Tag: Paul Freeman

  • Black Composers Series Rediscovered

    Black Composers Series Rediscovered

    To reiterate, the 2019 compact disc reissue of CBS Records’ landmark Black Composers Series of the 1970s, though lamentably underpublicized and unconscionably delayed, was still just ahead of the curve, as there has been an explosion of Black classical music in our concert halls in only the last few years. In the intervening decades? The pickings were slim.

    These visionary recordings, made under the direction of conductor Paul Freeman (pictured) and employing world class orchestras and soloists, were originally released on vinyl between 1974 and 1978, providing rare exposure to 200 years’ worth of neglected music at a time when most of it was essentially unknown.

    This week on “The Lost Chord,” it’s the third in a four-part survey of highlights from this exciting boxed set, which was reissued, finally, by Sony Classical.

    José Silvestre de los Dolores White y Lafitte (or José or Joseph White, for short) was one of the great romantic violinists. Born in Cuba in 1835, he made his public debut at the age of 18 with the most celebrated North American pianist of the day, Louis Moreau Gottschalk. It was Gottschalk who encouraged White to study at the Paris Conservatory and who raised the money to send him there. This launched the young man on a globetrotting trajectory that sent him all over Europe, the Caribbean, South America, Mexico, and the Northeastern United States.

    White died in Paris in 1918. We’ll hear his Violin Concerto in F-sharp minor, played by the prolific and committed Aaron Rosand. Why this is not a repertory piece is anybody’s guess.

    David Baker, born in 1931, was professor of jazz studies at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, a program he founded. From 1991 to 2012, he was also director and conductor of the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra. On top of everything else, he was extraordinarily productive as a writer and recording artist, leaving over 65 recordings, 70 books, and 400 articles.

    Baker died in 2016. He was trained as a trombonist – he was active as a jazz performer throughout the 1940s and early ‘50s – but a facial injury suffered in an automobile accident caused him to switch to the cello. We’ll hear Baker’s Cello Sonata, composed in 1973 for the great Janos Starker, who will perform it with Alain Planès at the keyboard.

    Finally, Roque Cordero was born in Panama City in 1917. He studied composition with Ernst Krenek and conducting with Dimitri Mitropoulos. He became director of Panama’s Institute of Music and artistic director and conductor of its National Symphony. Later, he was assistant director of the Latin American Music Center, professor of composition at Indiana University, and, from 1972, distinguished professor emeritus at Illinois State University. Cordero died in Dayton, Ohio, in 2008, at the age of 91.

    Fascinatingly, Cordero’s music tends to balance Panamanian folklore with more advanced techniques. The boxed set contains not only his Violin Concerto, with Sanford Allen the soloist, but also “Eight Miniatures for Small Orchestra” of 1948. We’ll hear Paul Freeman conduct the latter with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra.

    I hope you’ll join me for “Black to the Future, Part III,” yet another program of highlights from the Sony Classical reissue of CBS Records’ forward-looking Black Composers Series, on “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – ALL NEW! – Saturday at 11:00 AM EST/8:00 AM PST

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Adolphus Hailstork & “Done Made My Vow”

    Adolphus Hailstork & “Done Made My Vow”

    I’ve been a fan of Adolphus Hailstork since the 1980s. That’s when I first heard “Done Made My Vow,” as part of a concert broadcast over the radio.

    “Done Made My Vow” (1985), often described as a gospel oratorio, was inspired in part by speeches of Martin Luther King, Jr. So uplifting was the marriage of words and music, I hoped for years that it would be recorded. Then one day I stumbled across a copy in the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra gift shop.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” I hope you’ll join me for this extraordinary piece, scored for speaker, chorus and orchestra.

    Hailstork has been part of the fabric of American music since at least the 1970s. Born in Rochester, New York, in 1941, he earned his BA from Howard University, his MA from the Manhattan School of Music – where his teachers included Vittorio Giannini and David Diamond – and his doctorate from Michigan State, where his studied with H. Owen Reed. Then he was off, like so many of his great American forebears, to study at Fontainebleau with Nadia Boulanger.

