[Kwanzaa
Observance]
Saturday, December 31, 2011
ClassicalDiscoveries.org Tribute to Black Composers Includes Still's 'Symphony No. 3' & Dett's 'Cinnamon Grove'
Marvin
Rosen of www.ClassicalDiscoveries.org
aired his annual Kwanzaa Tribute to Black Classical Composers today,
Dec. 31, 2011 on WPRB Radio in Princeton, New Jersey. Recent
releases included William Grant Still's Symphony
No. 3 (The Sunday Symphony)
recorded by the Fort Smith Symphony on Naxos and R. Nathaniel Dett's
Cinnamon
Grove suite for piano by
Phoenix Park-Kim, piano and Merwin Siu, violin on the album Deep
River
from MSR Classics:
Bonds,
Margaret
Troubled Water
Helen Walker-Hill, Piano
Leonarda - LE
339
5:31
Khumalo,
Mzilikazi
Five
African folk songs
National Symphony Orchestra of the South
African Broadcasting Corporation, Richard Cock, conductor
Marco
Polo – 8.223832
5:37
Anon
18th
Century Peru
The Congo
La Chimera
Naive –
E8931
5:59
Williams,
Julius P.
Myths
of History
Louise Toppin, Soprano, Dvorak Symphony Orchestra,
Julius P. Williams, conductor
Albany Records – TROY1314
6:03
Price,
Florence
Three
Negro Dances
Northern Arizona University Wind Symphony, Dr.
Patricia J. Hoy, conductor
Northern Arizona University Wind
Symphony - NAUWS 003
6:13
Thompson,
Shirley J.
New
Nation Rising (A 21st Century Symphony)
Royal Philharmonic
Orchestra, Westminster Voices, Newham Academy Choir, Westminster
Voices, Mark De-Liser, Maria Awa, Nicholas Sherwood, Vocalists,
Shirley J. Thompson, Conductor
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra - RPO
SP 001
6:20
Dett,
R. Nathaniel
Cinnamon
Grove - Suite for Piano
Phoenix Park-Kim, Piano
MSR Classics -
MS 1372 – (M*06)
7:03
Perkinson,
Coleridge-Taylor
Sinfonietta No. 1 for Strings
Chicago Sinfonietta, Paul
Freeman, conductor
Cedille -CDR 90000 087
7:19
Jegede,
Tunde
Lamentation
Members of the London Sinfonietta
Triciom
Records -TriCD 1001
7:38
Roumain,
Daniel Bernard (DBR)
Lecolion
Loops
Lecolion Washington, Bassoon, Carina Nyberg Washington,
Clarinet, Mark Ensley, Piano
Albany Records - TROY
1038
7:42
Perry,
Julia
By the Sea
Sebronette Barnes, Soprano, Elise Auerbach,
Piano
Senrab Records – SRR7988
8:03
Still,
William Grant
Symphony
No. 3 "The Sunday Symphony"
Fort Smith Symphony, John
Jeter, Conductor
Naxos – 8.559676
8:07
Coleman,
Valerie
Suite:
Portraits of Josephine
Imani Winds
Koch International Classics
– KIC-CD-7696
8:27
Still,
William Grant
Song
for the Lonely
Lecolion Washinton, Bassoon, Mark Ensley,
Piano
Albany Records - TROY 1038
8:56
Juanita Smith: 'Schoenberg's New World: The American Years' by Sabine Feisst refers to Hale Smith's 'Evocations' (1961)
[Schoenberg's
New World: The American Years;
Sabine Feisst; Oxford University Press (2011)]
HaleSmith (1925-2009)
is
profiled at AfriClassical.com, which features a comprehensive Works
List by Prof. Dominique-René de Lerma,
http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com
On Dec. 29, 2011 AfriClassical posted: “'Deep River: Merwin Siu and Phoenix Park-Kim Play S. Coleridge-Taylor, R.N.Dett, H. Swanson, H. Smith & D. Baker.” Juanita Smith, widow of the
late Hale Smith, has made a comment which we also present as a post
of its own:
Comment
by email:
Hi,
you might want to check out the new book by Sabine Feisst entitled
Schoenberg's
New World: The American Years.
There is a tiny reference to Hale as one of the American composers
using Schoenberg's method in Hale's "dodecaphonic” piano work
"Evocations" (1961). The book is hefty in content and I
am sure that I am missing a lot by not being a musician, but the over
all is intriguing and informative. Thanks for keeping me apprised of
musical events, Happy New Year! Juanita [Juanita Smith]
Sankusem.org to release 'Bolga Sonata' and other instrumental works by J.H. Kwabena Nketia
[Coming
Soon: Bolga Sonata and other
instrumental works by J.H. Kwabena Nketia]
December
28, 2011
“Dear Friends:
As we celebrate the New Year,
thoughts often turn to giving back, to sharing good fortune with
those around us, with our community, and perhaps, with the world.
It’s a time to consider how to bring a bit of joy to others.
“As a
friend of Sankusem, you know that part of our mission is to bring the
music experience of the African village to the concert hall utilizing
traditional and classical instruments, in order to share the music
and arts of Africa with new audiences. As you are making decisions
on your charitable giving, we ask you to please put Sankusem on your
list of contributions. As a non-profit organization, all donations
will go to expanding Sankusem’s ability to educate and to stimulate
through the power of performance.
