A companion to AfriClassical.com, a website on African Heritage in Classical Music.
Sunday, June 28, 2015
University of Arkansas Little Rock: Hear Florence Price’s heroic, virtuoso 'Piano Sonata in E Minor' now on 'A Celebration of American Music' by Linda Holzer, piano
Dr. Linda Holzer
Coordinator of Classical Piano Studies Music Department University of Arkansas at Little Rock
Florence B. Price was the
first African-American woman composer to have her music performed by a
major symphony. She was also a Little Rock native.(Credit University of Arkansas Libraries Special Collections)
Florence B. Price is the second of three American Women Composers heard onA Celebration of American Music, a special program of piano
and piano chamber music. It will air on KLRE Classical 90.5 Sunday, June
28, 2015 at 7 p.m. and again Friday, July 3, 2015 at 7 p.m. Audio of
the program will be accessible on this page following the first
broadcast.
Florence Price
(1887-1953), a native of Little Rock, Arkansas, was a pioneer in the
field of American classical music in the early twentieth century. She
became the first black woman composer to earn an international
reputation for her work, and was among the first American composers to
integrate her Negro heritage with Western art music. Price's father, Dr.
James H. Smith, was a dentist, and her mother, Florence Gulliver, was a
school teacher with some musical training who was her daughter’s first
piano teacher. Young Florence Smith was an excellent student, and
graduated from Capitol High School in Little Rock in 1903 as the
valedictorian of her class. She traveled to Boston and enrolled at the
New England Conservatory of Music, earning a bachelor’s degree in 1906.
This institution was among the few professional music schools in the
country that accepted students regardless of race. She taught on the
music faculties of historically black colleges in Georgia and Arkansas
for several years.
In 1912 Florence Smith married attorney Thomas
J. Price and the couple settled in Little Rock, where Thomas Price was
partner in a law firm. His law firm was involved in several contentious
civil rights cases, including the Elaine Race Riot Case in 1919. The
Prices decided to move north to Chicago in 1926. Having lived in Boston
during her student days at the New England Conservatory, Florence Price
quickly found ways to take advantage of Chicago's cultural riches and
the thriving artistic contingent of the urban black community. Among the
pieces she composed in Chicago was the formidable Piano Sonata in E
Minor (1932). Shortly after that, she won the Wanamaker Award for her
1st symphony, which was performed by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in
1933 as part of the World’s Fair, known as “A Century of Progress.” The
performance was attended by First Lady, Eleanor Roosevelt, who wrote
about it in her column, “My Day.” Price’s heroic, virtuoso Piano Sonata
in E Minor is featured on A Celebration of American Music program. Performer is Linda Holzer, piano, in concert at UALR. Comment by email: Thank you, Bill. If you’d like to add this link to the blog, it includes the MP3 of the broadcast. http://ualrpublicradio.org/post/celebration-american-music
Even if someone wasn’t able to tune in for the 7 PM broadcast today,
KLRE is making the full hour program available on their web site via
MP3. Thanks very much,Linda Holzer Tweet Favorited By Eunice Mullins (@elm57)
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