Florence B. Price
(University of Arkansas Libraries Special Collections)
Florence B. Price is featured at AfriClassical.com
Recently discovered work of Arkansas native Florence Price has been recorded for the first time by U of A music professor Er-Gene Kahng.
January 18, 2018
A recently discovered violin concerto by Florence Price, an
African-American composer and Arkansas native, is available on CD for
the first time. Albany Records will release the recording, by Er-Gene Kahng, Feb. 1. Kahng is a violin professor and director of graduate advising in the Music Department of the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences.
Kahng will perform Price’s Violin Concerto No. 2 with
the Arkansas Philharmonic Orchesta Saturday, Feb. 17, at 7 p.m. at the
Arend Arts Center in Bentonville. This performance will be the world
premiere of the piece.
Florence B. Price (1887-1953) was born in
Little Rock and studied at the New England Conservatory, the Chicago
Musical College and the American Conservatory. She wrote music
throughout her life, producing as many as 300 compositions. Price’s
groundbreaking Symphony in E Minor was the first work by a
black woman to be performed by a major symphony orchestra in the United
States, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, in 1933.
Price lived in a
time and place where women, and especially black women, were treated as
second-class citizens. She never attained full recognition during her
lifetime and, as Kahng said, has been nearly forgotten to history. Yet
her enormous compositional output shows that she never stopped writing
and producing. Kahng said she hopes that this project will raise
awareness about “a remarkable woman who led a life of quiet tenacity and
resistance.”
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