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Conductor RUDOLPH DUNBAR of Guyana

Posted by: randallbutisingh on: October 25, 2008

Conductor RUDOLPH DUNBAR of Guyana

Conductor Rudolph Dunbar
Conductor Rudolph Dunbar

Rudolph Dunbar – Berlin Philharmonic’s first black conductor

BBC Radio 4 program on Rudolph Dunbar broadcast on August 7, 2007 should read Echoes of Rudolph Dunbar on the BBC.

“At a concert this week in Berlin, Berlin’s famed 65-year-old Philharmonic Orchestra was led by a U.S. war correspondent in battledress. Besides being a war correspondent, the guest conductor was a Negro, born in British Guiana. The 2,000 Berliners and the 500 Allied soldiers in the audience found it quite an experience. They applauded warmly when the conductor led the orchestra through Webber’s familiar Oleron and Tchaikovsky’s Pathétique. They broke into cheers, and called him back five times, when he gave them Berlin’s first hearing of fellow-Negro William Grant Still’s boisterous, bluesy Afro-American Symphony.

Slender, serious Rudolph Dunbar is no musical freshman. He studied at Manhattan’s Julliard School, has several times conducted the London Philharmonic. He was in Berlin as correspondent for the Associated Negro Press of Chicago. Shortly before the Berlin Philharmonic’s Conductor Leo Borchard was accidentally killed by U.S. sentries, he had invited Dunbar to guest-conduct. U.S. occupation authorities were all for it, though their interest was more in teaching the Germans a lesson in racial tolerance than in Dunbar’s musicianship.”

The news story above was published in Time on September 10, 1945 when the career of Rudolph Dunbar was at its peak. Dunbar lived for another forty-three years, but what happened in those years to the first black musician to conduct the Berlin and London Philharmonic Orchestras is a mystery. The story starts at the turn of the last century in British Guiana (now Guyana). The date of Dunbar’s birth is variously given as 1902 or 1907, and classical music was an unlikely career for a black Guyanese boy at that time. But the young Dunbar’s interest was sparked by hearing transcriptions of Wagner and Elgar played in Georgetown by the British Guiana Militia Band. He joined the Militia Band as an apprentice clarinettist at the age of 14, and stayed with them for five years.

His talent was such that he left the band when he was 19 to study at the
(now the Juilliard) in New York, and lived in the city until he graduated in 1925. His subjects at the Juilliard were composition, clarinet and piano, but he was also active in the Harlem jazz scene, and was clarinet soloist on recordings by The Plantation Orchestra. While in New York he became a friend and champion of the African-American composer William Grant Still, and their correspondence is held today at the University of Arkansas.

In 1925 Dunbar moved to Paris as a post-graduate, studying conducting with Philippe Gaubert (below), and composition with Paul Vidal and clarinet with Louis Cahuzac. He also spent time with Felix Weingartner in Vienna. Dunbar’s reputation as a clarinetist grew, and reached the widow of Claude Debussy who invited him to give a private recital in her apartment in 1930 for members of the Paris Conservatoire.

Dunbar moved to London in 1931 to work as a music critic, and he also started the first ever clarinet school, which attracted students from around the world. His reputation was such that in 1939 he was commissioned to write a textbook on the clarinet, and his Treatise on the Clarinet (Boehm System) became the standard reference work for the instrument. It remained in print though ten editions, and today
commands high prices as a collectors item.

Dunbar remained active as a jazz musician, and in the 1930s in Britain he led two jazz groups, the All British Coloured Band (also known as the Rumba Coloured Orchestra), and Rudolph Dunbar and his African Polyphony, and made pioneering recordings of West Indian music with both these groups. He also composed, and his 1938 ballet score Dance of the Twenty-First Century (described by Dunbar as ‘ultra modern’), which was written for the famous Cambridge University Footlights Club, was broadcast nationally by NBC with the composer conducting.

The outbreak of war in Europe opened up conducting opportunities for Dunbar, and in 1942 he led the London Philharmonic in the Royal Albert Hall in a concert that was described at the time as a fund-raiser for “Britain’s coloured allies”. He wrote for the Associated Negro Press of Chicago, and this gave him credentials as a war correspondent in Europe. He took part in the Normandy Landings with a black regiment, and was the first foreigner to conduct a symphony orchestra in Paris after it was liberated, and then went on to conduct in Berlin.

In 1945 Dunbar presented a Festival of American Music in the
Théatre des Champs Elysees, Paris with the Conservatoire Orchestra and pianist Jeanne-Marie Darré. The programme included the premiere of In Memoriam: The Colored Soldiers Who Died for Democracy by William Grant Still (right), as well as Still’s Afro-American Symphony. The following year Dunbar made his US conducting debut with the Hollywood Bowl Symphony in a programme that again included Grant Still’s Afro-American Symphony. In other concerts he programmed the music of the Afro-British composer Samuel Coleridge Taylor (photo below).

Dunbar was a pioneering activist against racism. When asked at his US debut if he would settle in the country he replied: “I think I will make my home in Paris where, if you are good, they will applaud you whether you are pink, white or black, and if you are bad they will whistle at you.” But he was also supportive of the US, and objected to the British Government promoting his career for political ends, saying “It is not the British who have done it for me, it is the Americans.”

At the end of the war the promise was immense. Dunbar was established as a leading performer and authority on the clarinet, his conducting career was in the ascendant as concert life restarted, and he was seen as a role-model for West Indians. But the promise wasn’t fulfilled. Dunbar is documented as being the first black conductor of a symphony orchestra in Poland (1959), and Russia (1964), both concerts were in Soviet bloc countries at the peak of the Cold War. He promoted concerts for the Jamaican Hurricane Relief Fund in 1951, and toured British Guiana in the 1950s conducting the country’s Militia Band, Philharmonic Orchestra and a youth choir. Rudolph Dunbar died in London in June 1988.

