South side impresarios: how race women transformed Chicago’s classical music scene
South side impresarios: how race women transformed Chicago’s classical music scene
Between the world wars, Chicago Race women nurtured a local yet widely resonant Black classical music community entwined with Black civic life. Samantha Ege tells the stories of the Black women whose acumen and energy transformed Chicago’s South Side into a wellspring of music making.
Ege focuses on composers like Florence Price, Nora Holt, and Margaret Bonds not as anomalies but as artists within an expansive cultural flowering. Overcoming racism and sexism, Black women practitioners instilled others with the skill and passion to make classical music while Race women like Maude Roberts George, Estella Bonds, Neota McCurdy Dyett, and Beulah Mitchell Hill built and fostered institutions central to the community. Ege takes readers inside the backgrounds, social lives, and female-led networks of the participants while shining a light on the scene’s audiences, supporters, and training grounds. What emerges is a history of Black women and classical music in Chicago and the still-vital influence of the world they created.
University of Illinois Press
Ege, Samantha
14d7009c-0cd8-4402-aafc-063312da43aa
12 November 2024
Ege, Samantha
14d7009c-0cd8-4402-aafc-063312da43aa
Ege, Samantha
(2024)
South side impresarios: how race women transformed Chicago’s classical music scene
,
University of Illinois Press
Abstract
Between the world wars, Chicago Race women nurtured a local yet widely resonant Black classical music community entwined with Black civic life. Samantha Ege tells the stories of the Black women whose acumen and energy transformed Chicago’s South Side into a wellspring of music making.
Ege focuses on composers like Florence Price, Nora Holt, and Margaret Bonds not as anomalies but as artists within an expansive cultural flowering. Overcoming racism and sexism, Black women practitioners instilled others with the skill and passion to make classical music while Race women like Maude Roberts George, Estella Bonds, Neota McCurdy Dyett, and Beulah Mitchell Hill built and fostered institutions central to the community. Ege takes readers inside the backgrounds, social lives, and female-led networks of the participants while shining a light on the scene’s audiences, supporters, and training grounds. What emerges is a history of Black women and classical music in Chicago and the still-vital influence of the world they created.
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Published date: 12 November 2024
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Local EPrints ID: 505615
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505615
PURE UUID: 2b6a1a63-8d2d-47e9-8810-970e0b6ec496
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Date deposited: 14 Oct 2025 16:54
Last modified: 15 Oct 2025 02:08
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Author:
Samantha Ege
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