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Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr.
BornJanuary 3, 1915
Baltimore, MD
DiedAugust 26, 1988
Occupation(s)composer, pianist, organist, music teacher
EmployerHoward University
TitleChair of Keyboard Department, Professor of Piano
Term1943 - 1976

Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr.

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Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. (January 3, 1915 - August 26, 1988) was an American classical pianist, organist, music teacher, and composer whose compositions and arrangements for piano, organ, voice, woodwind ensemble, and chorus were performed by some of the leading African American artists of his time[1] including pianists Sylvia Olden Lee,[2] Natalie Hinderas,[3] William Duncan Allen Jr.,[4] and the duo-piano team, Delphin and Romain.[5][6][7] His arrangements of Negro Spirituals have been performed and recorded by notable artists including Kathleen Battle[8][9][10] and Jessye Norman.[11][12]

Kerr was Professor of Music and Chair of the keyboard department at Howard University from 1943 - 1976. He served as the organist of the Plymouth Congregational United Church of Christ in Washington, DC.[13] As a pianist, he performed widely in the area and was the first African American to perform a recital the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC.[14]

Early life and education

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Thomas Kerr Jr. was born in Baltimore, Maryland in 1915 and died in 1988. He was one of three children born to Geneva Lyles and Thomas Henderson Kerr Sr. His father was a graduate of the pharmacy school at Howard University, class of 1912. He owned a pharmacy in Baltimore and was a part-time musician who led a pre-jazz orchestra in the decade following 1910.[15][16]

Thomas Jr. began playing and studying piano at an early age. He was self-taught on the organ, and, as early as fourteen, played for services at Metropolitan United Methodist Church in Baltimore.[17] He also played piano in Baltimore's nightclubs.[18]

His early musical training was with W. Llewellyn Wilson in Baltimore at Frederick Douglass High School, who produced some of the most prominent musicians of the latter twentieth century, including Eubie Blake, Blanche Calloway, Cab Calloway, Ellis Larkins, and Mark Fax.[19]

After high school, Kerr wanted to attend Peabody Institute but, at that time, African Americans were not admitted.[20] He instead attended Howard University for one year, then transferred to the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York. At Eastman, he earned three degrees: a bachelor of music in piano, a bachelor of music in theory, and a master of music in theory. He studied piano with Cécile Genhart (1898–1983) and graduated summa cum laude.[21] His master’s thesis was A Critical Survey of Printed Vocal Arrangements of Afro-American Religious Folksongs.[22]

Career

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Kerr’s first position after his Eastman studies was Instructor of Piano and Organ at Knoxville College in Tennessee (1940-1943). While at Knoxville he started to compose, and he did so as the need arose.[23]

During the 1940s Kerr performed in a piano duo with Sylvia Olden Lee (1917–2004)[24] on the “Black College Circuit.”[25] In addition to the performing the standard concert repertoire for piano duo, Kerr composed a significant concert work for their tour: Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel?: Concert Scherzo for Two Pianos, Four Hands.[26][27] According to Kerr, he needed a piece to perform with Olden Lee on the “Black College Circuit.”[28]

He worked briefly at the Library of Congress and, in 1942, received a Julius Rosenwald Fund Fellowship for creative work in musical composition.[29][30]

In 1943, Kerr returned to Howard University where he served as Professor of Piano and Chair of the Piano Department in the School of Music for more than thirty years, before retiring in 1976.

During his tenure at Howard, his career flourished. He composed and arranged music for significant events that directly and indirectly affected the University, such as the Howard University Centennial and the installation services for James Nabrit Jr., president of the University. He also composed for events of national significance, such as the US Bicentennial, the deaths of presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy, and the death of the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.

For over thirty-five years, Kerr served as the organist at Plymouth Congregational United Church of Christ in Washington, DC, where he composed organ, choral, vocal, and ensemble works for services. His organ compositions have been performed at the National Cathedral, the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, the Mormon Tabernacle, and in cathedrals and churches in Europe.

