Conductor Roland Carter will lead the Houston Ebony Opera Guild's annual gala concert Sunday.
(Jamie Davis, Houston Chronicle)
(Jamie Davis, Houston Chronicle)
Houston Chronicle
February 27, 2015
Since 1992, the African-American Music Gala has been a prominent annual
performance for Houston Ebony Opera. And this year will be no exception.
"It's a major concert event," says Mary Marks Guillory, the chair of
the Houston Ebony Music Society. "It's a platform for African-American
music, including new works. And it reflects our broad commitment to
African-American composers."
Sunday'ss program is called "Duke, Dett and Three
Premieres." And the composers sung by the 45-member choir range from
jazz giant Duke Ellington to R. Nathaniel Dett, an early-20th-century
classical composer. Three new works by Houston composers will be
performed as well.
On the podium for the occasion will be
conductor Roland Carter, professor emeritus at the University of
Tennessee at Chattanooga, where he taught for 23 years. He's also a
composer, arranger and music publisher.
Carter has enjoyed a long association with Houston Ebony Opera, dating to 1989. He had high praise for the organization.
"I
think it has done quite well - it has grown tremendously. And as the
charter members revolve out, there are new members coming in."
The
major piece on the program is Ellington's "Sacred Concerts." Carter
points out that this year marks the 50th anniversary of the first of the
composer and bandleader's cathedral concerts in San Francisco in 1965.
The major piece on the program is Ellington's "Sacred Concerts."
Carter points out that this year marks the 50th anniversary of the first
of the composer and bandleader's cathedral concerts in San Francisco in
1965.
For the "Sacred Concerts," Carter will be sharing the stage
with DeVonne Gardner - a Philadelphia vocalist who appeared with
Ellington in the 1960s and 1970s. The Duke praised her as a
"clear-voiced soprano," and she became a regular with his orchestra.
The
name R. Nathaniel Dett isn't as widely recognized today as Ellington.
But in the 1930s, the Canadian-born black pianist and composer was known
nationally, through appearances on NBC and CBS radio networks. He died
in 1943.
Carter also feels a personal connection to Dett.
"Dett
is very special to me. He founded the music school at the Hampton
Institute in Virginia. I was subsequently choir director there for a
quarter of a century. So I count him as part of my musical heritage."
Dett's
oratorio "The Ordering of Moses" was premiered in 1937 by the
Cincinnati Symphony under the distinguished British conductor Sir Eugene
Goosens. Carter will conduct excerpts from this work at Sunday's gala.
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