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Fifth annual Persevering Legacy event promotes diversity in performance

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Historically, minority groups have been overlooked in classical music performance. Since 2019, the College of Music鈥檚 Persevering Legacy project鈥攚ith support from the 鈥攁ims to bring such underrepresented artists into the spotlight.

On March 7, will showcase the talents of more than a dozen undergraduate and graduate students in a celebration of women-identifying composers from around the world. Selected from more than 20 submissions, the program will include works for bassoon, saxophone, French horn, trombone, violin, viola, piano, voice and electronic sounds in various combinations and featuring a range of musical styles. 

Professor of Piano Pedagogy Alejandro Cremaschi has been coordinating the annual Persevering Legacy event and chairing the selection committee for the last six years. 鈥淚鈥檝e always been interested in promoting and disseminating works by composers in underrepresented groups in the classical music field,鈥 he says. 

Cremaschi and Assistant Professor of Composition Annika Socolofsky comprised this year鈥檚 Persevering Legacy selection committee.

Many of the works to be performed come from the American Music Research Center鈥檚 including music by Black women composers such as Avril Coleridge-Taylor, Margaret Bonds, Florence Price and Mary Watkins, according to Cremaschi. 鈥淭he program also includes a solo piano work by undergraduate composer Josie Arnett, to be performed by another undergraduate, Holly McMahon,鈥 he adds. 

Cremaschi further notes his excitement to discover how many students are interested in performing often neglected works. 鈥淭he Persevering Legacy project is among the most successful DEI [diversity, equity and inclusion] initiatives of the College of Music, creating awareness, excitement and engagement among our students and faculty for exploring amazing works that would otherwise be collecting dust,鈥 he says. 鈥淧ersevering Legacy concerts also create support around the women and women-identifying musicians and composers in our college.鈥

As part of this year鈥檚 Persevering Legacy event, alumnus Gregory Walker鈥攕on of the composer George Walker and Helen Walker-Hill, a pianist and musicologist who specialized in the music of Black women鈥攚ill present a master class on March 5, 10:50 a.m.-12:20 p.m. (C125). Walker鈥攁 violinist, composer and American Academy of Arts and Letters Fellowship recipient, among other distinctions鈥攊s professor of music and entertainment studies at CU Denver.

for Persevering Legacy on March 7 at 7:30 p.m. in the Imig Music Building, Chamber Hall (S102).