Tinashe makes a home at Cornell

by Jen Grous

All eyes are on Tinashe as she commands the stage with innate charisma. Photo: Zoey Arnold

Homecoming glee infests campus on September 28th. As the Cornell football team prepares for its paramount game of the season and students gather to flock to fraternities for pre-match festivities, the Cornell Concert Commission (CCC) builds a stage in Barton Hall for their largest event of the semester. Back in July, the club’s advisor and I (CCC’s Selections Director) finalized our decision to appoint Tinashe as this year’s Homecoming headliner. Following months of anxious preparation, Tinashe’s pedestal began coming together. With the help of the professional team from BSI Productions, an upstate New York AV company, students eagerly lugged cases of sound equipment and lighting across the venue. Hours of physical labor later, the troupe of handymen take their first and only break of the day.

Hours of labor from professional staff and student volunteers are required to quickly erect a stage in Barton Hall, Cornell’s ROTC and indoor track building. Photo: Danielle Donovan

After a hurried soundcheck, the doors fling open for a herd of itching attendees to stream inside, away from the unexpected rain. Delirium and anticipation flood the pit in front of the stage where the audience flows into. Before Tinashe is Yaya Bey, a Brooklyn-based performer who reworks jazz motifs into R&B ballads. Yaya marvels fans with mournful trumpet playing atop her howling cries for her late hero on “iloveyoufrankiebeverly.” She prefaces the track with high praise for soul singer Frankie Beverly, who passed away earlier this month after a venerable five-decade career authoring countless “unifying Black anthem[s].” After an angelic anthem of her own, Bey’s band leaves behind their instruments as they exit the stage. A strong start that would only build on itself in the act to follow.

Yaya Bey’s poised stage presence reinforces her intimately confessional lyrics. Photo: Arina Zadvornaya

After the opener’s set concludes, the Executive Director of the Cornell Concert Commission takes a transient spotlight to introduce the main attraction. As Tinashe’s name rolls off the announcer’s tongue,  innumerable phone cameras find their position in the air. A white LED flash from the video board downstage sends shock waves into the audience. Another flash elicits another shriek. A dissonant distorted chorus swarms the building, lifting the crowd to their tiptoes in hopes of getting the first look at Tinashe. An unfulfilled gasp echoes as her first dancer struts up the side stairs. Eight counts later Tinashe arrives, taking a moment to bask in her glory. Outfitted in a hat, glasses, and a large jacket, she is careful not to give too much of herself too early.