Thursday, December 31, 2015
Derbyshire Times: American pianist to give RCH recital [Lara Downes will perform 'Fantasie Negre' by Florence B. Price on January 24, 2016, from 11 AM]
Lara Downes
Florence Beatrice Smith Price (1887-1953) is profiled at AfriClassical.com, which features a comprehensive Works Lists by Dr. Dominique-René de Lerma, http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com.
Pianist Lara Downes is scheduled to perform Florence B. Price's Fantasie Negre at the Royal Concert Hall in Nottingham, England on Sunday, January 24, 2016, beginning at 11 AM:
Lara Downes is an American pianist and her recital will have a dance theme.
The programme for the hour-long recital includes Weber’s Invitation
To The Dance, Ravel’s La Valse, Gershwin’s Rhapsody In Blue, plus
Fantasie Negre by Florence Price, the first African-American woman to be
recognised as a significant composer.
Bob Shingleton of 'On An Overgrown Path' Questions the Continuing Miniscule Numbers of Conductors of African Descent at Orchestral Concerts
Rudolph Dunbar
Our friend Bob Shingleton forwards this post from his U.K.-based blog On An Overgrown Path,
Thursday, December 31, 2015
Why do we still not believe in Negro symphony conductors?
Four years ago an Overgrown Path post recounted how in the 1950s classical music super-agent Arthur Judson told the African American conductor Everett Lee "I don't believe in Negro symphony conductors", and another post described how Rudolph Dunbar died in 1988 a forgotten and marginalised figure, despite becoming the first black conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic. That is Rudolph Dunbar in the photo; the Guyanese musician - who was a friend of the controversial child prodigy Philippa Schuyler - was a talented conductor and an outstanding clarinetist, who in 1939 wrote the standard work on the instrument, the 'Treatise on the clarinet (Boehm system)'.
Despite achieving considerable success on the podium, Rudolph Dunbar's
career faltered and stalled, and another post discussed allegations that
a senior figure in the BBC had derailed his career, allegations that were subsequently supported by an authoritative source.
Arthur Judson stigmatized Negro symphony conductors more than fifty
years ago, while allegations that Rudolph Dunbar's career suffered
because he was one of a group of West Indians in the UK who campaigned openly
against racism and colonialism relate to the 1980s, and, of course,
times have changed. Or have they? The BBC Proms are a microcosm of the
classical music establishment, and in a 2011 post I asked - How many
black conductors at the BBC Proms? The answer is that in more than 2500
concerts over the 120 year history of the Proms there have been just
three black conductors; Isaiah Jackson in 1987, Wayne Marshall in 1998, and Bobby McFerrin in 2003.
Less than 0.002% minority representation is unacceptable by any
standards, and what is more serious is there is no evidence of
improvement: during the last ten years of our supposedly multicultural
society there has been not one black conductors on the podium in the
Royal Albert Hall. There is disturbing evidence that the nuanced racism
of Arthur Judson lingers on in classical music, as the black American
conductor and composer Kevin Scott explained recently on Facebook:
Now many of you will say, "it should be talent, not color" that is the requisite to perform just about anywhere, and you are right - talent and vision are indeed the key requisites to be taken seriously and nurtured. But for some reason or another, there are those that hold the power of position that looks at a black man or woman who can conduct a symphony orchestra and wonders why are they in a field that is Euro-centered and not devoting themselves to their musical roots.
The
BBC Proms provide a convenient measure of inclusivity, but it is unfair
to demonise just one concert series: because the same picture will be
found at other prestigious concert series around the world. Quite
rightly there has been much criticism of the underrepresentation of women in classical music, but much less about the even more acute underrepresentation of musicians of colour. Very good work
has been done in improving the representation of women; one of the
results is that the iconic Last Night of the Proms has been conducted
twice by Marin Alsop in recent years, and commendably one of these concerts featured a commission by the Jamaican composer Eleanor Alberga.