As a pianist, he performed both on the Howard campus and at area venues including the Phillips Collection and the National Gallery of Art, where he was the first African American to perform a recital.[31] He appeared twice as a concert soloist with the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, DC.[32]

Personal life

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Thomas Kerr Jr. raised two children, Thomas Henderson Kerr III (b. 1945) and Judith Elaine Kerr (b. 1950), with his first wife, Norma McAllister Kerr (1922–1991).[33] His second wife, Hortense Reid Kerr (1926–2002) was Professor of Piano at Howard University. She performed, catalogued, and lectured on his music and career.[34]

Thomas H. Kerr Jr. died on August 26, 1988, as a result of being struck by an automobile.[35] He is buried in Washington, DC, near Howard University.[36][

Compositional Style

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Kerr describes his own musical style as “conservative,” rejecting serialism and atonality. His music was personal, and since he wrote for community occasions or for specific performers, the writing would need to reflect those specific goals.[37]

Usually I write what Hindemith calls, Gebrauschmusik, useful music. I write music for special occasions. I write music for myself. I wrote music when I was a performer on the piano and organ. I have since become the chief arranger for the Morgan choir.[38] I write music for them. I've written music for Plymouth Church, and my own church, where I was organist and choir director for nearly 30 years. No looking at the sunset, nature and the babbling brook. That's not what sets me off. I write the things I need. Oft times, I can't find them, so I write them, in the style and the degree of complexity or lack of complexity I need at the time.[39]

Jane Fitz-Fitzharris, who has studied Kerr’s compositional techniques, writes:

The musical language of Thomas Kerr, Jr. uniquely reflected the African-American experience. . . His forms and styles were classically European but at the same time he incorporated elements of African music as well as spirituals and American jazz. . . Kerr's output shows pluralistic influences. For example, his use of the ostinato technique reflects the rhythmic richness/complexity of African music; his use of formal structures such as theme and variations reflect European style; and his inclusion of the spiritual was African- American.[33]

Many of Kerr’s piano and organ works, choral works, and vocal/piano arrangements were strongly rooted in the spiritual tradition.[40] While many of these were written for religious occasions celebrated in his church, spirituals also formed the basis for his concert works. Among his compositions are significant concert works based on spirituals: Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel?: Concert Scherzo for Two Pianos, Four Hands, Easter Monday Swagger, Scherzino (based on “Walk Together, Chillen”) for solo piano,[41][42] and Anguished American Easter (based on “He Rose”) for organ.[43][44][45]

The spiritual also formed the basis of compositions with political significance, such as those he wrote after the assassination of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. or in response to events during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s.

Fitz-Fitzharris writes:

Kerr was a prolific composer during the years of the civil rights movement, (1956-1964), a crucial time for African-Americans. Through his creativity as a composer, he left his perception of these historical events embedded in his compositions. Kerr personally witnessed the African-American struggle for human dignity and freedom.[46]

Kerr’s catalogue lists the following compositions around events affecting the African American community and on themes of Black liberation.

  • “Untitled” (Theodore Ward) [Voice and Piano] (1942)
  • Freedom Train (Langston Hughes) [Chorus, Piano, Narrator] (1947)
  • Birmingham Sunday (Jack Mendelsson) Dedication: The Birmingham Four. [Voice] (1963); [Chorus] (1965)
  • Jerusalem, the Golden. Dedication: R.I.P Martin Luther King [Organ] [sketch] (1968)
  • Anguished American Easter. Dedication: To the Memory of Dr. Martin Luther King [Organ[ (1969)
  • Scherzino, Easter Monday Swagger. Dedication: For Natalie Hinderas [Piano] (1970)
  • Prayer for the Soul of Martin Luther King, Jr. (Kerr) [Chorus] (1971)
  • Du Bois’ Litany Responses (W.E.B. Du Bois) [SATB] (1973)
  • Bicentennial Hymn (Anthem) for Black Citizens (Kerr) Dedication: For Howard University [Chorus/Brass/Tympani/Organ] (1975)

List of Works

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Kerr’s catalogue lists over 120 works for piano, organ, voice, chorus, and chamber ensembles, none published during his lifetime.[47][48] These manuscripts are preserved in Kerr’s archives at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. A renewed interest in his compositions has resulted in recent publications annotated here.

Voice with Piano

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  • “Riding to Town” (Paul Lawrence Dunbar) Dedication: Howard University (1942) Published 1984.[49][50]
  • “Thou Art My Lute” (Paul Lawrence Dunbar) Dedication: To Norma [Norma McAlister Kerr] (1942, rev. 1955, 1959) Published 2002.[51]
  • “Untitled” (Theodore Ward) (1942)
  • “In Memoriam” (Paul Lawrence Dunbar) (1956) Published 2002.[52]
  • “Washington, Our Own” (Kerr) Dedication: “To my parents with happy memories of a pleasant holiday” (1957)
  • “Imagination Waltz” (Henry Lyles) Dedication: “for Jaxon” (1952, rev. 1960)
  • “Soliloquy (Haunted / You Are There!)” (Paul Lawrence Dunbar) (1960) Published 2002.[52] 2021[53]
  • “Prayer for the Peace of John F. Kennedy” (Text: Quebec, Sir Henry Baker, in part) (1963)
  • “Centennial Ode” (alternate titles: Centennial Anthem, Centennial Hymn) (Lewis H. Fenderson) (1966)
  • “Words: Let Me Speak Straight from My Heart” (Kerr) (1979)

