Text Only
Search

 
CD to Benefit Darfur Relief Efforts


08 November 2006
Elmasry Report (MP3) - Download 1.9MB - Download (MP3) audio clip
Elmasry Report (MP3) - Download 1.9MB - Listen (MP3) audio clip
Elmasry Report (Real) - Download 1.2MB - Download (Real) audio clip
Elmasry Report (Real) - Download 1.2MB - Listen (Real) audio clip

CD cover of 'We Are All Connected' by the Berklee College of Music shows a woman from Darfur, Sudan
Among the global efforts to help the people of Darfur is a new CD. We Are All Connected: Berklee College of Music Reaches Out to the Women of Darfur is a collection of R&B, soul, jazz, pop, world and gospel songs. This musical gift does more than benefit relief efforts in this region of Sudan, where three years of fighting has killed an estimated 200,000 people and displaced two million others from their homes. It also proves that music has the power to heal and create connections of caring.

During the African famine in the mid 1980s, Linda Mason lived in Sudan, running a humanitarian relief program. Last year, she returned to Sudan as a member of a women's delegation investigating war crimes in Darfur.

Linda Mason, seen here in a compound with three local women says the musical project started in Darfur
Linda Mason, seen here in a compound with three local women says the musical project started in Darfur
"We were there taking testimony from women, victims of war," she says. "We spent two weeks taking testimony from about 60 women, hearing their stories of war, which were quite moving."

On the last day of the trip, Mason says, she presented those women with a gift, two songs written by two students at Berklee College of Music, where her husband serves as president. "I played these songs on my laptop in the middle of the camp and my interpreter translated the songs into their local language as they were played," she says.

"The women just sat there, stunned. They had no idea that people outside their small area knew what they were going through. They were incredibly moved and touched by these beautiful songs and the lyrics that were sung directly to them. So they were crying, trilling and holding each other's hands. At the end, they jumped up and said, we would like to offer a musical gift back to you."

The Darfurian women started singing some of their traditional songs, and Mason started recording them.

"When we came back to the States - the small group of women that I went with - we all felt very inspired to bring these messages and stories back to the United States, and to build on this connection we had started," she says. "Then the CD idea started to snowball at Berklee."

Berklee Associate Professor Leanne Ungar says working with songwriters was inspiring and uplifting
Leanne Ungar says working with songwriters was uplifting
The College announced a songwriting competition for the CD. Mason's recordings were put on-line, and participants were encouraged to use them as inspiration. Associate Professor Leanne Ungar says it turned into a school-wide project.

"My real role was kind of finding teachers from all over the school that would mentor the writers and help them produce their songs," she says. "We had a little over 40 submissions. We had songs from every genre I can think of: jazz, rap, industrial, electronica, country and pop and alternative rock and roll. Many of the writers were students, but also we had alumni, we had teachers, and we had staff."

Damien Bracken says the Darfur women's voices inspired him
Damien Bracken says the Darfur women's voices inspired him
Staff member Damien Bracken wrote Tell Me Your Name, one of the 18 songs selected for the CD. "The samples of these Darfurian women's voices singing were very moving to me," he says. "Just around this time, the Live Aid Concert happened on TV, the effort that was headed by Bob Geldof. There was a wonderful moment where he put up the photograph of the poster child for the original Live Aid concert. Then [he] invited that child to walk out on the stage as a 21-year-old young woman. It was an incredible moving time." Bracken says his song, Tell Me Your Name, was inspired by that incident. "I thought of this idea of actually engaging in a conversation with somebody and really connecting with them."

Andrea Whaley (left) sings for Darfur
Andrea Whaley (left) sings for Darfur
Linda Mason says songs from We Are All Connected have been performed at Berklee's commencement ceremony, on TV and at support rallies. "This past September in New York City in Central Park, where about 30,000 people attended, we opened this rally with the story of the musical exchange and some of my stories from Darfur," she says. "Then one of the songs was played, We Are All Connected, which was written by a 19-year-old Berklee College student, Andrea Whaley."

"As a songwriter," Whaley says, "I feel very honored. I'm really glad that my song was able to help the cause and support these women who are suffering greatly. It's allowed me to open up my songwriting abilities to a wider subject. It's been an amazing experience."

Andrea Whaley says she and the other songwriters hope their music will help raise awareness about the Darfur crisis. Proceeds from the CD will go to relief efforts for women and children in Darfur.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
US Signals Flexibility on Darfur Peace Force
Relocation Efforts Delayed for 40,000 Darfur Refugees
 
  Top Story
US Auto Companies Appeal to Congress for Help  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Chistmas Pageantry Begins In Washington
Major European Interest Rate Cuts Fail to Rally World Markets  Audio Clip Available
Rice Says Pakistan Committed to Mumbai Investigation
Israeli Soldiers Drag Jewish Settlers From House in Hebron  Audio Clip Available
Zimbabwe Declares National Cholera Emergency  Audio Clip Available
Russia Set for Immediate Response to Positive US Signals  Audio Clip Available
Bombers Strike as Iraq Gives Final Approval of US Pact
Canadian PM Shuts Down Parliament to Avoid No-Confidence Vote
UN Security Council Has 'Cautious Optimism' for Afghanistan's Future  Audio Clip Available
Bangkok Airport Back in Operation, But Economic Pain May Linger  Audio Clip Available
S. Korean School Isolates N. Korean Defectors to Better Integrate Them  Audio Clip Available
Measles Deaths Worldwide Fall by 74 Percent  Audio Clip Available
NASA Delays 2009 Mars Mission Due to Technical Problems  Audio Clip Available