Friday, March 26, 2021

bachtrack.com: Ulysses Kay, the Buffalo Philharmonic and the soul of a nation

Ulysses Kay (1917-1995)


By , 25 March 2021

It was a night in America like so many others, the day after a mass murder. It would have thrown a pall over any public event, especially over a concert given by an orchestra with as strong a community bond as the Buffalo Philharmonic. A spokesperson, perhaps music director JoAnn Falletta, would have addressed the audience and the scheduled music might have been adjusted to fit the occasion. In fact, just a few days before, the orchestra had issued a statement condemning anti-AAPI violence in the wake of the Atlanta spa shootings. And Ulysses Kay's Pietà, in what may have been its first performance since 1958, provided an opportunity to reflect on beauty and the soul of a nation.

In 1958, Kay along with William Schuman, Roy Harris and Roger Sessions traveled to Moscow to represent the United States as guests of the Soviet Union Composers' Union. He was the first African-American to receive the Prix de Rome and wrote his eight-minute Pietà in 1950 during his stay in the Eternal City, perhaps referring to Michelangelo's sculpture, as a work for English horn and piano dedicated to Pietro Accoroni. It was played in the composer's exquisite orchestration for a small chamber ensemble with a sense of inner reflection blooming into sound by Anna Mattix who had found and championed the piece. A moody introduction led to intertwined themes of yearning and a little phrase that unavoidably and not unpleasantly recalled the Serenade movement in Berlioz's Harold in Italy


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