"The late American conductor James DePreist"
(NPR.org: Wendy Leher/courtesy of the artist)
James DePreist is featured at AfriClassical.com
NPR Music
Deceptive Cadence
From NPR Classical
Deceptive Cadence
From NPR Classical
Pioneering American conductor, National Medal of Arts winner and poet
James DePreist died early this morning in Scottsdale, Ariz. He was 76
years old. His death, his manager told Deceptive Cadence, stemmed from
complications following a heart attack he suffered nearly a year ago.
Born
in Philadelphia in 1936, DePreist studied composition with Vincent
Persichetti at the Philadelphia Conservatory of Music before earning
bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of Pennsylvania. The
nephew of the pioneering contralto Marian Anderson, DePreist told
NPR's Roy Hurst in 2005 that his aunt had provided an extraordinary
model. "She knew that she was Marian Anderson," DePreist said, "but my
aunt was simultaneously the most humble person I ever met in my life and
the most powerful. And it was a combination of her not needing to strut
her strength, because it was just a natural part of her. To the extent
that anything has rubbed off, then I'm grateful."
Like his
aunt, DePreist became a trailblazer. He became a widely recognized
artist in an era in which African-American classical conductors were few
and far between. And despite a significant physical disability, he
became a favorite of orchestras and audiences around the globe.
DePreist
was a survivor of polio, which he contracted on a 1962 State
Department-sponsored tour to Thailand and which paralyzed both his legs
permanently. Later, DePreist encountered another significant challenge
when he developed kidney disease in the 1990s and had to go on dialysis —
and remarkably, he received a new kidney from a devoted fan.
It
was on that 1962 Asia tour, however, that DePreist's professional life
took an unexpected turn. He had been brought by the State Department to
play with his jazz quintet; on something of a lark, he was invited to
conduct a rehearsal with the Bangkok Symphony. That rehearsal led to an
epiphany, as DePreist told Hurst: "You feel entirely differently than
you felt before, ever, and you say, 'This is something that I could
really commit my life to. And not only could I, I would be really bummed
if I couldn't."
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