She was there at Minneapolis City Hall on the first day of marriage equality in Minnesota, her singing voice brimming with joy and light as the first cohort of same-sex couples exchanged their vows. She was behind a megaphone during protests over the police shooting of school cafeteria worker Philando Castile, her song carrying grief, resistance and hope in the aftermath of the traumatizing event livestreamed on Facebook. And she has sung in many a school, encouraging children to find strength in their voices — a power she demonstrates in a singalong to "Hand in Hand," an original tune that became an anthem for the Black Lives Matter movement.
An achingly beautiful singer and songwriter, Jayanthi Kyle believes that her alto voice is a gift endowed for the purpose of healing. She has given moving expression to emotions at some of the most significant public moments in recent Minnesota history. Think of her as a modern-day Nina Simone, the jazz icon and civil rights activist, except that Kyle comes by way of Maple Grove, where she grew up, and Ford Heights, Ill., her birthplace.
"Singing is therapy and medicine," Kyle said. "The vibrations heal our bodies."
Minnesota is rich with singers — probably 50 for every lake in our water-suffused state. But Kyle is a rarity among them, not just because of the qualities of her voice, but also because of the variety of situations and causes she embraces. She still sings in bands — at one point she was in 11 simultaneously. But she's cut her regular collaborations to just a handful, including the Give Get Sistet, an a capella troupe of six black women, and her ongoing duet with guitarist David Crittenden, whom she met at a funeral.
More often than not, you can find her singing in nursing homes, hospitals, juvenile detention centers or shelters — places that are far from glamorous but where, she believes, her healing is urgently needed.
She has worked with the Rev. William J. Barber II in the Poor People's Campaign, part of a national call for moral revival, as well as the Peace Poets of New York City.
On Saturdays through May, she is teaching children in a class called "Homies and Harmony" at the Water Bar in northeast Minneapolis.
"We don't have to wait for others to sing to us or be ashamed of our voices," she said. "We all have the power to heal."