Program Notes
Writer’s Opinion:
Six Degrees ofSeparation Kevin Bacon and the "Othering" of Minority
Composers
Six Degrees of
Fanny Mendelssohn |
More often than not, however, minority composers frequently undergo
a Kevin Bacon-ing before their music can be considered worthwhile. Fanny
Mendelssohn Hensel (1805-1847), for example, was taught by a student of J. S.
Bach and was a prolific composer in her own right. Despite this, yet she is primarily known as “Felix
Mendelssohn’s sister.” Likewise, Clara Wieck Schumann (1819-1896) is regarded
as one of the most important pianists of the nineteenth century, yet her legacy
has been overshadowed by her husband, Robert Schumann (1810-1856). Her legacy
thus persists as “Schumann’s wife” for many classical music enthusiasts.
Their music received far fewer performances and was taken
much less seriously because of their gender. During the nineteenth century—and
certainly long before and after—the mere image of a
woman performing or
publishing was considered far too salacious to be considered as a possibility. Prejudiced
ideas about inferiority also have had a similar impact on the musical careers
of black and indigenous people, and people of color.
Clara Schumann |
It was certainly not just women who experienced, and
continue to experience, this othering that strips them of their independence. Samuel Coleridge-Taylor is perhaps the most prominent
example of a black composer whose name is obscured by the Kevin Bacon-ing of
music history. Coleridge-Taylor, for example, was born to a white British woman
and a Creole man from Sierra Leone. During his three tours of the United States
during the early 1900s, he was given the nickname of the “African Mahler” or
“Black Mahler” by white American musicians. Although this certainly was intended as a compliment—and
more importantly as a way
to skirt around notions of racial inferiority in the post-Civil War United
States—it is a nickname that seems a bit -off to many of today’s musicologists
and musicians.
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor |
Perhaps the only appropriate time to
describe someone as the “Black Mahler” in today’s
social and political climate is when I talk about my dog, Gustav Mahler-Holst-Nyquist-Wells, as the “Black and White Gustav.”
social and political climate is when I talk about my dog, Gustav Mahler-Holst-Nyquist-Wells, as the “Black and White Gustav.”
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