Organ Works

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  • Nativity Chorale-Fantasy (based on two Christmas melodies, “Rise Up, Shepherd An’ Follow” and “In dulic jubilee” (1941)
  1. Maestoso
  2. Allegretto for Flutes
  3. Antiphonal (Echo)
  4. Contrapuntal Dialogue (Homage to J. S. Bach)
  5. Aria (Pastorale)
  6. Extempore Toccata – Carillon
  • Arietta. Dedication: “To my Parents, Thomas H. Sr. and Geneva [Kerr]” (1951) Published 2000.[54]
  • Concert Variation on a Merry Xmas Tune: “Good King Wenceslas” (1951)
  • Passacaglia and Fugue. Dedication: Easter (1955, revised as Romantic Fantasy, 1960)
  • Meditation on “He Never Said a Mumblin’ Word” (1963, 1969)
  • Improvisation (After Manner of a Cradle Song) (1964)
  • Communion Chime Meditation on “It Came Upon the Midnight Clear” Dedication: Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1965 (1965)
  • Michael’s Christening (1966)
  • O Perfect Love. Dedication: “For the Jan. 22nd wedding of “Florence-of-Arabia” (1966)
  • Centennial Anthem (alternate titles: Centennial Hymn, Centennial Ode) (1967)
  • Anguished American Easter. Dedication: “To the Memory of Dr. Martin Luther King (written on the Holy Friday after the assassination for performance at Easter Service of Plymouth Congregational Church, Washington, DC)” (1968) Published 2005.[55]
  • Thanksgiving, 1969 (Somber Variations on Handel’s “Thanks Be to Thee”) (1969)
  • Suite Sebastienne. Dedication: For Joanne Sebastian Abrams, my student” (1974)
  1. “Procession of the Gargoyles” (rev. 1987) Published 2001.[56]
  2. “Miniature Antiphonal on a Pedal Point” Published 2001.[54]
  3. “Cantus”
  4. “Frolicking Flutes – Homage to Vierne” Published 2004.[54]
  5. “Miniature”
  6. “Fugato”
  7. “Toccata – Full Organ”
  8. “Trio”
  9. “Allegro Barbaro”
  10. “Reverie for Celestes” Published 2006.[54]
  11. “Toccata - Carillon
  • Concert Variations for Organ on a Traditional Theme (N.D.)

Organ with other instruments/voice

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  • Centennial Anthem (alternate titles: Centennial Hymn, Centennial Ode) [org, brass, timp] (1967)
  • Academic Procession on Two Triumphant Spirituals with Fanfare for Brass and Percussion (“Jacob’s Ladder,” “Great Day”) Dedication: Dean Mark Fax [org, 5tpt, 3tbn, tba, 3timp, perc] (1967)
  • Bicentennial Hymn (Anthem) for Black Citizens (Kerr) Dedication: Howard University [SATB, org, brass, timp] (1975)
  • Introductory Fanfare [org, reeds, brass, orch] (N.D.)

Choral Works

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  • “A Sailor's Song” (Paul Lawrence Dunbar) [TTBB] (1943)
  • “It's All Over” [vv, SATB] (1947)
  • Prayer for the Soul of Martin Luther King (Kerr) [SATB] (1971)
  • Du Bois’ Litany Responses (W.E.B Du Bois) [SATB] (1973)

Choral Works with Organ, Piano, Mixed Instruments

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  • Freedom Train. (Langston Hughes) [SATB, vv, pf, nar] (1947)[57]
  • Eight Festive Variations on an Original Hymn (Kerr) Dedication: “To the Choir and Congregation of Plymouth Congregational Church (of the United Church of Christ) and to its esteemed minister, Rev. Theodore Ledbetter. Composed for the Dedication Service of June 13, 1965, celebrating the acquisition of a new and adequate organ for the Sanctuary” [SATB, org, congregation] (1965)
  1. Cantus
  2. Antiphonal
  3. Fugato-Toccata
  4. Trio
  5. Allegro Barbaro
  6. Reverie
  7. Carillon
  8. Reprise
  • Festive Variations on an Original Hymn of Thanksgiving (Kerr) [SATB, org] (1965)
  • Joy Bells of Florence (theme by Poulenc) [SATB, pf] (1965)
  • Fanfares for the Nativity (Kerr) [SATB, org] (1970)
  • Christmas Fanfare (Kerr) [SATB, pf,] withdrawn by the composer (1970)
  • Bicentennial Hymn (Anthem) for Black Citizens (Kerr) [SATB, organ, brass, timp] (1975)

