Come to the Holy Land in 2013 with the Proctors Click here
Friday, May 24 2013

email

menuClick Here
Maurine Jensen Proctor
Sunday, April 19 2009

Kenneth Cope's Musical Testimony of Joseph Smith

By Maurine Jensen Proctor Notify me when this author publishesComment on Article
Email Author
Author Archive
Send To a Friend
Print Article Bookmark and Share

The man behind such seminal LDS albums as Greater than Us All and Women at the Well shares an interactive musical and visual testimony of Joseph Smith.


Put your interactive CD-ROM in the computer and a four minute movie on the life of Joseph Smith passes before your eyes. Floating in space is a ball with fiery magma cracks which cools into a blue planet which dissolves into the head of a baby. Joseph Smith is born, foreordained from the foundations of the earth to be the prophet of the last days. Then in quick dissolves you look over Joseph's shoulder through candlelight at a scripture in James, see a long shot as he walks into a grove in spring, enter a log cabin where an angel is visiting, run through Joseph's life in glimpses and flashes until a camera moves up the stairs at Carthage and a bullet passes through a wooden door. The music undulates and swells, moving with the camera. With the new interactive CD-ROM, Joseph Smith, the Seer, you have just entered into new possibilities in your understanding of Church history.

And suddenly you have choices. Do you want to study Joseph's early years or Zion's Camp march or catch new glimpses of Nauvoo? It is all at the click of your mouse.

The man behind the music for this new dimension in gospel learning is Kenneth Cope, familiar to Latter-day Saints for his numerous well-loved albums including Greater than Us All, and Women at the Well.

A year ago Kenneth got a call from Chris Jones, a man with a vision who was starting CapitalMedia. His dream was to use instructional multi-media not just to teach the gospel, but to teach with an emotional impact, creating something beautifully done and well-crafted. Would Kenneth create the music and an accompanying album for the CD-ROM? It would be something new for Kenneth-to write music and have it deliver the meaning without words.

"I'm a man with a message," Kenneth says. "That's who I am. This would be the first time I would orchestrate something that had to bring emotion and understanding without lyrics, using no other tool but the music itself. " Kenneth gave Chris the answer he has given to others who have approached him with projects. He had to think and pray about it.

Kenneth and his wife, Kathy had a prayer about it before they went to bed that night, and he said, "I got the answer right then." He knew he was on board.

Kenneth loved the possibilities of Joseph Smith, the Seer. Like a film, creating the expanded possibilities of a CD-ROM involved the talents of a team. Researchers and scholars, 3D artists and photographers were involved. The expertise of Susan Easton Black, Richard Cowan, Joseph McConkie and Larry Porter were lent to the project.

"We journeyed to the Church history sites to capture photography. We looked for textures and angles, the sides of trees and the rough wood of buildings so that the artists could come home and build graphics and images on the computer," said Kenneth. The final product would be a rich panoply of photography, interactive maps, text and graphics, burnished with the art of Liz Lemon Swindle. What's more it would contain over 30 hours of narration with professional voices taking parts to bring Church history alive.


Kenneth's Witnesses
It was a dream project for Kenneth whose love for Joseph Smith started in a series of small moments while he was young. "I remember going to the Manti pageant which started with this boy praying, and then looking for the plates on a hillside," said Kenneth. "From that intent prayer came all that followed-the restoring of the gospel, converts gathering, crossing the plains, and eternal blessings in temples. Then the pageant ended with that same boy on a hillside. He was only a young man, and because he believed and had faith, he could be a pure receptacle for God's word to come through him. I felt the Spirit.

"Then," said Kenneth, "I was a junior, attending a high school for the performing arts in Houston Texas, about 45 minutes from my early morning seminary class. Every day as I took the bus to school, I pulled out a Book of Mormon and read. Day after day I read and felt that God was in it.

"Next, I served in Switzerland and France on my mission, and we kept ourselves busy tracting. There were not a lot of homes-- mostly apartment buildings-and we climbed and climbed and knocked and knocked. I was so busy that once for some time I hadn't had much personal study time. I'm not sure why. Anyway, I felt empty. I remember praying, 'I've got to get the Spirit; what can I do?' The answer came that I should study the scriptures. ' I can't do it on this bike right now,' I said. The answer came, 'Do you know any by heart?' I had memorized Joseph Smith's first vision, so I thought, OK, and started quoting it. With each word the Spirit got stronger and stronger. I hadn't been looking for another strong witness that Joseph was who he said he was, but I got it."

Making Music
Parallel with these early stirrings of the Spirit in Kenneth's life was the love of music. He's sung since he was a child. "I had harmonies in my head," he says. "One day when I was in about fourth grade, I was riding with my mother in the car, singing harmonies in the back seat and she turned to me and said, 'Honey, you have a gift.' That's probably the first time I recognized it. It was later that I learned I could write music, too."

Kenneth is passionate, emotional, and like any artist, he writes about what moves him deeply. For him, above all else, shining like a beacon in his soul is the gospel of Jesus Christ. "I felt like the Lord would use my talents in his service," he said.

After Kenneth married, he moved to Los Angeles to pursue a music career. He thought if he could break into the big scene and gain confidence and clout, he would be able to make better art. His goal was to have an impact. "I would do Latter-day Saint music and try to network down in L.A." he said, "but it just kept coming back loud and clear. "I'm glad you're here, but I have other treasure for you that is not in this city. I want you to make music for my people." After five years in Los Angeles, the Copes moved back to Salt Lake and "since then I haven't had a chance to breathe," says Kenneth.

A Testimony in Music
"What am I supposed to say now? What am I supposed to do now?" These are the questions Kenneth asks as he conceptualizes and creates music. Before the 150th anniversary of the martyrdom of Joseph Smith, Kenneth felt to write a musical biography of the prophet that he called My Servant, Joseph.


0 Comments

Add Comment

520+1000