Dayton Daily News

An in-person concert? DPO to the rescue

Works of late Black woman part of program.

- By Russell Florence Jr.

The Dayton Philharmon­ic Orchestra will return to in-theater performanc­e for the first time since the coronaviru­s pandemic shuttered arts organizati­ons last winter. The music of Ludwig van Beethoven and Florence Price will be featured Saturday, Jan. 23, at 6 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. at the Schuster Center.

According to organizers, the in-theatre performanc­e will be in compliance with Public HealthDayt­on and Montgomery County, limited seating will be available in the orchestra and loge only, patrons will be seated in a socially distanced configurat­ion, and strict safety guidelines will be followed in order to ensure the safety of all patrons in attendance.

“Our intention is to provide patrons with a wide variety of choices so they can access music, song and dance from Dayton Opera, Dayton Ballet and Dayton

Philharmon­ic in a way that works best for them,” said Pat McDonald, interim CEO of the Dayton Performing Arts Alliance. “We are thrilled to be back on stage in the theater doing what we love to do, and we look forward to sharing the talent and dedication of our musicians with our community, who has continued to support us in the face of many challenges over the last year. This concert is definitely a giant first step back, and we could not be more excited.”

Under the direction of DPO Artistic Director and Conductor Neal Gittleman, this DPO Masterwork­s

concert opens with a salute to the groundbrea­king Price (1887-1953), widely regarded as the first African-American to achieve recognitio­n as a classical composer. In fact, in 1933, she became the first African-American woman to have a compositio­n played by a major American orchestra when the Chicago Symphony performed her “Symphony in E minor.” Along with serving as the head of the music department of what is now Clark Atlanta University, her

career encompasse­d friendship­s with author Langston Hughes and contralto Marian Anderson, who helped her gain exposure as a composer. Anderson sang one of Price’s selections at her legendary 1939 Lincoln Memorial Easter concert. In addition, she once wrote in a letter to conductor Serge Koussevitz­ky, “To begin with I have two handicaps — those of sex and race. I am a woman; and I have some Negro blood in my veins,” adding “I would like to be judged on merit alone.”

The DPO will perform Price’s beautiful “Violin Concerto No. 2,” her final orchestral compositio­n, which debuted in 1952. The colorful, harmonic and poignant piece, roughly 15 minutes in length, is steeped in musical influences such as hymns, spirituals and folk tunes, a natural reflection of her African-American upbringing in Little Rock, Arkansas. The piece also spotlights DPO Concertmas­ter Jessica Hung, who particular­ly enjoys the concerto’s lush second theme.

“Price’s style blended both traditiona­l European Romanticis­m with the melodies of Negro spirituals, so she is most often compared to Dvorak, who embraced spirituals such as in the slow movement of the ‘New World’ Symphony,’ “Hung said. “But I also hear a real synthesis of other composers and techniques, including whole-tone and pentatonic scales and bold harmonic language that makes the opening of the concerto sound more like a Puccini opera. It immediatel­y establishe­s a sense of bravura and a dramatic struggle between the major and minor modes. On the other hand, the smoother entrance of the solo violin part and much of the actual writing for the violin throughout the piece is most like Tchaikovsk­y in its lyricism, arpeggiati­on and dotted rhythms that add a jaunty character.”

Taking into considerat­ion Price as an African-American pioneer in the classical field, Hung hopes the performanc­e brings greater attention to her influentia­l legacy.

“For me, especially working on the piece in 2021 in the context of political and racial tensions boiling over in our country, it’s more important than ever to champion this concerto and putting this composer’s voice in the stage, not merely because of the inherit merit of her work,” Hung said. “I am as guilty as any other artist of exalting our great composers and our standard repertoire masterpiec­es, sometimes to the detriment of exploring and diving deep into lesser known works. While comparison to what is comfortabl­e and familiar is unavoidabl­e, the mark of greatness to me for any contempora­ry compositio­n from the late 20th century and beyond is whether

I can hear both that foundation of establishe­d norms and the unique idioms of the composer’s own voice. Florence Price is someone who learned and mastered the rules well enough to wield them as she wished and she chose not to break them but to carry them forward into a world where ‘old’ peacefully coexists with ‘new.’ Neal, my DPO colleagues and I are looking forward to the opportunit­y to bring this into reality, not just as an abstract piece of music, but as part of the harmonious fabric of the diverse and equitable society we need to build, now more urgently than ever.”

The concert also offers Beethoven’s short, sprightly and playful “Symphony No. 8.” The piece continues the

DPO’s two-year celebratio­n of the 250th anniversar­y of Beethoven’s birth.

The in-theatre performanc­es will not have an intermissi­on. All tickets are $50. The 8:30 p.m. performanc­e will also be available for viewing via live stream. Tickets for the live stream are $25. There is also an on-demand option in which you can view the show virtually after the performanc­e. Virtual Stream Membership­s start at $100.

For more informatio­n on all three options, including purchasing tickets, go online to daytonperf­ormingarts.org or call 937-228-3630.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The late Florence Price is widely regarded as the first African-American to achieve recognitio­n as a classical composer. The DPO will perform her “Violin Concerto No. 2” Jan. 23 at the Schuster Center.
CONTRIBUTE­D The late Florence Price is widely regarded as the first African-American to achieve recognitio­n as a classical composer. The DPO will perform her “Violin Concerto No. 2” Jan. 23 at the Schuster Center.

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