Piano Solo

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  • Burlesque Toccata (Adventures of an Emancipated Puppet) (1937)
  • Caprice Carillon. Dedication: William Duncan Allen (1940)
  • Retreat of the Lame Tin Soldier (1941)
  • Joy (Prelude in E-flat major) (1942)
  • Temportrait I (Toccata) Dedication: Sylvia Olden Lee (1943)
  • Temportrait II (Dedication) Dedication: G.L.K. (Geneva Kerr) (1943)
  • Dancétudes: 7 Vignettes of Dolls and Pets. Dedication: Judy Kerr, Age 9. (1959. rev. 1961, 1963) Publication forthcoming 2024.[58]
  • Caprice on Two Dance Themes (Toccatina) Dedication: Natalie Hinderas. (1960)
  • Scherzino: Easter Monday Swagger. Dedication: Natalie Hinderas. (1970) Publication forthcoming 2025.[59]

Two Pianos, Four Hands

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  • Satirical Gavotte (1938)
  • Passacaglia and Concert Fugue in the Old Style (1939)
  • Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel? Concert Scherzo for Two Pianos (1940) Published 2024.[60]
  • Es Ist Voll Brach (arr.) J.S. Bach. Dedication: Sylvia Olden Lee (1941)
  • Begin the Beguine (arr.) Cole Porter. Dedication: Sylvia Olden Lee (1941) (pages missing)[61]
  • Romantic Fantasy in the Form of a Passacaglia and Fugue (1959)
  • Cadenza for W. A. Mozart Concerto for Two Pianos, K365. Dedication: “Written on Mozart’s 214th birthday, January 27, 1970, for Earl and Earnest Hargrove by their teacher” (1970)

Piano Four-Hands (Duet-Pedagogical)

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  • Old MacDonald (Chicken Reel). Dedication: “for Pat and Michael Thornton” (1973)
  • Mother “B’s” Bach. Dedication: “For the Hargrove twins – Everest (short for Never-rest because of his characteristic (and endearing) restlessness – verging on explosiveness and Oil [Earl] because of his quiet demeanor and quiet movements – there is an ancient Arling-Oriental maxim that says: Watch out for those quite ones!” (1973)

Chamber Music (Mixed Instruments)

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  • Five Festive Variations on a Merry Carol (Good King Wenceslas) [fl, ob, 2cl, bcl, hn, bsn] (1969)
  • Filets of Soul (alternate title: Pastorale Elegy) [fl, ob, cl, hn, bsn] (1970) rev. Pastorale Elegy (1979)
  • Sonatina [vl/fl] (N.D.)

