The Price of Admission: A Musical Biography of Florence Beatrice Price
Airs Sunday, Feb. 24, at 9 pm on 105.9 FM and WQXR.org
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Florence Beatrice Price wrote more than 300 musical compositions. Some of her works have been lost, others are unpublished, and some of piano and vocal music is still being heard in concert halls. When contralto Marian Anderson gave that historic concert at the Lincoln Memorial in 1939, she concluded her recital with Price’s “My Soul’s Been Anchored in the Lord.” And since the 1930s, Price’s art songs and spiritual settings have been favorites of artists who specialize in African American concert music.
At 9 p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 24, join Terrance McKnight, WQXR host and former Morehouse professor of music, for "The Price of Admission," a one-hour program that brings to light the music and legacy of one of America’s pioneering but nearly forgotten composers and takes a biographical look at Price’s symphonic music, songs, and works for piano and organ. The radio documentary includes archival interview tape of composer Margaret Bonds talking about her friendship with Price and Marian Anderson’s performances of Price’s music recorded during “The Bell Telephone Hour,” a popular musical showcase in the 1940-'60s.
Price was born in Little Rock, Ark., but spent her professional career in Chicago. Due to her musical talent and her family’s affluence, Price enrolled at the New England Conservatory in Boston, where she majored in organ and piano. After graduating with two degrees, Price worked as a college professor, a church organist and a theater accompanist. However, she is best remembered as the first woman of African descent to have a symphony performed by a major American orchestra. In 1933, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra played her Symphony in E minor. That orchestra also premiered her Piano Concerto the following year.
Video: Florence B. Price "To My Little Son" Erin Flannery, Soprano and Terrance McKnight, Piano
Music heard within the program:
Florence Price: Concerto in One Movement
Florence B. Price Concerto in One Movement, Symphony in E Minor
Florence Price: "Dances in the Canebrakes: Silk Hat and Walking Cane"
Black Diamonds: Althea Waites plays music by African-American Composers
Blind Boone: "Sparks: Galop de Concert" (1894)
Marshfield Tornado: John Davis Plays Blind Boone
Florence Price: Symphony in E Minor
Florence B. Price Concerto in One Movement, Symphony in E Minor
Florence Price: "Hold Fast to Dreams"
Ah! Love, But a Day, Songs and Spirituals of American Women
Gioachino Rossini: Stabat Mater, "Inflammatus et accensus"
Wiener Philharmoniker; Myung-Whun Chung, conductor
Traditional: "Go Down, Moses"
Dvorak Discoveries
Carl Heinrich Reinecke: Concerto No. 2 op. 120 in E minor
Carl Heinrich Reinecke Piano Concertos 1-4
Alexandre Guilmant: Organ Sonata No. 1 in D Minor
Guilmant Organ Music
George Whitefield Chadwick: Symphonic Sketches I. Jubilee
Symphony No. 2; Symphonic Sketches
Florence Price: Symphony No. 3 in C minor Juba: Allegro
Florence Price: The Oak, Mississippi River Suite, Symphony No. 3
Florence Price: "The Oak"
Florence Price: The Oak, Mississippi River Suite, Symphony No. 3
Roland Hayes: "Beau Soir," "Alma del core," "Pity a Po' Boy," "Du bist die Ruh," "Orfeo Vi ricordo o bosch ombrosi"
The Art of Roland Hayes, Six Centuries of Songs
Alessandro Scarlatti: "Se Florindo e Fedele"
Marian Anderson Rare and Unpublished Recordings, 1936-1952
Florence Price: "Fantasie Negre"
Kaleidescope: Music by African American Women
Hector Berlioz: L'Enfance du Christ, Op. 25 - Partie 2: La fuite en Egypte: Le repos de la Sainte Famille - Les pèlerins étant venus
Florence Price: "Dances in the Canebrakes: Tropical Noon"
Black Diamonds: Althea Waites plays music by African-American Composers
Florence Price (arr.): "My Soul's Been Anchored in de Lord"
Marian Anderson: He's Got the Whole World in His Hand Spirituals
Florence Price: "Song to Dark Virgin"
American Classics Explore America Vol. 1
Florence Price: "Toccata"
Chicago Renaissance Woman, Florence B. Price Organ Works
Florence Price: "Mississippi River Suite"
Florence Price: The Oak, Mississippi River Suite, Symphony No. 3
"City Called Heaven"
Angela M. Brown, Mosaic: A Collection of African-American Spirituals with Piano and Guitar
Special thanks to Hatch Billops Collection, Helen Walker-Hill Collection at University of Colorado at Boulder, Rodgers and Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Center for Black Music Research and New York Public Radio Archivist Andy Lanset.


Comments [8]
Utmost appreciation and sincerest gratitude to QWXR for presenting this glorious tribute to the legacy of Ms. Florence Beatrice Price and her impressive body of work left for us to behold, to listen, and to enjoy. By the same, I wholeheartedly commend, host, Mr. Terrance McKnight for his masterful presentation of this and the other lovely works featured during this Black History Month. His vast knowledge of classical music and it's dynamism in terms of the US Black experience is a welcome breath of fresh air to all, and in particular, to our black community as well.
Thank you again Terrance for introducing me to a composer that I was oblivious to, although familiar with her cohorts; William Grant Still and Margaret Bonds. Continue to enlighten us about the contributions of our people to the world of music.
Re/Discovering the Music of
Florence Beatrice Price
Featuring
guest speaker,
Dr. Victoria
Bond of the
New York
Philharmonic.
Co-sponsored by the African-American History Month
Committee, Women’s History Month Committee and
the RCC Black Student Union.
For information, contact Dr. Shamika Mitchell:
845.574.4162
Monday, 4 March 2013
6:30 PM - Ellipse Room,
Technology Center
Rockland Community College
Thank you so very much for this invaluable program. I have long since wanted to explore more of Florence's life and works. This has been a great synopsis, enough for me to begin further exploration and appreciation of this talented woman.
Terrence Mc Knight is making an invaluable contribution to the station's programming, to QXR listeners, and to the rich legacy of African Americans with the bios he's been writing, co/writing, and narrating. From King to Price we've been enlightened with factoids, introduced to new folks, and heard a variety of often new music to our ears. Congrats, and THANK YOU!(So, program directors, let's hear some of this music more often. I, for maybe the only one, have heard Lark Ascending often enough!)
vyctorynotes.blogspot.com says: Thank you so much for all your dedications this Black History/Herstory month. I have learned and enjoyed quite a lot!
Kudos to Terrance Mcknight on the Price of Admission, a fascinating musical biography of a composer I knew nothing about. I hope this will be widely heard outside of the WQXR listening area, and will be repeated on WQXR itself in future years. This whole series has been wonderful -- enjoyed the Langston Hughes program as well. Terrance should do more of these!
Thank you for introducing me to the beautiful music and moving story of Florence Price.
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