“In
2011, Sankusem toured the Pacific Northwest, performing with
internationally renowned artists including Rachel Barton Pine, Obbo
Addy and Kofi Anang before audiences at Whitman College, Icicle Creek
Music Center, Seattle Pacific University and the University of
Washington. With your help, the New Year can truly be a monumental
one for the group. Sankusem’s first CD is about to be released, the
group is making connections with the Smithsonian as it develops its
new African-American museum and is working on a Composer’s
Competition which should bring international attention as well as
exciting performances as new works are premiered.
“Through
our 501C3 fiscal partner NIA Production Company, Sankusem can now
take tax-deductible donations, by check or cash.” “Your
assistance will help us spread this music across the world—and the
members of Sankusem thank you for your generosity.”
Sincerely,
George
Francois
Dr.
George Francois
Executive
Director, Sankusem
I
eagerly await this! The Bolga Sonata, for a start, is the sort of work
that could, in my view, become a very popular access point. There is
something about Nketia’s music that always makes me smile! [Michael S. Wright]
Friday, December 30, 2011
Kelly Hall-Tompkins, Founder of Music Kitchen: 'Still Shopping for a last minute tax deduction?'
[Kelly
Hall-Tompkins, Founder of MusicKitchenNYC.org]
KellyHall-Tompkins:
Consider Giving to Music Kitchen,
which is making a difference
in real people's lives:
Consider Giving to Music Kitchen,
which is making a difference
in real people's lives:
"The
Music Kitchen Concerts did have a great influence
on
some of us girls, me in particular.
I
remember you playing a piece by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,
it
inspired me to want and seek more out of life.
The
Music Kitchen is essential
especially
to people like me who lost everything
and
needs that extra push of confidence to try again."
-Kewani
Former Shelter
Client/Music Kitchen Listener,
now working and living on her own.
now working and living on her own.
Only
a Few Days Left!
and
Claim
a Charitable Tax Deduction for 2011!
Countertenor Darryl Taylor sings 'Vivi, tiranno!' from Handel's opera 'Rodelinda' on YouTube
[Darryl
Taylor, countertenor]
Countertenor
Dr. Darryl Taylor is a longtime associate of ours. He has a website
at www.darryltaylor.com
which includes space for The African-American Art Song Alliance. The
Alliance also has a Video Channel,
http://www.youtube.com/user/ArtSongAlliance
Sergio
Mims is a Classical Music host of radio station WHPK-FM in Chicago.
He writes:
"I
know that you've mentioned countertenor Darryl Taylor before on your
website but have you seen this? I came across this by coincidence.
It's of Taylor singing 'Vivi, tiranno!' from Handel's opera
Rodelinda,
HAPPY
NEW YEAR!
Sincerely,
Sergio
Mims"
Comments by email:
I had not known of Darryl Taylor. As a voice fan--especially of tenors and countertenors--I ordered one of his CDs. Thank you for all the goodies, of which I can partake very few--and enjoy the knowledge. Gwen [Gwendoline Y. Fortune]
Nice ….. but I then explored a bit and was totally bowled out by the arrangement of Amazing Grace arr by the late Hale Smith (despite poor sound on you tube) and Sence you Went Away (arr by Leslie Adams) and then I went on to the others.. Could not help being moved to tears. It is my oversight that I have previously only heard Darryl’s performances as tenor.. What an oversight! The CD ‘Love Rejoices’ is now on order from Amazon!!! [Michael S. Wright]
Leslie's Sence you went away is a really great contribution to the literature. I think I've said this before. This may not be my last time. [Dominique-René de Lerma]
Comments by email:
Hi Bill, Thanks for the promo! Happy 2012! Darryl [Darryl Taylor]
I had not known of Darryl Taylor. As a voice fan--especially of tenors and countertenors--I ordered one of his CDs. Thank you for all the goodies, of which I can partake very few--and enjoy the knowledge. Gwen [Gwendoline Y. Fortune]
Nice ….. but I then explored a bit and was totally bowled out by the arrangement of Amazing Grace arr by the late Hale Smith (despite poor sound on you tube) and Sence you Went Away (arr by Leslie Adams) and then I went on to the others.. Could not help being moved to tears. It is my oversight that I have previously only heard Darryl’s performances as tenor.. What an oversight! The CD ‘Love Rejoices’ is now on order from Amazon!!! [Michael S. Wright]
Leslie's Sence you went away is a really great contribution to the literature. I think I've said this before. This may not be my last time. [Dominique-René de Lerma]
Dear Sergio, et al. Thanks so
much for the positive commentary on my switch to countertenor. I did
this about 5 years ago and am full-time dedicated to the fach. I've
recorded a CD of spirituals for Albany Records in this voice type. You
can hear three clips from it on youtube by going here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dg7fvYDElKg. I hope you enjoy! All best wishes for a safe and prosperous 2012! Darryl [Darryl Taylor]
Good news all around. HAPPY NEW YEAR EVERYBODY!!!!!!! S [Sergio Mims]
Good news all around. HAPPY NEW YEAR EVERYBODY!!!!!!! S [Sergio Mims]
Boston.com: 'Firebrand performs music of Haiti in memory of earthquake'
[Justin
Elie (Cover photo of sheet music for Nostalgie)]
The Haitian classical composer Justin Elie (1883-1931)
is
profiled at AfriClassical.com, which features a comprehensive Works
List by Prof. Dominique-René de Lerma,
http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com
Other Haitian composers featured at the website are Occide Jeanty,
Ludovic Lamothe and Julio Racine:
The
following was submitted by Firebrand Concert Series:
On
January 7th at 8 p.m., the Firebrand Concert Series will present
rarely performed classical music of Haitian composers in recognition
of the hardships Haiti has faced and in honor of Greater Boston’s
Haitian community. The concert will begin with Haiti’s national
anthem performed by young Haitian cellists, who will share their
experiences during and since the earthquake. Cellist Diana Golden
and pianist Synthia Sture will then perform Haitian compositions from
the 1850s to the present by Louis Moreau Gottschalk, Justin Elie,
Frantz Casseus, Daniel Bernard Roumain, and Jean Perrault, as well as
traditional folk songs.
