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Christian McBride鈥檚 Commencement Address Offers Sage Advice to SFCM Grads

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The seven-time GRAMMY winner shares advice with SFCM鈥檚 Class of 2021 at a virtual ceremony on May 29.

June 1, 2021 by Tim Records

World-renowned bassist Christian McBride inspired the 含羞草传媒 Francisco Conservatory of Music鈥檚 Class of 2021, including the first graduates of the Roots, Jazz, and American Music program, with an encouraging and thoughtful speech during a virtual commencement on May 29.

Throughout a year of challenges and change, SFCM students continued to excel, participating in high-profile master classes and innovative film and orchestra experiences such as , , and Music for Hard Times. Saturday鈥檚 commencement celebrated 113 graduates who are moving on to bright futures.

McBride鈥檚 message was honest, straightforward, and grounded in his own experience, yet simple: 鈥淏e fearless. Be selfless. Make harmony. Be nice to each other. Keep your goal in mind. Pay attention. And remember that it鈥檚 the people in your life who matter, not the likes and retweets. Life is all about making harmony.鈥

He began: 鈥淔or me, these three things always ring true, no matter your age, where you鈥檙e from, what type of music you play, or whether there鈥檚 a pandemic: Fearlessness, Humanity, and Harmony.

In 2021, it may be difficult to be fearless...but don't join the moshpit of social media. Pick your goal, set your vision, be intentional, and don鈥檛 let anything get in the way of reaching it. Obstacles are only obstacles if you let them be obstacles.鈥

After sharing a few personal anecdotes from his life in music, McBride offered that fearlessness goes hand in hand in hand with selflessness. 鈥淏e nice to people, it鈥檚 part of being fearless. It鈥檚 part of humanity, and humanity matters. Think of the world as a piano, and the people in it are all notes,鈥 he suggested. 鈥淗ow do you make harmony from something that may not work at first?鈥 he posited, then explained that in that same way you could change the notes a bit to make something musical more interesting, people can shift a little to accommodate others鈥攚hich ultimately makes harmony. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 what life is all about.鈥