Florence B. Price
In
November 1943, the composer Florence Price wrote to Serge Koussevitzky,
the music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, asking him to
consider performing her scores.
“Unfortunately
the work of a woman composer is preconceived by many to be light,
froth, lacking in depth, logic and virility,” she said. “Add to that the
incident of race — I have Colored blood in my veins — and you will
understand some of the difficulties that confront one in such a
position.”
It was her second letter to Koussevitzky; there is no evidence he ever replied to her.
Price
(1887-1953) was the first black woman to have her music played by a
major American orchestra when the Chicago Symphony performed her
Symphony in E Minor in 1933. She was a prominent member of the
African-American intelligentsia, corresponding with W.E.B. Dubois and
setting to music poems by Langston Hughes and Paul Laurence Dunbar.
In
1893, the composer Antonin Dvorak proclaimed that an American art music
should be built on African-American idioms. The musicologist Douglas
Shadle has pointed out that, while white composers eagerly took up this
directive — arguably culminating in George Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue”
— many largely forgotten African-American composers did as well, and
often took exception to what they saw as white appropriation.
Price
was, Mr. Shadle said in an interview, “really the culmination of the
African-American intellectual stream that followed in Dvorak’s
footsteps.” She became well-known for her arrangements of spirituals;
the great contralto Marian Anderson closed her historic 1939 concert at
the Lincoln Memorial with Price’s arrangement of “My Soul’s Been
Anchored in De Lord.”
But
Price did not only quote folk songs. Describing her Symphony No. 3 in a
1943 letter to the conductor Frederick Schwass — her canvas began to
broaden to the symphonic scale in the early 1930s — Price wrote that “it
is intended to be Negroid in character and expression.”
“In
it,” she went on, “no attempt, however, has been made to project Negro
music solely in the purely traditional manner. None of the themes are
adaptations or derivations of folk songs. The intention behind the
writing of this work was a not too deliberate attempt to picture a
cross-section of present-day Negro life and thought with its heritage of
that which is past, paralleled or influenced by contacts of the present
day.”
Marquese
Carter, a doctoral student at Indiana University who specializes in
Price’s work, said in an interview that she “uses the organizing
material of spirituals. You may not hear direct quotation, but you will
hear playing around with pentatonicism, playing around with call and
response, some of these organizing principles that African-American
scholars like Amiri Baraka have pointed out as indicative of black
musical discourse.”
No comments:
Post a Comment