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6 - The Right Kind of Symphonist: Florence Price and Kurt Weill

New York and Chicago 1933–4 – London 2020

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 January 2023

Emily MacGregor
Affiliation:
King's College London
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Summary

Alighting briefly once again on Weill’s Symphony No. 2 from the book’s opening, and then turning to consider Florence Price’s Symphony in E minor as a closing case study, Chapter 6 pivots between the early 1930s and the present day to consider the legacies and twentieth-century historiography of the symphonies in the book – their absences and recoveries – and the remarkable persistence of the symphonic genre in the mechanisms of how cultural and political agency is conferred to the present day. The poor reception of Weill’s New York premiere in 1934 comes under examination in light of the discussion in the intervening chapters, raising the question of why, for that time and place, Weill was the wrong kind of symphonist. Then, the chapter addresses the contemporary revival of Price’s symphony in the early 2020s, and it suggests the capacity of symphonies from the tumultuous years around 1933 to invigorate a differently dynamic symphonic landscape and a differently dynamic landscape of selfhood.

Type
Chapter
Information
Interwar Symphonies and the Imagination
Politics, Identity, and the Sound of 1933
, pp. 206 - 235
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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