, where Blanchard was nominated for
Best Original Score for his
soundtrack of
BlacKkKlansman. In 2007, the
Monterey Jazz Festival named Blanchard Artist-In-Residence, citing him as "one his generation’s most artistically mature and innovative artists and a committed supporter of jazz education." The Monterey Jazz Festival 50th Anniversary Band featuring Blanchard on trumpet made a 54-date, 10-week tour of the United States from January 8, 2008, to March 16, 2008. Rounding out the band were saxophonist
James Moody, pianist
Benny Green, bassist
Derrick Hodge and drummer
Kendrick Scott. The special ensemble also featured jazz singer
Nnenna Freelon. In December 2007, the Terence Blanchard Quintet performed the movie music of Spike Lee and Terence Blanchard with an orchestra and singers
Dee Dee Bridgewater,
Kurt Elling, and
Raul Midón at the
John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. In November 2008, he was a guest on
Private Passions, the biographical music discussion programme on
BBC Radio 3. On February 10, 2008, Blanchard won his first
Grammy Award as a bandleader for ''
A Tale of God's Will (A Requiem for Katrina)'' in the category of Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album. His two other Grammy Awards were as a sideman for Art Blakey (1984) and McCoy Tyner (2004). Blanchard composed original music for
Stephen Adly Guirgis's Broadway play
The Motherfucker With the Hat, which premiered at the
Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre on April 11, 2011. The show is described as "a high-octane verbal cage match about love, fidelity and misplaced
haberdashery." On January 20, 2012, the film
Red Tails was released nationwide in the United States. Blanchard served as the composer of the original score, marking the first time he has worked with executive producer
George Lucas. He composed incidental music for the 2012 Broadway revival of
A Streetcar Named Desire. He released
Magnetic May 28, 2013, on Blue Note Records. Blanchard's album,
Breathless, with his new band, The E-Collective, was released by Blue Note Records on May 26, 2015. Featuring
Maroon 5's PJ Morton on three cuts, and JRei Oliver, Terence's son, on spoken word, the core band consists of
Fabian Almazan on keyboards, Charles Altura on guitar, Donald Ramsey on bass, and
Oscar Seaton on drums. Cuepoint, on the web publishing site, Medium, published Blanchard's essay, "Using Music to Underscore Three Words: I Can't Breathe" which details Blanchard's revulsion by the
death of Eric Garner and how the subsequent "I Can't Breathe" campaign inspired the series of songs the E-Collective created for the album. On November 9, 2019, Blanchard performed alongside
Lady Gaga as a special guest during her Jazz and Piano show in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Operas On June 15, 2013, after a workshop with
Opera Fusion: New Works, Blanchard premiered his first opera,
Champion, at the
Opera Theatre of Saint Louis. It is about the life of prize fighting boxer
Emile Griffith from
St. Thomas, with a libretto by Pulitzer Prize-winning
Michael Cristofer. It starred
Denyce Graves,
Aubrey Allicock, Robert Orth, and
Arthur Woodley.
Champion made its
Metropolitan Opera premiere in 2023, receiving the
best opera recording Grammy, and its
Lyric Opera of Chicago premier in 2024. On June 15, 2019, Blanchard's second opera,
Fire Shut Up in My Bones, with a libretto by
Kasi Lemmons, was premiered by the Opera Theatre of Saint Louis. The opera, based on the 2014 memoir of the same title by
Charles Blow, was expanded with added dance sequences and a larger role for the part of Billie, Charles's mother, and opened the Metropolitan Opera's 2021–2022 season. It closed the Lyric Opera of Chicago's 2021–2022 mainstage opera season. Blanchard is the first Black composer to have an opera performed at the Metropolitan Opera. == Discography ==