#ClassicsaDay #BlackHistoryMonth 2022 Week 3

February is Black History Month, and a great opportunity to explore the music of black composers. That's what the Classics a Day team felt, anyway.

As always, I tried to find works and composers that I hadn't shared before during #BlackHistoryMonth. Here are my posts for the second week.

02/14/22 Harry T. Burleigh - From the Southland

This piano suite was published in 1910. Burleigh dedicated it to his friend, the British composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor.

02/15/22 R. Nathaniel Dett - Magnolia Suite

This piano suite was published in 1912. Dett's goal was to synthesize African-American music with classical forms in the same way Dvorak did with Czech folk music.

02/16/22 William Dawson - Negro Folk Symphony

Dawson completed this work in 1932, and it was premiered by Leopold Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra two years later. Dawson revised the symphony in 1952 after visiting Africa.

02/17/22 William Grant Still - Symphony No. 2 in G minor, "Song of a New Race"

Still wrote this about his 1937 work: "The Symphony in G minor describes the black people of the current America, a totally new man, as a result of the mixture of white, Indian and black bloods".

02/18/22 Clarence Cameron White - Lament

White recorded his composition in 1920. It was recorded for Broome Special Phonograph Records, the first black-owned label in the States.

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/
Previous
Previous

George Crumb Metamorphoses -exceptional in every way

Next
Next

Felix Draeseke String Quartets, Vol. 2 improves upon Vol. 1