Until roughly 11:30 a.m. last Friday, it’s safe to say that the number of people who knew that President James Madison once owned a crystal flute — let alone that it’s now in the possession of the Library of Congress — could likely fit comfortably inside a high school auditorium. (Honestly, maybe even a classroom.) That was when the librarian of Congress, Carla Hayden, tweeted out an invite to singer, rapper and classically trained flutist Lizzo to check out Madison’s flute and the rest of the library’s collection while she was in town for a concert.
IM COMING CARLA! AND IM PLAYIN THAT CRYSTAL FLUTE!!!!! https://t.co/aPcIthlqeo
— FOLLOW @YITTY (@lizzo) September 24, 2022
Fast-forward a week and suddenly people have thoughts about the propriety and sanctity of Lizzo gleefully playing a few notes on that flute on a stage in Washington on Tuesday. It’s somehow a tragedy and a scandal that anyone would dare be so crass as to remove a Founding Father’s obscure tchotchke from its place of safekeeping to be used as a prop for a twerking symbol of America’s moral decadence.
When I say “people,” what I really mean is “a handful of men who love to be mad on the internet.” And their sudden surge of interest in early American musical instrument lore is as transparent as the crystal flute itself.
The backstory of how the flute went from a hidden-away catalog to appearing on stage in Lizzo’s hands is actually pretty heartwarming. She accepted Hayden’s offer to visit the library’s extensive collection of flutes, spending three hours on Monday exploring and trying out the instruments on hand, according to The New York Times. That included the crystal flute that Hayden had teased in her tweet — and which the superstar asked if she could play during her D.C. performance on Tuesday.
Hearing @lizzo play some of the Library’s priceless antique instruments on Monday was such a gift, and we were honored and happy to help her share that gift with her concert audience Tuesday night. Here is some more behind-the-scenes footage of her Library tour. #LizzoAtLOC pic.twitter.com/OQc4K3YXBg
— Library of Congress (@librarycongress) September 28, 2022
You may be thinking that the criticism is centered around what seems at first like a valid fear: She could have broken this priceless artifact. But nobody cares more about protecting historical artifacts than professional librarians and archivists. These are people who believe so deeply in safeguarding the past that they voluntarily wage an eternal war against unvanquishable enemies like light and dust. These are people who would rather drop-kick a grubby-handed toddler bearing down on a piece of parchment than be responsible for damage to an item in their charge.
To wit: “Before Lizzo arrived, the Library’s curators in the Music Division made sure that it could be played safely and without damage,” according to a press release the Library of Congress issued on Wednesday. When items are briefly lent out for display — or in this case performance — “curators ensure that the item can be transported in a customized protective container and a Library curator and security officer are always guarding the item until it is secured once more.”
These are people who would rather drop-kick a grubby-handed toddler bearing down on a piece of parchment than be responsible for damage to an item in their charge.
You could see that those protective steps were in place in video from Tuesday’s concert, where Lizzo reverently holds the crystal flute when it’s handed to her. She plays a few notes, runs a trill, does a little twerk in the process, and then hands it back to Hayden, who tucks it into the padded case used to transport it.
That should have been it, an all too rare, nice moment of a famous person exposing a broader audience to a bit of historical trivia. Instead, we’ve now had a day of people projecting their own weird hang-ups onto an object that they had never heard of until maybe 24 hours beforehand.
“The thing that is obvious but people don’t want to say is that this is about humiliating white people, about desecrating American history and heritage,” Chronicles magazine senior writer Pedro L. Gonzalez tweeted, comparing Lizzo hitting a few notes to the Muslim conquest of Spain in the Middle Ages.