Ms. Golden’s cello students, who
immigrated to Boston from Haiti after the 2010 earthquake, attend
Open Access to Music Education (OAMEC) in Hyde Park, which is
dedicated to engaging at-risk youth in music as a means of expression
to cope with trauma. Any donations received for this concert will
go toward the students’ music center. All of the Firebrand
concerts are at St. Paul’s Episcopal Parish at 26 Washington Street
in Malden. Tickets may be purchased for $12 from the Firebrand
website or for $15 at the door. For audience members 14 years and
under, tickets are $5 at the door.
VocalEssence: Composer Hannibal Lokumbe Premieres 'In the Spirit of Being' at WITNESS Concert, Saint Paul, Feb. 19
[Hannibal
Lokumbe]
This release is from VocalEssence.org:
Joyce
Awards-winning composer brings premiere piece to the annual
VocalEssence WITNESS concert
MINNEAPOLIS,
Minn. (December 15, 2011) – Hannibal Lokumbe, 2011 Joyce Awards
winner, will premiere In the Spirit of Being at the annual
VocalEssence WITNESS Concert on February 19, 2012
(4 pm), at Ordway Center for the Performing Arts in Saint Paul.
VocalEssence commissioned Lokumbe (Dear Mrs. Parks, WITNESS
2007) to write In the Spirit of Being, a four-movement piece
scored for mixed chorus, children’s chorus, jazz quartet and female
soloist Tonia Hughes. In the Spirit of Being artfully
presents the stages of the human experience — birth, struggle,
forgiveness/resolution, and peace — as seen through the eyes of the
composer. For more information and to order tickets, call
651-224-4222 or visit vocalessence.org.
The
African continent is rich in musical sounds for voices and drums.
VocalEssence opens this year’s WITNESS concert by
celebrating some of these sounds with music from South Africa, Kenya,
Cameroon and Ghana: a wonderful combination of songs about work,
praise, and animals sung in the dialects of Luo, Xhosa, Zulu, Kamba
and Cameroon. Joining the VocalEssence Chorus and conductor Philip
Brunelle will be the percussion ensemble from Macalester College
and their director, Sowah Mensah. Don’t miss the opening
procession with the seldom-seen royal drums of Ghana!
In
1991, VocalEssence created WITNESS to celebrate the artistic
contributions of African Americans to the fine arts and to our common
cultural heritage. By commissioning new works and programming rarely
heard works by African American composers, we help broaden ideas
about African American musical expression and introduce important new
voices to our audiences through concerts, recordings and radio
broadcasts.
Hannibal
Lokumbe is a composer and jazz trumpeter whose career spans more
than forty years. After moving to New York in 1970, he spent the next
25 years there playing trumpet and recording with legends such as Gil
Evans, Pharoah Sanders, and Elvin Jones. Lokumbe eventually formed
his own Sunrise Orchestra, which has toured the world playing in
every major music festival from Istanbul to China. He has composed
more than 150 works, many of which have historical subjects such as
John Brown, Anne Frank, and Rosa Parks. He is the recipient of
numerous awards from the Bessie, the National Endowment for the Arts,
and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Detroit Symphony Orchestra.
Soloist
Tonia Hughes is a Twin Cities recording artist and actress.
She has garnered critical acclaim for her leading roles in musical
and theatrical productions including Encounters (2002),
Southern Theater; Black Nativity (2003 – present),
Penumbra Theater; Caroline or Change (2009), Guthrie
Theater; Loves Covers (2010), Women’s Club of
Minneapolis; Mahalia (2011), Fellowship Baptist Church;
and Cinderella (2011), Ordway Center for the
Performing Arts.
Afro-Cuban Composer José White Born Dec. 31, 1835; 'Etude No. 6' on 'Capricho Latino' by Rachel Barton Pine on Cedille
[TOP:
Capricho
Latino; Rachel
Barton Pine, violinist; Cedille 90000 124 (2011) BOTTOM: José White - Shown here after he received the 1st prize for violin at the
Conservatoire de Paris in 1856. Bibliothèque Nationale de
France; Wikipedia]
José Silvestre White, aka José Silvestre White y Lafitte (1835-1918) was an
Afro-Cuban composer, violinist and professor who is profiled at
AfriClassical.com, where
his works are listed by Prof. Dominique-René de Lerma, http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com.
