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John Wesley Work III
March 1944.John Wesley Work III (July 15, 1901 - May 17, 1967) was a
composer, educator, choral director, musicologist and scholar of African
American folklore and music.
Biography
He was born on June 15, 1901, in Tullahoma, Tennessee, to a family of
professional musicians. His grandfather, John Wesley Work, was a church
choir director in Nashville, where he wrote and arranged music for his
choirs. Some of his choristers were members of the original Fisk Jubilee
Singers. His father, John Wesley Work Jr., was a singer, folksong
collector and professor of music, Latin, and history at Fisk, and his
mother, Agnes Haynes Work, was a singer who helped train the Fisk group.
His uncle, Frederick Jerome Work, also collected and arranged folksongs,
and his brother, Julian, became a professional musician and composer.
Work began his musical training at the Fisk University Laboratory
School, moving on to the Fisk High School and then the university, where
he received a B.A. degree in 1923. After graduation, he attended the
Institute of Musical Art in New York City (now the Juilliard School of
Music), where he studied with Gardner Lamson. He returned to Fisk and
began teaching in 1927, spending summers in New York studying with
Howard Talley and Samuel Gardner. In 1930 he received an M.A. degree
from Columbia University with his thesis American Negro Songs and
Spirituals. He was awarded two Julius Rosenwald Foundation Fellowships
for the years 1931 to 1933 and, using these to take two years leave from
Fisk, he obtained a B.Mus. degree from Yale University in 1933.
Work spent the remainder of his career at Fisk, until his retirement in
1966. He served in a variety of positions, notably as a teacher,
chairman of the Fisk University Department of Music, and director of the
Fisk Jubilee Singers from 1947 until 1956. He published articles in
professional journals and dictionaries over a span of more than thirty
years. His best known articles were "Plantation Meistersingers" in The
Musical Quarterly (Jan. 1940), and "Changing Patterns in Negro
Folksongs" in the Journal of American Folklore (Oct. 1940).
Work began composing while still in high school and continued throughout
his career, completing over one hundred compositions in a variety of
musical forms -- for full orchestra, piano, chamber ensemble, violin and
organ -- but his largest output was in choral and solo-voice music. He
was awarded first prize in the 1946 competition of the Federation of
American Composers for his cantata The Singers, and in 1947 he received
an award from the National Association of Negro Musicians. In 1963 he
was awarded an honorary doctorate from Fisk University.
Following Work's collection Negro Folk Songs, the bulk of which was
recorded at Fort Valley, he and two colleagues from Fisk University,
Charles S. Johnson, head of the department of sociology (later, in
October 1946, chosen as the university's first black president), and
Lewis Jones, professor of sociology, collaborated with the Archive of
American Folk Song on the Library of Congress/Fisk University
Mississippi Delta Collection (AFC 1941/002). This project was a two-year
joint field study conducted by the Library of Congress and Fisk
University during the summers of 1941 and 1942. The goal of the
partnership was to carry out an intensive field study documenting the
folk culture of a specific community of African Americans in the
Mississippi Delta region. The rapidly urbanizing commercial area of
Coahoma County, Mississippi, with its county seat in Clarksdale, became
the geographical focus of the study. Some of the correspondence included
in this collection between Work and Alan Lomax, then head of the Archive
of American Folk Song, touches on both the Fort Valley and the emerging
Fisk University recording projects.
John Wesley Work died on May 17, 1967.
Musical works
Yenvalou for orchestra (1946)
Sassafras, pieces for piano (1946)
Scuppernong (1951)
Appalachia (1954)
From the Deep South (1936)
The Singers, cantatas (1941)
Isaac Watts Contemplates the Cross (1962) |
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