Margaret Bonds
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Composer, pianist, teacher, and social-justice activist Margaret
Bonds fought against racism, sexism, and economic injustice
throughout her career, amassing a portfolio of social-justice
compositions unrivalled in eloquence and originality which
challenged longstanding barriers between Black and White, male and
female, popular and classical. During her lifetime the political
economy of music publishing consigned most of her music to
manuscript dissemination, and since her death -- despite the
enduring popularity of works such as He''s Got the Whole World in
His Hand and The Ballad of the Brown King -- her success in
transcending the barriers she faced as an African American and a
woman has been obscured by the forces of racism and sexism in
concert life, which, together with White- and male-dominated music
historiography, have viewed her life and work through the lens of
specious, racist, and sexist tropes. This book draws on an
unprecedented mass of archival evidence to set aside those tropes
and offer a fresh portrait of Margaret Bonds. Examining her
published and unpublished music, it shows how the child prodigy
rose to become the first African American woman whose music was
performed widely in Africa; one of the first African American women
whose music was broadcast on European radio; the first African
American woman and pianist to perform with a major U.S. orchestra;
the second African American woman in classical music to attain full
membership in ASCAP; the first woman Black or White to win not one
or two, but three, awards from that predominantly White and male
organization; the lasting musical voice of Langston Hughes; and the
teacher of other notables including Ned Rorem and Cheryl Wall. It
thus shows how the confluence of natural genius, matrilineal and
racial pride, faith, and support from the community of African
American artists, intellectuals, and institutions enabled Margaret
Bonds to become one of the most extraordinary figures in all of
twentieth-century music. In response to the increasing
globalization of music, the Composers across Cultures series,
formerly the Master Musicians series, seeks to explore the
inexhaustible diversity of music, and its common links to our
shared humanity.