    For many years, Hailstork was composer-in-residence at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, where he taught. He is perhaps best known for his choral music, though it was the wistful slow movement of his Symphony No. 1, composed for a summer music festival in Ocean Grove, New Jersey, that next caught my ear.

    His brief but boisterous curtain-raiser “Celebration!” was included in Paul Freeman’s legendary “Black Composers Series,” recorded for Columbia Records back in the 1970s. Freeman remained a champion of Hailstork’s work for the rest of his career. I particularly recommend his recording of “Sonata da Chiesa,” a multi-movement work for string orchestra, inspired by Hailstork’s impressions as a boy chorister singing at the Cathedral of All Saints in Albany.

    As preamble to the oratorio, we’ll also enjoy Hailstork’s rhythmically exciting “Variations for Trumpet” (1981).

    The music is hale, but the sentiments are King. I hope you’ll join me for “Done Made My Vow,” on “All Hail Hailstork,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.

    AND, if you are as swept away by it as I was, you might be interested to know that the New York Philharmonic will be performing it on the same series of concerts with William Grant Still’s Symphony No. 2 “Song of a New Race,” March 2-4!


    Hailstork’s “Sonata da Chiesa” (1992)

    Symphony No. 1 (1988): Mov’t II, Lento ma non troppo

    “Motherless Child” (2002)

    “Celebration!” (1974)

  • 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 Composers Series Reissue Celebrated

    Black Composers Series Reissue Celebrated

    During Black History Month, I thought it would be good time to share some archived episodes I put together for “The Lost Chord,” on WWFM – The Classical Network, to celebrate the reissue – after 40 years – of Columbia Records’ Black Composers Series.

    The series was the brainchild of conductor Paul Freeman, who drew from 200 years-worth of neglected repertoire written by composers of color. The performances were released on nine LPs. Trying to collect them over the decades has been like panning for gold for us classical music prospectors.

    Astonishingly, the boxed set of ten CDs, now including a bonus disc of spiritual arrangements, was simply dropped on the market with zero advertising, not even on the Sony Classical website. News was circulated strictly through word of mouth and thanks to bloggers and broadcasters like myself. For me, it was totally unexpected, and the adrenaline surged, when I spotted it on the shelf at Princeton Record Exchange.

    Thankfully, in the decades since the project was first undertaken, a handful of the composers have entered the fringes of the concert repertoire, but there are still a number of fascinating discoveries to be savored.

    George Walker’s “Lyric for Strings” (not included in the set) has found particular success recently, and deservedly so. Part Two of my “Lost Chord” broadcasts devoted to the subject (the second of a four-part series) includes Walker’s Trombone Concerto and a Requiem Mass from 1816 by the Brazilian composer José Maurício Nunes Garcia. Walker, not incidentally, was the first African-American recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Music.

    I am linking webcasts of the individual segments on Saturdays throughout February. Follow the links, click “listen,” and enjoy.

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

    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

  • Black Composers Rediscovered

    Black Composers Rediscovered

    During Black History Month, I thought it would be good time to share this archived episode of “The Lost Chord,” the first of a four-part series celebrating the efforts of conductor Paul Freeman in reviving 200 years’ worth of neglected repertoire by composers of color.

    The Black Composer Series was originally issued on Columbia Records back in the 1970s, its individual volumes much sought-after by collectors. I almost passed out when I found it had finally been reissued on compact disc as a boxed set, though with astonishingly little fanfare, by Sony Classical. I hadn’t seen anything about it until I discovered it on the shelf at Princeton Record Exchange.

    Some of the composers have since found a toehold on the fringes of the concert repertoire – William Grant Still, George Walker, and the Chevalier de Saint-Georges are being heard with more frequency these days – but there are still many fascinating discoveries to be savored.

    The series originally aired on WWFM – The Classical Network in 2019. I’ll post another segment each Saturday in February. Or you can just binge on all four now.

    Part One features selections by Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Olly Wilson, and Fela Sowande. Follow the link, click “listen,” and enjoy.

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

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