Dvorák 9 From the New World'
Programme
- Leonard Bernstein Overture Candide
- Billy Childs Diaspora (Dutch premiere)
- Antonín Dvořák Ninth symphony 'From the New World'
American music has gone its own way, thanks in part to Dvorák's Ninth Symphony "From the New World. The Radio Philharmonic Orchestra charts Dvorák's influence in a nutshell with works by Bernstein and Billy Childs. Chinese-born conductor Xian Zhang proves with the orchestra that American music belongs to all of us as well.
Dvorak's mission
Antonin Dvorák left his beloved Czech homeland in 1892 to become director of the New York Conservatory of Music. There, as a composition professor, he pointed out to his American students the treasure they had hitherto left untapped: the musical traditions of the native and black populations. He set a good example himself with his Ninth Symphony.
Saxophone Concerto
Dvorák stirred things up, and many American composers followed his example. They turned to the folk music of native Americans and the spirituals and blues of African-Americans. A fine recent example is the saxophone concerto Diaspora by Billy Childs (1957). Inspired by African-American poets, he reflects on the history of black Americans in the United States.