Fela Sowande (1905-1987)
The Africa Suite of Fela Sowande will be performed by the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia on Sunday, October 7 at 2:30 PM and Monday, October 8 at 7:30 PM, according to the COP website,
Broadway World
The Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia (COP) Season Opening Concert, AFRICA Begins Migrations Season
September 18, 2018
A founding resident company of The Kimmel Center for the Performing
Arts, The Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia (COP) announces the opening
of their 2018/2019 season Migrations with their season opening concert,
AFRICA.
The Chamber Orchestra's Migrations season takes audiences on a
journey through many regions from which Philadelphia residents and their
ancestors originated. AFRICA features music of two major African
composers: Nigerian Fela Sowande,
whose beautiful and graceful melodies, many derived from sources from
his native land, are the core of his African Suite; and Tunde Jegede,
born in London of a Nigerian father, who traveled to The Gambia to study
the griot tradition of native music and storytelling, which dates back
to the 13th century.
***
Fela Sowande,
the son of an Anglican minister in Lagos, studied church music as well
as organ and piano in Nigeria, until, at the age of 19, he moved to
London. There he made a name for himself as a jazz musician, founding a
band, playing with Fats Waller, and performing as soloist for an early
London performance of Rhapsody in Blue. He found a post as organist for
the BBC, playing a wide variety of music. Eventually, he returned to
Nigeria and became head of the music section of the Nigerian
Broadcasting Corporation, where his programming explored (among other
things) traditional Yoruba music, mythology and culture. After teaching
African studies in Nigeria and America, Sowande passed away in 1987.
The African Suite was composed in 1944, and frames traditional
African folksongs in a more European idiom, while retaining their
characteristic rhythms and pentatonic melodies. The melodies are
accompanied by a variety of sounds that call to mind nature, African
plucked instruments, lullabies, nostalgia, and lively dance episodes.
The finale became well-known to Canadian audiences as the theme for a
popular program, "Gilmour's Albums."
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