He said, "You should be working on this more. For the concert, I have some great collaborators. If someone figures out how to stage this, great. Who are your collaborators on this? LMM: It's been me and a bunch of history books for the past three years. He told me he heard Obama say on the way out, " Geithner's gotta hear this!" Obama stood up at the end of the song, which is the greatest thing that's ever happened in my life. It's used in classrooms, I hear, all the time. That took on a life of its own when that video went online. LMM: Boy did I ever! It was my first time singing it in public. They asked if I had anything about America.Īnd boy did you ever. They were doing an evening of spoken word, poetry and music. It summarizes the first 17 years of Hamilton's life. You performed part of this new piece for President Obama at The White House in 2009? LMM: The song I performed was the only song I had written up to that point. But also very wicked, according to Jefferson. By saying, "We'll act out of self-interest, and we can harness that power of self-interest to bring us together," he was very smart. But that also created system that still exists on Wall Street. For better or worse, Hamilton created the United States by creating a central bank and assuming the debt of all of the different states, tying us up together financially. The financial system that we are still dealing with today is a system that he largely set up. Basically, there's a whole other story to Hamilton that happens after he dies. They all outlived him and were able to write lots of things that sullied his reputation. LMM: Jefferson, Adams, Madison wrote the Federalist Papers with him, and then switched sides as Hamilton became very pro-Central Government. I think a lot of that was because the other Founding Fathers outlived him and the other Founding Fathers hated him. He seems to be the one Founding Father that hasn't been rediscovered in recent years. He went to King's College - now Columbia University - and immediately got into the revolutionary spirit. He literally wrote his way out of his circumstances. The poem was published and people raised money for this kid to go to the mainland and get a scholarship. He wrote a poem about a hurricane that destroyed the island where he lived. At the very beginning, words were the most important thing to him. What is it about Hamilton's life that lends it so naturally to hip-hop? LMM: There's the rags-to-riches that is very much the "American Dream." He was an immigrant who came to this country. These Founding Fathers, their wars of words, sort of created our nation. It seemed more right for a hip-hop treatment than anything I've ever read. It's an incredible book, but it's also an incredible life. I had that rare experience that, as I was reading it, songs were popping out to me. I went to Borders and picked up a big fat book to read. I was taking my first vacation from In the Heights, in 2008. I had written a paper on it in high school. How did this come about? Lin-Manuel Miranda: All I knew about Hamilton before reading Ron Chernow's book Alexander Hamilton is he was on the $10 bill, he died in a duel, and that his eldest son died in a duel two years before. Miranda talked to Playbill about Hamilton journey's from the $10 bill to the stage.Ī hip-hop musical about Alexander Hamilton. The subject is Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, the co-author of "The Federalist Papers," the first Secretary of the Treasury, the architect of America's financial system and the victim of the most famous duel in U.S. On January 11, 2012, as part of Lincoln Center's American Songbook Series, In the Heights creator and composer-lyricist Lin-Manuel Miranda is offering the premiere presentation (he calls it a "rough draft") of his new song cycle, The Hamilton Mixtape. For those hybrid musical fans/American history buffs who have been suffering from withdrawal ever since Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson closed, relief is on the way.
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