But I have a dream that one day we will see a black conductor wielding
the baton for Jerusalem and Land of Hope and Glory at the Proms. So
let's make 2016 and the years that follow the decade when musicians of
colour take their rightful place on the podium.
My thanks go to Kevin Scott and John McLaughlin Williams, whose tireless advocacy of musicians of colour inspired this post, and to my Guyanese wife Sorojini,
who encouraged me to follow the path of Rudolph Dunbar. Any copyrighted
material is included as "fair use" for critical analysis only, and will
be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Also on Facebook and Twitter.
Posted by
Pliable
at
Thursday, December 31, 2015
The Times of Trenton, NJ: Classical Music: Local pianist releases 2 new albums [My Cup Runneth Over, The Complete Piano Works of R. Nathaniel Dett; Cyril Scott]
Clipper Erickson
R. Nathaniel Dett: MY CUP RUNNETH OVER
Navona Records NV 6013 (2015)
is profiled at AfriClassical.com, which
features a comprehensive Works List
and a Bibliography by Dr. Dominique-René de Lerma,
By
Ross Amico
on December 30, 2015
While the rest of the world is looking ahead to a new year, Clipper Erickson is on the look-out for new repertoire.
"I think it's important to record things that are off the beaten
track," he says. "We tend to get stuck into hearing the same pieces
over and over again. Not that there's anything wrong with those pieces,
but it's good to really explore and get a full idea of what has been
going on in various periods in musical life. I think there is something
important in a mission of bringing music that isn't known to a wider
audience."
The omnivorous pianist, who is on the faculty of Rider University's
Westminster Conservatory of Music in Princeton and Temple University's
Boyer College of Music and Dance in Philadelphia, has two new releases
of "new" music that has languished in obscurity for decades.
Erickson's research for a dissertation on the piano works of R.
Nathaniel Dett (1882-1943) qualifies him as a world authority on this
neglected composer, who was born in what is now Niagara Falls, Ontario.
The grandson of Underground Railroad refugees, Dett became an important
figure in American music of his time. Yet he is remembered today, if
at all, for a lone piano suite, "In the Bottoms," or perhaps only for
its two-minute concluding dance, "Juba."
Erickson is the first to record Dett's complete piano works. His
performances have been issued on an album titled "My Cup Runneth Over,"
on the Navona Records label, for which he provides his own liner notes.
The two-CD set was made possible, in part, through the financial
backing of St. Michael's Church in Trenton, where Erickson serves as
organist.
"I did two programs there of Dett's music, which included piano
works, some of the vocal music, and also poetry readings," he says.
"Dett was a published poet."
He was also the first musician of African descent to earn a B.A. in
Music from the Oberlin Conservatory. Dett pursued graduate studies at
Columbia University, Northwestern University, the University of
Pennsylvania, Harvard University, the Eastman School of Music, and the
American Conservatory at Fontainebleau, in France, under the supervision
of legendary pedagogue Nadia Boulanger.
He himself went on to become an influential teacher. His works won
prizes and his concerts and recitals received favorable notices. He was
a gifted writer and choral conductor. All in all, his posthumous
neglect is puzzling.
"I think there are a lot of reasons for that," Erickson says. "One
is that he doesn't fit into our stereotypes. He's a black composer that
doesn't compose in a jazz idiom, and that's what people usually assume
when they run into an African-descent composer – oh, it's going to sound
like jazz. It has roots in German Romanticism, so the music sounds a
lot like MacDowell or Amy Beach or Griffes or Grieg. All of those
influences are there. Of course there are strong ethnic influences, as
well, but it's very much rooted in European classical music."
With the notable exception of "In the Bottoms," most of Dett's scores
have also been long out of print. Be that as it may, Erickson
speculates that the music isn't flashy enough to attract the interest of
many pianists.
"Pianists kind of like things that go over well in competitions, and
Dett's music is very personal," he says. "It's very poetic and
intimate. Those things usually don't fly in competitions."