His mother was Afro-Cuban and his father Spanish. Josephine Wright,
Professor of Music at the College of Wooster, in Wooster, Ohio
published an article Violinist
José White in Paris, 1855-1875,
in Black
Music Research Journal, Vol. 10, No. 2, Fall 1990.
The article tells of José White's success at the Paris Conservatory,
as evidenced by his First Grand Prize in Violin, the occasion for the
above photograph:
“Thriving
in such an enriching, stimulating environment, José White excelled.
After just one year of study, he won the Paris Conservatory's highest
award in violin, the coveted First Grand Prize. That competition took
place on July 29, 1856, and was reviewed by Le Pays on August 5:
'The
competition for violin [at the Conservatory] has offered a beautiful
spectacle this year, being the most brilliant struggle. The first
grand prize was conceded to Mr. White, pupil of Alard, and the second
[prize] to Mr. [Aimé] Gros, from the same class... Mr. White showed
himself [so] superior that there should have been created a grand
exceptional prize in his favor. He performed with an extraordinary
animation, not like a pupil but as a great artist who commands his
audience. The jury itself was electrified" (Ramirez 1891, 178).'
This year saw the release by Cedille
Records of Rachel Barton Pine's Capricho
Latino, Cedille
90000 124 (2011)
which
includes the
world premiere recording of White's Etude
No. 6 (5:11),
dedicated to one of his teachers, Secundino Arango. An
earlier recording of the music of José White is Violin
Concertos By Black Composers of the 18th and 19th Centuries,
Cedille 90000 035 (1997), which includes his Violin Concerto in
F-sharp Minor (21:34) performed by Rachel Barton, violin and the
Encore Chamber Orchestra led by Daniel Hege, Conductor. The
recording received a maximum rating of 10/10 from Classics
Today,
was praised by The New York Times, and remains in print today.
On
Aug. 6, 2011 AfriClassical posted: “'CamerataRomeu' Performs Music of Afro-Cuban Composer José White at'Credomatic Festival,' Costa Rica.” Camerata Romeu is a women's
string orchestra from Cuba. It took part in the 21st Credomatic
Music Festival.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Deep River: Merwin Siu and Phoenix Park-Kim Play S. Coleridge-Taylor, R. N. Dett, H. Swanson, H. Smith & D. Baker
[Deep
River: Music for Violin and Piano by Composers of African Descent;
Merwin Siu, violin; Phoenix Park-Kim, piano; MSR Classics MS 1372
(2011)]
On
Dec. 21, 2011 AfriClassical posted: “Deep River: Music for Violinand Piano by Composers of African Descent” by Phoenix Park-Kim &Merwin Siu.” Deep
River
presents
works of three composers who are featured at AfriClassical.com:
Samuel
Coleridge-Taylor, R. Nathaniel Dett and Hale Smith.
The complete works of R. Nathaniel Dett and Hale Smith have been compiled by Prof. Dominique-René de Lerma, http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com, and are found at AfriClassical.com. The recording also includes music of David Baker, Howard Swanson and Ellis L. Marsalis, Jr.
The complete works of R. Nathaniel Dett and Hale Smith have been compiled by Prof. Dominique-René de Lerma, http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com, and are found at AfriClassical.com. The recording also includes music of David Baker, Howard Swanson and Ellis L. Marsalis, Jr.
Following
the initial post, we have
had an opportunity to become well acquainted with the MSR Classics release
Deep
River.
The CD has considerable breadth, and is a notable
contribution by the performers to the recorded repertoire of
Composers of African Descent. .
Samuel
Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912)
composed the title work, Deep
River for violin and piano, Op.
59, No. 10 (5:25). This work was transcribed by the American
violinist Maud Powell. The liner notes tell us: “Coleridge-Taylor's
chamber music arrangement of the spiritual Deep
River shows
his affinity to the late Romantic style and Negro spirituals. He
said, 'What Brahms has done for the Hungarian folk music, Dvorak for
the Bohemian, and Grieg for the Norwegian, I have tried to do for
these Negro Melodies.'”
R.
Nathaniel Dett (1882-1943) wrote
Cinnamon Grove,
Suite for piano (15:28)
in
1928, yet the work did not receive its world premiere until this release.
The world is indebted to violinist Merwin Siu and pianist Phoenix
Park-Kim for rescuing this delightful piece of late Romantic music
from undeserved oblivion some eight decades after it was published.
We read in the liner notes “Dett was a romanticist who composed in
small forms with lyrical melodies and consistently used extra-musical
ideas. Such ideas are reflected in Cinnamon
Grove where
Dett demonstrates his knowledge and love of poetry as well as African
American folk song. Each movement of the suite is inspired by
poetry: the first on lines from The
Dream by
John Donne; the second on lines from Gitanjali
by
Rabindranath Tagore; the third on lines from Epimetheus
by
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow; and the fourth and final on lines from a
song in the collection Religious
Folk Songs of the Negro.
