In the early part of the 20th Century, before the end of segregation, Florence Price did the extraordinary.
Price became the first African American woman composer of major symphonies. Her musical compositions are world-renowned. Price was, as U of A Music Department violin professor Er-Gene Kahng said, “a remarkable woman who led a life of quiet tenacity and resistance.”
That is what brought Kahng to Ostrava, Czech Republic, this spring to record a world-premiere release of Florence Price’s violin concertos, which will be released by Albany Records in January 2018.
Florence Price was born in Little Rock in 1887, shortly after the Reconstruction era that followed the Civil War, and was 32 when women gained the right to vote.
Price died in Chicago in 1953 — one year before the Supreme Court ordered the desegregation of American schools — and her compositions were essentially lost until 2009, when they were discovered during the renovation of a house that had been owned by her daughter. The University of Arkansas bought the manuscripts and they are currently a part of the Special Collections at the University Libraries.
Kahng, who is also director of graduate advising as well as professor in the Department of Music of the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences, and James Greeson, professor emeritus of music, discovered Price’s violin concertos while combing through the collection – including one that historians did not know existed.
Price never attained full recognition during her lifetime and, as Kahng puts it, has been nearly forgotten to history. Yet her enormous compositional output shows that she never stopped writing and producing. Kahng said she hopes that this project will raise awareness about “an inspiring life and incredible musical mind that continued to persevere, hope and achieve in the face of adversity and discouraging setbacks.”
“Once it was decided that I would be collaborating with [them], I couldn’t have been more happy,” Kahng said. “I felt deeply honored to have the chance to make music with an orchestra of their stature, and knew we would be producing a remarkable recording in their hands.”
So on May 2, Kahng flew to Ostrava, the third-largest city on the Czech Republic and began work with a 60- piece ensemble with 24 microphones located throughout the studio.
“We had three days to record all the music, so it was initally challenging to know how to make the most efficient use of time while not getting sloppy or panicked,” she said. “Recording is usually a highly artificial environment because the music is cut up into various start/stop points, and those sections are often recorded several times.”
Kahng said the most difficult part of the recording process was trying to
Because Kahng doesn’t speak Czech, and many of the musicians didn’t speak English fluently, they had to rely on a translator. However, they all spoke the language of music.
“Most of Price’s musical terms were written in Italian, so we communicated key phrases when needed. Instead of someone asking, ‘are we going faster in this section?’ they would just ask me directly, ‘Piu mosso?’ and I could respond, ‘Poco’ or ‘Qui, legato e piano,’ and so on.”
The best part for Kahng? “The solidification process: The feeling that we were slowly becoming more and more familiar with one another, and realizing that things were coming together.”
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