Saturday, August 31, 2013
Charleston Symphony Orchestra Gospel Choir Opens Season in Summerville SC 6 PM Saturday Sept. 21 With 'Wind and Mockingbird'
Charleston Symphony Orchestra Gospel Choir
David A. Richardson
CSO GOSPEL CHOIR presents
The Wind and the Mockingbird: How the Written Word Changed Society
2013-14 Season Opening Performance, Summerville Saturday, September 21
Charleston
SC—August 29, 2013 −The
Charleston Symphony Orchestra (CSO) Gospel Choir and the Berkeley County Chorus
are pleased to present The Wind and the Mockingbird: How the Written Word Changed Society,
a concert theme inspired by literary works Gone With the Wind and
To Kill A Mockingbird on Saturday September 21, 2013, 6:00pm
at Cane Bay High School, Summerville as part of a special CSO Gospel
Choir/Berkeley County School District musical and educational
partnership.
Through dramatic
gospel music and historical narration, this performance is inspired by
two best-selling literary novels that helped change the tone and course
of U.S. race relations.
The CSO Gospel
Choir’s 2013-2014 season opening performance highlights the work of two
female authors each of whom only wrote one seminal work in their
lifetime: Margaret Mitchell’s 1936 novel
Gone With the Wind, a sweeping depiction of the privileged South during the Civil War and Harper Lee’s 1960
To Kill A Mockingbird, a personal account of racial heroism
set in the Deep South during the Depression. Music and narration will
honor these award-winning works that wielded enormous influence in
changing America’s view of race relations, prejudice and injustice with
their portrayal of strong African-American characters,
both later brought to the big screen to massive public appeal.
“The
opportunity to bring our students and community together through a
world-class music and literature event with the CSO Gospel Choir is an
amazing gift,” Archie Franchini, deputy superintendent for the Berkeley
County School District, said. “We are thrilled
that music professionals are working with our students in this capacity
and that we can host this event for the Cane Bay community.”
The performance will feature more traditional gospel selections including
Walk Around Heaven All Day, May The Work I’ve Done Speak For Me,
along with historical narration that illustrates the transformational
power of literature and its ability to alter the attitudes of a nation
gripped by a history of racial inequality.
“The written word
has often shown us how to do the right thing. Most people remember the
southern depiction of domestic help as the traditional role afforded
black Americans. Both literary settings were strong
but one so sweeping it provided the platform for the first Academy
Award for a black actor,” said Lee Pringle, producer and CSO Gospel
Choir President.
This performance is dedicated to former Berkeley County District music teachers Mildred Brevard and Mary Quinney.
Generous sponsorship support provided by
Cooper River Partners
LLC and Gramling Brothers Real Estate & Development
Tickets and Information
CSO Gospel Choir: The Wind and the Mockingbird: How the Written Word Changed Society
Saturday September 21, 2013, 6:00pm
Cane Bay High School, 1624 State Road, Summerville SC
Tickets: $10 adults: $5 students
Online: www.csogospel.com
By phone (866) 811-4111
At door: Cash or check only up to one hour before performance
About the CSO Gospel Choir
Now in its
thirteenth year, the Charleston Symphony Orchestra (CSO) Gospel Choir,
Charleston’s celebrated culturally diverse choir, performs gospel,
spirituals and sacred music for annual concert events including
a Palm Sunday performance, CSO Gospel Christmas, Piccolo Spoleto and
regional events throughout the southeast
and numerous engagements in Europe including Paris, London, Rome and Prague. The Choir also visited Ghana, West Africa in 2012.
CSOGospel.com
About
Music Director David A. Richardson
CSO
Gospel Choir Music Director David A. Richardson is a recipient of the
prestigious Charleston Southern University Horton School of Music Senior
Excellence Award for his exceptional
work in the area of Choral Music Education and is a noted baritone
soloist who has garnered admiration of the choral community throughout
the Carolinas.
As
a professional vocalist he toured the United Kingdom, Scotland,
Austria, and Prague, where he performed with the CSU concert choir to
much acclaim. An accomplished pianist, Mr.
Richardson has served as music director for several regional
productions and has accompanied choral programs and honor choirs at all
levels including three seasons with the University Children's Choir.
Mr.
