Paul Freeman Conducting the Chicago Sinfonietta
November 25, 2019
Everyone in musical Chicago — and beyond — knows how hard Paul
Freeman worked to bring sorely needed diversity to classical music.
The most famous facet of the late conductor’s campaign was the
Chicago Sinfonietta, which Freeman established in 1987 to open up
minority staffing and repertoire in American orchestral music.
But Freeman made an equally important – though far less celebrated –
contribution in the mid-1970s, when he recorded the landmark “Black
Composers Series” for CBS Masterworks. On its nine LPs, Freeman
documented signal compositions by William Grant Still, George Walker,
Hale Smith, Olly Woodrow Wilson, T.J. Anderson and other black composers
who had been mostly excluded from concert and recorded life in America.
Thanks to Freeman’s efforts, listeners finally were able to savor and
study contemporary recordings of Still’s “Afro-American Symphony”
(1930), Smith’s “Ritual and Incantations” (1974) and earlier works, such
as Jose Maurico Nunes-Garcia’s Requiem Mass (1816).
The “Black Composer Series” was reissued in the mid-1980s by the
nonprofit College Music Society, and now – at last – it’s out again, for
the first time in a Sony Classical boxed set of separately jacketed CDs
remastered from the originals. In addition, the new package includes a
disc titled “Symphonic Spirituals,” featuring music for voice and
orchestra recorded by Freeman and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in
1979.
Though the repertoire gathered here barely scratches the surface of
black creativity in classical music, it makes a powerful statement about
scores long ignored or worse.
Predictably, not everyone saw the virtue of Freeman’s labor of love.
“Some people criticized me when we released the ‘Black Composers Series,’” he told me in 1990.
“Some people said: ‘Why do we have to ghetto-ize music?’
“The reason is that some issues must be ghetto-ized to get noticed,
before they become part of the mainstream. When I recorded the ‘Black
Composers Series … most people hadn’t even heard of the music on the
set. Today many of those pieces have become part of the standard
repertoire.”
Certainly works by Still, Anderson, Smith, Wilson, David Baker,
Ulysses Kay and Walker (the first African-American composer to win a
Pulitzer Prize in music) are heard in concert more now than when Freeman
first released his series of recordings. Next season, for instance,
Chicago Symphony Orchestra music director will conduct Still’s “Mother
and Child” and the Symphony No. 3 of Florence Price (who faced double
discrimination as a black woman in classical music).
Freeman’s dedication to this cause arose, in part, from the racism he experienced first-hand.
“When anyone used to ask me what I wanted to be when I grew up, I always would say: ‘a musician,’” Freeman told me.
“And they would always say: ‘Ah yes, like Louis Armstrong.’
“Now, at that point in my life, I didn’t know how important Louis
Armstrong and jazz music were. But I did know that I had no desire to be
the next Louis Armstrong or anything like it.
“At the time, I couldn’t understand why nobody said to me: ‘Ah yes,
like Arturo Toscanini.’ The implied message was that my role was to be
Armstrong, not Toscanini, and that hurt.”
The “Black Composers Series” and Chicago Sinfonietta represented
Freeman’s response to such slights, which eminent choral conductor
Robert Shaw illuminated for me in 1988.
“I think we have to admit that one of the reasons so few works by
black composers turn up in the concert hall is that, in generations
past, most gifted black musicians didn’t even bother to pursue classical
music; they went straight into the popular fields, where they were
treated more humanly and welcomed,” said Shaw, one of the earliest
American conductors to advocate for concert music by black composers.
“We also have to admit that white society is generally indifferent to
black culture, and this is an indifference shared not only by the
unenlightened but also by the intellectual elite.”
Freeman made musical history with the “Black Composers Series,” but
he knew that would not be enough – that listeners needed to encounter
this work in concert, particularly played by an ensemble that encouraged
diversity.
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