He hopes to have a hand in changing that. He is currently involved
in the planning of a Dett festival at Temple, which is projected to take
place in the fall. "We'll have choral performances and keyboard
performances. The dance department is very involved. They've already
choreographed a couple of Dett piano pieces. I'm hoping also to start a
piano competition. I figure that's a good way to get Dett's music
played."
With violinist Andrew Kirkman, Erickson has also been active in
reviving the music of English composer Cyril Scott (1879-1970). A new
album, "Dawn and Twilight," documents the first and last violin sonatas
of the composer, sometimes referred to, rather reductively, as "the
English Debussy." For decades, Scott's memory was kept alive through
his piano miniatures, especially "Lotus Land."
"The First Violin Sonata had never been recorded in its original
version," Erickson says. "Scott revised it later, about fifty years
after he wrote it. It was really quite a ground-breaking piece. It was
written in 1908. It was quite avant-garde for its time and has never
been played after its first few performances, which is the case with a
lot of Scott's music."
In the case of the Violin Sonata No. 4, it had never even been
heard. Kirkman and Erickson received the manuscript directly from the
composer's son, Desmond, now in his 80s and living in Toronto. They
gave the first performance of the piece in 2013.
"It's kind of amazing how Cyril Scott was completely eclipsed,"
Erickson says. "He was really the leading light of the British
avant-garde in the early 20th century. But by the time the '30s and
'40s came along, he was completely forgotten. It was rather amazing to
the two of us that this Fourth Sonata had never even been performed. It
was written in 1956."
The album appears on the Affetto Records label, a recent venture of producer and recording engineer John C. Baker.
Comment by email:
Comment by email:
Thanks again for posting! Have a wonderful New Year and best wishes for 2016. Clipper [Clipper Erickson]
John Malveaux: Edward J. Blum, co-author of “The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America” joined Roland Martin Wednesday on “NewsOne Now”
The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America
Edward J. Blum & Paul Harvey
Edward J. Blum & Paul Harvey
The University of North Carolina Press (2014)
John Malveaux of
writes:
Please see discussion after 30 second commercial
http://newsone.com/3050115/white-jesus-white-supremacy-video/. The light skinned Julianne is my cousin Dr. Julianne Malveaux.
Thanks
John Malveaux
NewsOne Now
Edward J. Blum, co-author of “The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America” joined Roland Martin
Wednesday on “NewsOne Now” to discuss how the American image of Jesus
has been used to advance white supremacy around the world. Listen to
their conversation [above].
Wednesday, December 30, 2015
John Malveaux: Gail Eichenthal, Executive Producer USC Radio, shared this CBS News story with MusicUNTOLD: "Changing the color of classical music"
CBS News: An all African American orchestra plays at the Colour of Music festival
John Malveaux of
writes:
Gail Eichenthal, Executive Producer USC Radio, shared this CBS News story with MusicUNTOLD:
CBS News
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/changing-the-color-of-classical-music-charleston-south-carolina-festival/
CHARLESTON, S.C. -- A festival in South Carolina is
trying to change the color of classical music. Less than four percent of
classical American symphony musicians are African American, but that's
not because of the talent pool.
Maestro Marlon Daniel conducts not
only the orchestra, but the entire festival called the Colour of Music,
now in its third year.
"You know a lot of musicians of color get pigeon-holed into jazz and
hip-hop and all these things. It's a big stereotype," said Marlon.
"A
lot of people think there are not any musicians of color out there
doing classical music, when there actually are, in reality, tons of us."
Clarinetist Robert Davis says in most symphonies he sticks out as a black classical artist, but not here.
"You usually see the same ones, you know. But then I came down here,
and there's a whole other group," Davis said of the festival. "It's like
where are they coming from? So I was really shocked about that."
The festival also highlights black classical composers, like Adolphus Hailstork.
His
"Church Street Serenade" was performed just one block away from the
historic black church where a white gunman opened fire and killed nine people in June.
