The Philadelphia Inquirer
Valerie Coleman’s stirring ‘Umoja’ is a Philadelphia Orchestra milestone: The first classical work by a living African American woman that they have performed.
by Peter Dobrin, Updated: September 20, 2019
The Philadelphia Orchestra’s program note Thursday night said the
concert marked the first time the orchestra had played a work by Valerie
Coleman, and that her piece was an orchestra commission and world
premiere.
The greater significance behind the debut of Coleman’s Umoja, Anthem for Unity,
though, is this: It was the first time the Philadelphia Orchestra had
ever performed a classical work by a living African American female
composer. And so the concert raised a two-part question fraught with
complexity and paradox. What took it so long, and why does it matter?
Let’s start off by calling Umoja, Anthem for Unity exactly what it is apart from the question of who wrote it. It’s a terrific work. The piece — umoja means unity
in Swahili — arcs from serene peace to racing tension before emerging
in sunlit joy. That’s a lot in 10 or so minutes. Coleman is not
primarily an orchestral composer (she was best known for years as the flutist in Imani Winds), but her new work is a powerhouse of emotional directness and bold orchestration.
As for the who behind the piece, it does matter. For all kinds of reasons.
An orchestra spokesperson said the group believes this is the first
time it has commissioned a new work from a female African American
composer. That it took it 120 years of actively commissioning composers
before landing on this demographic says a lot about how little the
orchestra has noticed the city it has lived in all this time. Coleman’s
identity is an important factor to many, but especially to children all
over who may never have thought this world was open to them — as
composers and listeners.
The messaging is more delicate than many realize. My Asian American
daughter, no stranger to concert halls, was 5 or 6 when we saw an Asian
American girl playing piano at one of the orchestra’s family concerts.
She whispered to me that it had never occurred to her that such a thing
was possible.
Yannick Nézet-Séguin led the Coleman premiere. On Facebook not long
ago, orchestra piccolo player Erica Peel posted a shot of a page from
the score. “Erica solo,” it says at bar 146. And in fact, Umoja has a concerto grosso feel at times. There’s a tasty bass clarinet solo, a spritely breakout moment for oboe played by Philippe Tondre, guesting in the principal chair for the evening, and other section solos.
The piece has its origins in a 1997 version for women’s choir and it
has been adapted for other forces. But here it seems to have arrived at
its inevitable state, where texture and instrumental contrast take on
emotional hues. It opens with the promise of spring, like a beginning.
Let’s hope it is. A full-length orchestral piece from Coleman next would
be welcome.
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