Naxos 8.559827 (2019)
Jason Victor Serinus
January 21, 2019
To celebrate Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day and the recent Women's March, we turn the spotlight on Symphonies Nos.1 & 4
of Florence Beatrice Price (1887–1953), the first African American
woman to have her music performed by a major American orchestra. In
doing so, I extend a big thank you to Naxos, whose invaluable American
Classics series continues to record works by American composers both
famous and relatively unknown.
Price, who was born in Little Rock, AR, first encountered prejudice at a
young age, when her city's most highly regarded white music teachers
refused to welcome her as a pupil. With the support of her mother, she
enrolled at the New England Conservatory of Music in 1903, after she had
finished high school, where she specialized in organ and piano.
After marrying Attorney Thomas Jewell Price, Price taught in Little Rock
until 1927, when financial challenges and a terrible lynching impelled
the couple to relocate to Chicago. There, Price thrived as a musician.
After winning several competitions, and befriending contralto Marian
Anderson and Frederick Stock , the director of the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra, Price saw her First Symphony premiered by the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra at Chicago's Century of Progress International
Exhibition in June 1933.
Well-played by the Fort Smith Symphony of Arkansas, conducted by John
Jeter, the opening of Price's Symphony No.1 in e will surely remind
music lovers of Dvorák's "New World Symphony." (Musicologist Rae Linda
Brown also points to the influence of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor.) Catchy
melodies abound, with a variety of percussion adding color to the mix.
After a lyrical second movement which abounds in dignity, the symphony's unusual third movement Scherzo
develops into a juba, a pre-Civil War slave style of music known for
its foot stomping, chest patting, and syncopated rhythms. Price's answer
to a Strauss waltz, this fun and energetic third movement comes
complete with a slide-whistle interjection and a thunderous bass ending.
The final movement at first sounds a bit like an Irish reel, but builds
in energy to its big pounding cymbal-rich close.
Symphony No.4 in d also includes a third-movement juba dance of sorts.
This one begins like a cakewalk, but soon develops into a touching
spiritual. Fragments of the beloved spiritual "Wade in the Water"
surface in the opening movement, which grows grander and more
distinguished as it proceeds. Several themes are passed around in the
second movement, with one harking back to the largo of Dvorak's Symphony No.9.
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