© 2015 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Kelly Hall-Tompkins: Music Kitchen Celebrates 10 Years: Music Kitchen has presented 80 concerts since inception in 2005
It's been a wonderful year and we have much to be grateful for!
Help us look to a wonderful new 2016 by giving your
Thank you to everyone who has donated this year!!
Cheers,
Kelly
Anthony R. Green: Castle of our Skins would like to wish all of your readers a Happy Kwanzaa and a Happy New Year!
Anthony R. Green, Composer & Performer
© 2015 Anthony Green
Anthony R. Green writes:
Hello!
Castle of our Skins would like to wish all of your readers a Happy Kwanzaa and a Happy New Year!
Thank you so much!
Anthony, Ashe, Seychelle, and Adriennet
www.castle-of-our-skins.com
Comment by email:
Comment by email:
Thank you so much! Cheers and happy new year! Anthony [Anthony R. Green]
Monday, December 28, 2015
John Malveaux: Changing America: The Emancipation Proclamation, 1863 and the March on Washington, 1963, Dec. 11, 2015 - Jan. 29, 2016, L.A. Public Library
John Malveaux of
writes:
The Central Library is one of only 50 sites across the United States
to host this notable traveling exhibition that explores through images
the historical context of the 1863 Emancipation Proclamation and the
1963 March on Washington. The traveling exhibition is sponsored by the
Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture
and the National Museum of American History, in collaboration with the
American Library Association and the National Endowment for the
Humanities.
The Los Angeles Public Library has supplemented the
exhibit with images from its Shades of L.A. and Rolland Curtis
Collections, capturing a peek at the everyday lives of African American
communities in the first half of the 20th century, after the signing of
the Emancipation Proclamation and leading up to the March on Washington.
The exhibit and related programs are free.
ArtsMemphis: National Endowment for the Arts supports our Fellows Program!
ArtsMemphis 2014 Fellow, Lecolion Washington, presents his case for support to peers and faculty
Saad&Shaw
ArtsMemphis 2015 Fellows at the Americans for the Arts Annual
Convention left to right: Tierney Bambrick (Opera Memphis), Amy
Ruggaber (Playback Memphis), Brittney Boyd (Crosstown Arts), Melody
Barham (Soulsville Foundation), Siphne Sylve (UrbanArt Commission)
Dec. 8th, 2015
Today,
the National Endowment for the Arts announced a $40,000 grant to help
ArtsMemphis train emerging leaders in the nascent field of arts-driven
social change. The initiative is called the Community Engagement
Fellows Program.
ArtsMemphis launched the Fellows program in
2014, with seed funding from the First Tennessee Foundation. Each
Fellowship award comes with a stipend to participate in a six-month,
hands-on curriculum, featuring leading scholars and practitioners. Over
the past two years, the program has graduated 30 Fellows from a host of
different nonprofits throughout Memphis.
"Our Community Engagement Fellows serve as ambassadors to peers in
Memphis and around the country at national conferences on how to use the
arts to transform underserved communities," said Bruce Hopkins,
ArtsMemphis Board Chair.
The Fellowship curriculum is led by nationally recognized thought
leader Linda Steele, who joined ArtsMemphis as Chief Engagement Officer
two years ago. Steele is especially excited about the work that
ArtsMemphis Fellows are carrying out in the Orange Mound neighborhood.
"The Fellows have been working hand-in-hand with Orange Mound
residents,” Steele said, “designing arts-based projects to address the
neighborhood’s self-identified needs. And we’ve been able to fund some of the most innovative projects through ArtsMemphis."
The Fellows program is just one piece of ArtsMemphis’ larger strategy
to show that the arts can be a major tool for revitalizing communities.
"We’re working to place community engagement at the center of
everything we do at ArtsMemphis," said President & CEO Elizabeth
Rouse.
