STILL: Piano Music
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William Grant Still (1895-1978) Piano Music Long known as the doyen of Afro-American composers, William Grant Still was born on 11th May, 1895, in...
William Grant Still (1895-1978)
Piano Music
Long known as the doyen of Afro-American
composers, William Grant Still was born on 11th May,
1895, in Woodville, Mississippi to musical and
scholarly parents of African-American, Native
American, Spanish, Irish, and Scotch heritage.
Following the death of Still's father when William was
only a few months old, the family moved to Little Rock,
Arkansas, where the young Still began his musical
education with violin lessons from a private teacher and
a stack of Red Seal opera recordings bought for him by
his stepfather.
Still attended Wilberforce University, spending his
time there conducting the band and learning to play the
various instruments in it, as he made his first attempts to
compose and orchestrate. His subsequent studies at
Oberlin Conservatory of Music were financed at first
through his father's legacy, and later through a
scholarship established just for him by the faculty. After
graduating, he began his professional career playing in
orchestras and orchestrating music, particularly for the
violin, cello, and oboe. Some of the legendary
musicians he worked with include Paul Whiteman,
Artie Shaw, Bing Crosby, and Sophie Tucker, and for
several years, he arranged and conducted the Deep
River Hour on CBS and WOR radio.
Later study included a period at the New England
Conservatory of Music and an individual scholarship
with the ultra-modern composer Edgard Varèse. In the
1920s Still made his first appearances as a serious
composer, receiving Guggenheim and Rosenwald
Fellowships, and several important commissions
including CBS, the 1939-1940 New York World's Fair,
Paul Whiteman, the League of Composers, and the
Cleveland Orchestra. Other honours included the
jubilee Prize of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra
(1944), the Freedoms Foundation Award (1953), and a
prize from the U.S. Committee for the United Nations,
the N.F.M.C., and the Aeolian Music Fund for his
orchestral work The Peaceful Land, cited as the best
musical composition honouring the United Nations
(1961).
Still received countless honorary degrees from
several prestigious universities, including Howard
University, Oberlin College, Pepperdine University,
and Peabody Conservatory. In addition, he was awarded
numerous trophies and citations from organizations
such as the American Federation of Musicians, the
National Association of Negro Musicians, the Phi Beta
Sigma George Washington Carver Award, the Richard
Henry Lee Patriotism Award, and a citation from the
governor of Arkansas. He also lectured at various
universities from time to time, and was a distinguished
member of ASCAP, the American Society of
Composers, Authors and Publishers.
Among his many distinctions, Still was the first
African-American to conduct a major symphony
orchestra in the United States (the Los Angeles
Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl in 1936), the first
Afro-American to conduct a White radio orchestra in
New York City, the first Afro-American to have an
operatic work produced by a major company in the
United States (Troubled Island at the City Center of
New York in 1949), and the first person of Colour to
have an opera televised over a national network. He
wrote over 150 compositions, including operas, ballets,
symphonies, chamber works, and arrangements of folk
themes, as well as instrumental, choral, and solo vocal
works.
The compositions for piano on this recording are,
truly, visions of life; more specifically, they are visions
of African-American life and history. Through these
visions, the composer depicts the positive nature and
progress of a courageous people, from the African
cradle of civilization, to a glorious future in the afterlife.
In Africa, the dark-skinned peoples are seen as the
first humans, having begun to evolve three million years
ago. They thrive in a place of peace and romance
because they have a close relationship with the Divine.
After millions of years, they are taken into slavery and
sent to other locales, until the Civil War ends their
physical bondage. Amid the ruins of A Deserted
Plantation, where once they toiled in chains, they face
their new freedom with thanks to the Creator, and with a
joyful ability to dance, to sing, and to find love in the
face of hardship.