Richardson serves as Director of Choral Activities at Fort Dorchester
High School, earning consistent superior ratings at regional concert
festivals. Prior to his tenure at
Fort Dorchester High School he served as Band Director and Music
Specialist in the Berkeley County School District and Director of Vocal
Music for the Charleston Southern University Music Camp and Oconee
County Choral Festival. Mr. Richardson earned his Bachelor
of Arts in Music Education from Charleston Southern University and is a
Master of Music Education candidate at Kent State University.
Civil Rights Leaders Share Their Memories From The March On Washington - On The "CBS Evening News"
CBS Evening News
Civil
Rights leaders Andrew Young, Julian Bond and Marian Wright Edelman
shared their memories from the March on Washington on its 50th anniversary in an interview that was broadcast
tonight, Aug. 28 on the CBS EVENING NEWS WITH SCOTT PELLEY (6:30-7:00 PM, ET) on the CBS Television Network.
Young, Bond and Wright Edelman attended the March on
Washington in 1963 and returned for the anniversary. Pelley sat down
with them at the historic Willard Hotel in Washington, D.C., where Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. finished writing his famous
speech, which he delivered 50 years ago today.
Click here to watch the interview. A transcript is below.
ANDREW YOUNG: When the trains started unloading from the
South and trainload from Philadelphia, and then the movie stars flew in,
then I realized that this was something big.
SCOTT PELLEY: On that day, what did you think would be achieved by the March on Washington? What could be accomplished?
JULIAN BOND: Dr. King’s speech, and in the speeches of the
other people, we had explained, “Here are the problems we are facing.
These are the reasons why we’re here. We’re marching. We’re protesting.
We’re sitting in. We’ve had several years of
disruption around the country, and we’ve shown you about it. Now do
something about it.”
ANDREW YOUNG: The Southern Christian Leadership Conference
and Martin Luther King set out to redeem the soul of America from the
triple evils of racism, war and poverty. Now, I think we’ve made
enormous progress on legal racism. We’ve made progress
on war. But we have retrogressed on poverty.
MARIAN WRIGHT EDELMAN: I am so worried about this country
moving backwards. A child is dropping out of school every eight seconds.
If 60 percent of all of your children cannot read and compute at grade
level, you are not going to be a strong, competitive
nation. And we need to just see the growing gap between the poor and
the rich, and the wealth and income inequality at an unprecedented stage
with poor children are everywhere.
SCOTT PELLEY: For decades, CBS News has been polling
Americans about their views on race. And we have a brand new poll on
that subject. We asked whether there is real hope of ending racial
discrimination. In this new poll, it’s 52 percent, the very
first time there’s ever been a majority saying that racial
discrimination in our country could end. Why is that happening?
ANDREW YOUNG: Because it’s happening. I mean, the truth of
it is the University of Georgia elected a black student government
president, as did the University of Alabama few years back and
Mississippi State. To me, the hope of dealing with racism
is in the South because we’ve been struggling with it for several
hundred years, and we really are making progress.
SCOTT PELLEY: We have a photograph of a young Julian Bond and a young Marian Wright in the crowd. What’s happening in that moment?
MARIAN WRIGHT EDELMAN: We are singing.
JULIAN BOND: “We Shall Overcome” had become the anthem of
the Civil Rights Movement. People are leaving, going home, and we’re
standing there hand-in-hand singing “We Shall Overcome.”
SCOTT PELLEY: And if you said to a young person, “If you
don’t take anything else away from the March on Washington, understand
this.”
ANDREW YOUNG: Understand that the struggle continues, and the future is in your hands, in your heart, in your mind.
# # #
John Malveaux: 'As I watch the...50th Anniversary March on Washington...earlier concerns in connection with Dr. King's death come to mind.'
50th Anniversary March on Washington, August 28, 2013 (Washington Post)
On August 28, 2013 as I watch the ceremony in Washington DC celebrating
the 50th Anniversary of March on Washington and I HAVE A DREAM speech,
earlier concerns in connection with Dr. King's death come to mind. I
stopped everything and listened to the entire trial of James Earl Ray.
