Florence B. Price (1887-1953)
Joshua Kosman
January 26, 2019
“If you don’t remember anything else from tonight,” music director
Michael Morgan told the audience at the Paramount Theatre on Friday,
Jan. 25, “remember Florence Price.”
In truth, there was plenty to take away from the concert by the Oakland Symphony,
a lively and sometimes revelatory event devoted to music by black
composers. Titled “To Belong Here: Notes From the African Diaspora,” the
program ranged from 18th century Paris to the Harlem winningly evoked
in the music of Duke Ellington.
But Morgan was entirely correct in focusing the audience’s attention on the music of Price,
who died in 1953 and is only now — well into the following century —
receiving some of the attention she’s due. Price’s Third Symphony, a
robust and wondrously inventive creation that had its premiere in 1940
in Detroit and was promptly forgotten, emerged as the triumphal high
point of the evening — not only a memorable performance in itself but a
challenge to other orchestras and conductors who seem to believe that
there’s no music worth programming by women or composers of color.
We are, happily, going through a little renaissance of interest in
Price’s work. An unknown pile of her manuscripts was rediscovered a
decade ago, and last year the music publisher G. Schirmer acquired the
rights to her catalog, which means that her symphonies and concertos are
only a phone call and a royalty payment away. A world premiere
recording of Price’s Fourth Symphony, released this month by the
Arkansas Fort Smith Symphony and conductor John Jeter, revealed a work
full of delicate harmonic and rhythmic surprises.
Yet to judge from Friday’s vibrant and resourceful performance, it
may be the Third Symphony that provides the most compelling entree into
Price’s distinctive orchestral sound world. Like its fellows, the piece
is steeped in the harmonies and rhythms of the African American world —
the fluid, gapped melodic scales of the spiritual, the vivid syncopated
dance strains known as “juba,” even the densely stacked harmonies of big
band jazz.
At a first encounter, this can make Price’s symphonies remind a
modern listener of Dvorák, especially given the superficial similarities
in their orchestral palettes. But where Dvorák is a
tourist-ethnographer — mining and exploiting the sounds of the New World
for his own European ends — Price turns those musical resources into
something periodically new and strange.
In the Third Symphony, that means expanding a seeming straightforward
set of melodic themes into a first movement of unpredictable but
closely argued musical logic. It means a radiant and rhapsodic slow
movement punctuated by plangent bassoon and trumpet solos, and an
ebullient dance interlude that piles syncopation atop syncopation until
the phrases stretch into wonderful, oddball shapes.
Perhaps most striking is the symphony’s finale, which turns the
simple rhythmic profile of a buoyant rondo into something weightier and
more shadowy — a bit of expressive sleight-of-hand that Morgan and the
orchestra conveyed perfectly.
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