(A Panoramic Map of Chicago, 1868)
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Riccardo Muti, Music Director
Playbill: Rivers: Nature. Power. Culture. May 9 - June 9
May 2013
Maude Roberts George
Nora Douglas Holt
Theodore Charles Stone
Maude Roberts George
Nora Douglas Holt
Theodore Charles Stone
Photo Credits for images of Maude Roberts George, Nora Douglas Holt and Theodore Charles Stone: Archival Collection of Chicago Music Association, Branch No. 1, National Association of Negro Musicians, Inc. NANM (since 1919).
Barbara Wright-Pryor is President of the Chicago Music Association, Branch No. 1 of the National Association of Negro Musicians, Inc. (since 1919). She is a Classical Music Critic for The Chicago Crusader newspaper. Her bio at TheHistoryMakers.com reads, in part: "A charter member of the Community Advisory Council of the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra (CSO), Wright-Pryor helps monitor the CSO’s progress
in achieving its diversity agenda. She also serves on the Artistic
Planning Committee of the Chicago Symphony."
Barbara Wright-Pryor researched and authored The Mississippi River, the program notes on Florence B. Price (1887-1953) for the Playbill, pictured above, which documents the Chicago Symphony Orchestra's Rivers series of concerts from May 9 to June 9, 2013. We strongly felt the Florence B. Price program notes deserved the widest possible audience. Barbara generously granted our request to present portions in AfriClassical Blog and at the Florence B. Price page at AfriClassical.com. She writes:
Dear Bill,
As promised, here are the edited program notes on Florence B. Price
that I prepared for The Chicago Symphony Orchestra when they performed
Mississippi River. Please feel free to
extract any portions that are suitable to your needs.
I am attaching photos from CMA's archives of Nora Douglas
Holt, Theodore Charles Stone, and Maude Roberts George if you wish to
use them. Credit: Archival Collection of Chicago Music Association,
Branch No. 1, National Association of Negro Musicians, Inc. NANM (since
1919).
Musically yours,
Barbara
Program
Notes on Florence B. Price
Born: April 9, 1887 - Little Rock, Arkansas
Born: April 9, 1887 - Little Rock, Arkansas
Died:
June 3, 1953 – Chicago, Illinois
Florence
Beatrice (Smith) Price became the first black female composer to have
a symphony performed by a major American orchestra when Music
Director Frederick Stock and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra played
the world premiere of her Symphony No. 1 in E minor on June 15, 1933,
on one of four concerts presented at The Auditorium Theatre from June
14 through June 17 during Chicago’s Century of Progress Exposition.
The historic June 15th
concert entitled “The Negro in Music” also included works by
Harry T. Burleigh, Roland Hayes, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and John
Alden Carpenter performed by Margaret A. Bonds, pianist
and tenor Roland Hayes with the orchestra. Florence Price’s
symphony had come to the attention of Stock when it won first prize
in the prestigious Wanamaker Competition held the previous year.
The
Chicago Daily News
reported: “It is a faultless work, a work that speaks its own
message with restraint and yet with passion . . . worthy of a place
in the regular symphonic repertory.” Later it would become known
through the archival records of Chicago Music Association (CMA) that
Maude Roberts George, classical music critic for The
Chicago Defender
and President of CMA of which Price was a member, underwrote the cost
of the June 15, 1933 concert.
Although
this premiere brought instant recognition and fame to Florence
Beatrice Price, success as a composer was not to be hers. She would
“continue to wage an uphill battle – a battle much larger than
any war that pure talent and musical skill could win. It was a
battle in which the nation was embroiled – a dangerous mélange of
segregation, Jim Crow laws, entrenched racism, and sexism.”
(Women’s Voices for Change, March 8, 2013). The same fate would
also befall fellow Arkansan William Grant Still, the “Dean of Black
Composers” (whose Afro-American Symphony was performed by the
Rochester Philharmonic Symphony under Howard Hanson, the first time
in history that a major American orchestra had played a symphonic
work by a black composer) and many others due to rampant endemic and
systemic racism.