One surprise was he visited Long Beach several weeks before the
assassination and took dance lessons in Long Beach. Ray did not have a
known source of income and where he received financing is a critical
question. For more than two years before the assassination, the FBI wire
tapped all of Dr. King's conversations and conference calls with other
civil rights leaders. J Edgar Hoover called Dr. King the most dangerous
Negro in America. Many of Dr. King's inner circle advised him not to go
to Memphis due to the demands in planning the second March on
Washington called POOR PEOPLE's CAMPAIGN. The first March was the
largest in the history of our nation. The second March was denied
because of Dr. King's assassination.
On another
note, the first African America City Councilman, James Wilson and a
committee, appointed me and a trusted friend as body guards for Stokely
Carmichael (also Kwame Ture) when they invited him to Long Beach for several speaking engagements.
John Malveaux (also John Champion)
Imani Winds Quintet performs Astor Piazzolla's "Libertango" on YouTube (5:11)
Imani Winds (YouTube)
Uploaded on Feb 21, 2012
Imani Winds performs Piazzolla's "Libertango." Arrangement by Jeff Scott (French horn).
Recorded/filmed at The Mansion at Strathmore in North Bethesda, Maryland USA.
* * *
Friday, August 30, 2013
John Lewis in "Walking with the Wind": "We were supposed to be the leaders of the march, but the march was all around us, already taking off, already gone."
The following is an excerpt from a statement made August 28, 2013 by Rashad Robinson of ColorOfChange.org:
In his autobiography "Walking with the Wind," Rep. John Lewis describes the morning of the 1963 March on Washington — 50 years ago today.
Some of the most prominent civil rights leaders — Dr. King, Bayard
Rustin, Lewis and others — were in meetings at the Capitol and realized
that the march had started without them. They watched as tens of
thousands of people poured into the streets, seemingly leaderless,
before quickly rushing to meet the march in the middle.
"It was truly awesome, the most incredible thing I'd ever seen in my life," Lewis wrote. "I
remember thinking, there goes America. We were supposed to be the
leaders of the march, but the march was all around us, already taking
off, already gone."
As I've been reflecting on the 50th
anniversary of the March on Washington, this story remains my favorite, I
think, because the people are leading the march — as they should be.
Like the marchers that day, ColorOfChange.org members are the leaders of
a modern grassroots march for racial justice.
'Prelude to a Dream' salutes Joyce Ladner of the SNCC Legacy Project
THE MARCH has created "The Bayard Rustin Civil Rights Award" in memory of the legendary organizer of the 1963 March on Washington. Ms. Ladner & Mr. Cox will be the first recipients of this award for their work as the SNCC representatives on the March on Washington Committee and for their continued commitment to civil rights through the SNCC Legacy Project and other organizations
Project
Comment by email:
I just posted this on our Facebook page:
"I would like to take a moment and thank
William J. Zick of the AfriClassical who creates a blog post from the
newsletter emails he receives from THE MARCH. He's as consistent as the
rising and setting of the sun. Bill, you're one of our heroes!"
Thank you again,
Alan [Alan Marshall]
C
xxxxxxCCc
To the beat of a different drum: "The March" debuts in Washington - Washington DC Performing Arts | Examiner.com
Saigon Saadi
August 29, 2013 [Excerpt]
What was presented on Tuesday night in the beautiful sanctuary of D.
C. 's historic Metropolitan A. M. E. Church was more in the manner of
informally dramatic reenactments that relied heavily on the audience's
participation rather than the individual talents of the guest
performers.
In his introductory remarks, the producer Alan Marshall shared that
the work evolved into a multi-media project. One could only wonder what
the original direction and intent of the work was. In terms of
personnel, there seemed not to be the inclusion of any familiar artists
that make up the rich fabric of the Washington arts circuit. Billed as a
'Civil Rights Opera'-Prelude to A Dream was more or less devoid of any
rich solid musical material or delivery from the performers. Instead,
by instinct or perhaps by design, the familiarity of the interpolated
congregational spirituals certainly provided the core nucleus of the
performance with the principal actors only having to offering commentary
to what previously occurred from the audience's perspective. The
program itself was difficult to follow in part to the fact that there
was no real context for the setting nor was there a libretto that
brought the presentation together in a collective fashion.The spirit of
the evening's performance did show great potential. It was evident that a
lot of effort and sacrifices were made to honor the story. Those
moments really were conveyed by powerhouse singer Jo Ann Clark, who in
essence was the musical nucleus of the production. Jeronique Bartley
was a sterling standout in her portrayal of Civil Rights Activist Joyce
Ladner, who was present. Alan Marshall doubled as the producer and in
the pivotal role of Bayard Rustin.