Howard
Swanson (1907-1978) is
represented on the disc by Nocturne
for violin and piano (4:15),
which he composed in 1951. As the liner notes say, “His Nocturne
is an excellent example
of his distinctive lyrical gift, expressed through the utmost economy
of means.”
Hale
Smith (1925-2009) wrote
Epicedial Variations for
violin and piano (13:48)
in 1979. The liner notes tell us: “When Hale Smith passed away in
2009, he left behind a legacy as a revered educator and distinguished
New York-based jazz pianist who had worked with artists ranging from
Dizzy Gillespie to the poet Langston Hughes. However, Smith is
equally renowned as a formal composer, and he owed much of his
training to his principal theory teacher, Ward Lewis at the Cleveland
Institute of Music. The Epicedial
Variations were
dedicated to memory of his teacher. Elegiac in character, the
variations begin with a declarative statement from the violin before
presenting the main theme, based in part on an anagram of Ward Lewis'
name. The variations are highlighted by two solo cadenzas before
returning to a subdued conclusion that combines the introductory
material and main theme.”
David
Baker (b. 1931) gives
us Ethnic
Variations On A Theme Of Paganini for violin and piano (10:40),
a 1976 composition. The nine variations include Bebop,
Swing and
Funky Groove. The
liner notes indicate: “Baker composed Ethnic
Variations in
1976 on a commission from violinist Ruggiero Ricci. On the theme of
Paganini's 24th
Caprice, Baker fused elements of jazz and classical music through his
nine variations.”
Ellis
L. Marsalis, Jr. (b. 1934) composed
The Fourth Autumn
for piano (5:33)
about
1985. We read in the liner notes: “Since 1989, Marsalis has headed
the jazz department at the University of New Orleans and has
influenced the careers of countless musicians. In 2008, he was
inducted into The Louisiana Music Hall of Fame. The
Fourth Autumn, a
ballad written as a wedding anniversary present for his friend,
demonstrates a blend of the Romantic tradition and modern jazz
harmonies.”
Disclaimer:
A
review copy of this CD was provided by the performers.
Comment
by email:
Hi,
you might want to check out the new book by Sabine Feisst entitled
Schoenberg's
New World: The American Years.
There is a tiny reference to Hale as one of the American composers
using Schoenberg's method in Hales "dodecaphonic piano work
"Evocations" (1961). The book is hefty in content and I am
sure that I am missing a lot by not being a musician, but the over
all is intriguing and informative. Thanks for keeping me
apprised of musical events, Happy New Year! Juanita [Juanita Smith]
Patrick D. McCoy on Terri Allen: 'Life, love and laughter: Arts advocate honored with a 60th birthday gala'
[Arts
Advocate Terri Allen was honored with a holiday gala on the occasion
of her 60th birthday. Credits:
Patrick D. McCoy]
DC
Performing Arts Examiner
Examiner.com
December
28, 2011
“When
your birthday is so close to Christmas, what exactly do you do? Will
your friends and loved ones count all of your gifts as in the same.
Do you celebrate at all? For Terri Allen, who serves as the
Executive Director of the arts advocacy organization, Coalition for
African Americans in the Performing Arts it never was a big deal. “I never really celebrated my
birthday because it is so close to Christmas and didn’t want to
inconvenience anybody.” she explained.
"Turning 60 is a big
deal and a gala honoring this milestone made up for all the birthday
celebrations she did not have. Allen’s daughter, the soprano
Pamela Simonson, along with her brother, pianist Victor Simonson
spearheaded a lavish evening gala celebration for their mother held
on Friday, December 23, 2011 at the National Golf Club. The event
was a mirror image reflection of the elegance that radiates from
their mother. Guests arrived in their holiday festive formal attire,
with bursts of red, gold and crème glistening throughout the room.
"Themed
Terri Allen: 60 years of Life, Love and Laughter,
the gala program celebrated the arts advocate through music,
scripture and song. Mistress of Ceremonies for the occasion was her
cousin, Benita Dallas. The program not only celebrated Allen for her
birthday, but for the joy that she brings to others as a friend,
sister, daughter, wife, community leader and mother. Entering the
room to a musical fanfare, Allen was elegant in a black floor length
gown, glamorously radiant in sparkling jewels. Later in the evening,
she changed into a sassy, shimmering dress, with long flowing hair,
channeling full diva. She was joined by her supportive husband, Dale
Allen.”
American Museum of Natural History: KWANZAA 2011 Dec. 31, 12 PM - 4 PM
[Kwanzaa
in the Milstein Hall of Ocean Life AMNH/R. Mickens]
AmericanMuseum of Natural History
December 31, 2011 | 12:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Milstein
Hall of Ocean Life, First Floor
KWANZAA
2011! is a vibrant celebration that honors the seven principles of
Kwanzaa with performances of song, dance, and spoken word and an
international marketplace. This year’s event will feature
storyteller Linda Humes as master of ceremonies, The
Brooklyn Steppers, Restoration Dance Theatre Company, ADLIB Steel
Orchestra,
and Something
Positive, Inc.