Were Dunbar’s conducting talents simply eclipsed by de-Nazified conductors returning to the podium after the war, or were there other reasons why the promise wasn’t fulfilled? Exactly what happened remains a mystery, but there are some tantalising clues. Dunbar’s brief obituary in the Musical Times says: ‘He gradually withdrew from public life, and devoted himself to fighting racism and trying to increase black involvement in Western art music.

But there seems to be more to it than a gradual withdrawal from public life. It is known that Dunbar conducted the BBC Symphony Orchestra. One of the leading authorities on music in Guyana is Dr Vibert C. Cambridge at Ohio University, and in an article for the Stabroek News in Guyana in August 2004 Dr Cambridge quotes from an interview Rudolph Dunbar gave six months before his death in 1988:

“Dunbar spoke about the particular vindictiveness of a producer/director of music at the BBC who derailed his musical career in Europe. Dunbar described that director of music as “despicable and vile” and the BBC “as stubborn as mules and ruthless as rattlesnakes”.


Today Rudolph Dunbar
is remembered as a one of a pioneering group of West Indians who fought racism in the UK. The musician who was the first black conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic, and who wrote a standard reference work on the clarinet, does not warrant a single mention in the current or earlier editions of the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, or other major music reference books. Why remains a mystery.

Sources:
* Rudolph Dunbar by Dr Vibert C. Cambridge, Stabroek News August 22, 2004
*
W. Rudolph Dunbar: Pioneering Orchestra Conductor, The Black Perspective in Music, Vol. 9, No. 2 (Autumn, 1981), pp. 193-225
*
Rudolph Dunbar, The Musical Times, Vol. 129, No. 1749 (Nov., 1988), p. 619
*
Debut in the Bowl, Time Sept 02 1946
*
Rhythm in Berlin, Time Sept 10 1945
*
The Pantheon of West Indian Heroes Framed, Black Britain, July 8 2006.
*
Settling Scores: German Music, Denazification, and the Americans, 1945-1953, by David Monod, NewMusicBox Oct 24 2006,
(c) Bob Shingleton 2007

6 Responses to "Conductor RUDOLPH DUNBAR of Guyana"

You might contact the Guyanese writer and academic Jan Carew, who knew Dunbar personally in London. Carew probably knows what happened to Dunbar in his later years.

Dear Jan Carew

I have only recently discovered information on this unique and talented man. I have collection of old Picture Post Bond magazines, which I acquired by accident. I am an American by birth – married and English after some years in the Middle East and eventually settled in England for 20+ years. Four years ago, we moved tomy childhood home in Florida. I have finally had an opportunity to shift through numerous antiquarian books and emphermia that came with our shipment from England. Hence discovering the original article in the Picture Post of May 9, 194 of Rudoolph Dunbar’s performance at the Royal Albert Hall. Although we frequented classical concerts, I had never heard of this gentleman and am very intrigued as to what became of him in the post wars years and of his issues with the BBC who apparently thrawted his career.

Do you have any information that you would be willing to sharein order that I meant have some insight into what became of this gentleman. I was a child of the first integrated school in Daytona Beach and witnessed first hand the fear, suspicion and reticence of this time that will forever be eteched in my mind.

Please excuse this intrusion, but I am seriously interested in the life of Mr Dunbar.

Respectfully

S Yates

The content of your weblog about Mr. Rudolph Dunbar provides an informative overview.

My spouse and I met Mr. Rudolph Dunbar in London, where we lived, during the early 80’s. He was a suave perfectionist both in his music and demeanour.

Dunbar was a very generous person with his entertaining following WWII. He described quietly a lavish party that he gave in Paris. He disclosed a figure of (at the time) $5000.00 for costs of this particular affair, which he paid he noted, without difficulty.

I hesitate to state more because I am writing information about him and I do not wish to detract from the subject.

Thank you for the opportunity to comment.

Dr. I.M. Spence-Lewis

Thank you Dr. Spence-Lewis. for visiting my weblog for which I feel humble and very grateful. Your comments on Rudolph Dunbar are gracefully acknowledged. I knew of him long ago and admired him, an accomplished musician and a gentleman par excellence. Your spouse and you were indeed fortunate to enjoy his august presence. I was happy to have him in on my website so as to share his accomplishments with viewers, and also to be an inspiration to them.

My grandfather worked with Rudolph Dunbar in 1940 in London. His name was Freddy Grant and he also played clarinet and composed. He started out in what I assume must have been a militia band growing up in Guyana and then moved to Trinidad in 1933 to join the Constabulary Band there. Eventually he came over to London in 1937/38 and played with Cyril Blake, Lord Kitchener, Lord Beginner, Leslie Hutchinson, Humphrey Lyttleton and Rudolph Dunbar amongst others. He helped to found that very distinctive calypso/jazz sound that became so popular. I’m desperately trying to find out more about him (he was so illusive, even to his own family whom he left for New York in 1953) so any information you or anyone may have would be greatly received. It would be a dream come true to trace at least some of my roots :-)

Tiffany, your grandfather was really fornutate to work with such an illustrious character.as Rudolph Dunbar. I am sure some of his expertise must have rubbed off on him. Guyana had the Militia Band during Colonialism, but during Independence, it was known as the Police Band. I am sorry, except for his name, I do not know anything about your grandfather. Ask Cyril Bryan, a guest contributor to this weblog; whose address is cbryan@hotmail.com. He may be able to give you some more information.

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