Priceline
This post is one of a series on composer Florence Price.
Below is a timeline of some of the major events of the life of Florence Beatrice Price with many linked sources allowing the reader to explore further. In many cases, I have provided contextual events covering major events in history, those events local to Price's residence at the time, and international musical events. It is hoped that this timeline will help weave Price into the fabric of our understanding of the 20th century. As with other entries in this log, there are a number of details about Price's life that simply haven't yet been investigated, which explains some of the notable gaps in time shown below.
Contextual events are listed in italics.
Birth and Childhood
1876
Florence Irene Gulliver, a pianist, and James Smith, a prominent dentist, marry and moved to Little Rock, Arkansas. (Source: 1)
1887
Formerly believed to be her birth year. It now appears that her true birth date is 1888. (Source: 1)
1888
Florence Beatrice Smith is born on April 9 in Little Rock, Arkansas. Born to Florence Gulliver, and James H. Smith, a dentist.
Other Notable Births: Arthur Rubinstein, Eubie Blake, Heitor Villa-Lobos, Chico Marx, Anthony van Hoboken, Nadia Boulanger, Ernst Toch.
1891
Price gives her first piano performance at the age of 4.
Fourteen-year-old cellist Pablo Casals gives a solo recital in Barcelona.
Carnegie Hall has its grand opening, at which Tchaikovsky conducts his own works.
Brahms composes his Clarinet Quintet in B Minor, Op. 115.
1893
Dvořák composes his 9th and final symphony in E minor, nicknamed “From the New World.” Price would later compose her first symphony in the key of E minor.
1895
William Grant Still is born in Woodville, Mississippi. He and his mother move to Little Rock when he is an infant. Still’s widowed mother later remarries, to Thomas Shepperson. The Sheppersons were well-known to the Smiths.
1898
Price has her first composition published at the age of 11.
Price attended the same elementary school as William Grant Still later would. Both had notable teacher Charlotte Andrews Stephens who had a 70-year tenure
Notable compositions: Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Hiawatha's Wedding Feast; Rimsky-Korsakov, Sadko;
Youth in Boston
1901
Smith graduates Capitol High School at age 14, the Valedictorian of her class.
Moves to Boston, Mass.
Enrolls at New England Conservatory in Boston at the age of 14. Majors in Piano and Organ. While there:
Studies with George Chadwick.
Studies with Frederick Converse.
Composes first string trio.
Composes first symphony. (Unclear if this is simply an earlier version of the Symphony in E Minor.)
Major Premieres: Mahler, Symphony No. 4; Rachmaninoff, Piano Concerto No. 2; Dvořák, Rusalka
Giuseppe Verdi Dies
1903
Boston Americans beat the Pittsburgh Pirates in Game 8 of the inaugural world series, held in the Huntington Avenue Baseball Grounds in Boston, making them the first champions of the modern World Series.
1905
George Chadwick completes one of his more popular works, Symphonic Sketches during this period in which Price was one of his NEC pupils. (Information: 1 • 2. Score: 1 • 2. Recordings: 1 • 2.)
Early Career
1906
Smith graduates New England Conservatory with honors. Receives an artist diploma and a teaching certificate. Returns to Arkansas.
Taught in the music department at Shorter College in Arkansas.
Lynching of Homer G. Blackman leads to what is known as the Argenta Race Riot of 1906. (Argenta is now North Little Rock.)
1910
Price’s father, Dr. James Smith, dies. Florence Irene leaves her family. (Source: 1)
Smith moves to Atlanta, Georgia.
Becomes the head of the music department at Clark Atlanta University.
Compositions: Schoenberg, Five Pieces for Orchestra; Scriabin, Prometheus; Vaughan Williams, Symphony No. 1, Stravinsky, The Firebird.
Married Life in Little Rock
1912
Smith Marries lawyer Thomas J. Price and again moves back to Little Rock. Changes name to Florence Price.
The couple have two daughters during this period.
This period is not well-documented. It is quite possible that many works from this period are lost.
Premieres: Mahler, Symphony No. 9; Schoenberg, Pierrot Lunaire.
Compositions: Prokofiev, Piano Concerto Nos. 1 and 2; Ravel, Daphnis et Chloé.
Publications: "The Memphis Blues," one of the first recognized hits of the genre.
1917
The United States declares war on Germany on April 6, beginning direct US involvement in World War I.
1918
Armistice of 11 November 1918 concludes WWI. The economic impact of returning black and white soldiers is considered an important influence on the racial strife of the 1920’s.