The NEA grant was awarded under the agency’s "livability" category,
which is focused on projects that incorporate the arts into strategies
that improve quality of life within local communities. According to NEA
Chairman Jane Chu, “Supporting projects like the one from ArtsMemphis
offers more opportunities to engage in the arts every day.”
Pianist Rebeca Omordia and Filarmonica Transilvania, Cluj-Napoca, Romania, in Saint-Saens Piano Concerto No. 2 in G minor, Friday, January 15, 2016, 7:30 PM
Rebeca Omordia
www.rebecaomordia.com
www.rebecaomordia.com
Romanian-Nigerian pianist Rebeca Omordia announces a concert in Cluj-Napoca, Romania with Filarmonica Transilvania:
Saint-Saens Piano Concerto no 2 in G minor with 'Transilvania' Philharmonic Orchestra, Romania
Retweeted
By Rebeca Omordia (@RebecaOmordia)
Retweeted
By Rebeca Omordia (@RebecaOmordia)
Dr. William H. Chapman Nyaho, Born Dec. 28, 1958, is a Pianist, Professor and Pioneer of Sheet Music and CDs of Piano Music of Africa and the African Diaspora
ASA: Piano Music by
Composers of African Descent
William Chapman Nyaho, piano
MSR Classics MS1242 (2008)
MSR Classics MS1242 (2008)
Senku: Piano Music by
Composers of African Descent
William Chapman Nyaho, piano
Musicians Showcase 1091 (2003)
Piano Music of Africa and the African Diaspora
Compiled and Edited by
William H. Chapman Nyaho
Volume 1
Early Intermediate
Oxford University Press (2007)
William H. Chapman Nyaho
Volume 1
Early Intermediate
Oxford University Press (2007)
Nyaho.com
William Chapman
Nyaho brings a unique cultural background
and extraordinarily eclectic sense of music
to the concert hall, propelling an evening of his music to, as one
critic put it, "reach great heights."
His teaching experience and great sensitivity make the master classes,
lectures and school activities highlights of his
residencies that almost rival his exciting performances.
His performances with Susanna Garcia in the well-respected Nyaho/Garcia
Duo have equally won critcial acclaim.
Nyaho's love of music, expressed through his insightful technique,
creates an exciting musical experience for the experienced music
devotee and newcomer alike.
Sunday, December 27, 2015
Orchestra Update, League of American Orchestras: White House honors Milwaukee Youth Symphony Orchestra
First Lady Michelle Obama, Musician Malik Johnson, Milwaukee Youth Symphony Orchestra Executive Director Linda Edelstein
First Lady Michelle Obama said, "Arts education is not a luxury. It is a
necessity," at a White House ceremony on November 17, honoring the
Milwaukee Youth Symphony Orchestra (MYSO) and twelve other winners of the
National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Awards.
MYSO Executive Director Linda Edelstein and musician Malik Johnson
accepted the honor on behalf of the Community Partnership Programs,
which offer
string training for third- and fourth-grade students
from lower-income and minority families, ensemble performance
opportunities for middle and high school students, and financial aid for
lessons and transportation.
National Society of Black Engineers Appoints Constance Thompson and Stanton Hill to Executive Positions
Constance Thompson
Stanton Hill
ALEXANDRIA,
Va. — The National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE) has appointed two
new members to the Society’s Executive Leadership
Team. Constance Thompson, formerly senior manager
for Diversity & Inclusion for the American Society of Civil
Engineers (ASCE), has joined NSBE as director of External and Government
Affairs. Stanton Hill, NSBE’s new director of Finance and Accounting,
joins the Society after serving the United Negro College Fund (UNCF).
The appointments were effective Nov. 30.
NSBE, with more than 31,000 collegiate, pre-collegiate and professional members, is one of the largest student-governed organizations
based in the U.S. Founded in 1975, the Society is dedicated to moving
black students and professionals from underrepresentation to
overrepresentation in the field of engineering. Hill, Thompson and the
other members of NSBE’s Executive Leadership Team lead the professional
staff at NSBE World Headquarters, which implements the policies and initiatives of the college students and young professionals comprising NSBE’s National Executive Board.
