“I hope this showcase generates a little more respect for the
contributions of these composers to their field,” says Stephen Tucker,
UCI associate professor of music and conductor of the UCI Symphony
Orchestra.
Steve Zylius / UCI
The famed Czech composer Antonín Dvořák believed that the African
American tradition was central to all American compositions, calling it
“all that is needed for a great and noble school of music.” On Feb. 3,
Stephen Tucker, UCI associate professor of music and conductor of the
UCI Symphony Orchestra, will launch Black History Month with a concert
showcasing some of America’s most celebrated African American composers,
highlighting their influence on the world of concert hall music.
The 7 p.m. event will conclude the three-day College Orchestra
Directors Association Conference, hosted by UCI, which is expected to
draw nearly 100 college conductors from around the world.
To be held at Orange County’s Soka University, the concert will
feature two world premieres: a composition by Carolyn Yarnell called
“It’s Still Big, Just Like You Remember!” and an aria by Richard
Thompson, “We Wear the Mask,” sung by UCI student Marlaina Owens. The
UCI Symphony Orchestra will also play compositions by Adolphus
Hailstork, four-time Grammy winner Billy Childs, George Walker and Duke
Ellington.
Tucker, who wrote his dissertation on Ellington and considers several
of these composers “the center of [his]academic life,” is eager to
bring their work to wider audiences.
“I’ve never had the opportunity to do a black history concert before,
so the chance to play music by African American composers for a captive
audience of peers is wonderful,” Tucker says. “I want everyone to leave
the concert with this arsenal of pieces in their minds, so they can do
their own research and find out who else is out there – because there
are so many African American composers in jazz and classical, and they
influence everything.”
Although Tucker was raised in Jamaica, he noticed when he came to
America as a young man that the contributions of African American
musicians were “everywhere” and “so powerful,” although sometimes
overlooked in the classical genre.
“These influences are not just felt in pop music; there are benefits
to be gained from observing, embracing and adopting the African American
tradition in concert hall music,” he says. “I hope this showcase
generates a little more respect for the contributions of these composers
to their field and possibly inspires more African American musicians to
pursue their craft.”
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