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Black Women Composers

A guide to Scores, Literature, and Sound Recordings in the ASU Library

Biography

Scores

 

Scores in the ASU Music Library

44 art songs and spirituals

An album of piano pieces

Art songs and spirituals by African-American women composers

Black women composers : a century of piano music (1893-1990)

Colonial dance : for piano

Clouds : for piano solo

Don't you tell me no : for voice and piano

Fantasie no. 1 in g minor : for violin and piano (1933)

Fantasy no. 2 for violin and piano

His dream : for piano solo

I'm troubled in my mind : for piano

Impromptu no. 1 : for piano solo

Joshua fit de Battle of Jericho : for piano solo

Judgement day : for voice and piano

King of kings : organ music of Black composers, past and present

Meditation : for piano solo

Memory mist : for piano

Music of Florence Beatrice Price: Volume 2 - Short Organ Works.

Music of Florence Beatrice Price

New historical anthology of music by women

Nobody knows the trouble I've seen : for piano solo

On a quiet lake : for piano

Piano music of Africa and the African diaspora

Preludes for piano

Quintet in A minor for piano and strings

Sonata : for organ

Sonata in E minor, for piano

Scenes in tin Can alley : for piano solo

String quartet in G major (1929)

String quartet no. 2 in A minor

Symphonies nos. 1 and 3

Three miniature portraits of Uncle Ned : for piano solo

Three roses : for piano

Three suites for piano

To a Brown Leaf : for piano solo

The Glory of the day was in her face : medium voice and piano

Three Negro spirituals : for violin and piano

Violin concerto no. 1 in d major : for violin and orchestra - piano reduction

 

The ASU Library acknowledges the twenty-three Native Nations that have inhabited this land for centuries. Arizona State University's four campuses are located in the Salt River Valley on ancestral territories of Indigenous peoples, including the Akimel O’odham (Pima) and Pee Posh (Maricopa) Indian Communities, whose care and keeping of these lands allows us to be here today. ASU Library acknowledges the sovereignty of these nations and seeks to foster an environment of success and possibility for Native American students and patrons. We are advocates for the incorporation of Indigenous knowledge systems and research methodologies within contemporary library practice. ASU Library welcomes members of the Akimel O’odham and Pee Posh, and all Native nations to the Library.