Florence Price and Robert Nathaniel Dett
Florence Price (1888-1953), composer, pianist, organist, and educator, is the first Black woman composer to have established an international recognition as a composer. She wrote many compositions and arrangement for various media. Her musical works have been stated to combine "the melodies and rhythms of Black culture, Black religious spirituality, and European romantic mood and techniques" (Reese 2021, n.p.). Her most noteworthy works include the Piano Sonata in E Minor, for which she won many prizes, and her most famous work, Symphonie in E Minor, which was performed by the Chicago Symphony in 1933.
Florence Price (1888-1953)
Robert Nathaniel Dett (1882–1943), pianist, composer, arranger, and educator, was born in Drummondville, Ontario, and died at Battle Creek, Michigan. Dett is the first African American to graduate from Oberlin Conservatory of Music with a degree in piano and composition. His musical output covers over 200 piano, vocal, and choral works. As a nationalistic composer, his musical works fused the elements of traditional Black music into his choral and keyboard compositions. His compositions that made use of spirituals include his oratorio The Chariot Jubilee (1919), the motet, "Don’t Be Weary Traveler ," the motet "Listen to the Lambs"(1923), and the oratorio The Ordering of Moses: Biblical Folk Scenes (1932).
In The Bottoms
I. Prelude (Night)
II. His Song
III. Honey (Humoresque)
IV. Barcarolle (Morning)
IV. Juba Dance
Robert Nathaniel Dett (1882-1943)