“The National Executive Board is pleased with the value being added to NSBE’s human resources with
the hiring of staff members of this caliber. We welcome Stanton and
Constance to the NSBE family,” says NSBE National Chair Neville Green,
the Society’s top-ranking officer, a senior majoring in chemical
engineering at the City University of New York.
“We
are thrilled to have Constance and Stanton in these key positions,”
says NSBE Executive Director Karl W. Reid, Ed.D. “Their skills,
experience and talent will be vital as we pursue the primary goal of
NSBE’s new 10-year strategic plan. The U.S. needs a big increase in its
number of black engineering graduates. The nation’s demand for engineers
is growing, while the percentage of African Americans entering the
engineering workforce is shrinking. NSBE’s goal is to increase the
annual number of African-American bachelor’s degree recipients from
3,501 to 10,000, by 2025.”
Thompson
is primarily responsible for the day-to-day management and oversight of
NSBE’s strategic government policy and initiatives. She will advance
NSBE’s mission and strategic plan, by collaborating with the Society’s
governance, staff and liked-minded strategic partners to position NSBE
as an indispensable stakeholder in advancing STEM education policy and
workforce practices for blacks in engineering.
An
example of this will be seen in Thompson’s management of the
groundbreaking 50K Coalition. Designed to serve as a unified voice in
changing the perception and persistence of underrepresented groups in
engineering education and careers, the group has established a bold and
unprecedented goal of producing 50,000 diverse engineering graduates
annually by 2025 — a number that represents a 66 percent increase in the
current annual graduation rate of Bachelor of Science in engineering
degree students. Now serving more than 70,000 pre-collegiate, collegiate
and professional members, the coalition is led by the executive
directors of NSBE, the Society of Women Engineers (SWE) and the Society
of Hispanic Professional Engineers (SHPE) and will host a national
strategy summit in April of 2015.
Before her
tenure at ASCE, Thompson served as manager for Diversity Programs with
the American Chemical Society and manager for Recruitment and Diversity
Recruitment at Cornell University. Thompson earned Bachelor of Science
degrees in political science and French from Virginia State University
and holds a Cornell Certified Diversity Professional certification from
Cornell University. A well-known and effective leader among engineering
societies, she has served on numerous boards and committees that align
with NSBE’s mission and strategic plan, including the American
Association of Engineering Societies Diversity Working Group, as
co-chair; the Greater Washington American Society of Association
Executives Diversity & Inclusion Committee, as a board member; the
American Association for the Advancement of Science Human Rights
Coalition Service to the STEM Community Working Group, as co-chair; the
Society of Women Engineers Multicultural Committee; and the Women in
Engineering Pro Active Group Diversity Committee.
As director of finance and accounting, Hill is responsible for
planning, directing and supporting NSBE’s financial and accounting
practices as well as its relationships with banking institutions,
financial and investment committees of the National Executive Board, and
the broader financial community.
Hill has nearly 10 years of cross-functional experience centered on
finance, project management and program execution. During his tenure at
UNCF, he held financial, strategic and analytical responsibilities that
included the management of the annual operating development budget,
forecasting, and process redesign initiatives for multiple departments.
He designed and implemented budget and cash-flow processes to manage $30
million in grant funding and a $12-million operating budget in support
of UNCF’s development operations. Most recently, he served as UNCF’s
senior business analyst, forecasting financial performance and engaging
in strategic planning to reshape the organization’s fundraising
activities and unearth growth opportunities. Hill has a B.A. in business
administration management from Morehouse College and an M.B.A. in
innovation entrepreneurship and high technology from Northeastern
University. He also has Project Management Professional and Certified
Non-Profit Accounting Professional designations.
