On This Day: July 4, 2016
A Spiritual Celebration of Independence
Welcome to Heifetz 2026! This summer, as we celebrate three decades of transformative education, extraordinary artistry, and the community that has made Heifetz possible, each day we’ll be sharing audio, video, images, and programs from across the decades of the Institute. Check back each day throughout our 30th Anniversary Season as we share some memorable moments from each golden year of the Institute!
July 4, 2016: Charlottesville, VA
The first of our annual Independence Day concerstat Monroe’s Highland estate in Charlottesville, VA.- the presidential home of Founding Father James Monroe – took place a decade ago, on July 4, 2016. One of the highlight performances of the day came from the pen of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, a celebrated composer born in London in 1875 to an English mother and an African father. His father had been bound for America on a rogue slave ship until intercepted and diverted to England by the British Navy.
Growing up in Great Britain, which had abolished slavery in 1833, Coleridge-Taylor encountered both racism and opportunity – as a young virtuoso violinist and budding composer, he became a top student at the prestigious Royal College of Music.
Part African, part English, Coleridge-Taylor’s music reveals many strands of influence. One of the turning points of his life came in 1896, when he heard the touring Fisk Jubilee Singers chorus from Nashville, Tennessee, where he first heard traditional African-American spirituals. The music – and the literature (Coleridge-Taylor called W.E.B. DuBois’s 1903 book The Souls of Black Folk “one of the best books I have read by any author, white or black,”) drew the composer to America, where he was celebrated as a conductor and performer on three tours. His first tour in 1904 even included being the first man of color ever invited to the White House, where he was famously – and to some, scandalously – welcomed by President Theodore Roosevelt.
After his tour, Coleridge-Taylor picked up his composing pen and created a series of 24 Negro Melodies for violin and piano, writing in the preface, “What Brahms has done for the Hungarian folk music, Dvorak for the Bohemian, and Grieg for the Norwegian, I have tried to do for these Negro Melodies.”
Violinist Wynton Grant, joined by pianist Stefan Petrov, offers some poignant remarks to precede his performance of Deep River at the storied home of another President – Founding Father James Monroe, the nation’s 5th President.
The Fisk Jubilee Singers
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Did you attend the Heifetz Institute? If so, you’re part of an exclusive group of musicians who have explored their full creative potential through the advanced private lessons, unrivaled concert appearances, and the unique Performance & Communication Training method. We believe that the one-of-a-kind Heifetz training prepares our students to become not only more effective communicators and performers, but also more confident and dynamic in all facets of life. Now we want to reconnect and hear more about how you’ve put your Heifetz experience to use – both on and off stage!
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