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Bea breaks barriers! : How Florence Beatrice Price's Music Triumphed over Prejudice  Cover Image Book Book

Bea breaks barriers! : How Florence Beatrice Price's Music Triumphed over Prejudice / Caitlin DeLems ; illustrated by Tonya Engel.

Summary:

Florence Beatrice Bea Price loved music from a young age. When she wasn t practicing on the piano, she tapped her feet, drummed her fingers, and whistled. Growing up in Little Rock, Arkansas, she was surrounded by Negro spirituals, classical music, Juba dance rhythms, and folk songs and even had the chance to play piano with John William Blind Boone. But as a young Black girl living in the South, Bea wasn't offered the same chances as white children. Not allowed to perform in public, Bea's first recital was in her living room. But Bea was not deterred. She studied hard, rose to the top of her class, and was accepted to the New England Conservatory of Music one of two Black students and majored in both music and composition. Bea never forgot her roots and wove all kinds of musical genres into her musical compositions and spirituals.

Record details

  • ISBN: 1635924278
  • ISBN: 9781635924275
  • Physical Description: 48 p. : col. ill. ; 28 cm
  • Publisher: New York, NY : Calkins Creek, 2024.
Subject: Price, Florence, 1887-1953 > Biography.
African American composers > Biography.
African American women > Biography.
Recital
Little Rock, Arkansas
Genre: Musical History
Nonfiction
Picture Books
Biography

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at scottsboropl.

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  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
scottsboropl E 780.9 DeL 32269001265282 Juvenile - Easy NonFiction Available -

Summary: Florence Beatrice Bea Price loved music from a young age. When she wasn t practicing on the piano, she tapped her feet, drummed her fingers, and whistled. Growing up in Little Rock, Arkansas, she was surrounded by Negro spirituals, classical music, Juba dance rhythms, and folk songs and even had the chance to play piano with John William Blind Boone. But as a young Black girl living in the South, Bea wasn't offered the same chances as white children. Not allowed to perform in public, Bea's first recital was in her living room. But Bea was not deterred. She studied hard, rose to the top of her class, and was accepted to the New England Conservatory of Music one of two Black students and majored in both music and composition. Bea never forgot her roots and wove all kinds of musical genres into her musical compositions and spirituals.

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