Professor
Dominique-René de Lerma, distinguished American musicologist and
eminent historian states “Florence Price was born in a
racially-integrated community in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1887 where,
at the age of four, she played in her first piano recital and her
first composition was published at the age of eleven, all under her
mother’s guidance.” De Lerma continues, “Her mother Florence
Irene Smith Née
Gulliver, had been a school teacher in Indianapolis, Indiana before
her marriage, and in Little Rock had a restaurant, sold real estate,
and served as secretary of the International Loan and Trust Company.
Her father, James H. Smith, was the city’s only black dentist (his
patients included the state’s governor) who had moved to Little
Rock in 1876.”
Price
graduated as high school valedictorian at age 14 and left Little Rock
in 1904 to attend the New England Conservatory and, after following
her mother’s advice to present herself as being of Mexican descent,
earned a bachelor of music degree in 1906, the only one of 2,000
students to pursue a double major (organ and piano performance)
studying with Frederick S. Converse (piano), George Whitefield
Chadwick (music theory), and Henry M. Dunham (organ). Dr. De Lerma
states that it was about this time that Price “started to think
seriously about composition.” Following graduation she taught for
one year at the Cotton Plant-Arkadelphia Presbyterian Academy campus
in northeastern Arkansas (the main campus was located in the
southwestern Arkansas city of Arkadelphia) then at Little Rock’s
Shorter College, and from 1910 to 1912 at Clark University in Atlanta
before returning to Little Rock where she taught privately and became
active in composition.
Segregation
was the order of the day and racial tensions began to mount in the
city. Price was unable to find employment and, after being refused
admission to the all-white Arkansas Music Teachers Association, she
founded the Little Rock Club of Musicians and taught music at the
segregated black schools. Little
Rock had been a comfortable city for Black residents, but as racial
problems began to develop resulting in a lynching, she moved with her
husband, Attorney Thomas J. Price (whom she married in 1912) and
their two daughters, to Chicago in 1927.
Shortly
after arriving in Chicago, Price joined the R. Nathaniel Dett Club of
Music and the Allied Arts (named for the black composer of Canadian
descent) and did additional study at the American Conservatory of
Music, Chicago Teachers College, Central YMCA College, the University
of Chicago and Chicago Musical College (now Chicago College of
Performing Arts of Roosevelt University) as a student in composition
and orchestration with Carl Busch and Wesley LaViolette, graduating
in 1934.
It
was at Chicago Musical College that Florence Price met baritone
Theodore Charles Stone, a member of the Chicago Music Association who
later served as its President from 1954 to 1996).
The
Chicago Music Association (CMA) had been established March 3, 1919 by
Nora Douglas Holt, then the classical music critic for The Chicago
Defender, in order to provide performance venues for
classically-trained “Negro” musicians who were, by tradition,
denied performance opportunities in major concert halls and on opera
stages throughout the country. In July, 1919, musicians from
Washington, D. C., met with the newly-organized CMA in Chicago
at Bronzeville’s historic Wabash Avenue Y.M.C.A. and organized the
National Association of Negro Musicians, Inc. (NANM); CMA became
the first branch and awarded its first scholarship prize to Miss
Marian Anderson of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is significant to
note here that these meetings were held during a horrific race war
occurring less than three miles away at the 31st Street
Beach and gunshots could be heard through the open windows of the
meeting hall.
Ted
Stone encouraged Price to join CMA where she met organist Estella
Bonds and her young daughter, Margaret, who would later become
Florence’s student. Stone was the first black who would later
study at The Sibelius Institute in Helsinki, Finland after having
sung for Marian Anderson’s accompanist, Kosti Vehanen, a colleague
of Jean Sibelius who awarded Stone a scholarship. The
outbreak of the World War II in Europe would force Stone to return to
Chicago in 1939 where he reunited with CMA and resumed his career as
a classical concert singer, music promoter and journalist writing for
The
Chicago Bee
and The
Associated Negro Press
(both now defunct), The
Chicago Defender,
at that time the oldest Black-owned daily newspaper (est. 1905) and
The
Chicago Crusader,
the oldest Black-owned weekly newspaper (est. 1940).