1919
Elaine massacre takes place from September 30–October 1 in Phillips County, Arkansas. It is considered among the deadliest acts of racial violence in U.S. History. (Sources: 1 • 2)
Congress passes the Volstead Act which begins the prohibition era in 1920. Prohibition is linked to the rise of hundreds of thousands of "Speakeasy" establishments across the country and to the live jazz music popularized in these clubs.
Flight to Chicago
1927
Price leaves Little Rock for the last time, moving permanently to Chicago due to racial violence in Little Rock. She studies with leading Chicago artists including Carl Busch and Leo Sowerby.
Leo Sowerby completes his Symphony No. 2.
1928
Publishes four pieces for piano. Composes At the Cotton Gin for piano.
Bartok completes his String Quartet No. 4.
1929
Composes one of her most popular piano pieces, her Fantasie negre in E minor.
Composers String Quartet in G Major (Video)
Stock Market Crash of 1929 begins the Great Depression. The Great Depression puts a great deal of financial pressure on the Prices.
1930
Price composes "The Moon Bridge" and "The New Moon" for choir.
Compositions: William Grant Still, Symphony No. 1 in A-flat “Afro-American”
Maturity
1931
Thomas and Florence divorce. (Sources: 1 • 2)
Price is forced to raise her two daughters on her own during the Great Depression. At some point during this period, she moves in with her student, Margaret Bonds.
Completes Symphony No. 1 in E Minor.
Still’s Symphony No. 1 is premiered by the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra.
1932
Price composes Ethiopia's Shadow in America and Piano Sonata in E Minor.
Price wins the first prize in the Wanamaker Foundation Awards for her first Symphony.
1933
Frederick Stock premieres Price's first Symphony on June 15. This is the first recorded instance of a performance by a major American orchestra of a composition by an African-American woman.
Price's student, Margaret Bonds performed Price's piano concerto with the Women's Symphony Orchestra of Chicago.
Adolph Hitler is appointed Chancellor of Germany.
1934
Composes Mississippi River Suite, Piano Concerto in One Movement. (Source)
Composes "Dreamin' Town" on text by Paul Lawrence Dunbar.
1935
Composes String Quartet in A Minor. (Video)
Composes Four Songs.
Eastman Symphony Orchestra gives a reading to Symphony No. 1. (Source)
1936
The first black member of the Chicago Club of Women Organists, Price performed her Passacaglia and Fugure and an arrangement of "Steal Away" on one of their programs.
1937
"My soul's been Anchored in de Lord" published by Gamble Hinged Music.
1938
Price composes Dance of the Cotton Blossoms and Arkansas Jitter for piano.
Arranges "Nobody knows the trouble I see" for piano.
1939
Marian Anderson closes her historic Lincoln Memorial concert before 75,000 attendees with Price's arrangement of "My soul's been Anchored in de Lord". Price was invited by Howard University and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. (Sources: 1 • 2 • 3)
Completes Violin Concerto No. 1.
Premiere of Bartok Violin Concerto No. 2 in Amsterdam. The opening theme played by violin over repeated chords, and many points throughout, borrow from the blues.
Compositions: Roy Harris, Symphony No. 3;
1940
Price is inducted into National Association for American Composers and Conductors.
Composes Symphony No. 3 in C Minor. (Source)
Symphony No. 3 successfully premiered by the Michigan WPA Symphony, conducted by Valter Poole. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt reviewed the concert in her syndicated column, My Day. (Sources: 1 • 2)
Creation of the Florence B. Price Music Study Guild, a third Chicago branch of the National Association of Negro Musicians.
Premieres by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra: Milhaud, Symphony No. 1 with Stock; John Alden Carpenter, Symphony No. 1, Stravinsky, Symphony in C with Stravinsky; Roy Harris, American Creed (Source: 1)
1941
"Songs to the Dark Virgin" published by Schirmer. Text by Langston Hughes. (Sources: 1)
Glen Miller receives first gold disc for Chattanooga Choo Choo.
Premieres by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra: Kodály, Concerto for Orchestra with Stock. (Source: 1)
1942
Marian Anderson performs Price's ""My soul's been Anchored in de Lord" on "The Bell Telephone Hour" conducted by Donald Vorhees.
Price arranges "Were you there?" for piano.