PROGRAM
Noon–4 pm
Marketplace
Performances,
Main Stage
1 pm Linda
Humes, Host
Welcome
by master storyteller and actress Linda Humes
1:15 pm The
Brooklyn Steppers
The
Brooklyn Steppers, the high-energy stars of President Obama’s
inauguration parade and a featured ensemble on “Law & Order,”
energize with a universal call for unity and world peace. This
dynamic student marching band—famous for its intricate drum solos,
unbelievable moves, and “Brooklyn Attitude”—dazzles.
2 pm
Restoration Dance Theatre Company
Restoration
Dance Theatre Company, dressed in beautiful costumes, performs
African, Caribbean, jazz, and modern dances. This multi-disciplinary
arts training program in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn inspires
thousands of young people toward self-determination, empowerment, and
responsibility.
2:30 pm
ADLIB Steel Orchestra
Rooted
in the musical traditions of Trinidad and Tobago, the ADLIB Steel
Orchestra offers a diversity of rich styles including calypso, jazz,
pop, rhythm and blues, and soca. This award-winning ensemble boasting
some of New York’s most talented and versatile young musicians has
been known even to funkify Beethoven’s music.
3:20 pm
Something Positive, Inc.
Something
Positive, Inc., founded by Cheryl Byron, traces the ancestral origins
of African-American musical, oral, and dance traditions from the
motherland of Africa to the Caribbean beaches and onward to North
America. This inspirational and highly interactive performance
incorporates dance, music, song, and storytelling.
3:55 pm
Closing Ceremony
Throughout
the day, special Kwanzaa foods will be sold in the Museum Food Court,
Lower Level.
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Gapplegate Classical-Modern Music Review: 'I found many reasons why Still's music still speaks to us today.'
[TOP:
William Grant Still Symphonies Nos. 2 & 3, 'Wood Notes' on Naxos
8.559676 BOTTOM: William Grant Still (Photo is the sole property of
William Grant Still Music, and is used with permission)]
Gapplegate
Classical-Modern Music Review
Wednesday,
December 21, 2011
In
this third volume of the orchestral music of William Grant Still (1895-1978) by John Jeter and the Fort Smith Symphony (Naxos
8.559676) I found many reasons why Still's music still speaks to us
today. As the most prominent Afro-American classical composer of his
generation, he does not simply fit into a ready-made category. Listen
to the three works on this set and you get Still the melodist, the
impressive orchestrator, the impressionist-romantic-Americana voice
of originality.
“The marvelously evocative 'Wood Notes'
(1947) (here in its world premiere recording) puts four pastoral
vignettes together that draw on the tonality of traditional black
America as well as the rural invocation of nature. It is a delight.
The two symphonies represented here (No. 2 from 1937; No. 3 from
1958) similarly evoke folk-ethnic-natural imagery through tone
painting of a high order.
"This is music that will breathe fresh air into the cobwebs of your typical listening patterns. It is performed with balance and care by Jeter and the Fort Smith Symphony. Recommended.” Posted by Grego Applegate Edwards
Comment by email:
This is a very good review--I like it! And all so true. [Judith Anne Still]
"This is music that will breathe fresh air into the cobwebs of your typical listening patterns. It is performed with balance and care by Jeter and the Fort Smith Symphony. Recommended.” Posted by Grego Applegate Edwards
[WilliamGrant Still (1895-1978) is profiled at AfriClassical.com, which
features a comprehensive Works List by Prof. Dominique-René de
Lerma,
http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com]Comment by email:
This is a very good review--I like it! And all so true. [Judith Anne Still]
Festival Concert Programs Written by Prof. Michelle Garnier-Panafieu, Laid Out by Catherine Pizon
[International Week of the Saint-Georges Festival in Guadeloupe 2011]
Prof.
Michelle Garnier-Panafieu, author of Un contemporain
atypique de Mozart, writes a
comment in French, which we have translated. It has been added to
the post "Afro-French Composer Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Born Dec. 25, 1745, Honored With Festival in 2011." We feel the comment deserves to be made a post as well:
“Thank
you for your initiative and your comments. To provide complete
information to your readers, I suggest adding the two concerts given
during the International Week of the Saint-Georges Festival.
Programs were written by me, laid out by Catherine Pizon and edited
by CCSBT. Here are the two programs:
-
April 29, 2011, 8 p.m., Basse-Terre
Cathedral: Saint-Georges, Symphony in G
Major, Opus 11, 1779; Bortnynansky, Hymn
of the Cherubim; Fauré Requiem,
Opus 48, 1888. Festival Orchestra and Choir: Marlon Daniel,
conductor; Luigi Greco, conductor; Magali Léger, soprano; Paul
Gigue, baritone; Koh Gabriel Kameda, violin.
-
April 30, 2011, 8:30 p.m., Art'Chipel,
From Saint-Georges to Mozart: Lyric
Theatre and Instrumental Music.
Saint-Georges, extracts from L'Amant
anonyme (The Anonymous Lover) and
Concerto for Violin, Opus
2, No. 2, 1773; Mozart: Aria
for soprano (accompanied by strings, two oboes and two horns): 'Voi
avete un cor fedele' K. 217, 1775, and Symphony
No. 29 K. 201/186a, 1774. Festival
Orchestra conducted by Marlon Daniel; Magali Léger, soprano; Koh
Gabriel Kameda, violin.”