Florence
Price’s career flourished after the move to Chicago.
It was around 1928 when the G.
Schirmer and McKinley publishing companies began to issue her songs,
piano music, and especially her instructional pieces for piano. She
filed for divorce from Thomas Price in 1928 and she and the children
moved in with her student and friend Margaret Bonds. She gave music
lessons at home and at T. Theodore Taylor’s School of Music located
in the Abraham Lincoln Centre Community Service Agency, 700 E.
Oakwood Blvd. in Chicago’s historic Bronzeville Community (now
occupied by Northeastern Illinois University’s Center for Inner
City Studies) and composed more than 300 works including symphonies,
organ works, piano concertos, works for violin, arrangements of
spirituals, art songs, and chamber works.
Florence
Price’s friendship with Margaret Bonds gained national recognition
and performances for both. Price and Bonds had submitted compositions
for the 1932 Wanamaker competition with Price winning first prize for
Symphony in E minor and second prize for her Piano Sonata. Bonds won
third prize for a vocal work. Price’s
works were performed in concerts held in churches and black social
and cultural clubs by chamber ensembles, solo artists, her own Treble
Clef Glee Club and by the Florence B. Price A Cappella Chorus
conducted by Grace W. Thompkins. A number of Price’s orchestral
works were played by the Chicago Women’s Symphony and the WPA
Symphony of Detroit.
Florence
Price became friends with Marian Anderson, who had sung Price’s
spiritual arrangement “My Soul’s Been Anchored in the Lord” and
Schubert’s “Ave Maria” in an international broadcast from
Prague on May 6, 1937 (so noted in CMA’s archives), composer
William L. Dawson of Tuskegee Institute, Will
Marion Cook who had attended New York City’s National Conservatory
while Antonin Dvorak was its president, Abbie Mitchell, Langston
Hughes and many others.
Professor
De Lerma adds “As a single person, she earned a living from the
sales of her piano works and, under the pseudonym of Vee Jay, as
composer of popular songs. She also played organ for the silent
films and orchestrated for WGN radio. Additional performances were
secured with the U. S. Marine Band, the Michigan W.P.A. Symphony, the
Forum String Quartet, the Detroit W.P.A. Concert Band, the Chicago
Club of Women Organists, the Illinois Federation of Music Clubs, the
Musicians Club of Women (Chicago), the Brooklyn Symphony, the
Bronx Symphony, the Pittsburgh Symphony, the Chicago Chamber
Orchestra and the New York City Symphonic Band.
Marian
Anderson began singing Price's arrangement of the spiritual My
Soul's Been Anchored in the Lord regularly on her concerts which
always concluded with Negro Spirituals. She then performed
Price's original setting of the Langston Hughes poem cycle Songs
to a Dark Virgin which a Chicago Daily News reviewer
called "one of the greatest immediate successes ever won by an
American song." The Hughes song cycle was published in 1941 and
other leading black vocalists, among them Roland Hayes and later
Leontyne Price, began to sing Price's vocal music. Among her admirers
was composer John Alden Carpenter (whose Concertino for Piano and
Orchestra had been performed by Margaret Bonds on the 1933
history-making Century of Progress Exposition concert) who sponsored
her for membership in the American Society of Composers, Authors, and
Performers (ASCAP).
Price
continued to compose throughout the 1940s and early 1950s, penning
two concertos for violin and orchestra, two additional symphonies,
one of which, Symphony No. 2, has apparently been lost. She gained
recognition from as far away as England where conductor Sir John
Barbirolli commissioned her to compose a suite for string instruments
which had its premiere with the famed Hallé Orchestra in Manchester.
Some of Price's output was written for specific instruments; she
continued to write art songs and music for choruses that performed on
radio station WGN.
She continued to arrange spirituals for solo voice and composed
pieces for organ that were performed by organists in the many black
churches of Chicago. She even served a term as Recording Secretary
of CMA whose members gave constant encouragement and support. In
1997 Calvert Johnson, organist at Agnes Scott College in Decatur,
Georgia recorded seventeen of Price’s organ works and performed
them in
a 1999
CMA-sponsored recital on the historic
Kimball Organ at Chicago’s First Baptist Congregational Church.
