George Walker
Gateways Music Festival
&
Eastman School of Music
The Eastman School of Music is proud to
celebrate the 95th birthday year of composer and pianist George
Theophilus Walker in a special alumnus recital on Monday, April 2 at
7:30 p.m., in Hatch Recital Hall at Eastman, followed by a champagne
toast and reception in Wolk Atrium for the audience. The recital,
comprised of the complete (5) piano sonatas of George Walker, will be
performed by Albanian pianist Redi Llupa, with opening remarks by Jamal
Rossi, the Joan and Martin Messinger Dean at Eastman.
The first African American to graduate
with a Doctorate from Eastman in 1956, and the first African-American
composer to win a Pulitzer Prize (for Lilacs for Voice and Orchestra)
in 1996, George Walker’s Eastman accolades also include an Alumni
Achievement Award in 1975 and the Rochester Distinguished Scholar Medal
in 1996.
“It was fortuitous for me to read an article in the New York Times
in 1954 about the DMA Degree created by Dr. Howard Hanson at Eastman
when I was teaching at Dillard University, a small black private college
in New Orleans,” Walker recalls. “I applied for admission into the
graduate program and was extremely happy to receive a fellowship. During
that time Dr. Hanson proposed that DMA candidates could select a
project that was not a dissertation for the DMA Degree. I chose to
compose my Piano Sonata No. 2. This work has become one of the most
performed American piano sonatas.”
That piano sonata, along with four others, will make up the program for Walker’s 95th
birthday celebration at Eastman. “Having all five of my piano sonatas
performed by Redi Llupa in a celebration of my music is very special.
They represent additions to the repertoire of piano literature that
should be known.” Walker adds on a personal note, “My son, Gregory, will
participate in the celebration by playing my Sonata for Violin and
Piano No. 1.”
Walker’s career and legacy is brimming
with accomplishments and successes. He blazed the trail for many
African-American musicians by being; the first black instrumentalist to
appear with the Philadelphia Orchestra, the first black instrumentalist
to be signed by a major management, the National Concert Artists; the
first black tenured faculty member at Smith College; first recipient of
the Minority Chair established by the University of Delaware; and the
first composer to receive the Whitney award. George Walker has composed
over 90 works for orchestra, chamber orchestra, piano, strings, voice,
organ, clarinet, guitar, brass, woodwinds, and chorus.
“George Walker is one of the most
prolific and accomplished American composers of the last century. In
addition to having been awarded the coveted Pulitzer Prize, he has been
honored by some of our nation’s leading cultural organizations including
the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the American Classical
Music Hall of Fame,” shares Dean Jamal Rossi. “We are very proud to
consider Dr. Walker as one of Eastman’s most distinguished alumni, and I
am privileged to know him as a friend.”
Walker’s works have been performed by
virtually every major orchestra in the United States, and by many in
England and other countries. His awards include the Harvey Gaul Prize,
MacDowell Colony, Yaddo and Bennington Composer Conference Fellowships,
two Guggenheim Fellowships, two Rockefeller Fellowships, a Fromm
Foundation commission, two Koussevitsky Awards, an American Academy of
Arts and Letters Award, a Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust Award, the
Mason Gross Memorial Award, numerous grants from the Research Councils
of Smith College, The University of Colorado, Rutgers University, the
National Endowment for the Arts, and the New Jersey Council on the
Arts. He has received two Alumni Awards from the Eastman School of
Music, the University Medal from the University of Rochester (1996),
honorary doctorate degrees from Lafayette College (1982), Oberlin
College (1983), Montclair State University, Bloomfield College, Curtis
Institute of Music (1997) and Spelman College (2001).
“George Walker is one of the great
musical visionaries of our age,” adds Lee Koonce, President &
Artistic Director, Gateways Music Festival, in association with Eastman
School of Music. “His music is engaging, often brilliantly rhythmic and
frequently contains very American references. Eastman and Gateways
Music Festival are delighted to celebrate Dr. Walker’s 95th birthday year and we congratulate him on his extraordinary career.”
Walker also received the Dorothy Maynor
Outstanding Arts Citizen Award in 2000 from the Harlem School of Arts.
In March of 2001, the Detroit Symphony awarded him its first annual
Classical Roots Award for a lifetime of achievement in American Music.
George Walker has been awarded the prestigious A. I. duPont Award,
presented by the Delaware Symphony, in 2002. In 2003 he was selected for
inclusion in the Washington Music Hall of Fame (Washington, DC).
It is fitting that Walker’s 95th
birthday musical celebration will be at Eastman, as one of the featured
pieces is one he wrote while attending as a student.
“I am most
grateful for the continuity of my connection with Eastman, a wonderful
institution,” Walker reflects. “The support that Eastman has given me
since I graduated in 1956 has been truly amazing.”
The George T. Walker 95th Birthday Year Celebration recital is free and open to the public.
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1 comment:
Honor & Respect
John Malveaux
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