![]() He was the first African American to perform at New York City's Town Hall and with the Philadelphia Orchestra, the first African American instrumentalist to be signed by a major management company, the first African American graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music, and the first African American composer to receive the Pulitzer Prize in Music. He received the Pulitzer for his work Lilacs in 1996.Īn accomplished and prolific classical music composer, George Walker has achieved many "firsts" in his career, mostly related to his race. What George and Gregory Walker both hope is that their collaboration will bring attention to one piece and two careers - that deserve more of it.George Theophilus Walker is an African-American composer, the first to win the Pulitzer Prize for Music. Don't for a minute think that there's anybody who's going to play it better than he. "The fact is that in insisting that he play the concerto, I was aware that he could do justice to the work. "I'd like to correct that," says George Walker. "That's one of my main aspirations: that I can at least hold the torch long enough, without singeing myself, to pass it on to a great player who can make a vehicle of it, and really deliver it to the wider audience it deserves." "We know that there are other people who, if they set their minds to it, can play this music," Gregory Walker says. But his son Gregory admits he's not the kind of superstar soloist whose name alone can sell tickets. The Philadelphia Orchestra was in talks to perform the concerto at Carnegie Hall earlier this year - with a different violinist. "I had hoped that I could persuade at least one orchestra to allow him to play it." "I wanted him to have the opportunity of performing a work on a larger scale, for a larger audience than he ever done before," says the composer. ![]() When George Walker sat down to write his new Violin Concerto, he knew he wanted his son to give the world premiere. The younger Walker is also the concertmaster of the Boulder Philharmonic Orchestra in Colorado. Though none were written with him in mind, Gregory Walker has made a specialty out of playing his father's previous compositions - they've even recorded together. "But in time - with different kinds of exposure - I've really learned to embrace and hopefully communicate what he has in mind." "I just was weaned with his particular approach to the art from time when I didn't understand what he was going for, when it was just as abstract to me as it can be for other lay listeners," says the younger musician. Walker's patience was rewarded in 1996, when he became the first black composer to win the Pulitzer Prize for Music, for the piece Lilacs.Įven Gregory Walker admits it took him a while to understand his father's music. "A way of doing something that was different something that I would be satisfied with." "I had to find my own way," says George Walker. But success as a composer didn't come easily. ![]() Walker studied composition with two of the best: Nadia Boulanger in Paris and Rosario Scalero at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. He was the first black pianist to give a recital at Town Hall in New York City in 1945. George Walker has been writing intense, sometimes difficult music for more than 50 years. But it's a very intense, difficult and challenging work for both the soloists, and the orchestra," says George Walker.Ī Long Career Marked By Challenges And Firsts George Walker doesn't entirely deny the jab about "artistic control," but the composer says he knew his son was up to the task. And I think, along with that, you're able to maintain an element of artistic control. "Didn't know about it until it was too late," the younger Walker deadpans. Violinist Gregory Walker didn't even know about it until the finished score showed up in the mail. Yet only now - at the age of 87 - has George Walker written a work for his son. His music has been performed by many of this country's top orchestras - he's got more than 80 commissions and a Pulitzer Prize to his name. ![]() George Walker has helped blaze a trail for African-American classical composers. George Walker is insisting that his son, Gregory Walker, play a new violin concerto he's written.
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