Composers Datebook for November 16, 2014 Sunday, November - TopicsExpress



          

Composers Datebook for November 16, 2014 Sunday, November 16 Coleridge-Taylor in Washington On todays date in 1904, the Washington Posts headline read, Hiawatha Tonight: Samuel Coleridge-Taylors Masterpiece to be sung at Convention Center. The 29-year old British composer himself, on his first visit to America, was to conduct the 200 members of the Coleridge-Taylor Choral Society of Washington DC, accompanied by the Marine Band orchestra. So who was this British composer and what had he done to inspire an American chorus to name itself after him? Coleridge-Taylor was born in 1875 to an African father from Sierra Leone and an English mother. Showing remarkable musical talent, he studied at the Royal Academy of Music in London, and rapidly established himself as a major choral composer with a trilogy of oratorios, all based on Longfellows epic poem Hiawatha. The first, Hiawathas Wedding Feast, had premiered in 1898. The Death of Minnehaha followed in 1899 and Hiawathas Departure premiered in 1900. These oratorios became wildly popular in England, but the 1904 concert in Washington DC was the first time all three had been performed on the same concert. The Coleridge-Taylor Society of Washington DC was Americas first African-American concert choir. Attending the Washington performance were many members of the Federal government and distinguished members of both black and white society. Coleridge-Taylor died young, at the age of 37, in 1912. His Hiawatha Trilogy continued to be very popular through the early decades of the 20th century, but nowadays is rarely, if ever, heard or performed. download.publicradio.org/podcast/composers_datebook/2014/11/16/datebook_20141116_128.mp3?elq=a84e3516d03840ee8e44b33ddd7404a3&elqCampaignId=10030
Posted on: Sun, 16 Nov 2014 12:59:52 +0000

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