SOLD OUT: More Than Rhythm: A Black Music Series Featuring Adia Victoria

Fri Aug 26 2022 at 06:00 pm to 09:00 pm

Columbia Museum of Art | Columbia

Columbia Museum of Art
Publisher/HostColumbia Museum of Art
SOLD OUT: More Than Rhythm: A Black Music Series Featuring Adia Victoria
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Galleries and bar open at 6:00 p.m. | Conversation at 7:00 p.m. | Concert at 8:00 p.m.
More Than Rhythm returns for its second season with a special performance from South Carolina native and globally recognized blues musician Adia Victoria. On break from her world tour, Victoria joins host and ethnomusicologist Dr. Birgitta Johnson to discuss her journey as an eclectic 21st-century blues artist before taking the stage with guitarist Mason Hickman. Their performance includes original poetry paired with dance interpretations by Columbia-based dancer Erin Bailey. Free.

The blues sits alongside spirituals as a foundational core of African American music. Its roots in Black folk traditions such as work songs, field hollers, chants, street cries, and borrowed folk songs melded in the late 19th century to become a primary voice of Black expressive culture after Emancipation. By the Roaring ‘20s, blues artists took the stories and songs of working-class Black life to mainstream and global audiences, upsetting the puritanical sensibilities of the day and inspiring jazz musicians like Duke Ellington and literary figures like Langston Hughes.
Today the influence of the blues is evident across many genres of American music like soul, rock ‘n’ roll, and hip-hop, but the blues as a genre unto itself never stopped evolving. Artists like Adia Victoria represent the many routes the blues has taken over the past century. In one breath, her music represents a contemporary Southern gothic landscape; in the next breath she’s mining classic feminist texts to weave a song that reverberates with the resistance themes of early blues mothers such Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Ida Cox. A native of Spartanburg, Victoria has traveled the world to find her home in the blues and its poetic ethos to be music for the people by the people. Her music takes audiences through a journey of self-discovery just as seamlessly as she takes on issues of oppression, mental health, and finding one’s voice in today’s world. Her performance for More Than Rhythm pulls together soulfully haunting vocals, acoustic guitar, and the original poetry that has grounded her as a blues artist and truth teller.
Presented by the Baker & Baker Foundation. This program has been made possible in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities: Democracy demands wisdom. This program is supported by Richland County Government and a Connected Communities grant from Central Carolina Community Foundation.
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Columbia Museum of Art, 1515 Main St, Columbia, United States

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