Janise White, Conductor of The Afro-American Chamber Music Society, writes:
The
Afro-American Chamber Music Society Orchestra will premiere
"Concertino for Viola" by Jeraldine Herbison, performed by Stefan
Smith, Hollywood Bowl Orchestra Violist and Symphony No. 1 by Jeraldine Herbison on
February 17, 2013 at 3pm at the First Presbyterian Church of Inglewood,
100 N. Hillcrest, Inglewood, CA. The public is invited to a Pre-Concert
Lecture to meet Music Laureate of Virginia, Jeraldine Saunders
Herbison. Listed in "Black American Music" by Hildred Roach and "The
International Dictionary of Black Composers" by Samuel Floyd.
Suggested Donation: $20/$15. Sponsors: $500; Members: $75 See aacms.weebly.com for further information.
Hildegard Publishing Company
Jeraldine Sanders Herbison
b. 1941
Jeraldine Saunders Herbison is a native of Richmond, Virginia. She
earned her bachelor's degree from Virginia State College (now Virginia
State University) where she studied theory and composition with Undine
Smith Moore. She also attended the University of Michigan division of
the National Music Camp, University of Alaska, Central Connecticut State
University and Hampton University. She is a retired teacher of
orchestral music in the secondary schools of Virginia and Maryland. A
violinist, she has performed with several college and community
orchestras. Her compositions include many instrumental chamber works,
orchestra pieces, and vocal works. Several of her cello works have been
performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D. C. Her Cello Concerto No. 1 was commissioned and performed by the Afro-American Chamber Music Society. Saltarello is from Five Short Pieces for Cello and Piano, Op. 30.
National Association of Composers/USA Mid-Atlantic Member Biography
Jeraldine Saunders Herbison (b. January 9, 1941) is a native of
Richmond, Virginia. She earned a Bachelor of Science degree in
Music Education from Virginia State College in 1963. She majored
in Violin and minored in voice and piano. Teachers who greatly
influenced her compositional techniques were Undine Smith Moore,
of Virginia State University, and Dr. Thomas Clark of the the University
of Michigan division of the National Music Camp at Interlochen.
From 1963 to July, 1998, she taught and directed string orchestra
music in the public schools of Maryland, North Carolina and Virginia.
In the summer of 1979, she was elected Honorary Composer at the
National Music Camp at Interlochen. Her first cello pieces were
performed on the Composers Forum of The National Black Colloquium Competition at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, in
1980. Cello Concerto No. 1 was commissioned and performed by
the Afro-American Chamber Music Society in California, and her
Concertino for Viola and Chamber Orchestra commissioned by the
same group, was performed by Beverly Baker and the Richmond Philharmonic
in 1996. In 1997 her Promenade was performed by Richmond Symphony
in their Harmony Series. In 1997, the Hampton University, Department
of Fine and Performing Arts featured Jeraldine's works on the
Symposium of Black Women Composers. Her string music is published by
Velke Publishing Company, in Glen Echo, Maryland. Her piano and chamber
works with piano are listed in books by DeLermo, Selma Epstein and
Helen Walker Hill. Jeraldine is a member of the National Association
of Composers USA, the Society of Composers Inc. and the American Composers
Forum. In addition to composing, she currently plays violin with the
HICO String Quartet, and the Norfolk State University Orchestra. She
plays viola in the York River Community Orchestra.
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