From the New York Timess former chief classical music critic, a tribute to one of the great singers of modern times and a national treasure who broke racial barriersThe night before Marian Anderson performed her historic concert at the Lincoln Memorial, she called her manager with grave doubts. What had started as a plan to sing a recital in Washingtons largest concert hall had turned, she feared, into a protest rally after she was barred from appearing on the venues whites-only stage. The next day a crowd of seventy-five thousand flocked there to see her perform on Easter Sunday, 1939, before the monument of freedom itself. This was a major triumph for racial justice, but Anderson worried it would overshadow the rest of her inimitable career.In this rich new portrait, Anthony Tommasini brings his decades of musical expertise to bear upon Andersons artistry, the journey of her life, and conversations about her legacy. After her breakout early performances in Europe, she gripped international audiences with her masterful renditions of Handel arias, German lieder, Scandinavian songs, and Negro spirituals: bold programming for her time. But recognition was harder to achieve at home. Though celebrated for her rich, lustrous voice and insightful artistry, Anderson had to contend with hotels and restaurants that turned her away in the very cities where she appeared in concert to acclaim. These tribulations brought forth memorable shows of goodwillEleanor Roosevelt fought the Daughters of the American Revolution in her honor; Albert Einstein housed her in Princetonbut were representative of the fierce racism Anderson faced. Still, she became one of the most respected and successful artists of her time and famously broke the color barrier at the Metropolitan Opera in 1955.As Arturo Toscanini famously said after attending one of Andersons performances: What I heard today one is privileged to hear only once in a hundred years. Now, we get to experience this again, in the context of Andersons dignified leadership, authenticity, and majestic presence.