Arrangements of Spirituals, Hymns, Carols

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  • “Mah Ways Cloudy” [org] (1941)
  • “Rise Up, Shepherd and Follow” [org]  (1941)
  • “I Will Extol Thee” [SATB] Dedication: Warner Lawson and the Howard University Choir (1942)
  • “Poor Wayfaring Stranger” [SATB] Dedication: “For the Howard University Choir of ’44-’45 on the day of President’s Funeral [Franklin Delano Roosevelt]” (1945)
  • “Benediction: The Lord Bless and Keep You” Dedication: “To the Howard Choir of ’48-’49”  [SATB] (1948, rev. 1986 Dedication: “Happy Birthday to my Wife, Hortense (Griselda) Kerr, the East Coast’s Grand Dame of Music Education”)
  • “Go Tell It on the Mountain” [SATB] (1948)
  • “Plenty Good Room” [SATB] (1950)
  • “I Want Jesus to Walk Wid Me” [org] (1951) Published 1951.[62]
  • “Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen” [org] (1951) Published 1951.[62]
  • “Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen” [pf] (1951)
  • “Didn't My Lord Deliver Daniel” Dedication: “To Herr Kappellmeister Tymus Thomas (or Thomas Tymus)”  [SATB] (1951, rev. 1961)
  • “Didn't My Lord Deliver Daniel” [1v, pf] (1951)
  • “I Want Jesus to Walk Wid Me” [1v, pf] (1951)
  • “Git on Board” Dedication: Easter [1v, pf ]  (1952) Published 2002.[63]
  • “I Got a Home In-a-Dat Rock” [1v, pf] (1952)
  • “Great Day” Dedication: Thanksgiving, DC  [1v, pf]  (1953) Published 2002.[63]
  • “Wade in de Water” [1v, pf]  (1953)[64]
  • “Talk About a Chile“ [SATTBB] (1954)
  • “You Better Mind” [SATB] (1954)
  • “Plen'y Good Room” [1v, pf] (1954)
  • “I Want Jesus to Walk Wid Me” [pf ] (1956)
  • “Nobody Knows” [SATB] (1957)
  • “Talk About a Chile” [1v, pf] (1957) [org]
  • “Christian, Dost Thou See Them” Dedication: “For the 1962 Church Birthday Celebration for Rev. Ted Ledbetter” [org] (1962, rev. 1967 Dedication: “To Aunt Bena R.I.P. Full Professor Rank – Iowa”)
  • “Lead, Kindly Light” Dedication: Gunston Temple (Canaan Baptist Church) [org] (1962)
  • “Sa’weet Hour of Prayer” Dedication: “For Rev. Ledbetter’s birthday, Jan. 15, 1962” [org] (1962)
  • “Savior, Thy Dying Love” [org] (1962)
  • “Angels from the Realms of Glory” Dedication: NY Settlement Band [org] (N.D.; rev. 1965, 1967)
  • “Come, Ye Thankful People” [org] (1965)
  • “What Child is This?” [org] (1965)
  • “O Worship the King” [org] (1965)
  • “Rejoice, O People, in the Mounting Years – Christians, Awake” [org] (1965)
  • “O Come All Ye Faithful” [SATB, org] Dedication: “For Charles Fleming and the Teacher’s Alumni Chorus” (1965, rev. 1969)
  • “Come, Come Ye Saints” [SATB] (1966)
  • “Christ, the Lord, is Risen Today” Dedication: Easter “Centennextravaganza” Plymouth Congregational Church [org] (1966, 1967)  
  • “Angels We Have Heard on High” [org] (1967)
  • “Come, Thou Almighty King” Dedication: “For Ted Golder” [org] (1967)
  • “Lead On, O King Eternal” [org] (1967)
  • “O Worship the King” [org] (1967)
  • “Rejoice, Ye Pure in Heart” [org] (1967)
  • “He Rose” Dedication: “For the Antiphonal Jr. and Sr. Choirs for Easter” [SATB, org] (1968)
  • “Silent Night” [TTBB, org] (1968)
  • “God of Our Father” [SATB, org] (1969)
  • “O Come, All Ye Faithful” [org] (1969)
  • “Gospel Train” [bar, stg orch] (1970, rev. 1973)
  • “Oh, What a Beautiful City” [sop, bar, stg orch] (1973)
  • “De Blin' Man Stood on de Road” Dedication: “For Deborah Brunson’s Recital” [1v, pf] (1973)
  • “O What a Beautiful City” [sop, bar, stg orch] (1973)
  • “Din' It Rain” Dedication: “ For graduating recital of countertenor, Woolyam Jones [William Jones]” [1v, pf] (1975) Published 2002.[63]
  • “Mah ways Cloudy” Dedication: “For Woodyam Jones [William Jones, Countertenor]” [1v, pf] (1975)
  • “Doancha Wanna Go” [1v, pf] (N.D.)
  • “Here, O My Lord” [org] (N.D.)
  • “Joyful, Joyful We Adore Thee” [org] (N.D.)
  • “O Zion, Haste” [org] (N.D.)

Other Arrangements

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  • Lullaby by Johannes Brahms. [va, pf] (1944)
  • Violin Sonata No. 5 in G Minor by Corelli  [org] [pf] (1955)
  • Cantilena – Maternal Elegy [org] (from a song to poem of Walt Whitman by Cecil Cohen arr. by T Kerr on the day of his funeral (completed 5:30 am) (1957)
  • Birmingham Sunday (Jack Mendelsson) Dedication: The Birmingham Four [1v, pf] (1963) [SATB] (1965)
  • Piano Concerto #3 by Sergei Prokofiev. Dedication: “A Judycial Reduction” (Orchestral reduction arranged for simplified piano.) (1965)
  • “Adagio Assai” from Piano Concerto by Ravel [org] (1969)
  • Concerto for 2 Klaviers by J.S. Bach. (orchestral parts) [org] (1970)
  • Venetian Love Song (Herbert) [vc, pf] (N.D.)

