JOHN W. WORK, III (1901-1967)
John Wesley
Work, III, was born June 15, 1901, in Tullahoma, Tennessee, to John Wesley
Work, II, and Agnes (Haynes) Work. Young John came to Nashville because
his father accepted a teaching position at Fisk University. Influenced
by the musical background of his family, John produced his first composition,
Mandy Lou, at age seventeen. He received the A.B. degree in history
(1923) and decided to enter New York's Institute of Musical Arts (Julliard
School of Music. After Agnes Work's death in 1927, John returned to Nashville
and completed his mother's appointment as a trainer of singing groups at
Fisk University, where he remained for thirty-nine years.
Meanwhile, John returned to New York to continue his studies in 1927.
He received the Master of Music Education degree in 1930 from Columbia
University, received a fellowship in 1931, and obtained a Bachelor of Music
degree in 1933 from Yale University. John Work, III, resumed his duties
at Fisk, teaching music education and theory. In 1946, he became the director
of the Jubilee Singers and reorganized the group into an ensemble of mixed
voices.
From 1946 to 1956, John Work, III, published more than fifty compositions.
He received an award from the Fellowship of American Composers for his
composition, The Singers, in 1946. Based upon a poem by Henry W.
Longfellow, this cantata was performed first at the 1946 Fellowship of
American Composers Convention in Detroit. After spending three months in
Haiti, Work wrote a suite for strings centered on Haitian themes. The string
symphony performed this suite, Yenvalou, at the 1946 Saratoga Spring
Festival. He completed a manuscript composition, Golgotha, based
upon a poem by Arna Bontemps. The Fisk Choir performed this composition
during the 1949 Festival of Music and Art.
Work's composition, My Lord, What A Morning, was performed for
the Festival of Music and Art in 1956 by choruses representing choirs form
Germany, Sweden, Great Britain, South America, France, Yugoslavia, Japan,
Canada, and the United States. The choir toured the United Nations and
performed this composition in Philharmonic Hall for the Festival's Gala
Concert.
Although many musicians did not consider black folk songs to have musical
credence, John Work, III, gave the Negro folk song a musical form. His
book, American Negro Songs and Spirituals (1960) made an invaluable
contribution to musicology. The book contains 230 religious and secular
songs, as well as the origins and nature of the various types of black
folk songs.
From 1950 to 1957, Work served as chairman of the Fisk University Department
of Music, and he continued to direct the Jubilee Singers until 1956. After
touring Europe for twelve weeks, his health waned, causing him to relinquish
conducting and administrative duties and concentrate on composing, speaking,
teaching, and writing. In 1966, he neared retirement and curtailed his
teaching to part-time service. The Fisk class of 1941 commissioned artist
Aaron Douglas to paint Work's portrait in 1966.
Work was a member of the American Society of Composers, Authors and
Publishers (ASCAP), among other organizations. He completed more than one
hundred compositions, published and unpublished. Not only was he a prolific
composer, Work was gifted with talent as an author, lyricist, choral conductor,
educator, and ethnomusicologist.
John Wesley Work, III, died on May 17, 1967.
Linda T. Wynn