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African Heritage Symphonic Series, Vol. 1

Victor Carr Jr

Artistic Quality:

Sound Quality:

Cedille Records intends its African Heritage Symphonic Series as a follow-up to CBS Records’ Black Composers Series from the 1970s, and I’m happy to say Volume 1 makes for a strong start. Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912), chiefly remembered for his cantata based on Longfellow’s Hiawatha, actually was British-born, and his music is understandably more European sounding than that of his African American colleagues, though in some cases you can hear instances of traditionally African harmonic modulations. Thus, the Danse Nègre from the African Suite (1898) sounds sort of like Vaughan-Williams’ The Wasps spiced up by Dvorák’s Slavonic Dances. Dvorák is a composer who comes to mind again in the Petite Suite de Concert (1910), where Coleridge-Taylor exhibits the same qualities of tunefulness, rhythmic fluency, and sparkling orchestration as the Czech master.

William Grant Still (1895-1978) greatly admired Coleridge-Taylor, but he also was heavily influenced by the great jazz musicians of his time, in particular W.C. Handy, known as the “Father of the Blues”. It’s the sound of the blues that opens Still’s Symphony No. 1, and to hear it in full symphonic dress immediately calls to mind George Gershwin (both composers knew each other’s music). Various forms of jazz and blues permeate the symphony, yet Still constructs his work according to classic symphonic principles, and the result is a highly original, thought-provoking, and ultimately enjoyable creation.

From the African diaspora, we turn to the motherland for the music of Fela Sowande (1906-87). Sowande’s Africa Suite (1930) utilizes traditional melodies of his native Nigeria, allowing us to hear the actual modes and rhythms of Africa presented in European orchestral timbres–a hybrid that works thanks to conductor Paul Freeman’s rhythmic exactitude and to enthusiastic playing by the Chicago Sinfonietta. Freeman and his band give vibrant performances of the Coleridge-Taylor works as well, and show a far less self-conscious demeanor in the Still symphony than Neeme Järvi and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, playing with much more relaxed authenticity and “cool”. Cedille’s recording is a model of three-dimensional realism, making this disc both a sonic and musical treasure. [11/14/2001]


Recording Details:

Album Title: AFRICAN HERITAGE SYMPHONIC SERIES 1
Reference Recording: Still: Järvi (Chandos)

SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR - Danse Nègre from African Suite; Petite Suite de Concert
WILLIAM GRANT STILL - Symphony No. 1 "Afro-American"
FELA SOWANDE - African Suite (selections)

  • Record Label: Cedille - 90000 055
  • Medium: CD

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