Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV AVoice4Peace Invitational Brings Together Local Schools for Peace Awareness Concert
Wednesday, October 03, 2018
![Ruthie Nelson claps with the HCC Concert Chorus as she directs the ensemble on stage of the Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV Music Concert Hall](/arts/images/news/20181003-body1-usf-avoice4peace-invitational-brings-together-local-schools-for-peace-awareness-concert.jpg)
Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV music alumna and director of choral studies at HCC Ruthie Nelson directs the HCC Concert Chorus at the Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV AVoiceForPeace Invitational.
The AVoice4Peace Invitational at the Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV School of Music Concert Hall brought seven middle, high school, and college choirs together for an evening of choir music in observance of the U.N.'s International Day of Peace on September 21.
As part of the global AVoice4Peace peace awareness project, the Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV Invitational united student choirs to talk and sing about peace in a sold-out concert.
Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV music education doctoral student and interim director of choral studies Morgan Burburan organized the event. She took special care to ensure the concert has a lasting impact on the performers, audience members, and volunteers involved.
"What I worked on with the students and also the audience is 'what does [peace] look like? What does that mean? How can we put action to the concept of peace?'" said Burburan.
The day began with students from four counties in the Tampa Bay area arriving at the School of Music in the early afternoon.
Schools participating in the event included Newsome High School, Clearwater High School, Fox Chapel Middle School, Wiregrass Ranch High School, Fort Meade Middle-Senior High, Hillsborough Community College (HCC), and the Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV.
Members of the local chapter of the National Association for Music Education (NAfME) met with students to discuss peace, play games, and write songs.
Students gained perspective by watching the trailer for the documentary on the AVoice4Peace
project, a collaboration between the Festival Singers of Florida and the Nairobi Chamber
Chorus. The documentary covers the international musical collaboration and the first-ever
AVoiceForPeace concert held in 2016.
Between rehearsals, students had the opportunity to tour the School of Music and Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV
campus with some of the twenty Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV choir students volunteering at the event.
"They were absolutely amazing, hardworking, and exhausted at the end of the day,"
said Burburan.
At the door, attendees brought nonperishable food items per the event's suggested
donation. Collections went to the Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV Feed-A-Bull program, an initiative that provides
supplemental food to Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV students in need.
![Ruthie Nelson stands on stage working with AVoice4Peace singers at the Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV Concert Hall](/arts/images/news/20181003-body2-usf-avoice4peace-invitational-brings-together-local-schools-for-peace-awareness-concert.jpg)
Morgan Burburan rehearses with students during the AVoice4Peace Invitational at Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV.
Programming for the concert centered on the theme of peace.
The Festival Chorus, a combined ensemble of the 300 singers participating in the concert,
opened the program with gospel and Civil Rights Movement anthem "We Shall Overcome."
The Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV Chamber Singers performed Jake Runestad's "Let My Love Be Heard," a piece
that developed new meaning after a memorable recording by a California State University
choir in remembrance of Nohemi Gonzalez, a Cal State student killed in the November
2015 Paris attacks.
Another meaningful highlight of the night was Hillsborough Community College's performance of "Dubula," a song from South Africa during the time of apartheid in the nation. Ruthie Nelson, director of choral studies at HCC, reminded her students in rehearsals how the anti-apartheid movement was only successful through peaceful and nonviolent civil resistance.
The festival chorus ended the night with "Ukuthula," the signature anthem of the AVoice4Peace project and the Nairobi Chamber Chorus.
The success of the AVoice4Peace Invitational at has special meaning to Burburan, who spent this past summer gathering data for her dissertation and visiting choirs in Kenya, home of the AVoice4Peace founder Ken Wakia and his ensemble the Nairobi Chamber Chorus.
Amidst hardship, she was touched by the people of Kenya.
"It was hard to be there and hear some of the stories the people have to face. But
what was beautiful were the people," said Burburan. "They were incredibly resilient
and kind and generous."
She saw everything from the dance-infused Nairobi Music Festival for young students
to Kibera, the largest slum in Africa.
There, she witnessed the power of music in a visit to the Magoso School, a primary
school that embraces the arts to help children impacted by violence in the slum. Burburan
witnessed the teacher-supported environment that uses music to bring peace to over
500 students.
"We got to spend the day with them and sing with them and sing for them and have them
perform for us," said Burburan. "Life changing. That's what music for all means to
me."
Burburan says the experience showed her how the meaning behind music can be more important
than simply the musical and technical precision of performers.
The AVoice4Peace Invitational at Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV and Burburan's recent experiences across the
globe demonstrate how people coming together to share in music, whether in Kenya or
the Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV Concert Hall, can have transformative effects on all involved.
"Afterwards I had a gentleman say to me that this was the best concert he'd ever been
to," said Burburan. "I said 'thank you' and he said, 'No, no, I mean it. This was
very special, this was very moving.' He really wanted to reiterate that."
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Banner photo (top): Students rehearse in the Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV choral rehearsal hall before the Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV AVoice4Peace Invitational concert.