposite of me!). She tried to teach me the dance steps to a couple of songs. Laughter ensued, and then I gave up. But it’s fun to try!  Start here:

BLACKPINK – ‘Kill This Love’ DANCE PRACTICE VIDEO (MOVING VER.)

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First Street Symphony Performance

I had an opportunity to sing for a very special audience on October
10, 2015. I had never been inside a prison facility before, and I
figured this a fitting Street Symphony experience, which could aid me
in my personal preparation for the Messiah Project. We, the Street
Symphony Chamber Singers, sang Durufle, Palestrina, Moses Hogan. But
the magic truly began when the inmates sang to US. First, I taught
them a little canon I wrote called “Umoja,” the first principle of
Kwanzaa meaning “unity.” We all sang it together, joining our voices
to voices of the incarcerated women. And when we had finish and they
had heartily thanked us, the women then asked if they could sing a
song for us. They harmonized and swayed in rhythm and sang fervently,
freely. In that moment, they gave us a most precious gift: their own
hearts through music. In sharing their music with us, they showed us
were all the same and that we all have the same power to use music as
a vehicle for building relationships. And I was humbled.