Artis Wodehouse plays Atwimu by J. H. Kwabena Nketia


Uploaded on Dec 4, 2011

Recorded on December 4, 2011 at the Music and Poetry service at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation at Montclair, New Jersey. J. H. Kwabena Nketia (b. 1921) is considered a pioneer among African composers as well as an important African musicologist. Atwimu, composed in 1946 refers to a heartland region of Ghana. Artis Wodehouse chose music by African composers to reflect back to and amplify the poetry chosen and read by Rev. Charles Ortman for this special Advent service.

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Pianist and harmoniumist ARTIS WODEHOUSE has devoted her careeer to preserving and disseminating neglected but valuable music and instruments from the past, with an emphasis on American music. Cited by the NYTimes as “savior of the old and neglected”, she received a National Endowment grant that propelled her into production of CDs and published transcriptions of recorded performances and piano rolls made by George Gershwin, Jelly Roll Morton and Zez Confrey. Her best-seller, “Gershwin Plays Gershwin”, on the Nonesuch label has sold over 500,000 copies. Beginning in 2000, Wodehouse began performing on a representative group of antique reed organs and harmoniums, toy pianos and an 1823 English square piano and an 1860 Steinway square piano that she had painstakingly restored and brought to concert condition. She founded the chamber group MELODEON in 2010 to present little known but valuable music from 19th and early 20th Century America, using her antique instrument collection as the basis for repertoire choice. Wodehouse has a BM from the Manhattan School of Music, an MM from Yale, and a DMA from Stanford.
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