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Think About It: Conversations with African American Composers


In Musical Landscapes in Color: Conversations with Black American Composers, Banfield emphasizes the linkage between the music of the "old guard"-musicians of yesteryear-and their impact on the contemporary Black classical musicians and American music today.

Listen to "Left of Black with Bill Banfield" a thirty-minute conversation in which Banfield and his interviewer Mark Anthony Neal, the James B. Duke Distinguished Professor of African and African American Studies.

Left of Black with Bill Banfield

Left of Black with Bill Banfield [ 00:00-00:00 ]

Explore specific ideas related to this lesson's topic, and then answer the following questions:

  • What is your understanding of the term cultural relevance? How do you think this understanding will affect the material you will encounter in this class?
  • Why do you think there are very few venues for Black composers to bring their music to the forefront?
  • Why is it the young musicians do not know about the long lineage of Black composers?
  • What is the understanding in listening to the music in this course of "passing on the torch"?
  • What is your understanding of the challenge phrase "the producers of culture are not the conceptualist of culture anymore"?
  • What is your understanding of the phrase "stream of a continuum," its relation to the "old guard" and present-day musicians?
Street Musicians (1939-1940), by William H. Johnson.

Street Musicians (1939-1940), by William H. Johnson.

William C. Banfield

Can you imagine American music without the work of Black composers or without Black music in general? Still, there is a refusal, a denial, of that reality.

William C. Banfield

We got some Black Beethovens living up in here, and what's most sad is, y'all don't even know it!