#ClassicsaDay #BlackHistoryMonth Week 3

The Classics a Day team has celebrated Black composers before. This time around, I tried to avoid duplication with previous posts. It was easy to do. There is a lot of classical music by persons of color, both in the past as well as the present. A lot.

Here are my posts for the third week of #BlackHistoryMonth for #ClassicsaDay.

02/15/21 Julius Eastman - Femenine

Eastman performed with Peter Maxwell Davies, Meredith Monk, and Pierre Boulez. As a composer, he used minimalism to develop his music organically.

02/16/21 Helen Hagan - Concerto in C minor

Hagen was a pianist and composer, who studied at Yale. She premiered this concerto in 1912. Horatio Parker conducted. She was the first Black woman to graduate from Yale. Her concerto has yet to be recorded with an orchestra.

02/17/21 Adolphus Hailstork - Piano Concerto

Hailstork's 1992 concerto was premiered in Norfolk with JoAn Falletta conducting the Virginia Symphony (which co-commissioned the work). Leon Bates was the soloist.

https://youtu.be/ZSCX_ZpYEuA

02/18/21 Undine Smith Moore - We Shall Walk in Peace

Moore became known as "The Dean of Black Women Composers." She wrote over 100 works, many for chorus. This is an arrangement of a traditional spiritual Moore published in 1977.

02/19/21 Philippa Schuyler - Five Little Pieces

Schuyler was a child prodigy, playing and composing at age 5. In her early 30s, she gave up the piano, weary of continually fighting prejudice in the classical music world.


Ralph Graves

Ralph has been a classical music programmer and host at WTJU since 1982. He’s also a published author and composer. Ralph’s music is available on Fleur de Sol and ERM Recordings and Soundcloud.

https://the-unmutual.blogspot.com/
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Niccolò Zingarelli Symphonies Surprise

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Classical Interviews – Jiyeon Choi