Sources

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Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. Papers (Sc MG 763). Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division of the New York Public Library.

de Lerma, Dominique-Rene. Liner notes for “Natalie Hinderas, Piano Music by African American Composers,” 2007, New World Records NWCR629. 

Fitz-Fitzharris, Jane. “Compositional Techniques in Thomas Kerr, Jr.’s ‘Anguished American Easter, 1968’ and Their Application to the Theme of African-American Theology.” DMA diss., Louisiana State University, 2006.

Garcia, Susanna and William Chapman Nyaho. 2024. "Preface" In: Kerr, Thomas Henderson, Jr. Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel? Concert Scherzo for Two Pianos. Edited by Susanna Garcia and William Chapman Nyaho, The Frances Clark Center Piano Education Press, pp. 4-15.

Garcia, William Burres. “Church Music by Black Composers: A Bibliography of Choral Music.” The Black Perspective in Music, vol. 2, no. 2, 1974, pp. 145–57. JSTOR.

Harrell, Paula D. Organ literature of twentieth-century black composers: An annotated bibliography, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, United States -- North Carolina, 1992. ProQuest.

Hobson, Cynthia Tibbs, and Cynthia A. Reid. A Catalogue of the Compositions and Arrangements of Thomas Henderson Kerr, Jr. (1915–1988) 2005. Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. Papers (Sc MG 763). Box 5, Folder 1. Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division of the New York Public Library.

Kerr, Hortense R., and Marva Cooper. “Selected Piano Music of Thomas H. Kerr, Jr.” Intercultural Musicology 4, No. 1. (April 2000). Archived from the original.

Kerr, Thomas H., Jr. A Critical Survey of Printed Vocal Arrangements of Afro-American Religious Folk Songs. June 1939. MM Thesis, Eastman School of Music.

Patterson, Willis. “The African-American Art Song: A Musical Means for Special Teaching and Learning.” Black Music Research Journal, vol. 16, no. 2, 1996, pp. 303–10. JSTOR.

Royal, Guericke C. Selected Works of Composers Associated with Howard University, University of Maryland, College Park, United States -- Maryland, 2018. ProQuest.

White, Evelyn Davidson. Choral Music by African-American Composers: An Annotated Bibliography. Scarecrow Press, April 1996.

Discography

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Year Album Works Performers Label
1971 Natalie Hinderas Pianist Plays Music by Black Composers “Scherzino, Easter Monday Swagger” Natalie Hinderas, piano Desto Records 7102/3
1991 Spirituals in Concert “Great Day” “Oh, What a Beautiful City” Jessye Norman and Kathleen Battle, sopranos, James Levine, conductor DGG
1992 A Diversity of Riches: Multi-Ethnic Organ Music by 20th-Century American Composers “Anguished American Easter” Herndon Spillman, organ Titanic
1998 Songs of Illumination “Git on Board” Louise Toppin, soprano and Howard Watkins, piano Centaur Records
2006 Spirituals “Great Day” Jessye Norman, soprano and Dalton Baldwin, piano Phillips Classics
2007 Piano Music by African American Composers “Scherzino, Easter Monday Swagger” Natalie Hinderas, piano New World Records NWCR629 (reissue of 1971 Desto LP)
2011 How Sweet the Sound “Git on Board” Darryl Taylor, countertenor and Brent McMunn, piano Albany Records
2021 Dreams of a New Day: Songs by Black Composers “Riding to Town” Will Liverman, baritone and Paul Sánchez, piano Cedille Records
2022 Five By Four “Concert Scherzo: Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel?” Nyaho/Garcia Piano Duo (William Chapman Nyaho and Susanna Garcia, duo pianists) MSR Classics MS1753
2023 Witness “Great Day” Limmie Pulliam, tenor and Mark Markham, piano Pulliam Music Group LLC.
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References