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Death of Tom Jones, Former Clarinetist and Conductor of Afro-American Chamber Music Society Orchestra
[Tom
Jones]
Janise White is a Professor of Music at West Los
Angeles College, and is Founder and Conductor of the Afro-American
Chamber Music Society Orchestra. She tells AfriClassical of the
passing of the former clarinetist and conductor of the Orchestra, Tom
Jones:
“Dear
Friends,
We
are deeply saddened to announce the sudden and tragic passing of our
former clarinetist and conductor of the Afro-American Chamber Music
Society Orchestra, Tom Jones.
“Tom
Jones shared his expertise in orchestrating and performance with the
orchestra consistently for over two decades replacing the late, Bill
Green and Marcus Eley, clarinetists. He was a consummate music
historian and clarinetist as a graduate of Indiana University (M.M.).
From New Orleans he became the young clarinet student of Robert
Marcellus, and later furthered his clarinet studies at the Cleveland
Institute (B.M.) with Bernard Portnoy and Ron DeKant. Tom studied
conducting with James Levine of the Metropolitan Opera at the Curtis
Institute.
“During
his music career, Tom performed with the New Orleans Symphony,
American Wind Symphony, Boston Symphony, Inglewood Philharmonic, Los
Angeles Repertory Orchestra, New Valley Symphony and the Middle
Eastern Orchestra of Culver City. In October of 1993, Tom introduced
the AACMS orchestra to Professor John Price of Tuskegee University
who quickly forwarded the orchestra score and parts for Scherzo For
Clarinet. This resulted in a west coast premiere of the work
performed by Tom Jones. Tom served as conductor of AACMS from 2006
to 2009. He concurrently pursued a successful career as a Computer
Programmer for Boeing in El Segundo, California.
“I
will announce the day of the funeral on which I hope everyone will
come out and support his daughter, Gina, my former voice student at
West Los Angeles College. I am asking that we prepare a performance
of Danse Nègre by Samuel Coleridge Taylor, a piece Tom enjoyed
conducting and also a piece which he fully orchestrated along with
Dwayne Smith.”
Dr. William Chapman Nyaho, Pianist of Ghanaian Heritage, Born in Washington, D.C. Dec. 28, 1958
[ASA:
Piano Music by Composers of African Descent;
William Chapman Nyaho, piano; MSR Classics MS 1242 (2008)]
Dr. William Chapman Nyaho (b. 1958) is a pianist of Ghanaian Heritage who is featured at
AfriClassical.com. His performance website is http://www.nyaho.com/;
his teaching website is http://www.NyahoPianoStudio.com;
and he has a Facebook Page. William Chapman Nyaho is also a member
of the Nyaho/Garcia Duo, with pianist Susanna Garcia. The Duo
recorded Aaron
Copland: Music for Two Pianos; Centaur
CRC 2405 (1998).
William Chapman
Nyaho has recorded 2 CDs of music of the African diaspora. The first
was Senku:
Piano
Music by Composers of African Descent, MSR
Classics MS 1091 (2003). It was followed by ASA:
Piano Music by Composers of African Descent;
MSR Classics MS 1242 (2008).
The Oxford
University Press has published his 5-volume graded sheet music series
Piano
Music of Africa and the African Diaspora.
This landmark resource has made many piano works of the African
Diaspora available in print for the first time. It was a massive
undertaking and a unique contribution to the legacy of African
Heritage in Classical Music.
The Texas A&M Department of
Performance Studies presented a concert of piano music by Dr. William
Chapman Nyaho at Rudder Theatre on April 6, 2011. The press release
for the program noted:
“Chapman Nyaho is a Ghanaian
American and resident of Seattle that has studied piano all around
the world. He has earned degrees from Oxford University in England,
the Eastman School of Music in at the University of Rochester (N.Y.),
and the University of Texas-Austin.
“His performances
have taken him to Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Europe, as well as his
current home of North America. He has played at the Kennedy Center,
with the Moscow Chamber Orchestra and the San Francisco Chamber
Orchestra and been featured on radio and television broadcasts from
Ghana to Switzerland to National Public Radio in the U.S.
“'Nyaho
is a superb musician and a rare talent who specializes in the
performance of Classical music from several Western and non-Western
cultures,' said faculty host Dr. David Wilborn. 'His piano
performances are intriguing and engaging. No one should ever miss an
opportunity to hear and watch him in performance.'
Chapman
Nyaho, who also spent time studying in Switzerland and as a four-year
visiting artist at North Carolina, is a regular guest clinician
giving lectures and recitals that advocate music by composers of
African heritage.”
Patrick D. McCoy Contributes First Piece to 'Arts and Culture for CBS Washington'
[Patrick
D. McCoy]
Patrick
D. McCoy
The
African American Voice in Classical Music
is
pleased to share his first piece as a contributor to
Arts
and Culture for CBS Washington
Monday, December 26, 2011
Afro-French Composer Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Born Dec. 25, 1745, Honored With Festival in 2011
[Maestro
Marlon Daniel; Un
contemporain atypique de Mozart: Le Chevalier de Saint-George;
Michelle Garnier-Panafieu; YP Éditions (2011)]
The
life, fencing and music of Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges (1745-1799)
are presented at AfriClassical.com. On Dec. 25, 1745, a slave on a
Caribbean plantation gave birth to a boy whose father was a French
nobleman who owned the plantation. Many children were born on
plantations in such circumstances, but young Joseph de Bologne was
taken to France and given the education of an aristocrat.
