Page 18 - NWS Nov 2024 Playbill
P. 18

PROGRAM Notes





      THREE SPIRITUALS FOR ORCHESTRA
      Adolphus Cunningham Hailstork III  (b. 1941, Rochester, NY)
      Composed: 2005
      Instrumentation: pairs of woodwinds, two french horns, three trumpets,
      three trombones, one tuba, percussion and strings
      Duration: approximately 8 minutes
      Adolphus Hailstork is an American composer, educated at Howard University, the
      Manhattan School, and Michigan State University, where he received his PhD.  He has
      taught at various American universities and is currently a member of the faculty of
      Old Dominion University in Virginia.  His reputation for technical prowess, directness
      of  expression,  and  stylistic  accessibility for a  variety  of audiences has  garnered  him
      widespread recognition and awards. His wide span of musical compositions ranges
      from symphonies, opera and a violin concerto to “Springtime for Two Elephants” for
      two tubas. He often employs material relating to African-American traditions as points
      of departure.
      Three Spirituals for Orchestra aptly demonstrates his mastery of melding traditional music

      into a contemporary musical language. The first movement, based upon “Everytime I
      Feel the Spirit,” illustrates an approach that reminds one of Aaron Copland’s approach
      to Mexican music: While the traditional tune does appear clear and easy to apprehend,
      the composer then employs fragments of it to weave a rhythmic, syncopated, and

      often disjoint musical fabric, adroitly and artfully manipulated. The well-known campfire
      song, “Kum Ba Yah” is the apt subject of the bluesy second movement, and, as in the

      first movement, Hailstork demonstrates his complete mastery of orchestration—even
      matching the best of Broadway arrangers. Finally, a jazzy “Oh Freedom” is the basis of
      the last of these immensely appealing settings of traditional spirituals as the basis for
      sophisticated orchestral excursions.
      © 2017 William E. Runyan
      “LOVE WILL FIND A WAY” FROM SHUFFLE ALONG
      Eubie Blake, arr. Arroyo  (b. Baltimore, 1887 – d. Brooklyn, 1983)

      Shuffle Along premiered in 1921 in New York City
      Instrumentation: piano solo and strings

      Duration: approximately five minutes
      A widely celebrated American pianist, composer and lyricist, Eubie Blake was at the
      vanguard of the Harlem Renaissance and is widely acknowledged as a key fi gure in
      the evolution of the jazz movement in the United States. His musical talents were
      recognized at age four and by age 15 he was gigging throughout Baltimore before
      joining various ragtime and vaudeville acts. In 1921, Blake, along with F. E. Miller
      and Aubrey Lyles, premiered Shuffl e Along, the fi rst hit Broadway musical written
      by and about African Americans. “Love Will Find a Way” is among the hit songs
      introduced during the show.
      ©2024 Michael Christie

    18   |   New West Symphony
   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23