Suggested Works by Black Composers for Students

Timothy Holley

I’m pleased to introduce and provide this list of graded music for cello of African-American composers for student exposure, education and use in performance. Some of these pieces are “adopted and adapted” from the Negro spiritual tradition. Such adaptation should not pose unusual difficulties for the developing cellist; however, the larger editorial challenge lies in matters of fingering and bowing. A minimum technical level of Suzuki Book 4 proficiency should be sufficient for most players to execute the majority of these pieces. 

This music stands apart from the larger European pedagogical tradition and technical orientation, but should find a place of similarity and alliance with the Suzuki-influenced folk song repertoire that so many of us have heard in our early lessons and gradual indoctrination into the European-American art-music tradition. It is my sincere hope that these pieces speak to each musician on larger cultural levels and in directly endearing musical ways. Just as a creative and performance “space” was made for the Negro spirituals through the work of Harry Thacker Burleigh, Roland Hayes, Paul Robeson and Marian Anderson, so should a parallel instrumental tradition be easily “adopted, adapted”—and inculcated into the “pedagogical cello repertoire,” which informs and buttresses the standard repertoire. This graded repertoire should also serve as technical and aesthetic “preparation” for study and performance of the more advanced “standard-level” repertoire of African American composers.

Most titles are commercially available online. Other specific titles can be acquired directly from the composers or from myself, Dr. Holley.

 

 

Music of Black Composers (MBC), Violoncello Repertoire List 
(partial, graded in terms of technical difficulty/requisite musical maturity):

 

Technical Level “A”: Nearly all settings of Negro spirituals (unless otherwise indicated). Level “A” is largely concentrated in 1st and 2nd positions, and contains a fair degree of flexibility and contained melodic range.

 

Roy Belfield, Jr. (b.1968): Two Spirituals—”So Glad I’m Here”, “Guide My Feet” (2013). Find more score information here.  

Margaret Bonds (1913-1972): “He’s Got The Whole World In His Hands” (1959); “Go Tell It On The Mountain” (1962); “Joshua Fit The Battle of Jericho” (1963); Publisher(s): Beekman Music/Mercury Music, Theodore Presser. 

Barbara Logan Cooke (1921-2017): Two Negro Spirituals: “Jesus Walked This Lonesome Valley”; “Fix Me, Jesus” (1997); Publisher: Original manuscript.

Betty Jackson King (1928-1994): “Calvary” (1983). Publisher: Chicago, IL: Jacksonian Press, Inc. Find more score information here. 

Phillip McIntyre (1951-1991): “Heav’n Bound Suite” (cello and organ/piano, 1987). Find more score information here

Hale Smith (1925-2009): “I Want To Die Easy” (1988). Halsco Publishers.

William Grant Still (1895-1978): “Here’s One” (1941). Original version in E minor. Publisher: Bryn Mawr, PA: The John Church Company/Theodore Presser Company, Carl Fischer. Arrangement for violin and piano by Louis Kaufman. Williamgrantstillmusic.com

Dolores White ( b.1933): Two Spirituals (1987), “Little David Play On Your Harp”; “Were You There”. Cleveland, OH: Ludwig Publishing Company. Find more score information here.  

John W. Work III (1901-1967): This Little Light of Mine (1945). Galaxy Music Corporation. Find more score information here.

 

 

Technical Level “B”: Progressing beyond first and second position at the cello.

 

Margaret Bonds (1913-1972): Troubled Water, version for cello and piano (1948)/Manuscript

Claudio Brindis de Salas (1852-1911): Consolation, Opus 5 (Chanson Sans Paroles) for piano and violin; Paris: Louis Gregh, c.1886

Charles S. Brown (b.1935): Songs Without Words (c.1977). Willis C. Patterson, Anthology of Art Songs by Black American Composers; Edward B. Marks Music Company/Hal Leonard Music. 

Lawrence Brown (1893-1972): SPIRITUALS: Five Negro Folk Songs for Cello and Piano (1923), “Nobody Knows de Trouble I See; “I Know de Lord’s Laid His Hands On Me”; “Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child”; “Swing Low Sweet Chariot”; “Ev’ry Time I Feel de Spirit”. Schott & Co, London, 1923

Lawrence Brown (1893-1972): Arranged for voice and piano. “Didn’t My Lord deliver Daniel?”; “Who’s Been Here?” (“Shortnin’ Bread” refrain); “Hear de Lam’s a-cryin’” (“Feed My Sheep”); “Goin’ to ride up in de Chariot”; “Dere’s a Man goin’ roun’ takin’ Names”. Schott & Co., London, 1930

Harry T. Burleigh (1866-1949): Spirituals: “Nobody Knows de Trouble I See”; “Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child” (c.1916); Southland Sketches (orig. vn/pno, 1916). Find more score information here. Recommending mvts. 1 & 3 only here.

Jacqueline Hairston (b.1932): “Guide My Feet,” Classical Vocal Reprints, 1991. Find more score information here

Moses Hogan (1957-2003): Deep River (2000). Hal Leonard Publishers.

James Lee III (b.1975): This Little Light of Mine (2001). Willis C. Patterson, Anthology of Afro-American Art Songs by Black American Composers, Volume Two.

Undine Smith Moore (1904-1989): “Ride Up In The Chariot” (1978). Willis C. Patterson, Anthology of Art Songs by Black American Composers. Edward B. Marks Music Company/Hal Leonard Music.

Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson (1932-2004): A Child’s Grace (1977). Willis C. Patterson, Anthology of Art Songs by Black American Composers; Edward B. Marks Music Company/Hal Leonard Music.

John C. Payne (1872-1952): “Crucifixion” (c.1925); New York: G. Schirmer, Inc.  

Florence Price (1887-1953): Three Spirituals for Violin and Piano (1933), “O Holy Lord”; “Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child”; “Lord, I Want To Be A Christian”. Fayetteville, AR: ClarNan Editions, Classical Vocal Reprints. Find more score information here.  

Ignatius Sancho Africanus (1729-1780): Twelve Country Dances (flute and cello, c.1779)

Maria Thompson (b. 1966): Motherless Child (2017); Wade In The Water (2020). MTC.

Clarence Cameron White (1880-1960): Fantasy on Negro Themes, Op.63 (1948). Find more score information here.  

Clarence Cameron White (1880-1960): Bandanna Sketches (orig. vn/pno, 1920). Find more score information here. 

Clarence Cameron White (1880-1960): From The Cotton Fields, Op. 18 (orig. vn/pno, 1920). Find more score information here.

Clarence Cameron White (1880-1960): Plantation Song (Based on the Negro Spiritual “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot”), Op. 27, No.1; New York: Carl Fischer, Inc., 1936.

 

Character/Genre/Concert Pieces/Art Songs (Technical Level “B”): 

Regina A. Harris Baiocchi (b.1956): “Miriam’s Muse” (mvt. 2) from Three Sketches for Piano Trio (cello and piano, 2012). Find more score information here. 

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912): “Willow Song” (Othello); Three Dream Dances (The Forest of Wild Thyme”, c.1910). 

Jeraldine Saunders Herbison (b.1941): Intermezzo for Cello and Piano, Opus 9 (1969); “Upon An Airy Upland”; Invention No.1 for Cello and Piano, Op.24 (1989). Contact the composer directly at jesauher@gmail.com.   

Mark A. Lomax II (b.1979): Lining Hymn (“By Grace”, mvt 3, solo excerpt). Find more score information here

Joseph Hansen Kwabena Nketia (1921-2018), “Antubam” (Wailing Song). 

Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson (1932-2004): “Calvary Ostinato” from Lamentations (1973). Tosci Music. Lauren Keiser Music (LKM), 1980. Find more score information here.

Hale Smith (1925-2009): “March Moon” from Beyond The Rim Of Day (1970). Find more score information here.

William Grant Still (1895-1978): Summerland (1936); Mother and Child (Suite for Violin and Piano, 1943). Find more score information here.

Richard Thompson (b.1952): The Negro Speaks of Rivers (2007). Find more score information here.  

Dolores White (b.1933): Prelude on Edge (1994); Tango (1997). Find more score information here

 

**Arthur Benjamin (1893-1960): Five Negro Folk Songs (1923). Schott/UK

**Tom Cipullo (b.1956): “Frederick Douglass” from America 1968 (2008)

**White composers whose contributions to this repertoire SHOULD NOT be overlooked, and included in this list for good reason in light of the genre, or in the profound setting of poetry by an African American poet, in the case of Tom Cipullo—the poet Robert Hayden (1913-1980).

AUTHOR

Timothy Holley

Timothy Holley is an alumnus of Baldwin Wallace University and the University of Michigan. He has collaborated with the Mallarmé Chamber Players and the North Carolina Symphony Orchestra since 1997.

His doctoral dissertation at UM focused on the cello music of African American composers, and he has given premiere performances of works by T. J. Anderson, William Banfield, Trevor Weston and Adolphus Hailstork — including the Sonata for Solo Cello, which was written for him. He has performed Valerie Capers' Song of the Seasons for soprano, cello and piano with Louise Toppin in Weill Hall at Carnegie Hall in New York City. He can also be heard on commercial recordings with Nneena Freelon ("Homefree"), Oral Moses ("Songs of America"), and the North Carolina Symphony Orchestra ("American Spectrum"). He recently performed with the Mallarme Chamber Players (on short notice!) in a concert of "Map to the Treasure: Reimagining Laura Nyro" with pianist and composer Billy Childs (2016).

He has participated in recent Gateways Music Festivals for Black Classical Musicians at the Eastman School of Music, Rochester, New York (2011, 2013, 2015, and 2017) and the VIDEMUS@25 Festival at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (2012). He co-hosted "A Symposium of Celebration" for the 100th birthday of Margaret Bonds at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and North Carolina Central University in March 2013. He also participated in the Colour of Music Festivals of Black Classical Musicians in Charleston, South Carolina (2013, 2014, and 2017).

Dr. Holley has given lectures on the aesthetic diversities of African-American concert music, as exemplified by the influence of the Negro spiritual on the cello music of African-American composers, the poetry of Langston Hughes and its influence on the music of Howard Swanson. He has made two cello transcriptions of works by William Grant Still and contributed encyclopedia entries on the Negro String Quartet and the Symphony of the New World. In 2013, he started an online Facebook group called "The African American Cello History Collective" and also maintains a companion blogsite titled "A View from the Scroll (www.viewedscroll.blogspot.com). He serves as an associate professor of Music at North Carolina Central University.

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