Music and the HIV/AIDS crisis, a pandemic discussion set for October 12
Matthew J. Jones (left) and John Seesholtz (right)
Houston-based musicologist Matthew J. Jones and 欧美口爆视频 Director of Vocal Pedagogy John Seesholtz will present, 鈥Music and HIV/AIDS 鈥 A Look at Then and Now,鈥 online on Monday, October 12 at 5:30 pm (MST). This public and interdisciplinary discussion will look at the intersection of music and the HIV/AIDS crisis, in light of the global coronavirus pandemic.
鈥淢ichael is a saint! And by that, I mean that he is a real hero of the gay community and the AIDS community,鈥 says Jones. 鈥淚 think it's time for a Michael Callen renaissance!鈥 Jones, whose work explores the relationships between LGBTQIA+ culture, music, media, and activism, expressed that 鈥渕usic played a role in AIDS activism, from chants at rallies to the use of existing folk and protest repertoires.鈥
Much of Jones鈥檚 research was gathered thanks to the immense help of Callen鈥檚 surviving partner, Richard Dworkin鈥檚 private collection of the singer-songwriters personal materials including, unreleased recordings, lead sheets from studio sessions, photographs, home videos, and soundboard recordings. 鈥淚t was extraordinary to hear him working on music, cultivating a style, making choices that would become part of his aesthetic as a gay musician and a musician living with HIV/AIDS,鈥 noted Jones.
Of the 67 musical additions gathered since the AIDS Quilt Songbook formation in 1993, only 18 of them are published. Seesholtz noted that the project was 鈥渃reated to parallel the AIDS Quilt NAMES Project as a never-ending work whose meaning and spirit is renewed and redefined with every addition." Dr. Seesholtz, a dramatic baritone with operatic performances in Madame Butterfly (Sharpless), Florencia en el Amazonas (Alvaro), Verdi鈥檚 Otello (Iago), and many others, will perform a few selections of the Songbook鈥檚 unpublished music during his presentation. He is also the author of the musical collection entitled, 鈥淭he Lost Songs of the AIDS Quilt Songbook, Vol 1.鈥