Special Event

Event

No Tears Project Memphis

Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site

Fee:

Free.

Dates & Times

Date:

Saturday, June 10, 2023

Time:

12:00 PM

Duration:

1 hour

Type of Event

Other
Partner Program
Talk

List of program times and locations are below in the text.


Description

No Tears Project Memphis Unites Community through Music and Conversation

 

The multi-day residency triangulates the American Civil Rights Movement legacies of Memphis; Jackson, Mississippi; and Little Rock, Arkansas. Featured events will include concerts with the world premiere of new music by Memphis native Robert “Bobby LaVell” Garner, as well as conversations with civil rights heroes, Dwania Kyles, Elizabeth Eckford, and Reena Evers-Everette.

The Oxford American, Memphis Public Libraries, and the National Park Service are excited to announce No Tears Project Memphis, a series of civil rights and arts education residency events taking place in Memphis, Tennessee June 10 - 14, 2023. The events are an expansion of the No Tears Project programs that Oxford American has produced since 2017 in partnership with pianist/composer Christopher Parker and vocalist Kelley Hurt, a native Memphian. Originally inspired by a musical composition written by Parker and Hurt to honor the Little Rock Nine, No Tears Project has evolved into a touring outreach program that uses conversation and concerts to engage communities in learning about civil rights.

 

The free to the public events will include a panel discussion, community concerts, and youth education programs that address Memphis’s past and present in the broader American civil rights story, and in relation to the experiences of people living in Jackson, Mississippi, and Little Rock, Arkansas. As a program created jointly between Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site, and the Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Monument, the Memphis programs will explore in particular the integration of public spaces, including the experiences of the Memphis 13, and the student protestors from LeMoyne and Owen Junior College that led sit-ins at Cossitt and Peabody Libraries in 1960. Featured guests during the events will include a variety of artists, activists and community leaders, including Memphis 13 member and Executive Director of the Memphis 13 Foundation Dwania Kyles; Little Rock Nine member Elizabeth Eckford; activist Reena Evers-Everette, daughter of Medgar and Myrlie Evers; and President of the National Civil Rights Museum, Dr. Russell Wigginton.

 

During the residency several free community concerts will be held at Memphis Public Library locations including the Cossitt Library and the Benjamin L. Hooks Central Library (detailed below). Featuring a seven-piece band led by Parker and Hurt, the No Tears Project ensemble will perform pieces from the group’s existing civil rights-inspired repertoire, as well as the world premiere of new work by Memphis native jazz saxophonist Robert “Bobby LaVell” Garner, and a new arrangement of Memphis pianist Donald Brown’s song “Poem for Martin,” written by Marc Franklin. Ensemble members for these special concerts include multiple GRAMMY-winning drummer Brian Blade, in addition to Memphis natives and long-time residents, including Rodney Jordan (bass), Robert “Bobby LaVell” Garner (tenor saxophonist and son of Beale Street Walk of Fame musician Robert “Honeymoon” Garner), Marc Franklin (trumpet), and Chad Fowler (alto saxophone). Also joining the ensemble is author and poet Treasure Shields Redmond, and dancer Ashley Tate.

 

View a detailed listing of dates, times, and event locations below or this website for more information.

 

 

Education Concert

Saturday, June 10, 2023 @ 12:00 pm CST

Cossitt Library

Free to the public

Seating is limited - register here

A 60-minute education concert for youth and families featuring No Tears Project ensemble members. The artists will play short selections of music interspersed with dialogue that highlights key moments and people from Memphis, Little Rock, and Jackson involved with the civil rights movement.

 

 

Community Concert

Saturday, June 10, 2023 @ 7:30 pm CST

Cossitt Library

Free to the public

Seating is limited - register here

A 90-minute concert from the No Tears Project ensemble led by Christopher Parker (piano) and Kelley Hurt (voice). The band will perform the world premiere of new works written by and in collaboration with Memphis artists, including saxophonist Robert “Bobby LaVell” Garner. A new arrangement of Memphis pianist Donald Brown’s song “Poem for Martin,” written by Marc Franklin, as well as selections previously written by Oliver Lake, Parker, and Hurt, in honor of the Little Rock Nine will also be performed with poetry accompaniment by Treasure Shields Redmond, and dance by Ashley Tate.

 

 

Community Concert

Sunday, June 11, 2023 @ 2:00 pm CST

Benjamin L. Hooks Central Library

Free to the public

Seating is limited - register here

A reprise performance of the same 90-minute program from Saturday June 10, designed to serve additional Memphis community members.

 

 

 

Recognition Before Reconciliation

Tuesday, June 13, 2023 @ 6:00 pm CST

Cossitt Library

Free to the public

Seating is limited - register here

A panel discussion featuring civil rights heroes and activists including Memphis 13 member and daughter of Rev. Samuel Billy Kyles Dwania Kyles; Little Rock Nine member Elizabeth Eckford; and activist Reena Evers-Everette, daughter of Medgar and Myrlie Evers. Dr. Russell Wigginton, President of the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis will moderate the discussion. Superintendent Robin White of Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site will provide opening remarks and context for the discussion.

 

 

Story Time with Elizabeth Eckford

Wednesday, June 14, 2023 @ 10:30 am CST

Cossitt Library

Free to the public

Seating is limited and available on a first come first served basis

Capping the residency in a 60-minute program for youth and families, Little Rock Nine member and heroine Elizabeth Eckford will share personal experiences and read from her book, The Worst First Day: Bullied While Desegregating Central High. Eckford, who as a 15-year-old in 1957 faced an incensed mob of segregationists and soldiers alone, will inspire the next generation with her words and story.

 

 

The No Tears Project Memphis residency is made possible by a consortium of generous funders led by the National Park Service’s Lower Mississippi Delta Initiative, Jefferson National Parks Association, Memphis Library Foundation, Stella Boyle Smith Trust, and Liz Armstrong.

 

Additional support is provided by the National Civil Rights Museum, Memphis 13 Foundation, Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site, Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Monument, Historic Clayborn Temple, and Memphis Jazz Workshop.

 

 

“It’s an honor to do this work with these people and organizations in Memphis in the footsteps of so many giants of the Civil Rights Movement,” said Ryan Harris, No Tears Project Director and consultant to Oxford American. “We sincerely hope that the dialogue created through this music and these conversations can play a small role in forging a deeper understanding of each other with the goal of creating a better future.”

 

“We are so excited to have the No Tears Project come to Memphis. Given our city’s history in the Civil Rights Movement and the Cossitt Library’s place in history when it comes to the desegregation of public libraries, it is fitting that it will be the location for this event,” said Memphis Public Libraries Director Keenon McCloy.

 

“It’s no surprise that the Evers household was constantly filled with music: from Miss Myrlie teaching piano lessons to neighborhood children, to Medgar joyfully dancing to the Twist with the kids,” said Keena Nichelle Graham, Superintendent of the Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Monument. “Now, music from the No Tears Project will heal those hearts that were broken by the deaths of great leaders such as Medgar Evers and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and by the deaths of unknown or little known, but no less loved warriors of justice.”

 

“Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. referenced Motown music as ‘emotional integration,’” said Robin White, Superintendent of Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site. “I concur, music is a significant part of humanity. It has the capacity to merit profound intangible concepts. No Tears Project incites universal harmony consistently merging at the intersections of hope, faith, love and evolution.”


More information

Reservation or Registration: Yes

Seating is limited at each program, so follow the instructions below each listed event to register and secure seating.

Contact Information

Brian Schwieger
501-374-1957
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