COALESCENCE, CULMINATION, AND EMANCIPATION:

Four Early Performances of Margaret Bonds’s Spiritual Suite

  • When did it become a three-movement suite? Most authors have evaded this slippery question, with guesses ranging from “1950s” (Walker-Hill, p. 166) to 1967 (the year of the publication of Troubled Water). Margaret Bonds performed two movements — “The Bells” and “Group Dance Based on the Spiritual ‘Wade in the Water’” (which eventually became “Troubled Water”) — in her Town Hall concert on February 7, 1952. She continued performing those two movements — usually separately — throughout the 1950s. But that changed sometime in the early 1960s . . .
  • When was the “Spiritual Suite” first performed with all three movements? On March 18, 1962, Florida-born, Miami-based pianist Dr. Joan Holley (1926–2015) gave the complete three-movement suite, now including its first movement (“The Valley of the Dry Bones,” based on James Rosamond Johnson’s “Dem Bones”), its New York premiere in her fourth Town Hall performance. That performance had a prehistory, though — for Bonds and Langston Hughes both knew Holley (well enough, in fact, for Bonds to mention her by her first name only when, on March 5, 1962, she told Hughes that she was sending him “a pair of tickets to Joan’s concert,” and to affectionately refer to her as “Dr. Joan” in numerous other letters). More importantly, Holley’s Town Hall program was reportedly “identical” to a benefit recital she gave in Miami at the Coconut Grove Baptist Church on February 16, 1962 ( The Miami Herald, February 10, 1962).
  • Did Margaret Bonds ever perform the entire “Spiritual Suite”? Oh, yes –and there is great beauty in the occasion for that performance. It took place the following year, in the context of a Gala Emancipation Concert hosted by Fine Arts Committee of the Manhattan Council of the National Council of Negro Women, held at Salem Methodist Church in Harlem.

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A musicologist with a passion for social justice, bringing unheard music to life for performers and listeners, and teaching.

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John Michael Cooper

A musicologist with a passion for social justice, bringing unheard music to life for performers and listeners, and teaching.