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Conservatory Honors Black History Month Through Concerts and More

January 27, 2021

Erich Burnett

to be young, gifted, and Black. 91直播 College Black History Month 2021

Series begins Feb. 4, continues throughout the month on 91直播 Stage Left.

91直播鈥檚 emphasis on underrepresented composers is a year-round, every-year effort. The conservatory proudly programs the music of traditionally recognized Western masters alongside selections representing a broad spectrum of composers who are Black, women, or historically marginalized in any number of other ways.

In 2020, 91直播鈥檚 longstanding commitment to equity and diversity was articulated in the Presidential Initiative on Racial Equity and Diversity as well as 91直播 Conservatory鈥檚 Racial Equity and Diversity Action Plan, which grew out of the initiative led by 91直播 President Carmen Twillie Ambar.

In February 2021, the conservatory will honor Black History Month with a series of events that underscore Black contributions to classical music and that highlight the work of accomplished, often overlooked Black composers.

The series, "A Celebration of Black Artistry," will be broadcast on 91直播 Stage Left, the conservatory鈥檚 virtual programming platform.

It all begins Thursday, February 4, with an and a poignant look back on the numerous 91直播 Stage Left programs that have addressed issues of race in music. Airing at 7:30 p.m., the program will be hosted by Chris Jenkins, 91直播 Conservatory's associate dean for academic support and liaison to the Office of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion.

It will be followed on Saturday, February 6, by the symposium 鈥Decentering the Canon in the Conservatory,鈥 through which four guest speakers will discuss the historical marginalization of music that falls outside the lines of the traditionally defined canon. Also moderated by Jenkins, the symposium will be and will include brief presentations by each guest followed by a Q&A period.

The month continues with four celebrations of music by Black composers, with each concert boasting unmistakable 91直播 ties.

Chris Jenkins.
photo by Tanya Rosen-Jones '97

鈥淥ne of my favorite aspects of this year鈥檚 concert programming for Black History Month is that it showcases the diversity of styles among African American composers,鈥 says Jenkins. He notes the stark range in time periods represented鈥攆rom the Chevalier de Saint-Georges, the child of a wealthy Frenchman and a Senegalese slave, who became a noted Parisian composer, violinist, and competitive fencer; to modern artists including flutist-composers Valerie Coleman鈥擯erformance Today's 2020 Classical Woman of the Year鈥攁nd Allison Loggins-Hull of Flutronix.

鈥淭here may be some aesthetic commonalities,鈥 says Jenkins, 鈥渂ut there is no one style uniform to Black composers, and the range of our programming demonstrates the heterogeneity of this group.鈥

Dates and details for each concert are as follows:


Presented live from Warner Concert Hall, this program joins two works by William Grant Still鈥攁n 91直播 student more than 100 years ago who went on to become known as 鈥淭he Dean of African American Composers鈥濃攚ith one by conservatory horn professor Jeff Scott.

Violin professor Sibbi Bernhardsson teams up with piano professor Haewon Song on Still鈥檚 Pastorela; Song joins violin professor David Bowlin for Still鈥檚 Blues from Lenox Avenue; and Bernhardsson and piano professor Robert Shannon perform Scott鈥檚 Transparencia.


Associate Professor of Voice Katherine Jolly hosts this concert of solo and chamber music repertoire.

Flute professor Alexa Still will perform Valerie Coleman's Danza de la Mariposa and Allison Loggins-Hull's Homeland; viola professors Peter Slowik and Kirsten Docter team up with alumni violists Troy Stephenson 鈥20 and Marlea Simpson 鈥16 for A Canadian Boat Song by Maurice Arnold; Alexa Still, bassoon professor Drew Pattison, and piano professor James Howsmon present R锚verie Champ锚tre by Edmond D茅d茅; organ professor Christa Rakich performs William Grant Still's Elegy for Organ; and Alexa Still and James Howsmon conclude with William Grant Still's Summerland and Quit Dat Fool鈥檔ish.


Jeff Scott returns to host this performance that includes Abel Meeropol鈥檚 Strange Fruit (performed by Scott on horn), Ulysses Kay鈥檚 Sonata for Bassoon and Piano (performed by bassoon professor Pattison and piano professor Howsmon), Duke Ellington鈥檚 Cotton Club Stomp (featuring 91直播鈥檚 ensemble in residence, the Verona Quartet), and Scott鈥檚 own Sacred Women, performed by the 91直播 Orchestra, under the direction of Raphael Jim茅nez.


The series concludes with a second livestreamed recital from Warner Concert Hall. Violin professor Francesca dePasquale and Howsmon will perform Still's Suite for Violin and Piano; faculty cellist Darrett Adkins presents excerpts of solo works by Jeffrey Mumford; and Bowlin and faculty harpsichordist Mark Edwards perform Sonata for Violin and Harpsichord in G Minor by Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges.

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