1943
Price pens her famous letter to Serge Koussevitzky. (Sources: 1 • 2 • 3)
Another letter was sent to conductor Eugene Goosens, date October 4. Goosens had apparently shown some previous interest in her music. (Source: 1)
1944
Koussevitzky examined one of Price's scores, but declined to program her music with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. (Source)
1945
World War II concludes with Japanese surrender on August 15, 1945.
1946
Price composes Night, for medium voice & piano.
Begins studies with Roy Harris at his residence. (Sources: 1)
1947
Price was the first black member of the Musicians Club of Women. In 1947, two members performed the two-piano version of her Piano Concerto in One Movement, a choral work, and several art songs.
Premiere of Maurice Duruflé, Requiem.
Completed compositions: Barber, Knoxvlle: Summer of 1915; Britten, Albert Herring; Irving Berlin, Annie Get your Gun; Rogers & Hammerstein, Oklahoma!; Weill, Street Scene.
1948
Price arranges "I am bound for the kingdom" for piano.
Price’s Mother, Florence Irene, dies.
1949
Price publishes two spirituals: "I Am Bound for the Kingdom," and "I'm Workin’ on My Buildin'".
Composes 3 Little Negro Dances for piano, four hands.
The Musicians Club of Women premiered Price's Suite for Brasses on February 8.
1951
Sir John Barbirolli sent Price a telegram to request a concert overture for the Hallé Orchestra in Manchester. (JRS: This work was lost for some time. I'm not clear if it is among the works located in 2009.) (1 • 2)
String Quartet on Negro Themes premieres at Catey Temple church in February.
Completes Five Folksongs in Counterpoint.
Chicago Symphony Orchestra performs Suite of Negro Dances. Conductor George Schick conducts on a live televised pops concert on February 18. (1 • 2)
Completes Sea Gulls for women's chorus and chamber ensemble. (1)
1952
Marian Anderson's performance of "Songs to the Dark Virgin" receives praise in the Chicago Daily News. (1 • 2)
Completes Violin Concerto No. 2.
1953
Composes Dances in the Canebrakes. (1 • 2)
Price dies of a stroke on June 30.
Posthumous Recognition
1974
A performance in Fargo, ND by the Orchestra of the International Peace Gardens included two unspecified pieces by Price on a program. (Source)
1993
Two of the first known commercial recordings featuring Price's music are released:
Art Songs by American Composers / Yolanda Marcoulescou-Stern. Gasparo Records, 1993.
Black Diamonds/ Althea Waites. Cambria Records, 1993.
1997
First album exclusively featuring music by Price is released:
Chicago Renaissance Woman: Florence B. Price Organ Works; Calcante CAL 014 1997
2001
First Album featuring the orchestral music of Florence Price released:
Florence Price: The Oak, Mississippi River Suite, and Symphony no. 3 / Women’s Philharmonic. Koch International Classics, 2001.
2009
Many of Price's works were found in an old cottage outside of St. Anne, Illinois by Vicki and Darrell Gatwood. Among these were two previously unknown violin concerti and her fourth symphony. (Sources: 1 • 2 • 3)
2013
Chicago Symphony Orchestra performs Mississippi River Suite. Mei-Ann Chen conducts. (Sources: 1 • 2)
Northwestern University Chamber Orchestra Perform Price's First Symphony (Source)
2015
World Premiere: String Quartet in G. University of Arkansas, Er-Gene Kahng, Ryan Cockerham, violins; Tazonio Anderson, viola; Patrick Bellah, cello. (Video)
2018
Many major media outlets and orchestras begin to seek opportunities to perform her music. both violin concerti and the fourth symphony receive their world premieres.
Concert Overture No. 2 Premiered by BBC Concert Orchestra, Jane Glover conducting. (Sources: 1 • 2 • 3)
World Premiere of Symphony No. 4 by the Fort Smith Symphony (Source).
G. Schirmer Purchases worldwide rights to the Florence Price Catalogue (Sources: 1 • 2 • 3)
2019
January 11 - Premiere Recording of Symphony No. 4 along with Symphony No. 1. Fort Smith Symphony; John Jeter, conductor. NAXOS. (Source)
Further Reading
Interesting musical connections between Little Rock and Chicago.
Meet the women of the Chicago Black Renaissance
Samantha Ege: Florence Price and the Politics of Her Existence
Chen honors long-neglected composer
A STUDY OF THE LIVES AND WORKS OF FIVE BLACK WOMEN COMPOSERS
IN AMERICA (1975)
When Women Play: The Relationship between Musical Instruments and Gender Style