| PROGRAM
DESCRIPTION
Project
Roots Pairs Folk Masters with Incarcerated Youth
Project
Roots pairs Michigan Arts & Humanities Touring Program musicians
with incarcerated youth for an eight-week workshop and concert series
where students learn to create their own roots music.
(Link
here to the lyrics and audio of "Eddie's Choice".)
Artists
perform an introductory concert for the entire facility to energize
the students and heighten their awareness of roots music, tracing
the genre from its West African beginnings to its current influence
in hip-hop and rock and roll.
Then,
staff recruit approximately a dozen students for a series of six
weekly workshops. The students work with the artists and program
coordinator to create roots music of their own, writing original
lyrics and adapting their poetry to fit the roots genre.
The
songs reflect the students’ struggles and triumphs, their
hopes and fears. As students turn their stories and feelings into
roots music, they learn that they are the latest torchbearers in
a musical tradition that – for centuries – has given
a voice to the voiceless.
The
workshop’s focus is a group exercise where students work together
to write a collective song. They brainstorm pertinent themes and
ideas and then concentrate on lyrics.
As
the students share their contributions, they build respect for their
peers and increase their team skills.
The students and artists then take to the stage to perform the group-written
and individual pieces at a final performance before the entire facility.
As
one Project Roots student said, it was “an unforgettable and
life-altering experience.” The program received national attention
coverage through an Associated Press story and a Michigan
Media radio feature.
MHC
has implemented Project Roots at the W.J. Maxey Boys Training School
in Whitmore Lake and the Adrian Training School in Adrian. The Council
is working to expand the program and pair additional Michigan Arts
& Humanities Touring Program performers with other Michigan
juvenile incarceration facilities.

Michael
Ball & Josh White, Jr. |
Project
Roots is a partnership of the MHC and the Michigan Council for Arts
and Cultural Affairs (MCACA). It was designed in collaboration with
Michael Ball of the Northfield Area Township Library.
Project
Roots was inspired by the Northfield Library’s production
of Young Poet Incarcerated, a documentary featuring the poetry of
a youth in the Maxey school. Project director Michael Ball chose
the student from his on-site creative writing workshop, a library
initiative. The student – anonymous, due to state confidentiality
policies regarding juvenile offenders – was chosen based on
his literary talent and compelling story.
Young
Poet Incarcerated was funded by an Arts
& Libraries Community Literary Partnership Program grant
(an MHC and MCACA program).
WHAT
IS ROOTS MUSIC?
The
term “American roots music” may not be a familiar one,
and requires some explanation. At the beginning of the 20th Century,
the term “folk music” was used by scholars to describe
music made by whites of European ancestry, often in the relatively
isolated rural South. As the century progressed, the definition
of folk music expanded to include the song styles - particularly
the blues - of Southern blacks as well. In general, folk music was
viewed as a window into the cultural life of these groups. Folk
songs communicated the hopes, sorrows and convictions of ordinary
people’s everyday lives.
Link
here to learn more... |
 |
ARTISTS
| 
Kitty
Donohoe

Robert
Jones

Josh
White, Jr.
|
Kitty
Donohoe is a “songwriter, storyteller and musician of
rare skill” (Champlain Festival News). A performer for over
30 years in the folk genre, Kitty is comfortable with audiences
of all ages. Her original Michigan songs, both informative and fun,
have become a staple in countless classrooms around the state.
Robert
Jones is a performer and teacher of blues, spiritual, and folk
music. He hosts Deep River on Detroit’s WDET 101.9 FM, and
has taught roots music at the university level.
Josh
White, Jr. is a veteran roots music artist who began performing
with his father, pioneering blues singer Josh White, when he was
four. He tours and conducts storytelling workshops, and has performed
at the Kennedy Center, on Broadway and on the National Mall in Washington,
DC.
For
more information on these artists, link to Michigan's
Arts & Humanities Touring Program.
WORKSHOPS
W.J.
Maxey Boys Training School
Whitmore Lake, MI
Iteration #1
Artists: Josh
White, Jr. and Robert
Jones
Project Coordinator: Michael Ball, Northfield Township Area Library
May 1, 2006: Opening Concert
May 8, 2006: Workshop #1
May 15, 2006: Workshop #2
May 22, 2006: Workshop #3
June 5, 2006: Workshop #4
June 12, 2006: Workshop #5
June 19, 2006: Workshop #6
June 26, 2006: Final Performance
W.J.
Maxey Boys Training School
Whitmore Lake, MI
Iteration #2
Artists: Josh
White, Jr. and Robert
Jones
Project Coordinator: Michael Ball, Northfield Township Area Library
September 18, 2006: Workshop #1
September 25, 2006: Workshop #2
October 2, 2006: Workshop #3
October 9, 2006: Workshop #4
October 16, 2006: Workshop #5
October 23, 2006: Workshop #6
October 30, 2006: Final Performance
Adrian
Training School
Adrian, MI
Artist: Kitty
Donohoe
Project Coordinator: Michael Ball, Michigan Humanities Council
October 5: Opening Concert
October 12: Workshop #1
October 19: Workshop #2
October 26: Workshop #3
November 2: Workshop #4
November 9: Workshop #5
November 16: Workshop #6
November 30: Final Performance
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