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Dreams of a New Day

– Songs by Black Composers Burleigh: Five Songs of Laurence Hope; Bonds: Three Dream Portraits; Kerr: Riding to Town; Leslie Adams: Amazing Grace; Damien Sneed: I Dream a World; Shawn E Okpebholo: Two Black Churches; Owens: Mortal Storm; Fariña: Birmingham Sunday (arr. Liverman)

Will Liverman (baritone),

Paul Sánchez (piano)

Cedille 90000200 58:57 mins This outstandin­g disc of African-american art song marks the culminatio­n of years of work by baritone Will Liverman. As noted in the album’s sleeve notes, ‘the corpus of songs created by African

Americans about the experience of Black Americans have long been deemed insignific­ant and relegated to a status of near-invisibili­ty’. Liverman is on a mission to redress this injustice. A true passion project, Dreams of a New Day gives voice to the remarkable creative contributi­ons of Africaname­rican composers from the 20th century to the present day, while also celebratin­g the generation­s of poets and lyricists ‘who have encapsulat­ed seminal events from the African-american community’. Performed with beauty, poise and conviction, the resulting disc is a powerful tribute to a sea of talent too often neglected and sounds a call for social justice.

Contempora­ry composer Damien Sneed’s vibrant song opens the disc with suitable fire and sets Langston Hughes’s ‘I Dream a World’, a poem written in 1941 at the birth of the Civil Rights era which imagines the ‘sweet freedom’ of a better future. In a new commission for the album, Shawn E Okpebholo’s Two

Black Churches explores two

horrific acts of racial violence – the Birmingham, Alabama church bombing of 1963 and the Charleston church shooting of 2015 – with mesmerisin­g intensity. The first of the two songs, ’Ballad of Birmingham’, proves especially powerful.

The piano accompanim­ent melds gospel motifs with jagged discord, while a gentle, anthemlike melody flows through the vocal line. At once restrained and tender, the resulting performanc­e from Liverman and Sánchez is almost unbearably moving.

The earliest composer included is Henry ‘Harry’ Thacker Burleigh (1866–1949), often credited as the first

Black American composer to reimagine the spiritual in art song format for the concert hall. Keen to emphasise that ‘Black composers wrote so much more than spirituals’, Liverman astutely avoids programmin­g any spirituals here, however. (‘Amazing Grace’ is often mistaken for a spiritual but was in fact composed by 18th-century slave ship captain John Newton.) Instead, the disc features Burleigh’s Five Songs of Laurence Hope (1915), a stirring and quasi-operatic set of songs that set poems by Adela Florence Nicolson, writing under the pseudonym Laurence Hope, and recount snapshots of her travels in India and the Middle East. Margaret Bonds’s acclaimed cycle Three Dream Portraits (1959) is another highlight among the older works featured. Composed at the height of the civil rights movement, these three beautiful songs, also featuring texts by Langston Hughes, range from the wry lamentatio­n of ‘Minstrel Man’ to the powerful and affirming ‘I, Too’.

Liverman’s rich and responsive baritone is a tour de force throughout, matched at every turn by the pianist Paul Sánchez. With superb sleeve notes by Dr Louise Toppin, this excellent disc is commendabl­e in every aspect of its conception and execution.

PERFORMANC­E

RECORDING

★★★★★

★★★★★

Will Liverman’s rich and responsive baritone is a tour de force throughout

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 ??  ?? Man on a mission: baritone Will Liverman’s album is a labour of love
Man on a mission: baritone Will Liverman’s album is a labour of love

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