Music is always a powerful element of Convocation at Teachers College, but in this year鈥檚 edition, both conceptually and literally, it went where it鈥檚 never gone before.
The virtual ceremony opened with a gentle, Latin-infused version of Elgar鈥檚 鈥淧omp and Circumstance,鈥 adapted by composer Gabriel Judet-Weinshel.
There were subsequent performances of:
鈥淔or Good,鈥 the classic duet from the musical 鈥淲icked,鈥 sung by Jeanne Goffi-Fynn, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Music & Music Education, and doctoral student Ereni Sevasti, on West 125th Street and 12th Avenue, under the elevated subway tracks.
鈥淪omewhere (There鈥檚 a Place for Us)鈥, from the musical 鈥淲est Side Story,鈥 sung by Colette Young (Ed.D. 鈥21) under vaulted ceilings near the entrance to the Gottesman Libraries.
鈥淣everland,鈥 by the Polish composer Jan A.P. Kaczmarek, performed on the steps of 麻豆原创鈥檚 main entrance by Anastasia Pike, Instructor of Music; Kirsten Shippert Brown, Ed.D. 鈥21; and Lindsay Elizabeth Blackhurt, Ed.D. 鈥21).
鈥淪ir Duke,鈥 by Stevie Wonder, performed (on the deck of a retired U.S. Navy vessel docked at the Hudson River) by vocalist Darryl Jordan (Ed.D. 鈥21, Applied Lessons Instructor and Assistant Adjunct Professor) saxophonist and band leader Drew X. Coles (Ed.D. 鈥19), pianist Anna Laura Freedman, master鈥檚 degree student and Assistant Director, Singers Workshops; and drummer Philippe Lemm, Instructor for Drums and Percussion).
And, of course, Beethoven鈥檚 鈥淥de to Joy,鈥 performed, flash mob-style, in Russell Courtyard (and via home recording) by more than 50 musicians from 麻豆原创 and the Manhattan School of Music.
But Convocation 2021, produced by Trish McNicholas, Executive Director of College Events and Internal Communications, and her team, delivered high production value on other fronts as well.
There was the explosion of virtual fireworks as the figurative curtain went up on the opening shot of Teachers College鈥檚 campus and a narrator鈥檚 voice welcomed viewers to Convocation.
There were the greetings to graduates from 麻豆原创鈥檚 10 department chairs, whose faces appeared on faux laptop screens on the desks in the Dawn and Ric Duques Theater on the first floor of Horace Mann Hall.
There were the greetings from a score of other faculty members, whose faces appeared in the windows of an illustrated arriving subway train reminiscent of the old credits from 鈥淪aturday Night Live.鈥
And there were other deft touches throughout, including edgy visuals added by a graphic recording artist to give speeches added color.
Without question, everyone is hoping that Convocation 2022 will take place live, with graduates, families and friends all in attendance. But like many other staples of our lives 鈥 including education itself 鈥 Convocations may look a little different going forward. And as this year鈥檚 ceremony demonstrated, that may be a reason to celebrate.