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Julia Amanda Perry was a classical composer and teacher who combined European classical and neo-classical training with Black heritage.

Julia Amanda Perry is the first African American woman to have her orchestral work performed by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, the Vienna Philharmonic, and the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra in London.

Born in Lexington, Kentucky, on March 25, 1924, Perry was raised in Akron, Ohio, the fourth of five daughters 𝐛𝐨𝐫𝐧 to Dr. Abraham Murphy Perry, a physician and amateur pianist, and ne᷃e America Lois Heath, a former school teacher. Upon finishing Akron High School in Akron, Ohio, she attended Westminster Choir College in Princeton, New Jersey, where she graduated in 1947 with a Bachelor of Music degree and won a prestigious scholarship to the Tanglewood Music Festival.

In 1948, Perry won first prize at the National Association of Negro Musicians in composition and voice. In 1952, she was awarded the prestigious Prix Fontainebleau for her Viola Sonata. Perry’s first musical conducting engagement was as a junior in college, when she composed a 1-page 29-measure Prelude to Piano. That same year, she attended the Julliard School of Music and earned a Master of Music in conducting and composition in applied music.

Throughout the 1950s, Perry’s compositions achieved widespread success due to her experimentation. She upheld the traditional European classical musical training she received yet also infused the negro spirituals of American Black culture in her compositions. By 1956, she wrote Three Negro Spirituals for Soprano and Orchestra.

By 1951, she composed Stabat Mater for solo contralto and string orchestra and Short Piece for Orchestra in Stabat Mater. In 1952, Perry attended the American Conservatory of Music in Fontainebleau, France, where she studied with acclaimed French teacher Nadia Boulanger, who noted that Perry was one of her most gifted Black students of the 1950s.  Perry also studied compositions and operas in Florence, Italy, with Italian composer Luigi Dallapiccola, who served as her mentor for over a decade, along with pianist Carlo Zecchi, and conductor and arranger Alceo Galliera.

From 1955 to 1957, Julia Perry received two Guggenheim Fellowships to study in Florence, Italy, with noted composer and conductor Roberto Lupi. From 1963 to 1968, Perry wrote Violin Concerto, a full score, piano reduction, and orchestral parts that introduced a new approach for twentieth-century composers by writing musical pieces that were more accessible to audiences.  Perry’s harmony enveloped listeners through repeated themes and pitch classes, flashes of consonant rhyme and triadic chord structures, and distinct rhythmic patterns, resulting in her neo-classical innovative style that showcased her profound understanding of the violin.

While Perry was affectionately called Maestra by her European peers, she returned to the United States in 1959 to join the music faculty at Florida A&M University and then took another position at Atlanta University. By 1960, however, she returned to Akron, where she wrote Homunculus C.F.

By 1961, Perry suffered from acromegaly, a rare condition causing her body to overly produce growth hormones, which enlarged her hands, feet, and face. Several strokes paralyzed her right side, leaving her wheelchair-bound. She taught herself to write with her left hand so she could continue to compose. During her lifetime, Perry completed 12 symphonies, two concertos, and three operas, in addition to numerous smaller pieces. Julia Amanda Perry died on April 29, 1979, in Akron, Ohio, at the age of 55.

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