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Detroit Symphony to debut piece honoring razed black areas

The commissioned piece celebrates Paradise Valley and Black Bottom, two neighborhoods torn down in an effort to combat "Urban Blight"
Credit: Thinkstock by Getty

DETROIT — The Detroit Symphony Orchestra plans to premiere a work commemorating two historic, razed black neighborhoods in the city.

The ensemble is scheduled to perform the 22-minute “Black Bottom” during performances March 6-7.

The commissioned piece was composed by Nkeiru Okoye, a native New Yorker born to an African American mother and Nigerian father.

The performance is part of a year long celebration of 100 years of Orchestra Hall. The program will also include a performance of Johnson’s Lift Every Voice and Sing and Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 5, "Emperor".

A release says “Black Bottom” came out of a roughly year-long research project. It aims to portray “joys, sorrows and interrelated stories” about Paradise Valley and Black Bottom, the latter so named by French colonial settlers because of its rich soil.

According to the Detroit Historical Society, Black Bottom was hit hard by the Great Depression since many of the neighborhood’s residents worked in the hard hit auto factories.

In the 1960s the city targeted the area to combat what it referred to as “Urban Blight”.

The areas were torn down partly to make way for a highway.

Many of the former residents of the neighborhood relocated to public housing projects.

Visit the Detroit Symphony Orchestra’s website for more information on tickets to the performance and Orchestra Hall.

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