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Closing out a busy first year at Michigan State University teaching and founding a record label with the Residential College of Arts and Humanities, Professor Austin Har is not slowing down. His nine-year opera project, "The Ghost – Act 1: Part 1," took to streaming platforms on Friday, June 19. 

After first learning philosophy and picking up music at the age of 15, Har went on to pursue a master's in Ancient Greek philosophy and found the framework of Greek tragedy to be a good fit for his artistry. 

In his studies, Har resonated deeply with Alexander Scriabin’s work, “The Poem of Ecstasy,” later referring to it as the “blueprint” for how to express his craft. Soon after, a radical Australian composer encouraged Har to turn his works into an opera. 

In this mythological setting of the opera, Sélvehm, Har uses a variety of different vocalists, ancient Greek and Roman instruments, the cithara, field recordings such as raven calls, different languages such as ancient Greek, the mythological language of Sélvehm and characters to detail the journey of tragic hero Oliver as he navigates his masculinity and the ego-ideal.

The combination of music and story, which Har developed simultaneously, is supposed to evoke fear, pity, longing and the cathartic reversal of those negative emotions, such as within the opera when Oliver watches the demon turn into an angel. 

Har hopes to connect with younger men navigating their sense of identity. Har noted that the “masculinity crisis” is a popular topic online currently, particularly the ideal of “having men be a whole person.” Har adopts the ancient Taoist belief of true and false yin and yang, noting that public male figures often adopt the false yin-yang energies of stagnation, aggression and violence. 

“It's both a duty and a privilege of an artist, because the artist has to on one hand go into these low parts of humanity, which is difficult," Har said. "You have to be intimate with that, you have to feel that. But on the other hand, it is a privilege because it can help you, and hopefully help others, recognize the fuller richness of your nature. You have to be both intimate with and distant from this subject matter.”

Har delicately walks the line between introspection and society by noting the good and bad within complicated characters and stories. 

“There's also these positive states within us that we can be blind to,” Har said. “Just because you might identify yourself with negative aspects, or inner thoughts for sometimes, doesn't mean you don’t have states for compassion as well.”

Har performed a piece similar to his opera and spoke at an MSU Museum panel on April 10 for the “Speculative Futures" event, which was part of a series of events to commemorate Asian Pacific Islander Desi American (APIDA) Heritage Month. MSU Museum Curator Val Berryman and English Professor Julian Chambliss referred Har to MSU Museum Education Coordinator Brittany Carter for the panel. 

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