In
2010 the Center for Black Music Research (CBMR established by
researcher Samuel Floyd in 1983) commissioned Trevor Weston, an
associate professor of music at Drew University, to
reconstruct the long-lost orchestral score for Price’s Concerto in
One Movement for Piano and Orchestra in order to perform the concerto
and release an album of the composer’s work which would become the
third issue in the CBMR series, “Recorded Music of the African
Diaspora.”
Dr.
Weston studied three of Price’s piano rehearsal scores for the
concerto and read articles about her written by Rae Linda Brown,
music professor at the University of California-Irvine and foremost
Florence B. Price researcher and biographer. Dr. Brown said Weston’s
name surfaced early on as someone who understood the history of
American music, one who would be able to understand what a symphony
orchestra sounded like in 1934. She added “We can uphold Trevor’s
score as authentic. He upheld it as a piece of African-American
history, a very important piece of history. He stayed true to
Florence Price’s voice” which is a combination of the romantic
style coupled with the black cultural heritage.
Florence
Price’s reconstructed Concerto in One Movement for Piano and
Orchestra with Karen Walwyn, pianist and Symphony No. 1 in E Minor
with Leslie B. Dunner conducting the New Black Music Repertory
Ensemble were performed at Chicago’s Harris Theater for Music and
Dance on February 17, 2011, to great critical acclaim, thanks to CBMR
Executive Director Monica Hairston O’Connell, Deputy Director
Morris Phibbs and staff for their perseverance and dedication in
keeping to the Center’s mission. The CD recording was released by
Albany Records later that same year. In 2001 The Women’s
Philharmonic, Apo Hsu, Artistic Director and Conductor had recorded
Price’s The Oak (1934), Mississippi River and
Symphony No. 3 in C minor (1940). A 2008 reissue of that CD by Koch
International Classics is currently available at various outlets.
Dominique-René
de Lerma writes that Florence B. Price’s materials are held within
the Special Collections of the University of Arkansas-Fayetteville
where they were presented in 1974 by Price’s daughter Florence
Price Robinson, and at the Library of Congress. Included in the
Arkansas collections is correspondence to and from John Alden
Carpenter, Roland Hayes, Eugène Goossens, Harry T. Burleigh, and
others.
While
planning a trip to Europe, Florence B. Price died
of a stroke on June 3, 1953 in Chicago, her adopted city that she had
come to love; a city that, in 1964, named an elementary school
for her as its own recognition of her legacy as a Chicago musician
and an important black composer (but, unfortunately, scheduled for
closing by The Chicago Public Schools in 2011); and a city, a nation,
a world that deserves to experience her music and
that of her colleagues and contemporaries; music that Antonin Dvorak
would affirm as authentic; music that had as its basis those slave
songs that survived the middle passage to become firmly entrenched in
the American musical landscape.
Mississippi
River: “The River and Those Dwelling Upon its Banks” was
written in 1934 and dedicated to Arthur Olaf Anderson, one of Price’s
mentors and head of the Theory Department at Chicago’s American
Conservatory of Music.
The
work replicates a boat cruising down the Mississippi River and
experiencing life along its banks. The opening section, like Gustav
Mahler’s Symphony No. 1, depicts the awakening of dawn, but in this
case, along river banks. Section 2 introduces a Native American
theme scored for Indian drum, timpani, marimba, and other percussion
instruments. In section 3, four Negro spirituals Nobody Knows the
Trouble I’ve Seen, Stand Still, Jordan, Go Down,
Moses and Deep River and original work by Price are mixed
with traditional tunes of the day, River Song, Lalotte, and
Steamboat Bill. The suite concludes with a layering of the
melodies, alternately stacked one upon the other, with the spiritual
Deep River the most dominant of all.
(Original
instrumentation: 3222 p, Eh, bcl, cbsn, 4331. timp, perc, harp,
strings)
Barbara
Wright-Pryor, President
Chicago
Music Association (1996-present) -The organization to which Florence
Beatrice Price belonged when her Symphony no. 1 in E minor was
performed by Frederick Stock and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
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