Florence Price
Concert Overture No. 2

African-American composer, organist, pianist, and educator, Florence Beatrice Price (née Smith) was born in Little Rock, AR on April 9, 1887 and died in Chicago, IL on June 3, 1953. Active as a composer and performer in the worlds of symphonic and commercial music, Price is also renowned for her choral and solo vocal compositions.

Her settings of spirituals were performed by some of the twentieth-century’s greatest singers, including Marian Anderson and Leontyne Price. She was also the first African-American woman to have a symphonic work performed by a major American orchestra, when Frederick Stock led the premiere of her Symphony No. 1 in E Minor with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in June, 1933. Much of Price’s music remained unpublished until after her death, but since 1918 the firm of G. Schirmer acquired the rights to her works, and more recent scholarship has led to ever more frequent performances of her music. Her Concert Overture no.2, was composed in 1943. Its orchestration calls for piccolo, 3 flutes, 2 oboes, English horn, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, harp, and strings.

Antonín Dvořák, while in the United States in the early 20th century, admonished American composers to look for its essence in the roots of Native and African-American music. This advice began to bear fruit in the 1930s, as two prominent Black composers, William Grant Still and Florence Price, began to rise to prominence. The fact that the latter was a woman made her achievements, and challenges she faced, all the more impressive. Born in the American South, Price sought to escape racism by moving from Little Rock and Atlanta to the friendlier climes of Chicago. Her extraordinary contribution to the classical repertory reflects, in her own soulful manner, the powerful late-romantic style of Dvořák’s music, as exhibited in the Czech master’s popular Symphony in E Minor (“From the New World”) mixed with the authentic voice of African-American culture—a beautiful example of cross-pollination.

Price’s Concert Overture no. 2 (the date of the first one is unknown), was composed in 1943, falling between the second and third of her four symphonies. Were it not for the good fortune and hard work of University of Arkansas librarians, Tom Dillard and Tim Nutt, the work might have been lost, as it was found among Price’s affects in an abandoned Chicago residence where she lived toward the end of her life. The work is based on three spirituals: “Go Down Moses,” “Ev’ry Time I Feel the Spirit,” and “Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen”. Program Note by David B. Levy, © 2022

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