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  1. ^ Hobson, Cynthia Tibbs, and Cynthia A. Reid. A Catalogue of the Compositions and Arrangements of Thomas Henderson Kerr, Jr. (1915–1988) 2005. Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. Papers (Sc MG 763). Box 5, Folder 1.Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division of the New York Public Library. p. vii.
  2. ^ Garcia, Susanna and William Chapman Nyaho. 2024. Preface. In: Kerr, Thomas Henderson, Jr. Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel? Concert Scherzo for Two Pianos. Edited by Susanna Garcia and William Chapman Nyaho, The Frances Clark Center Piano Education Press, pp. 6-8.
  3. ^ de Lerma, Dominique-Rene. Liner notes for “Natalie Hinderas, Piano Music by African American Composers,” 2007, New World Records NWCR629. Reissue of Desto 7102/3 Records, “Natalie Hinderas Pianist Plays Music by Black Composers,” Recorded 1971.
  4. ^ William Duncan Allen Jr. letter to Thomas H. Kerr Jr. February 8, 1982. Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. Papers (Sc MG 763). Box 1, Folder 4.
  5. ^ Garcia and Chapman Nyaho (2024) pp. 8-9.
  6. ^ Bruce Posner and Joe Patrych (1982-03-15), Concert Grande - Interview with Delphin & Romain, duo-pianists, 3-15-1982, retrieved 2024-09-20
  7. ^ National Black Music Colloquium and Competition Program Book. January 11, 1980, Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. Papers (Sc MG 763). Box 2, Folder 6.
  8. ^ Fitz-Fitzharris, Jane. “Compositional Techniques in Thomas Kerr, Jr.’s ‘Anguished American Easter, 1968’ and Their Application to the Theme of African-American Theology.” DMA diss., Louisiana State University, 2006, p. 3.
  9. ^ Kathleen Battle in Concert with Cliff Jackson. Recital Program, January 13, 2002. Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. Papers (Sc MG 763). Box 1, Folder 9.
  10. ^ Recording: “Great Day” Jessye Norman and Kathleen Battle. Spirituals in Concert. DGG, 1991
  11. ^ Jessye Norman, soprano and Dalton Baldwin, piano. Recital Program, March 13, 1980. Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. Papers (Sc MG 763). Box 1, Folder 14.
  12. ^ Recording: “Great Day” Jessye Norman and Dalton Baldwin. Spirituals. Phillips Classics.
  13. ^ Biographical/Historical Information. Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. Papers (Sc MG 763).
  14. ^ “Oasis: At 90, Kerr has ‘been somebody’ a long time” The Baltimore Sun. May 20, 1978. Retrieved September 2, 2024.
  15. ^ Obituary: Kerr, Thomas Henderson, Sr., 1888-1985 - Wylheme H. Ragland collection of funeral bulletins - The University of Alabama Libraries Special Collections.
  16. ^ Fitz-Fitzharris (2006), p. 1.
  17. ^ “Thomas H. Kerr Jr Dies, Howard Music Professor” The Baltimore Sun. August 30, 1988.
  18. ^ Kerr, Hortense R., and Marva Cooper. “Selected Piano Music of Thomas H. Kerr, Jr.” Intercultural Musicology 4, No. 1. (April 2000). Archived from the original. Retrieved September 2, 2024.
  19. ^ Fitz-Fitzharris (2006), p. 5.
  20. ^ It was not until 1949 that the first African American student was admitted to the Peabody Institute. “A Message of Inclusion, A History of Exclusion. Racial Injustice at the Peabody Institute.”
  21. ^ Hobson and Reid. Catalogue, pp. 3-4.
  22. ^ Kerr, Thomas H., Jr. A Critical Survey of Printed Vocal Arrangements of Afro-American Religious Folk Songs. June 1939. MM Thesis Eastman School of Music.
  23. ^ Kerr and Cooper (2000)
  24. ^ Olden-Kerr Piano Duo Recital Programs, April 21, 1944; June 24, 1956. Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. Papers (Sc MG 763). Box 4, Folders 4,5.
  25. ^ During the period of segregation in the US, it was a common for African American musicians to perform on a circuit of venues including historically Black colleges and universities and African American churches, schools, and community centers. Garcia and Chapman Nyaho (2024)
  26. ^ Recording: “Concert Scherzo: Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel?” Nyaho/Garcia Piano Duo, Five By Four (MSR Classics MS1753, April 2022).
  27. ^ eds. Susanna Garcia and William Chapman Nyaho. The Frances Clark Center Piano Education Press, (2024).
