‘Cool and interesting people’
Dashaun Alston, 19, is also an intern at Hill Freedman Records who was involved in the 2023 project.
“It was a brand new setting coming right out of the COVID [pandemic] and having to make music right off the bat like that,” Alston said. “I got to meet a lot of cool and interesting people. When I got here, I wasn’t expecting to be part of an HBO documentary. I just came here to make music, but I ended up making music with amazing people and being mentored by our teachers and they helped us succeed. It was great.”
Thurman, who has a background in opera and songwriting, said the HBO team spent almost two years filming at the school.
“The HBO documentary was the experience of a lifetime, as an educator who has been in a Philadelphia classroom for 26 years,” Thurman said. “It was a long journey, and we learned a lot. Being around the HBO production team and to see them working alongside our students was amazing. It really elevated our program.”
After the documentary aired, Thurman said that he fielded calls from educators and students from as far away as Asia, Europe and South America, wanting to know how they could do something similar.
As part of the Hill-Freedman’s International Baccalaureate Design and Music Technology program, all ninth-grade students work with local musicians, teaching artists and interns, Thurman said. The students learn 21st century digital media skills, such as songwriting, creating podcasts, production and performance, as well as music beat-making and even basic piano.
“Our real passion is activating students creatively, helping them face some of the challenges right in front of them and using their creative voices to speak,” Thurman said. The program was never meant to get students ready for the music industry, he said — but if that happens, great.
By 10th grade, the focus is on creating an album, Thurman said.
“We surround that 10th grade group and say we are going to make an album and your voices are going to be heard around the world,” Thurman said. “At first, they looked at us like we were crazy. But right now they are activated.”
Since 2017, Hill-Freedman Record’s six other albums include: “Sounds from Hill-Freedman Studios, What’s Going On” (2018), “Wake Up Everybody” (2019), “Things That Matter” (2020), “Love & Healing” (2021) and “Growing Up Black” (2022).
These albums were co-produced by World Café Live, a nonprofit in Philadelphia that previously funded the record label.
Two more albums are in the works, including one created from 2022 to 2023 that was delayed because of Thurman’s personal tragedy. His family home caught fire last year and nearly all their belongings were destroyed. He took a sabbatical to acquire housing for his family.
“We put a lot into the back end of the production of our albums,” Thurman said. “[Students] do the creating and the making. We also support on the back end with mixing, mastering and publishing.”
In addition, he said that the label is handling everything internally this year through its own nonprofit: Friends of Hill-Freedman Records.
For her part, Schatz praised HBO and Legend’s company Get Lifted for embracing and supporting the film.
“At the premier of ‘Stand Up and Shout’ during the Philadelphia Film Festival, Legend performed one of the students’ songs with them and it was magic,” Schatz said. “Programs like this can make the world better. Not only are we helping the kids by allowing them to feel joy, pride and talent, but also bringing resources like arts and music education that can really be transformative.”