KoreAm: 'Embodying the spirit of the 1963 March on Washington, African American, Korean and Jewish artists convened...to honor Martin Luther King, Jr.'
Performers at the 50th Anniversary MLK Jr. ‘Symphony of Brotherhood’ Concert. Photo by Ralf Cheung
Pianist Phoenix Park-Kim and soprano Jumi Kim. Photo by Ralf Cheung
Cellist Kristen Yeon-Ji Yun. Photo by Ralf Cheung
Embodying the spirit of the 1963 March on Washington, African
American, Korean and Jewish artists convened for a special intercultural
concert to honor Martin Luther King, Jr., and pay homage to his message
of peace and unity—the relevance of which still resonates 50 years
later.
Several prominent Korean and Korean American musicians performed at
the Aug. 18 event, titled “Symphony of Brotherhood,” held at the Zipper
Concert Hall at the Colburn School in Los Angeles.
But as much as the concert was a celebration of the legacy of King, who incidentally had a deep appreciation for classical and operatic music, the combination of African American, Korean and Jewish artists was also a deliberate move to try to heal past wounds, according to John Malveaux, the African American founder of MusicUNTOLD, the educational nonprofit that organized the concert. The concert’s title is a reference to a phrase King used in his famous “I Have a Dream” speech, and it became the inspiration for the multiracial line-up of the event, which included Grammy Award-winning African-American bass-baritone Mark S. Doss, Korean American pianist Phoenix Park-Kim, Jewish virtuoso flutist Laurel Zucker and African/Japanese American violinist Annelle Kazumi Gregory, among many others.
“In 1965 there were devastating riots in Los Angeles, and the target of most of the rioting was the Jewish merchants,” said Malveaux. “So Dr. King came to L.A. in an effort to quell the violence, and he made clear in his comments the destructive nature and harmful nature [of the riots]. So we included somewhat of a healing segment as a tribute to the African American and Jewish communities for that ugly disruption in Dr. King’s vision of ‘symphony of brotherhood.’ We had two songs performed—one, a Jewish folk song and one, an African American spiritual.”
But as much as the concert was a celebration of the legacy of King, who incidentally had a deep appreciation for classical and operatic music, the combination of African American, Korean and Jewish artists was also a deliberate move to try to heal past wounds, according to John Malveaux, the African American founder of MusicUNTOLD, the educational nonprofit that organized the concert. The concert’s title is a reference to a phrase King used in his famous “I Have a Dream” speech, and it became the inspiration for the multiracial line-up of the event, which included Grammy Award-winning African-American bass-baritone Mark S. Doss, Korean American pianist Phoenix Park-Kim, Jewish virtuoso flutist Laurel Zucker and African/Japanese American violinist Annelle Kazumi Gregory, among many others.
Thursday, August 29, 2013
"Ancestral Visionary" Works of African-American Painter Jerome Wright on First Friday Art Walk 5-8 PM Sept. 6, 2013, Portland, Maine; Exhibition to Nov. 30
Jerome Wright, Cellist and Painter
Woman Dancing, oil on canvas 40" x 40" 2011
Woman Singing Fado, oil on birch 48"x 48" 2011
Bass and Two Horns, oil on canvas 58" x 72"
The Arts, Portland, Maine
http://www.liveworkportland.org/arts/walk
http://www.liveworkportland.org/arts/walk
Upcoming First Friday Art Walk
Friday, September 6, 2013
Ancestral Visionary
Museum of African Art and Culture
13 Brown St.
Jerome
Wright is a central Pennsylvania artist whose work has earned him
national recognition. His work focuses on jazz, the Harlem Renaissance,
and the gospel church experience. He won a four-month debut show at the
Charles Wright Museum of African American History in 2010 Detroit
resulting in four of his paintings going into the Museum’s permanent
collection of great African American painters. His work has been in
various juried exhibitions at the Charles Demuth Museum, The Lebanon
Arts Council, Lebanon Valley College, Harrisburg Area Community College,
and the Gallery at Lebanon Picture Frame. He has received many
commissions and his works are now in many private collections as well as
places of worship.
