Normally Collaborative, Pianist Lara Downes Gets Intimate At A Tiny Desk (Home) Concert

The Tiny Desk is working from home for the foreseeable future. Introducing NPR Music’s Tiny Desk (home) concerts, bringing you performances from across the country and the world. It’s the same spirit — stripped-down sets, an intimate setting — just a different space.


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BY TOM HUIZENGA

Lara Downes thrives on collaboration. Her new album features Toshi Reagon, the vocal ensemble MUSICALITY and the string quartet called PUBLIQuartet. But in this intimate piano recital from her home in Sacramento, Calif., her only collaborators are her son Simon, who takes on cinematography duties, and her beloved pooch, Kona.

The songs, all from her recent album Some of These Days, might be old, but they are strong statements that resonate in new ways. From Margaret Bonds, one of the first celebrated African-American women composers, there’s “Troubled Water,” a poignant riff on the spiritual “Wade in the Water” that Downes says takes a “journey from classical virtuosity to gospel, jazz, blues and back again.” Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s arrangement of “Deep River,” for Downes, now represents “crossing over” the coronavirus crisis, while Florence Price’s “Some of These Days,” is a vision of better times ahead.

In a moment of vulnerability, Downes admits that not being out on the road – performing, embedded in communities and working with young people – makes her feel “not very useful.” But in these performances there’s a sturdiness and purpose that provide both comfort and the strength to carry on. Very useful, indeed.

SET LIST

  • “Margaret Bonds: Troubled Water”
  • “Samuel Coleridge-Taylor: Deep River”
  • “Florence Proce: Some Of These Days”
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