Zenobia Powell Perry


Zenobia Powell Perry was an American composer, professor and civil rights activist. She taught in a number of historically black colleges and universities and composed in a style that writer Jeannie Gayle Pool called "music with clear, classic melodies." Her work has been performed by the Cleveland Chamber Symphony, the Detroit Symphony and West Virginia University Band and Orchestra.

Biography

Early life and education

Perry was born Zenobia Powell in the once-predominantly African-American town of Boley, Oklahoma to physician Calvin B. Powell and Birdie Thompson Powell. Her family was well educated and middle class. Her grandfather, who had been a slave, sang her traditional spirituals as a child, which later influenced her work.
As a child, Perry met Booker T. Washington and sang for him at his appearance in Boley on August 22, 1915, where he "declared she was a future Tuskegegian." Perry took piano lessons as a child with Mayme Jones, who had been taught by Robert Nathaniel Dett. She won a piano competition in 1919. Perry also learned to play violin as a child. One of her biggest musical influences, however, came from the experience of hearing Hazel Harrison in concert, after which she knew she wanted to study music.
In 1925, Perry graduated from Boley High School. Her father was not supportive of her decision to study music, but her mother was, and sent her to Omaha, Nebraska, to study at the Cecil Berryman Conservatory in 1929. After her return to Boley, Dett visited her family to ask them to send her to the Hampton Institute, where she could study with him. However, soon after, Dett left Hampton for the Eastman School of Music and Perry decided on her own to study privately with Dett in Rochester, New York. Perry studied with Dett until May 1932. She studied composition briefly during this time with Cortez Reece at Langston University in Oklahoma.
In 1935, she went on to study at the Tuskegee Institute, and, because of her family's connection with Washington and her promise to study education as well as music, she was allowed to attend. At Tuskegee she studied with William L. Dawson who encouraged her to compose original work; she was already preparing arrangements for the Tuskegee Institute Chorus. Perry graduated in 1938.
After Tuskegee, Perry became part of a teacher training program for Black Americans that was headed by Eleanor Roosevelt. Roosevelt would become a mentor and friend to Perry and even helped sponsor her graduate studies. In 1941 she took classes at the Colorado State Teachers College and started teaching first grade in 1942. In 1945, she received her Master of Arts degree from Colorado State College.
She began "earnestly" writing her own music during the 1950s. From 1952 to 1954, Perry worked on her master's degree in music composition at Wyoming University, where she studied under Allan Arthur Willman, Darius Milhaud and Charles Jones.

Career

Perry worked as a professor for much of her life and began seriously composing when she was in her forties. From 1941 to 1945 Perry taught while attending the Colorado State Teachers College. Two years later, she held a faculty position at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, where she remained until 1955. During the years of 1949 and until she left UAPB, Perry toured with Kelton Lawrence as a piano duo in order to recruit students for UAPB.
From 1955 to 1982, she was a faculty member and composer-in-residence at Central State University, in Wilberforce, Ohio. She continued to volunteer "on behalf of the African American community" after she retired.
In 1998 she was honored by the University of Wyoming, winning the Arts and Sciences Outstanding Alumni Award.

Work

Perry's music is classical and "incorporates contrapuntal, tonal, mild dissonance, with some jazz and folk influence." According to biographer Jeannie Gayle Poole, she was "also influenced by black American and Native American folklore, music, language and poetry." She wrote an opera, Tawawa House, first performed in 1987 and revived in 2014. Perry also wrote for orchestra, bands and composed a mass. One of her most widely performed pieces is Threnody, a song cycle composed for her daughter set to the poetry of Donald Jeffrey Hayes. It was initially filed for copyright under the title Atmosphere: A Cycle of Songs in 1974, labeled as Op. 12.

Archival collection

Zenobia Powell Perry's papers are held at the Center for Black Music Research at Columbia College in Chicago. The collection is titled Zenobia Powell Perry Scores and Music Manuscripts. The collection as a whole consists primarily of original compositions and manuscripts produced by Powell herself.
Her pedagogical piano works are included in the University of Colorado at Boulder's Hidden Voices: Piano Music by Black Women Composers.

