Photo credit: Yerba Buena Center For The Arts |
Additionally, Pinderhughes’ The Healing Project exhibition at San Francisco’s Yerba Buena Center For The Arts has been extended by popular demand and will run until September 4. Find additional details and tickets HERE.
Pinderhughes’ critically acclaimed album GRIEF—another integral part of The Healing Project—is out now. Pinderhughes wrote all the songs and makes his official debut as a singer on GRIEF. Written in the spirit of music from the ’60s and ’70s by artists like Nina Simone and Curtis Mayfield who made powerful statements about life and social justice through their music, GRIEF aims to evoke feeling through texture and harmony by underlining the human voice as a bonding agent. Listen to/share the latest single “Grief” HERE and watch/share the videos to “Holding Cell” HERE and “Masculinity” HERE. Listen to the full album HERE. Additionally, watch a special NPR Tiny Desk performance of “The Cry/Masculinity,” “Holding Cell,” “Grief” and “Process” filmed onsite at The Healing Project exhibition at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts HERE.
CRITICAL ACCLAIM FOR THE HEALING PROJECT:
THE HEALING PROJECT AT
YERBA BUENA CENTER FOR THE ARTS: “The necessity of art like this underscores how deep-seated and
unresolved the issues it confronts are. The project operates as a call to action, broadcasting the fact that our nation has not reckoned with racism in a meaningful way—despite a long-running civil rights movement.” “For its unflinching look at a history of violence, The Healing Project resounds
harmoniously as a chorus of voices and invites viewers to join in solidarity for a less racist and less violent American future.” “Samora Pinderhughes doesn’t want to just talk about structural violence. He wants to
pave new avenues toward change. In his multimedia exhibition The Healing Project, currently on display at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, Pinderhughes marries different visual and sonic mediums in a prismatic reflection of resilience amid hardship. Rather than casting a single light, he projects a constellation of physical and virtual spaces: the exhibition, the album GRIEF and a digital archive of the installation. Through it all, he actively grapples with racism, incarceration and the systemic ills of capitalism.” “Through his purposeful engagement of various mediums, Pinderhughes centers
and amplifies the voices of the silenced, creating living spaces where individuals can grapple with endemic violence. In doing so, he encourages participants to move through the pain, and he invites all to partake in revolutionary change.” SAMORA PINDERHUGHES’ ALBUM GRIEF:
“He’s produced this masterful work in three parts: it’s part digital archive, it’s
part film and there’s a sound component which is this album and is absolutely incredible. It’s fascinating listening to this record how much softness there is to it, at the same time there’s really grandeur and range and reach, this is a fantastic record.” “The arrangements are so, so beautiful. It’s his official debut as a singer and it’s
incredible to hear yet another skill he pulls out of his bag. We hear him composing and producing and all of that but now he’s also singing and he has so much to say, it’s beautiful.” “The album’s sound is a mix of Pinderhughes, singing alone at his piano, and the
cerebral, richly textured force of an 11-person ensemble he put together. Back-up singers complement Pinderhughes’s vocals, bringing out refrains that toe the line between rousing and haunting. Expert tenor and alto saxophonists shine, as does Pinderhughes’s sister, Elena, who contributes her mastery of the flute. Pinderhughes’s choice to double up the bass, with the electric and the upright versions of the instrument playing simultaneously, adds depth to the rhythm section throughout.” “Most affecting is ‘Grief,’ the title track, which features a hypnotic
wurlitzer pattern oscillating over a steady build of drums, bass, voices, and Radiohead-
esque synth textures. It comes to a climax as Pinderhughes delivers a final refrain— ‘Don’t let them take me, tonight’—before being enveloped in a sonic landscape.” “TODAY’S TOP TUNE: Samora Pinderhughes: ‘Masculinity’”—Best New Music
“The Healing Project: a kaleidoscopic, highly collaborative creative
endeavor comprised of a 15-track album; an exhibition at San Francisco’s Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (YBCA); an audio archive of interviews with more than 100 people across 15 states who’ve encountered structural violence like incarceration, detention or community shootings in their daily lives; and a concert series.” “The pianist/keyboardist/vocalist/
milestone in his creative life with his fervent new album, Grief. It powers with a riveting and captivating listening experience of keyboard grooves, melodic song beauties, vocal choruses, improvisational interludes, gripping soundscapes and poignant messages. And even more impressive is that it’s only one part of his larger, ambitious venture fueled by sociopolitical issues.” Samora Pinderhughes is a composer, pianist, vocalist, filmmaker and multidisciplinary artist known for examining sociopolitical issues and fighting for change through his art. Born and raised in the Bay Area, Pinderhughes began playing music at the age of two years and went on to study music at Juilliard, where he met his primary artistic mentor, MacArthur-winning playwright Anna Deavere Smith. Pinderhughes has collaborated and performed with a number of artists including Common, Robert Glasper, Karriem Riggins, Sara Bareilles and Herbie Hancock, and his compositional works have been commissioned by institutions including Carnegie Hall, the Sundance Film Festival and the Kennedy Center.
</di
|