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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Valerie_Rodway
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Valerie Rodway
rdfs:comment
Valerie Muriel Rodway (February 12, 1919 – August 1970) was a Guyanese composer of cultural and patriotic songs, inspired by the events leading up to Guyana's independence in 1966. She is best known for composing music to accompany Guyana national poetry, like Arise, Guyana, Kanaïma, and the Martin Carter's Guyanese Independence poem Let Freedom Awaken. For the next two decades, school children were taught the songs she and others composed to inspire patriotism and cultural affinity. She selected the poetry for her compositions based upon her principles and values, first developed among her parents and siblings.
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Valerie Muriel Rodway
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Valerie Muriel Rodway
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1919-02-12
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dbo:thumbnail
n9:Valerie_Rodway_(1919-1970).png?width=300
dbp:awards
Wordsworth McAndrew Award Cacique Crown of Honor
dbp:birthDate
1919-02-12
dbp:birthName
Valerie Muriel Fraser
dbp:float
right
dbp:image
n15:Valerie-Rodway.jpg
dbp:nationality
Guyanese
dbp:notableWorks
Let Freedom Awaken Kanaïma Arise, Guyana
dbp:occupation
Composer of cultural and national music
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Valerie Muriel Rodway (February 12, 1919 – August 1970) was a Guyanese composer of cultural and patriotic songs, inspired by the events leading up to Guyana's independence in 1966. She is best known for composing music to accompany Guyana national poetry, like Arise, Guyana, Kanaïma, and the Martin Carter's Guyanese Independence poem Let Freedom Awaken. For the next two decades, school children were taught the songs she and others composed to inspire patriotism and cultural affinity. She selected the poetry for her compositions based upon her principles and values, first developed among her parents and siblings. She has been considered Guyana's greatest composer of patriotic and national music, and among the best composers from Guyana of the 20th century, generally and among composers of classical music. She was awarded the Wordsworth McAndrew Award posthumously in 2002. In 2019, she was awarded the Cacique Crown of Honor, one of the highest honors of Guyana. The National Trust of Guyana building in Cummingsburg, Georgetown, has been renamed the Valerie Rodway House in her honor. She was married twice, yet had no children of her own. She was described as a caring, good mother by her stepdaughter, Dr. Cicely Rodway, the daughter of James Rodway. James, her second husband, created Guyana the Free with her. She taught music at a school in Georgetown, Guyana, and was a pianist who jammed with other Guyanese musicians.
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Valerie Muriel Fraser
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1919-01-01
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