Personal life

In 1932, Zenobia Powell married violinist "King" Earl Gaynor. While she was pregnant, Gaynor left and she raised their son on her own. They later divorced in 1933. Her son, Lemuel, died in 1944 at age 11 of a ruptured appendix. In 1941, she married Jimmie Rogers Perry and they had a daughter, soprano Janis-Rozena Peri, in 1943. Perry was divorced again while her daughter was young. Perry raised her daughter alone while working towards her advanced degrees and studies and also while also working as a professor. Perry also supported her elderly mother for many years.
In 1962, she joined the NAACP to aid in the civil rights struggle.
In 1989 she was diagnosed and treated for breast cancer, and her health deteriorated until her death, nearly 15 years later. She died January 17, 2004, at the age of 95.

Works List

Opera

Tawawa House: A Musical Drama in Two Acts, 1985; revised 2014

Choral

Choral Suite No. 1, 1963
Done Made My Vow to the Lord, 1974
Didn't My Lord Deliver Daniel?
Hallelujah
Hymn of Praise
Jubilee: Fare You Well
Kingdom's Coming
O Christians, What Cha Gonna Do?
O Peter, Go Ring Dem Bells
Up Over My Head
Walk Together Children
A Wheel in a Wheel

Vocal

Ah Got a Home in a Dat Rock, soprano and piano
Threnody Song Cycle, soprano and piano, Text: Donald Jeffrey Hayes
  • Threnody
  • Alien
  • Benediction
  • Poet
  • Pastourelle
Cycle of Songs on Poems by Paul Laurence Dunbar, for high voice and piano
  • Sunset
  • On a Clean Book
  • Spring Song
  • Drizzle
  • Life
Certainly Lord, tenor and piano
They Call the Sun Ol' Hannah
Shine Along
Sinna Man, So Hard, Believe!
Oh I Want Two Wings
I Gotta Move When the Spirit Say Move
I Am a Poor Wayfaring Stranger
Hallelujah to the Lamb
Follow the Drinking Gourd
I Gotta Home in Dat Rock
O de Angels Down Bowed Down
Kid Stuff
The Cottage, soprano and chamber orchestra/piano
Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray, baritone and piano
How Charming is the Place
Trouble, Trouble
The Hidden Words of Baha'u'llab

Instrumental

Arkansia, suite for violin and piano
Benediction, for violin and piano
Conversations, two flutes and piano
String Quartet no. 1
Three Designs for Four Strings
Two Letters for Clarinet, Cello and Piano
Three Pieces for Horn and Piano
Pastels for orchestra
Mass in F-sharp minor
Sonatine for clarinet and piano
Four Seasons for clarinet and Piano
Four Mynyms for Three Players

Piano

Vignette no. 1
Vignette no. 2
Times Seven
Ties
Teeta
Sonatine
Soliloquy
Round and Round
Rhapsody
Promenade
Pavanne
Nocturne
A Jazz Trifle
Flight
Childhood Capers
Blaize
Character Matters
Orrin and Echo
Suite from ''Tawawa House''

Legacy

In 1981, Perry's daughter soprano Janis-Rozena Peri performed the song cycle Threnody at Carnegie Recital Hall.

Honors

Her most important honors include:
Awards from Ohio institutions for her life achievements and contributions to Ohio culture.
  • 1987 Honored with a Music Citation for distinguished service to Ohio in the field of music at the Ohioans Library Association.
  • 1988 Honored by Ohio National Organization of Women at the NOW Banquet in Columbus, as a part of their second annual women's history celebration.
  • 1991 Inducted into the Greene County Women's Hall of Fame
  • 1993 Inducted in Ohio Senior Citizens Hall of Fame
  • 1998 Named as one of Top Ten women for 1998 by Dayton Daily News.
  • 1999 Woman of the Year Award, Paul Laurence Dunbar House State Memorial, Dayton, Ohio.
  • 2000 Named 2000 Outstanding Senior Citizen of Green County, Ohio.
  • 2002 Cultural Arts Award for outstanding contributions in the field of Music Education, National Afro-American Museum, Wilberforce, Ohio.

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