Artist(s):
Jerome Wright
Medium:
oil on wood and canvas
Opening Reception: Friday Sept. 6th
5-8 pm
Free and open to the public
Exhibition runs September-November
30th 2013
Jerome
Wright is a central Pennsylvania artist whose work has earned him
national recognition. He won a four-month debut show at the Charles
Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit in 2010 resulting in four of his paintings going into the Museum’s
permanent collection of great African American painters. His
work has been in various juried exhibitions at the Charles
Demuth Museum, The Lebanon Arts Council, Lebanon Valley College,
Harrisburg Area Community College, and the Gallery at Lebanon Picture
Frame. He has received many commissions and his works are now in many
private collections as well as places of worship.
Sergio A. Mims: 'Tai Murray performing Samuel Coleridge-Taylor's Violin Concerto' Will Open WHPK-FM Radio Program 12-3 PM Sept. 4, 2013
Tai Murray, Violin; Eugène Ysaÿe: Six Sonatas for Solo Violin, Op. 27; Harmonia Mundi
On August 14, 2013 AfriClassical posted: Sergio A. Mims To Air 'Tai Murray performing Samuel Coleridge-Taylor's Violin Concerto' on WHPK-FM Chicago, Wednesday, September 4
Because
of an interview that I will be doing for my radio show next week I have
made some changes in the schedule. I will not be playing Verdi's Falstaff as planned and it will be re-scheduled for a later date.
I still will be playing Samuel Coleridge-Taylor's Violin Concerto with Tai Murray as planned and it will be the first selection on the program.
The revised schedule for Sept 4th is now:
Coleridge-Taylor
Violin Concerto; Brahms String Quartet in B flat major; Bruckner's Mass
No. 1; and an interview with the director of Chicago Opera Theater's new
production of Verdi's Giovanna D'Arco, David Schweizer.
WHPK-FM (Chicago) Wednesday 12-3PM (U.S. Central Time) 88.5 FM locally and livestream www.whpk.org
Sergio
[Samuel
Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912) is profiled at
AfriClassical.com,
which features a comprehensive Works List and a Bibliography by Prof.
Dominique-René de Lerma,
www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com.
We
are collaborating with the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Foundation of the
U.K., www.SCTF.org.uk]
Marta Richardson: GRAMMY Award-Winning Conductor and Violinist John McLaughlin Williams Coming Home to Greensboro, North Carolina
John McLaughlin Williams
As a GRAMMY Award-winning conductor and violinist, Williams has been critically acclaimed for his outstanding interpretive abilities and his engaging podium presence (Classical Music Across Cultures)
Marta Richardson writes:
Dear Bill,
I just wanted you to know
that we're continuing our work with Classical Music Across Cultures and actually
were able to partner with another organization, Music for a Great Space.
It's been an exciting collaborative effort to bring Williams to Greensboro.
Sincerely,
Marta Richardson
Guess who is coming home? GRAMMY Award-winning conductor and violinist John McLaughlin Williams!
This fall get your ears ready for a musical
feast as Music for a Great Space and Classical Music Across Cultures jointly
present John McLaughlin Williams in concert on September 20, 2013 at 7:30 pm –
opening day for the 17 DAYS Arts & Culture Festival. But what makes a John
Williams violin concert so special?
LOTS. Williams, an accomplished African
American musician, composer and acclaimed conductor, was born in Greensboro,
N.C. and later moved to Washington, D.C. where Williams began studying the
violin at the age of 10. What makes Williams so special is his mastery of the
instrument and his musical selections. “It always impressed me that there were
all these composers described as eminent, wonderful, great and important, but I
wasn’t hearing them in any of the concerts I was going to or any of the music I
was playing,” Williams said. “I love standard repertoire but there’s all this
other music that’s equally great and never gets played.” At age 14, Williams
played solo with the National Symphony and by age 15 had read “Baker’s
Biographical Dictionary of Musicians,” cover-to-cover. His talent and unique
interest in neglected American composers, and recordings of their works on the
Naxos label, earned William’s four GRAMMY nominations in 2010. In 2007, Williams
won a GRAMMY for “Best Instrumental Solo with Orchestra.”
