Day 18: Florence Price
In 1932 G. Schirmer published Price’s work At the Cotton Gin. In 1932 she won Wanamaker Foundation Awards for “Symphony in E minor” and for “Piano Sonata.” “Symophony in E minor” was performed at the 1933 World’s Fair by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. She wrote hundreds of pieces including works for piano and organ, spiritual arrangements, chamber music, and symphonies. Price also wrote music for her friend Marian Anderson. In 1940 Price was inducted into the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. Her work, a combination of the sounds of European romanticism and Black American music, fell out of popularity after her death. However, it has gained resurgence in recent years. Some of her pieces, long considered lost, were re-discovered and released in the 1990s. The Women’s Philharmonic created an album with Price’s compositions in 2001. In 2014 renowned pianist Karen Walwyn and the New Black Repertory Ensemble performed several of Price’s pieces.