27
Apr/22

CREDO: THE DESSOFF CHOIRS PERFORMS MARGARET BONDS

27
Apr/22

The Dessoff Choirs presents a cantata by Margaret Bonds made in collaboration with Langston Hughes and inspired by the words of W E B. Du Bois

Who: The Dessoff Choirs
What: New York premieres of cantatas by Margaret Bonds
Where: Church of the Heavenly Rest, 1085 Fifth Ave. at Ninetieth St.
When: Thursday, April 28, $20-$40, 6:45 talk, 7:30 concert
Why: “I believe in God who made of one blood all races that dwell.” So begins W. E. B. Du Bois’s 1904 prose poem Credo, which served as inspiration for African American composer, pianist, teacher, and Chicago native Margaret Bonds’s piano/vocal score that is part of the Dessoff Choirs’ presentation of a pair of New York premieres of cantatas by Bonds, taking place April 28 at the Church of the Heavenly Rest. The company, which was founded in 1924 by Margarete Dessoff, previously released the recording The Ballad of the Brown King & Selected Songs, centered around Bonds’s 1954 collaboration with Langston Hughes about Balthazar, one of the three kings who visited the baby Jesus. At the Heavenly Rest, the Dessoff Choirs, joined by a full orchestra, Grammy-winning bass-baritone Dashon Burton, soprano soloist Janinah Burnett, and the Carter Legacy Singers, will perform I Believe: Credo and Simon Bore the Cross, the latter also a collaboration with Hughes.

“Dessoff is dedicated to performing rarely heard choral masterpieces,” Dessoff music director Malcolm J. Merriweather said in a statement. “We are thrilled to cast a spotlight on Margaret Bonds’s neglected but important contribution to the American music canon. She is a forgotten voice for civil rights that must be remembered, appreciated, and cherished. It seems the time has come for Bonds’s voice to be heard.” The program begins with a preconcert talk at 6:45, followed at 7:30 by Dr. Rollo Dilworth’s seven-movement choral symphony version of Credo and Bonds’s Easter cantata, about Simon of Cyrene, who carried Jesus’ cross; the work was found in a dumpster at a book fair, along with other scores of hers.