Registered Charity 1201139

Undine Smith Moore (1904-89)
Composer; Pianist

African American composer Undine Smith Moore circa 1960 with short dark hair wearing a beaded white top

Works published by MoV
We Shall Walk through the Valley (SATB)

We Shall Walk through the Valley (SATB)

We Shall Walk through the Valley, composed in 1977, is one of Undine Smith Moore’s many arrangements of spirituals learned from her parents when she was a child. Her choral-writing style is said to be derived from southern American hymnody, and is rooted in the tonal tradition associated with hymns and spirituals. Many of her arrangements are intended for liturgical use, and reflect her deep religious faith.

We Shall Walk through the Valley (SATB)

This work is published in our anthology Volume 1

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Perusal score coming soon

 (August 2025)

Undine Smith Moore (1904-89)

Undine Smith Moore was born in Virginia, USA. Her father was a railroad brakeman and her grandparents were slaves. Her early musical education combined a rigorous grounding in music theory (Moore began to compose at the age of nine) with the pervasive influence of African American work songs and spirituals.
Moore won from the Juilliard Graduate School a scholarship to study at Fisk University, a predominantly African American institution in Tennessee whose chorus was fêted for its performances of spirituals. At the end of her first year, Moore’s father gave her a Steinway grand piano, and for a while she considered becoming a concert pianist. She graduated in 1926 at the top of her class with joint honours in piano and composition. In 1927 she became a faculty member at Virginia State College, lecturing there for 45 years and establishing a Black Music Centre, of which she was co-director. Moore attended Colombia University Teachers’ College from 1931, where she completed an M.A. in music education. She furthered her studies at the Eastman School of Music and the Manhattan School of Music.
Retirement only increased Moore’s productivity, and she composed prolifically until just before her death. Her choral cantata, Scenes from the Life of a Martyr, depicting scenes from the life of Dr Martin Luther King Jr., was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize after its première in 1982. In 1971, Moore visited Africa and was deeply moved by her experiences there. One of her last compositions was a trio for violin, cello and piano called Soweto, which is based upon Moore’s responses to apartheid.
She was awarded honorary doctorates from Virginia State College and Indiana University in 1972, and in 1975 the mayor of Petersburg proclaimed 13th April as Undine Moore Day.

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