His boarding school combined academics with first-class training in fencing, and he attended from ages 13 to 19.
Joseph showed exceptional talent in fencing, and for a time was
considered the best fencer in France. As a young adult he turned to
music, first as a violinist and soon after as a composer and
conductor as well.
On
April 26, 2011 AfriClassical announced the debut of Un contemporain
atypique de Mozart (An Atypical Contemporary of Mozart): Le Chevalier
de Saint-George, written by Michelle Garnier-Panafieu. The book
received its debut on April 27, 2011 as part of the International
Saint-Georges Festival in Guadeloupe, where Le Chevalier de
Saint-Georges was born. Professor Michelle Garnier-Panafieu is a
Musicologist at Université Rennes II.
We
were keenly aware of the author's specialized knowledge of the music
of Saint-George and his contemporaries. She had written, for
example, the lengthy and scholarly liner notes for the Avenira
release, Le
Chevalier de Saint-George: The Complete Symphonies Concertantes On 2
CDs.
We invited Prof. Garnieer-Panafieu to summarize her findings for
inclusion on the Saint-Georges page at AfriClassical.com. She
graciously did so. The longtime French translator of the
Saint-Georges page, Daniel Marciano, offered to translate the summary
into English, with the assistance of his American-born wife Carol.
The summary can be found at No. 51 in the Table of Contents of the
Saint-Georges Biography page.
AfriClassical
learned of Un
contemporain atypique de Mozart
from Jean-Claude Halley, a Guadeloupe resident and blogger who is
President of the Saint-Georges Association. It was he who first
provided us with access to a lavishly illustrated catalog for an
exhibition on Saint-Georges in Guadeloupe. Monsieur Halley has been
an invaluable resource ever since.
The first International
Saint-Georges Festival in Guadeloupe was established under applicable
law by Jean-Claude Halley, President of the Festival Association, and
Catherine Pizon, its Executive Director. Daniel Marciano says of
Catherine Pizon: “She
is a theatre and music lover and a very efficient artistic director.”
Madame Pizon's involvement in theatrical fencing has continued after
the Festival.
The
American conductor Marlon Daniel was responsible for the music at the
Festival. Maestro Daniel was warmly received by those in attendance,
including the local press. He is already working on plans for a 2012
Festival.
Violinist
and author Gabriel Banat is author of The
Chevalier de Saint-Georges: Virtuoso of the Sword and the Bow (2006),
which we regard as the most authoritative English-language biography
of Saint-Georges. This year he launched his own website, as we wrote
on Oct. 16, 2011:
Here
are links to some of the other top Saint-Georges stories of 2011:
Jean-Claude
Halley announced the book of Prof. Michelle Garnier-Panafieu on April
26, 2011:
A
post on April 30, 2011 told of the first performance of OperaCréole,
founded in New Orleans by Givonna Joseph:
For
many years, the author, writer, playwright and former Professor
Daniel Marciano has generously donated translations to the
Saint-Georges Biography page and several other pages of
AfriClassical.com. On May 15, 2011 we posted about the fencing program at the Festival, which he directed:
We
received several press clippings about Maestro Marlon Daniel, as we
posted May 14, 2011:
Marlon Daniel was 'Fabulous!' at opening concert of International Saint-Georges Festival April 30
Prof.
Michelle Garnier-Panafieu, author of Un contemporain
atypique de Mozart, writes a
comment in French, which we translate as follows:
“Thank
you for your initiative and your comments. To provide complete
information to your readers, I suggest adding the two concerts given
during the International Week of the Saint-Georges Festival.
Programs were written by me, laid out by Catherine Pizon and edited
by CCSBT. Here are the two programs:
-
April 29, 2011, 8 p.m., Basse-Terre
Cathedral: Saint-Georges, Symphony in G
Major, Opus 11, 1779; Bortnynansky, Hymn
of the Cherubim; Fauré Requiem,
Opus 48, 1888. Festival Orchestra and Choir: Marlon Daniel,
conductor; Luigi Greco, conductor; Magali Léger, soprano; Paul
Gigue, baritone; Koh Gabriel Kameda, violin.
-
April 30, 2011, 8:30 p.m., Art'Chipel,
From Saint-Georges to Mozart: Lyric
Theatre and Instrumental Music.
Saint-Georges, extracts from L'Amant
anonyme (The Anonymous Lover) and
Concerto for Violin, Opus
2, No. 2, 1773; Mozart: Aria
for soprano (accompanied by strings, two oboes and two horns): 'Voi
avete un cor fedele' K. 217, 1775, and Symphony
No. 29 K. 201/186a, 1774. Festival
Orchestra conducted by Marlon Daniel; Magali Léger, soprano; Koh
Gabriel Kameda, violin.”
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