As the Covid-19 virus ravaged lives and livelihoods over the last year,
those artists who had been on the verge of big moments and big careers
seemed in serious peril. Thankfully, the young composer, Carlos Simon,
seems to have weathered the career storm and potential loss of inertia
that the pandemic has wrought. In its gradual, limited return to live
audience performances, the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra introduced Simon’s Portrait of a Queen
on Thursday evening at the Tennessee Theatre to an audience that was
probably making Simon’s musical acquaintance for the first time.
***
Following the opening work, Joseph Haydn’s cleverly satisfying Symphony
No. 85 (“The Queen”), Demirjian and the orchestra launched into a
symphony by a Haydn contemporary, Joseph Boulogne, otherwise known by
the title of Chevalier de Saint-Georges. As one of the many ironies of
racism, Saint-Georges, the son of a wealthy French planter and an
African slave, was educated in France and there became a renowned
violinist, composer, and conductor, as well as a champion fencer. It was
in his capacity as orchestra leader of the Concert Olympique that
Saint-Georges commissioned and premiered the six “Paris” symphonies from
Haydn that included the No. 85. The “should have been” here is that,
despite his popular abilities and the favoritism of Queen Marie
Antoinette who was an admirer of both composers, Saint-Georges’ career
was stymied by those who refused to accept his mixed race status.
***
Demirjian followed with an example of a “should have been” closer to home—the American composer Florence Price.
***
Price’s Andante moderato for Strings, arranged from a movement of
her String Quartet in G major, is lush, luscious, and lyrical, in this
case, a welcome opportunity for the KSO strings to reclaim their
ensemble strengths.
***
The real eye-opener, and ear-opener, of the evening was Simon’s impressive Portrait of a Queen.
Written as his doctoral composition at the University of Michigan in
2017—scored for strings, piano, percussion, some audio playback, and a
female voice as a spoken narrator (text written by Courtney D. Ware)—the
work is bold and charged with the energy and textures of struggle and
hope. The narration was read with restrained power and obvious loving
gravity in this performance by Knoxville’s Reneé Kesler.
Simon’s program notes describe the work: “This piece
traces the evolution of black people in America through the lens of one
figurative black woman who represents strength, courage and
selflessness.”
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