“I can’t wait for the Williams’ concert this
fall,” said Classical Music Across Cultures founder and violin teacher Marta
Richardson. In addition to the concert, Williams has agreed to an artist
residency September 17-20, working with approximately 1,500 Guilford County
School students, providing inspiration and an exceptional learning opportunity.
“We want to help overcome the cultural stereotype of the classical musician by
giving our students role models that will inspire, motivate and captivate
them.”
ArtsGreensboro is pleased and honored to
support Music for a Great Space in its work to bring extraordinary classical
musicians to Greensboro. Arts Greensboro was instrumental in the formation of
Classical Music Across Cultures to bring the Sphinx Virtuosi Orchestra to
Greensboro for the inaugural 17 DAYS Arts & Culture Festival in 2011. Last
year, CMAC hosted Harlem Quartet as part of 17 DAYS. “We’re thrilled that MGS and Classical
Music Across Cultures are working together to bring Williams to Greensboro as
part of 17 DAYS Arts & Culture Festival this year. We’ve built the festival
on a solid foundation of collaborations, and this is a stellar example of how we
can bring talent and organizations together for our students and our community,”
said ArtsGreensboro President & CEO Thomas Philion.
Join us in Celebrating the 10th Anniversary Year of our Sphinx Virtuosi at Carnegie Hall Tuesday, October 8th at 6pm!
Dear Friends,
As we excitedly prepare for our Sphinx Virtuosi fall tour, I would like to share with you a formal invitation to our Sphinx Virtuosi at Carnegie Hall performance and gala on Tuesday, October 8th at 6pm!
I encourage you to join us for this evening of artistic excellence as
we celebrate the 10th anniversary year of this concert series. The gala
sponsorships highlighted below support the Sphinx mission and our music
education efforts in the New York area, so I encourage you to reserve your tickets today!
Thank you for your continued support of Sphinx and I hope to see you on October 8th for a memorable night of music!
Celebrate this milestone with us!
Dr. Aaron P. Dworkin
Sphinx Founder and President
[Aaron Paul Dworkin (b. 1970) is featured at AfriClassical.com as an outstanding Musician of African Descent]
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
George Walker on Chicago Sinfonietta: 'The very first program for the 2013/14 season is as embarrassing as it is demeaning.'
The
composer and pianist George Walker was born in Washington, D.C.
June 27, 1922, is featured at AfriClassical.com
and has a website at http://georgetwalker.com/
June 27, 1922, is featured at AfriClassical.com
and has a website at http://georgetwalker.com/
George Walker writes:
Regarding the Chicago Sinfonietta:The comments made by Arthur R. LaBrew and Julius Williams regarding the "misuse by the Chicago Sinfonietta of the Florence Price symphony for a hip-hop dance" are justifiable. The legacy of Dr. Paul Freeman is being undermined by a newly appointed conductor chosen for an acceptable skill level and a certain overt enthusiasm without anyone being aware of an appalling musical taste. The potpourri selected as program material is indicative of the attempt to be "with it" (hip style).Paul Freeman would now seem to have good reason to re-consider his choice. He devoted many years to develop and infuse an organization with a serious musical perspective. The very first program for the 2013/14 season is as embarrassing as it is demeaning. There are more than a few gifted conductors whose talents include the ability to make good musical choices as well as discerning administrative decisions.Regards.George Walker
RE: Arthur R. LaBrew on Florence Price's 'Symphony in E' and Chicago Sinfonietta: 'Must music by Black composers be subject to such popular vulgarity?'
John Malveaux
With great respect for purity and our significant contributors to
recording, preservation and awareness of our great legacy and
continuing contributions in classical and opera, we have reached the
unfortunate circumstance of collective elimination due to declining
concert attendance by youth and others under 60 years of age. Please
offer some suggestions/strategies to attract larger audiences and
greater awareness from those under 60 years of age.
John Malveaux
Sergio Mims: 'I sincerely hope that the Chicago Sinfonietta will reconsider its decision'
Sergio A. Mims
Sergio A. Mims writes on the Chicago Sinfonietta and the Symphony in E of Florence B. Price:
Here's my response:
This is a sad and quite
obviously desperate attempt in the hopes of attracting a younger
audience when it will, if fact, have the opposite effect.
