Home
Blog
Composers
Musicians
Black History
Audio
About Us
Links
AfriClassical
Blog Companion to AfriClassical.com
Black
History Quiz
(52 questions on 3 levels of
difficulty)
Guest Book
William
J. Zick, Webmaster, wzick@ameritech.net
© Copyright 2006
William J. Zick
All rights reserved for all content of AfriClassical.com
YouTube.com video from
documentary on
Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges:
Le Mozart Noir,
Part I
|
Français
AfriClassical.com
African Heritage in Classical
Music
Here you will meet
52 composers, conductors and instrumental performers - Africans,
African Americans and Afro-Europeans. Many are alive today, but one
lived 500 years ago! These artists are unknown to most of us, yet
are so numerous this site can present only a fraction of them. They
have made enduring contributions to Classical Music. Several have
composed, conducted and performed Classical Music. Le
Chevalier de Saint-Georges (1745-1799) of Guadeloupe is one of
those multi-talented musicians. Cuban classical guitarist Leo
Brouwer (b. 1939) is another. Over 100 sound samples can be heard
at the Audio page and at the biographical pages. The links at left
lead to a Black History Quiz covering everyone profiled at the site
and a Guest Book in which you are invited to leave your
comments.
NEW - AfriClassical
Blog AfriClassical Blog is a new companion to
AfriClassical.com, launched July 20, 2007. The first post was
Black Composer In Polka Dots, a discussion of a recent
Calliope CD whose cover art depicts Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges
in a red jacket covered with white polka dots. Visit often to learn
of current issues involving Black composers and musicians!
Biography of Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges A June 28, 2007
update adds important new information from the latest biography,
Joseph de Saint-George, le Chevalier Noir, by Pierre Bardin.
Use the link beneath the portrait of Saint-Georges below, or follow
the Composers link at left to the Saint-Georges page.
Audio of Webmaster Bill Zick on WDET 101.9 FM, March 25,
2007 Listen to a 9 1/2-minute
radio essay on AfriClassical.com, introduced by Front Row
Center host Celeste Headlee on Detroit Public Radio.
Audio of Bill Zick on Michigan Radio, 91.7 FM Ann Arbor, 104.1 FM
Grand Rapids and 91.1 FM Flint
Here is the audio of the story on
AfriClassical.com by Jennifer Guerra of Michigan Radio. It
aired on Jan. 26, 2007. Ms. Guerra interviewed Bill Zick, visitor
Susan Taylor of Ypsilanti and Afa Sadykhly, Vice President of
Programming of the Sphinx Organization. To reach both
text and audio of the broadcast visit www.michiganradio.org, click on
the Arts tab at upper left, then search for AfriClassical Music on
the Arts page.
Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges
Arion 68093 (1990)
|
Composers of African Descent Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges was a
very fashionable composer, violinist and conductor as well as
Colonel of Black volunteers in the French Revolution. The U.S.
composer and arranger William Grant Still blended jazz and the
Blues in his emblematic Afro-American Symphony. Another 39
composers have been selected from Brazil, Canada, Cuba, France,
Guadeloupe, Haiti, Jamaica, Nigeria, Puerto Rico, South Africa, the
U.K. and the U.S. Quality links provide access to still more
biographies.
|
Girma Yifrashewa
(2001)
|
Musicians of African Descent
Ludwig van Beethoven wrote his
Bridgetower Sonata to display the talents of a violin
virtuoso, George Augustus Polgreen Bridgetower. Before the work was
published, the two had a falling out and the work was renamed the
Kreutzer Sonata! Girma Yifrashewa saw a piano for the first
time at age 16, yet he became the first Ethiopian classical pianist
to tour widely in Africa. Thomas "Blind Tom" Wiggins was a musical
genius born into slavery in 1849, blind and autistic. Nearly all of
his enormous earnings went to slave owners, and later to guardians,
even after Emancipation.
|
John
Blanke (Copyright BBC)
|
Black History and Classical Music The Black trumpeter
John Blanke served England's Kings Henry VII & VIII. A tapestry
shows him performing in 1511. Ignatius Sancho was born on a slave
ship near West Africa, and was soon orphaned. He was raised as a
house slave in England but escaped at age 20. Before long he was a
composer, anti-slavery activist and author of A Theory of
Music. A Black History Quiz includes interesting facts on all
52 composers and musicians.
|
|
Audio Samples
The Audio page features over 100
samples of music by 33 composers, conductors and instrumental
performers.
|
Black Opera and Concert Singers; A Resource Book is the
working title of a book in progress by Dominique-René de Lerma,
Professor of Music at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin,
and former Director of the Center for Black Music Research at
Columbia College Chicago. He wishes to alert schools, studio
teachers, singers, managers, and an interested public that he is
seeking information on current or past professional opera singers
and recitalists. He intends to include data on the more than 1,600
figures (already identified) that have been active in recitals and
opera (including musical theater). This includes performers from
outside the U.S. There will also be a directory to more than 700
operas by Black composers. The manuscript presently runs more than
1,000 pages. It will not include excerpted quotations of critics or
biographies. Please pass this information on to other interested
persons. As soon as Professor De Lerma is comfortable that the
field is well covered, the manuscript will be delivered to the
publisher. Anyone who wishes to communicate with the author may
send him E-mail at: ddelerma@afgconsulting.org
|
Comments