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It was a tough week behind with the passing of Bill Bourne and Shane Yellowbird - two artists who brought Voyageur brilliantly to life – but my visit to Epiphany of our Lord Catholic Academy in Scarborough was an important reminder of the promise of the road ahead.
My last school engagement was to have been a return to Prince Edward County at the end of March 2020 and then.... well, you know what happened all over the world. And while I did do a couple of virtual school and student conference events over the past year, it's not the same as being in the room with those kids and seeing them connect to the project each in their own way. And to hear a student play and to be bombarded with questions as they file past at the end of the presentation taking their turn to touch the guitar they've just seen on the screen for an hour. There is such value and such energy and such sustenance in those encounters.
As I mentioned in my last blog, the presentation has been modified to address the effects the last two years have had on all of us. And it was no different for this small group of students from the ages of about 10-15. They've felt it particularly acutely – especially at that age – adjusting to virtual learning and having this critical time in their development so rudely and thoroughly interrupted. And with the deaths of Bourne and Yellowbird on my mind, I felt a kind of heaviness going into my first live school visit in over two years. But it felt great to be back seeing students and teachers responding to the project in person and in real time and to watch the characters among the students emerging and curiosity blossoming.
Sam (left) acted as emcee in full Radio Promo mode and that was certainly one major flash of character and resilience. But when the time came to hear Voyageur played, it was 11-year-old Kevork Manouchian who did the honours. He did two classical pieces and one he wrote himself that was a kind of hybrid of classical finger work and "House of the Rising Sun". I'll say that again: wrote himself! 11! And that was the reminder I needed of the way music carries us through the ups and the downs.
So thanks to Sam and Kevork. Thanks also to principal (and longtime friend) Dave McMullan and the rest of the staff and students at Epiphany of Our Lord Catholic Academy!