People instinctively
know when they are being pandered to and, as always, they reject it.
Music should be allowed to breathe and exist in its own original form
and whenever music is presented in that way will people come.
I sincerely hope that the Chicago Sinfonietta will reconsider it's decision and present Florence Price's remarkable and beautiful music in the way in which it was conceived.
Sergio Mims
WHPK-FM
Chicago
Arthur R. LaBrew on Florence Price's 'Symphony in E' and Chicago Sinfonietta: 'Must music by Black composers be subject to such popular vulgarity?'
Prof. Arthur R. LaBrew (YouTube.com)
Dominique-René de Lerma writes:
Mr. LaBrew has granted me permission to submit the following:
Regarding
the projected misuse by the Chicago Sinfonietta of the Florence Price
symphony for a hip-hop dance is like having Leontyne Price perform
Tosca in a mini-skirt. The lame excuse that Price's material would be
enlightening to a new audience is utter nonsense! Why not present the
work in its original form? Must music by Black composers be subject to
such popular vulgarity?
Arthur R. LaBrew
Director, Michigan Music Research Center, Inc.
------------------------------------
Dominique-René de Lerma
http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com
Comment by email:
Comment by email:
Dear Arthur, Thank you for your most
insightful and poignant contribution (shown below) and for all that you
have done and are doing to promote and maintain the dignity and sanctity
of our music by Black composers. Musically yours, Barbara [Barbara Wright-Pryor]
Julius P. Williams on Coming Season of Chicago Sinfonietta: 'A shame and a slap in the face.'
Julius P. Williams
Juliuswilliams.com
Juliuswilliams.com
Composer, Conductor and Professor Julius Penson Williams (b. 1954) is among the select group of composers and musicians featured at AfriClassical.com. On August 27, 2013 AfriClassical posted: Statements on the Chicago Sinfonietta's Opening Concerts of the Coming Season, by Barbara Wright-Pryor, Dr. Dominique-René de Lerma and William J. Zick
Maestro Williams on coming season of Chicago Sinfonietta:
The orchestra's direction was sealed by the new manager who has no clue
of the original orchestra's intent. I should rephrase that, he knows the
intent but has chosen not to honor it. A shame and a slap in the face.
MusicUNTOLD enables 105 residents to attend ICYOLA celebration of MLK Jr. 'I HAVE A DREAM speech at Disney Concert Hall Aug. 26, 2013
Through the courtesy of County Supervisor Don Knabe, MusicUNTOLD
provided approximately 105 residents FREE transportation and tickets to
attend Inner City Youth Orchestra of Los Angeles symphonic celebration
of MLK Jr. I HAVE A DREAM speech at Disney Concert Hall on August 26,
2013. See group photo taken prior to arrival of Carmelitos Housing
attendees.
John Malveaux
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Statements on the Chicago Sinfonietta's Opening Concerts of the Coming Season, by Barbara Wright-Pryor, Dr. Dominique-René de Lerma and William J. Zick
Florence B. Price:
Concerto in One Movement and Symphony in E Minor [Symphony No. 1]
Recorded Music of the African Diaspora, Vol. 3
CBMR/Albany Records TROY1295 (2011)
Florence Beatrice Smith Price (1887-1953)
is profiled at AfriClassical.com, which features
a comprehensive Works Lists by
Prof. Dominique-René de Lerma,
http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com.
is profiled at AfriClassical.com, which features
a comprehensive Works Lists by
Prof. Dominique-René de Lerma,
http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com.
On August 17, 2013 AfriClassical posted: "Chicago Sinfonietta Presents Daring Program Blending Live Hip-Hop And Orchestral Classics In 'eMotion'” We presented the complete press release of the Chicago Sinfonietta, without comment.
August 27, 2013
Statements of Barbara Wright-Pryor, Dominique-René de Lerma and William J. Zick:
Statements of Barbara Wright-Pryor, Dominique-René de Lerma and William J. Zick:
The
following statements are responses to the announcement of the Chicago
Sinfonietta's plan for the opening concert of the coming season. The
undersigned grant full reprint permission and look forward to support of
the press and public.