ABOUT NSBE
Founded in 1975, the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE) is
one of the largest student-governed organizations based in the United
States. With more than 31,000 members and more than 300 chapters in the
U.S. and abroad, NSBE supports and promotes the aspirations of
collegiate and pre-collegiate students and technical professionals in
engineering and technology. NSBE’s mission is “to increase the number of
culturally responsible black engineers who excel academically, succeed
professionally and positively impact the community.” For more
information, visit www.nsbe.org.
###
Charles Pettaway Performs Music by Composers of African Descent: Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Howard Swanson, George Walker & John D. Cooper
Charles Pettaway Performs Music by Composers of African Descent
On December 12, 2015 AfriClassical posted:
We received the recording shortly before the birthday of Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges, so we made this post on December 24, 2015:
AfriClassical listed the complete contents of the CD:
Sonata No. 1 in C major (8:21)
Adagio in F minor (3:52)
Howard Swanson
Sonata (10:17)
George Walker
Piano Sonata No. 1 (16:13)
Sonata (10:17)
George Walker
Piano Sonata No. 1 (16:13)
John Dangerfield Cooper
Sonata Fantasie in D minor (20:13)
The Unicorn (4:24)
Sonata Fantasie in D minor (20:13)
The Unicorn (4:24)
The liner notes are by Charles Pettaway:
Joseph Bologne, Le Chevalier de Saint-George, his music, and life have only come to the fore of music history within the past 12 years. However, mid-eighteenth century he enjoyed an obsequious following. The French viewed him as "exotic." He was a virtuoso violinist, conductor, composer, France's greatest fencer, fashion trend-setter, ladies man, and a colonel. In short, he was a "pop star." But in that society he was still a mulatto.
The first movement of his Sonata in C major utilizes classic sonata-allegro form. The right hand executes a sunny melody that is full of triadic and scale passages accompanied by an Alberti bass used throughout the entire composition. The second movement is a sad lament. The third movement is a Rondo seemingly full of personal resolve. This work is reminiscent of Mozart's Piano Sonata K. 545.
Saint-George's Adagio in F minor is a reflective piano vocalise, replete with the emotions that he must have experienced as a black man.
Howard Swanson was born in Atlanta, Georgia on August 18, 1907. He worked in the Post Office while he attended Cleveland Institute of Music. Swanson won a Rosenwald Fellowship which enabled him to study composition with Nadia Boulanger.
Swanson's piano sonata was composed in 1950. The work is written in three movements which include: Allegro risoluto, Andante cantabile, and Allegro vivo. This sonata is basically a contrapuntal work, with a bitonal two-voice texture.
The first movement introduces four themes at varying pitch levels. The andante cantabile is in song form (ABA). The allegro vivo is written in the style of a rondo. The rhythm of the piece is the most outstanding feature of the work. Admittedly, the sonata is not "easy listening," but this music of a high information content has a unique character - thus my recording of the work.
George Walker's first piano sonata is a composition created by a master craftsman. The first movement utilizes sonata-allegro form. The opening motif focuses on quartel harmonies, which form the bulk of the first two movements. There is a restless quality portrayed by myriad pianistic coloring through the use of clever compositional devices.
The second movement states a gentle theme with six variations predicated on a Kentucky folk song "Oh Bury Me Beneath The Willow."
The exciting third movement is a toccata in arch form. Here Walker inserts another folk song, this one titled "Lisa In The Summertime," which occurs twice in this virtuoso showpiece.
Walker is an acknowledged American Master with the dual distinction of being a superb concert pianist in addition to being a composer whose orchestral works have been performed by every American Orchestra.
Dr. John Dangerfield Cooper (1923-2006) was a Renaissance man. As an alumnus of Lincoln University, he served briefly as a college professor teaching ear training. In addition to composing in nearly every musical genre, he served as a minister at several churches in the Philadelphia area and was a community activist.
Cooper's Sonata Fantasie in D minor is written in three movements. The first movement, written in sonata-allegro form, is reminiscent of the 19th century virtuoso style utilizing sturm and drang. The two contrasting themes provide an intense musical balance to the turgidity of this restless movement.