  28. ^ Thomas H. Kerr Jr. typed program notes for National Black Music Colloquium and Competition. Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. Papers (Sc MG 763). Box 1, Folder 1.
  29. ^ Harrell, Paula D. Organ Literature of Twentieth-Century Back Composers: An Annotated Bibliography, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, United States -- North Carolina, 1992. ProQuest. P. 99.
  30. ^ "bookreader demo". credo.library.umass.edu.
  31. ^ Oasis Profile" The Baltimore Sun. (1978).
  32. ^ "archives.nypl.org -- Thomas Henderson Kerr, Jr. papers". archives.nypl.org.
  33. ^ a b Fitz-Fitzharris, p. 6.
  34. ^ Hortense Reid Kerr’s papers are found in the Kerr Collection at the Schomburg Center, Box 14.
  35. ^ Fitz-Fitzharris, p. 2.
  36. ^ Hobson and Reid. Catalogue (2005). pp. 4-5.
  37. ^ Thomas H. Kerr Jr., Interview by Sharon Barron (transcript), p. 4. Thomas Henderson Kerr Jr. Papers (Sc MG 763). Box 1, Folder 1.
  38. ^ Morgan State University Choir, Baltimore, MD.
  39. ^ Thomas H. Kerr Jr., Interview by Sharon Barron (transcript), p. 3.
  40. ^ “Thomas H. Kerr Jr Dies, Howard Music Professor” The Baltimore Sun. August 30, 1988. Retrieved September 2, 2024.
  41. ^ Recording:  “Easter Monday Swagger” Natalie Hinderas, Piano Music by African American Composers, 2007, New World Records NWCR629.  Reissue of Desto 7102/3 Records, Natalie Hinderas Pianist Plays Music by Black Composers.
  42. ^ Scherzino, Walk Together Chidren. eds. Susanna Garcia and William Chapman Nyaho. The Frances Clark Center Piano Education Press, (forthcoming, 2025)
  43. ^ Anguished American Easter for Organ, ed. Herndon Spillman, GIA Publications (2005)
  44. ^ Recording: “Anguished American Easter” Herndon Spillman, organ. A Diversity of Riches: Multi-Ethnic Organ Music by 20th-Century American Composers. Titanic, 1992.
  45. ^ Performance: “Anguished American Easter” Paul Fritts, organ, 2017.
  46. ^ Fitz-Fitzharris, p. 41.
  47. ^ Hobson and Reid, Catalogue.
  48. ^ Fitz-Fitzharris, p. 1.
  49. ^ Anthology of Art Songs by Black American Composers, ed. Willis C. Patterson, Hal Leonard (1984)
  50. ^ Recording: “Riding to Town”  Will Liverman and Paul Sánchez. Dreams of a New Day: Songs by Black Composers. Cedille Records. 2021.
  51. ^ Second Anthology of Art Songs by Black American Composers, ed. Willis C. Patterson (2002)
  52. ^ a b Patterson, Second Anthology (2002)
  53. ^ An Anthology of African and African Diaspora Songs, ed. Louise Toppin (2021)
  54. ^ a b c d "Mickey Thomas Terry". www.morningstarmusic.com.
  55. ^ Kerr, Thomas. "Anguished American Easter, 1968". GIA Publications.
  56. ^ African-American Organ Music Anthology, ed. Micky Thomas Terry, MorningStar Music (2001) Vol 2.
  57. ^ Not listed in the catalogue but mentioned in Barron's oral history and Kerr's handwritten notes.
  58. ^ Dancétudes: 7 Vignettes of Dolls and Pets. eds. Susanna Garcia and William Chapman Nyaho. The Frances Clark Center Piano Education Press, (forthcoming, 2024)
  59. ^ Scherzino, Easter Monday Swagger, eds. Susanna Garcia and William Chapman Nyaho. The Frances Clark Center Piano Education Press, (forthcoming, 2025)
  60. ^ Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel? Concert Scherzo for Two Pianos. eds. Susanna Garcia and William Chapman Nyaho. The Frances Clark Center Piano Education Press, (2024)
  61. ^ This score was found in the Sylvia Olden Lee Collection at Oberlin College and Conservatory. There are several pages missing. It is not listed in the Hobbs/Reid catalogue.
  62. ^ a b "American Guild of Organists | Boston University". www.bu.edu.
  63. ^ a b c Patterson, Willis C.; Johnson, Hall; Brown, Charles S.; Dent, Cedric; Dett, R. Nathaniel; Harper, Toy; Fax, Mark; Kerr, Thomas H.; Lloyd, Charles; Lee, James; Smith, Hale; Perkinson, Coleridge-Taylor; Alston, Lettie Beckon; Hairston, Jacqueline B.; King, Betty Jackson; Moore, Undine S.; Moore, Undine S.; Moore, Undine S., eds. (September 23, 2002). The new Negro spiritual collection. W.C. Patterson] – via Library Catalog (Blacklight).
  64. ^ Not listed in the Kerr catalogue but located at Kerr, Thomas H. “Wade in de Water.” Marian Anderson Collection of Music Manuscripts,1953.