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Voice of the Century Broke Racial Barriers

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In the early 1930s, years before the concert at the Lincoln Memorial that made her an international symbol of the American civil rights movement, Marian Anderson, the great Philadelphia-born contralto, was probably better known overseas than she was in the United States.

THE SOUND OF FREEDOM
Marian Anderson, the Lincoln Memorial, and the Concert That Awakened America

By Raymond Arsenault

Excerpt:
Andersons concerts, which combined opera arias and German lieder with black spirituals, won over not just crowds and critics but also Europes classical music luminaries. After she performed at the Finnish composer Jean Sibeliuss country house in 1933, singing his compositions in his native language, he called out for not coffee, but champagne.

When Anderson (1897-1993) was smuggled in to sing at the 1935 Salzburg Festival after non-Aryans were banned by the Nazis, Arturo Toscanini was in the audience. Yours is a voice such as one hears once in a hundred years, he told her. His words stuck. For the rest of her life Anderson would be referred to as the voice of the century.

In his new book, The Sound of Freedom, Raymond Arsenault delivers not a proper biography of Anderson there have already been a couple of those, in addition to her 1956 autobiography but a tightly focused look at the political and cultural events that led up to and came after her famous 1939 concert. Its a story thats well worth retelling.

Anderson spent so much time in Europe partly because of the training and experience that touring there offered. She had also had her fill of segregated concert halls in America, and of its cultural climate in general. After a lifetime of being told that they were intellectually and culturally inferior, Mr. Arsenault writes, even many blacks questioned their races capacity to excel in the higher forms of art, theater, science, literature, sports, entertainment and music.

One of the few areas in which black artists were successful was popular music. Blacks were born to sing and shout, whites told themselves without any sense of irony or concern, Mr. Arsenault observes. Classical music was another matter. Mastery of classical technique required superior intelligence, discipline and years of training, he writes. Most white Americans had never encountered a major black composer, opera singer or virtuoso violinist. Indeed, one suspects that few whites could even imagine such a thing.

Andersons emergence as a major performer in America in the mid-1930s was carefully orchestrated. She was sold to the news media, lest she be perceived as uppity, as both an international star and an unspoiled, unpretentious, working-class girl from South Philadelphia. She was Marian of Martin Street the same way Jennifer Lopez was later Jenny from the block.

Anderson did grow up poor. Her father, a railroad laborer, died when she was 12; she didnt attend high school because her family depended on money she earned from singing and domestic work. (She later got a high school diploma.) Her voice was her ticket; there was a sense of destiny about her from the beginning. After she performed in a recital as a teenager, a music critic for The Chicago Defender wrote that tears of joy were in the eyes of many of the musicians who felt that a new era in music has risen for our people.

There are many, many weeping onlookers in this book. Andersons voice and presence moved people. Calling one of her concerts the most dramatic experience I have had in 30 years of attending the theater, a Houston music critic described what Anderson looked like when she returned for an encore: And there, you thought, but for the Grace of God, stood somebodys negro cook.

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