The second movement reminds me of a Chopin Waltz, not made for dancing but for listening. This movement is full of musical profundity.
Movement three is entitled March Elan. It utilizes two themes and provides a musical relief from the first two movements.
The Unicorn, a movement from Dr. Cooper's Wissahickon Suite is a lyrical work of insidious technical difficulty.
Pianist Charles Pettaway has been hailed by music critics here and abroad. Of his playing, Le Figaro (Paris newspaper) commented, "One cannot imagine a finer performance." Nadia Boulanger proclaimed, "Pettaway has a god-given talent." Earl Calloway of the Chicago Daily Defender stated after a Chicago debut recital, "One was completely astonished at Charles Pettaway's technique and smoldering musicality."
Mr. Pettaway received music degrees from University of the Arts (formerly Philadelphia Musical Academy) and Temple University. He was awarded fellowships for study at the prestigious Tanglewood Music Center, The American Conservatory at Fontainbleu, France, and the International Ravel Music Academy in Southern France.
Charles Pettaway made his European orchestral debut appearing as soloist with the Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse, with Michel Plasson conducting.
In competition, Mr. Pettaway was awarded the grand prize at the Robert Casadesus Internationalk Piano Concours and was awarded first at the Bartok-Kabalevsky International Piano Competition. He has performed in concert at many European capitals and throughout the United states.
Charlwes Pettaway is a Full Professor of Music at Lincoln University of Pennsylvania and continues presenting concerts and master classes at colleges and other venues throughout the United States.
Saturday, December 26, 2015
Trombonist Martin McCain on Twitter Dec. 21, 2015: "Congrats to my grandfather on his 55th performance of Handel's Messiah"
Trombonist Martin McCain, D.M.A, www.martinmccain.com, is Associate Professor of Trombone at
Texas State University where he directs the Trombone Choir and Jazz
Trombone Ensembles. Here he poses with his Grandfather for the following Tweet:
"Congrats to my grandfather on his 55th performance of Handel's Messiah!"
Retweeted
1) By Martin McCain (@bassman781)
2) By Ronald A. Johnson (@RonAJohnson)
Retweeted
1) By Martin McCain (@bassman781)
2) By Ronald A. Johnson (@RonAJohnson)
John Malveaux: Katherine Johnson calculated the trajectory for Project Mercury & the flight to the Moon; In 2015 she received a Presidential Medal of Freedom
John Malveaux of
writes:
On
December 21, 2015, SpaceX succesfully landed upright on solid ground at
Cape Canaveral, Florida after traveling into space and back. A Look Back-In 1969, Katherine Johnson calculated the trajectory for Project Mercury and the 1969 Apollo 11 flight to the Moon. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katherine_Johnson. In 2015, Katherine Johnson received a Presidential Medal of Freedom.
John Malveaux
Thursday, December 24, 2015
Sylvia Y. Cyrus: 2015 was a spectacular year for ASALH. We celebrated our Centennial with successful events across the nation.
Greetings,
Thanks
to supporters like you, 2015 was a spectacular year for ASALH.
We celebrated our Centennial with successful events across the
nation. Our 89th Annual Black History Luncheon and 100th Annual Meeting
and Conference drew a record number of attendees. ASALH was recognized
by the National Association of Multicultural Education and the
Historical Society of DC for the work we have done to fulfill our
mission. Significant progress has been made on the renovation of the
Dr. Carter G. Woodson National Park site in Washington, DC. We were
able to exceed our membership goals and we chartered six
branches. Because of the generosity and commitment of people like you
we can end this year with a renewed spirit to continue the legacy of our
founder, Dr. Carter G. Woodson. Thank you so much!
On behalf of the Executive Council and staff of ASALH I wish you a new year filled with peace, joy, and meaning.
Sincerely,
Sylvia Y. Cyrus, Executive Director
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