Oklahoma City Philharmonic to Debut Work by Chickasaw Citizens

Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate

Published January 27, 2019

OKLAHOMA CITY  — The Oklahoma City Philharmonic will perform a work by Chickasaw classical composer Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate Saturday, Feb. 16, 2019, at the Oklahoma City Civic Center Music Hall.

The composition, “Clans” from “Lowak Shoppala’ (Fire and Light),” is a theatric expression of ancient Chickasaw clan leaders.

A trio of Chickasaws are responsible for breathing life into “Lowak Shoppala’, including Tate; Linda Hogan, Pulitizer-Prize nominated writer and poet and Margaret Roach Wheeler, world renowned textile weaver and Native American fashion expert.

“The title of the work comes directly out of the poetry of Linda Hogan,” said Tate. “She composed a poem called “Fire and Light” for the tribe in 2004. I was so moved by the poetry and the idea that I realized I wanted to use her poetry in the work as well.”

February’s show marks the orchestra’s début of a composition by the Emmy Award-winning Chickasaw composer.

In addition to full symphonic orchestra, “Clans” features a Yuchi-Muscogee Creek narrator, seven American Indian actors and Tate leading a male vocal trio singing in the Chickasaw language.

Words for the composition were written by Hogan, a 2007 Chickasaw Hall of Fame inductee and winner of numerous awards for books, poetry, novels and a global lecturer and writing teacher.

Panther Woman is shown in full regalia inspired by Chickasaw textile and fashion artist Margaret Roach Wheeler

Hogan received a master’s in English and Creative Writing from the University of Colorado at Boulder. She writes from a Native American perspective and is widely considered one of Native American literature’s most highly regarded writers.

Chickasaws Jason Eyachabbe, George Jesse, Travis John, Nola Monetathchi, Malcom Smith, Nick Underwood and Jared Walker will be dressed in historically accurate regalia crafted by Wheeler, who has been working every morning before dawn for several weeks to prepare for the show.

“Lowak Shoppala’ is one of the highlights of my career,” Wheeler said. “It allowed me to use my research from a fellowship with the National Museum of the American Indian on Mississippian Textiles. The Mississippians, or the Mound Builders (900 AD-1500 AD), were the ancestors of the Chickasaw people.

“I designed the handwoven costumes from images I had photographed and drawn from research on shell carvings, ceremonial pipes and pottery designs. There was a great amount of imagination and care that went into the creating each clan leader for the production,” Wheeler said. “Jerod’s music and Linda’s words set the tone in my studio. I needed to create costumes that were the essence of history of our people, the Chickasaw,” she added.

In ancient Chickasaw culture, a family clan system was maintained through matrilineal descent. Each clan had an animal name. “Clans” focuses on seven of these family lines – Minko (Chief), Bird, Alligator, Squirrel, Skunk, Panther and Raccoon – and Tate’s composition incorporates numerous traditional Chickasaw melodies and rhythms.

Tate’s work was included in the concert at the request of Alexander Mickelthwate, new conductor and musical director of the Oklahoma City Philharmonic. “I’m excited to include music from American Indian culture in our programming. Jerod Tate is a wonderful, creative man who is a classically trained pianist and composer and uses this ability to express his Chickasaw culture in a magical way,” Mickelthwate said.

“Lowak Shoppala’” was commissioned by American Composers Forum as part of their Continental Harmony Program, an initiative sponsored by the National Endowment for the Arts, to celebrate the full spectrum of American culture.

It was first performed in 2009 at Ataloa Theater in the Hallie Brown Ford Fine Arts Center on the East Central University campus.

For years, Tate’s career has been dedicated to American Indian folk music in classical repertoire.

“I am proud to bring our Native melodies into the same arena as Russian, French, Hungarian and German composers,” said Tate. “This performance by the Oklahoma City Philharmonic provides yet another venue in which the Chickasaw culture is represented on the classical concert stage.”

“Lowak Shoppala’: Clans” marks Tate’s 12th commission to specifically feature Chickasaw culture.

You may enjoy movements of Tate’s “Lowak Shoppala’ – Clans” at the composer’s website JerodTate.com/Lowak-Shoppala-Clans.

To purchase tickets to the Feb. 16 concert, call (405) 842-5387 or visit www.OKCPhil.org.

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