"As the current President of Chicago Music Association, Br. No. 1, The
National Association of Negro Musicians, Inc. (Since 1919), the
organization that championed the works of its member, composer Florence
Price, and underwrote the contract with Frederick Stock and The Chicago
Symphony Orchestra for the historical June 15,1933 premiere of Symphony
No. 1 in E minor, I am appalled by The Chicago Sinfonietta's upcoming
September 14 & 15, 2013 performance of "eMotion" that will extract
Movements 3 and 4 from the symphony as a whole to be re-envisioned as
accompaniment for hip-hop dance."
"This is disgraceful and reveals a total lack of respect for, or
understanding of, symphonic literature and/or works by Black composers
and Founding Music Director Paul Freeman's original mission for the
orchestra by its current musical and executive leadership."
Barbara Wright-Pryor
President, Chicago Music Association
"Florence
B. Price did not have an easy time of gaining recognition for the
excellence of her orchestral and symphonic compositions. Lacking other
avenues, Price concentrated on competitions. Horace J. Maxile, Jr.,
Associate Director of Research of the Center for Black Music Research at
Columbia College Chicago, wrote the liner notes for the historic
recording of Price's Concerto in One Movement and Symphony in E Minor,
Albany Records Troy1295 (2011). Maxile writes of Price's compositional
progress and experiences:
"This wide range of
influences coupled with strong craftmanship has left an indelible legacy
which is highlighted by her ground-breaking Symphony in E Minor,
which was the first prize winner of the 1932 Rodman Wanamaker Music
Contest and is considered among the main concert musical achievements of
the period. Premiered in 1933 by Frederick Stock and the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra at the Chicago World's Fair Century of Progress
Exhibition, Price's Symphony in E Minor, her first symphony, is the
first work by a black woman to be performed by a major symphony
orchestra in the United States."
"The Symphony in E
Minor's Rodman Wanamaker prize notwithstanding, the premier recording
was not made until 2011, some 78 years after the work's premiere. This
composition is to be reduced to Movements III and IV in the "Orchestra
Dance Mix". This "Collaborative Performance" clearly robs the Symphony
in E Minor of its integrity as a complete work of classical music.
"Similar treatment of Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake Suite will not
significantly affect the composer's extremely well-known legacy as a
composer. Florence Price's symphonies are rarely performed, and are far
more vulnerable when used for non-classical purposes."
William J, Zick
Webmaster, AfriClassical.com
"My association with Paul Freeman began 43 years ago when plans were
being formulated in what resulted in the award-winning 9 LP recordings
of The Black Composers Series, issued initially by Columbia Records and
now available from the College Music Society. The issue of these discs
helped confirm the standings of such giants as George Walker, Ulysses
Kay, and William Grant Still, and introduce composers as Saint-Georges,
José White, and José Maurício Nunes-Garcia. I know it gave valid hope to
the younger generation, certainly including Adolphus Hailstork and
Talib Hakim, who have then established themselves as gifted and
outstanding creators.
"During
these years we met often in the United States and in Europe, and I came
to know Dr. Freeman as an uncompromising person, unswerving in his
reasoned steps toward his goal of service to the very highest standards
in Black artistry. I saw him evolve into a jet-set conductor who
nonetheless gave his dedication and devotion to his position in British
Columbia and then to his dream of realizing a major non-discriminating
ensemble in Chicago, one which had a distinct and well-defined mission
from the start regarding minority composers and performers, faithfully
presented. This was an astonishing accomplishment; all similar efforts
by others had failed. Paul's guidance offered the public an alternate
to the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, on a basis that was no less lofty.
"
In my own work as administrator, I knew that diluted goals and changed
directions emasculate the mission. What I have heard taking place with
the Chicago Sinfonietta is deplorable, trivializing its very reason for
being, in the false expectation that this will encourage audience
development, but any attracted to those lowered standards will only be
for a continuation of that level, cemented there by the absence of
aesthetic values and artistic integrity.
"No less criminal is the shameful abandonment of the noble intents of
Dr. Freeman, so soon after his absence. Following this foolish path
will result in the Sinfonietta's becoming much less than a pops
ensemble, no longer faithful to its important distinction, disinterested
in its reason to exist, and with no laudable future."
Dominique-René de Lerma
Professor emeritus, Lawrence University
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