Tag: Black History Month

  • Black History Month Light Music on KWAX

    Black History Month Light Music on KWAX

    Some of the artists that will be featured on tomorrow morning’s “Sweetness and Light,” complete with a couple of Princeton Record Exchange stickers (green price tags) and an Adolphus Hailstork autograph (obtained at the premiere of his Symphony No. 4)! It’s the first of two newly-recorded light music programs for Black History Month. Part 1 of “Black and Light” will air this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, with Part 2 to follow next week. It’s music calculated to charm and to cheer, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!

    Stream it, wherever you are, here:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Black Composers Rediscovered Black History Month

    Black Composers Rediscovered Black History Month

    Throughout the month of February, to coincide with Black History Month, I’ve been reaching into the archive for relevant material from “The Lost Chord,” originally broadcast over WWFM – The Classical Network.

    My four-part survey, “Black to the Future,” celebrates the compact disc reissue – after 40 years – of Columbia Records’ landmark Black Composers Series. These visionary recordings, made under the direction of conductor Paul Freeman (pictured), were originally released on vinyl between 1974 and 1978. Now collected into a 10-CD box set by Sony Classical, they provide a rare overview of 200 years-worth of neglected music, from a time when most of it was essentially unknown. Indeed, there are still plenty of fascinating discoveries to be savored.

    The third installment includes a Romantic violin concerto by Cuban composer José Silvestre de los Dolores White y Lafitte (José White, for short), a cello sonata written for Janos Starker by David Baker, and “Eight Miniatures for Small Orchestra” by Panamanian composer Roque Cordero.

    https://www.wwfm.org/post/lost-chord-february-17-black-future-part-iii

    If you missed it, here’s Part One, with music by Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Olly Wilson, and Fela Sowande:

    https://www.wwfm.org/post/lost-chord-february-3-black-future

    And Part Two, with works by George Walker and José Maurício Nunes Garcia:

    https://www.wwfm.org/post/lost-chord-black-future-part-ii

    Follow the links, click “listen,” and enjoy.

  • Black History Month Classical Music on WPRB

    Black History Month Classical Music on WPRB

    Now that we’re all finished with the Groundhog, St. Valentine (snowed out, actually), and the Presidents, we can turn our attention fully to Black History Month. Tomorrow morning on WPRB, we’ll survey over 200 years worth of music by composers of color.

    We’ll hear pieces by Joseph Boulogne (the Chevalier de Saint-Georges), Margaret Bonds, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, William Levi Dawson, R. Nathaniel Dett, Duke Ellington, Adolphus Hailstork, Ulysses Kay, Florence Price, William Grant Still, George Walker, José Silvestre White Lafitte (a.k.a. Joseph White), and others.

    I hope you’ll join me as I celebrate Black History Month, tomorrow morning from 6 to 11 EST, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com. Black is the new black, on Classic Ross Amico.


    PHOTOS: (clockwise from left) Joseph White, Florence Price, Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges, and Samuel Coleridge-Taylor

  • Dett’s “Ordering of Moses” Black History Month

    Dett’s “Ordering of Moses” Black History Month

    It’s Black History Month. Rather than wait for the Passover season, I thought this would be an excellent excuse to unveil a recent recording, on the Bridge Records, Inc. label, of R. Nathaniel Dett’s “The Ordering of Moses.”

    Dett, the grandson of fugitive slaves, was born on the Canadian side of Niagara Falls. He studied all over the place, including Oberlin, the Eastman School, Harvard, and the American Conservatory at Fontainebleau, France. He taught all over the place, too. He made influential contacts and brought increased visibility to Black concert music. His was an important voice in the history of American art.

    “The Ordering of Moses” was composed in 1932. The recording, which documents a live 2014 concert of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and May Festival Chorus conducted by James Conlon, is electrifying.

    Hear it today. It’s one of our featured works between noon and 4:00 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

  • Black Composers on WPRB for Black History Month

    Black Composers on WPRB for Black History Month

    Yet to come this morning: William Levi Dawson’s “Negro Folk Symphony,” Olly Wilson’s “Piano Piece for Piano and Electronic Sound,” Joseph Bologne, le Chevalier de Saint-George’s Symphony in G Major, Op. 11, No. 1, Adolphus Hailstork’s cantata “I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes,” Florence Price’s Symphony No. 3, Duke Ellington’s “A Tone Parallel to Harlem,” and more.

    Also, Dashon Burton, Bass-Baritone will perform spirituals, arranged by Harry T. Burleigh and others, from a new album, titled “Songs of Struggle and Redemption: We Shall Overcome.”

    We’re celebrating Black History Month until 11:00, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com.

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