During the century following the Civil War, the
African-American people struggle to gain respect for
their talents, meeting adversity with a mixture of
sadness, longing and bravery that is the essence of The
Blues. Their affection for God and for Creation helps
them in their struggle, and they see God as a gentle but
exacting power in their lives, whose nature has seven
distinct characteristics. These characteristics are only
faintly visible to human kind - they are, in fact, seen
only in nature as Seven Traceries. The spiritual person
of Colour understands these "traceries," or traces, of
God's influence, and, as always, this awareness of
divinity is best expressed through his music.
Ultimately, their intimate relationship with the
Creator leads Afro-Americans to understand, not only
life on earth, but also life after death. William Grant
Still's Three Visions are the composer's explanation of
what happens to individuals, regardless of skin colour,
when their time on earth is over. All are judged. Noble
persons, who achieve in spite of obstacles and bigotry,
find blessings and advancement in the realm of the
spirit. The end of this recording, then, brings the proud,
accomplished person of colour to a reward and to a
vindication, and it brings the listener to a final vision of
triumph, magnificently developed and presented by
America's peerless creative talent, Afro-American
composer William Grant Still.
Three Visions is a suite for piano written by Still for
his wife, Verna Arvey, who first played the composition
in Los Angeles in 1936. The three segments of the suite,
Dark Horsemen, Summerland, and Radiant Pinnacle,
tell the story of the human soul after death: the body
expires, and the soul goes on to an apocalyptic
judgment. If it is seen that the past life has been a good
one, the soul may enter "heaven," or "Summerland".
After a period of time, the soul may reincarnate to learn
additional earthly lessons on the human plane. Some
souls reincarnate many times in a constant circular
progress toward Godly perfection.
The seven tone poems in the suite Seven Traceries,
Cloud Cradles, Mystic Pool, Muted Laughter, Out of
the Silence, Woven Silver, Wailing Dawn, and A Bit of
Wit, are mystical in both sound and intent. According to
the composer's daughter, they are actually seven
musical portraits of God; they present to the hearer the
"seven faces" of Divinity. The composer describes the
various attributes of the Higher Power in terms of the
natural landscape. In clouds, in pools, and in the rising
sun, God is portrayed as a nurturer, as a teacher, as a
humorist, as a stern commander, as a dazzling beauty,
as an enthroned glory, and as a lighthearted onlooker. In
all of these descriptions, William Grant Still's deep
reverence for the pictorial as well as for the spiritual is
the cord that binds the seven little tone pictures together
into a haunting and profound landscape.
The Blues is a segment from the Still-Arvey ballet,
Lenox Avenue, which was first heard on CBS Radio on
23rd May, 1937. This is gut-deep music, impelled by
the hard-hitting rhythms and rolling-bass of New
York's Harlem in the 1920s. It is, perhaps, Still's most
memorable rendering of the Negro idiom.
A Deserted Plantation was written by Still for Paul
Whiteman's Orchestra, and Whiteman gave the first
performance it in the Metropolitan Opera House in New
York City on 15th December, 1933. The work was
accompanied by excerpts from Paul Laurence Dunbar's
poem The Deserted Plantation. The version of the suite
which is included on this recording is the piano part
from the orchestral score. The beauty of this music
when played on the piano is that it retains the colour and
sonorous texture of the original.
The present piano reduction of Still's larger
orchestral work Africa was made by Verna Arvey, the
composer's wife. The original version for orchestra was
composed when Still was partially under the influence
of his teacher, Edgard Varèse. The composition was
first played in 1930 (in a reduced form) by the Barrère
Little Symphony in New York. Later in 1930, the
complete version was presented in Rochester, New
York, at an American Composers' Concert. The
composer dismantled the piece years afterward, using
parts of it in other works.
Judith Anne Still © 2004
Three Visions (more info)
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I. Dark Horsemen - 1:24
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II. Summerland - 4:19
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III. Radiant Pinnacle - 4:07
Seven Traceries (more info)
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I. Cloud Cradles - 2:13
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II. Mystic Pool - 3:01
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III. Muted Laughter - 0:52
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IV. Out of the Silence - 4:05
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V. Woven Silver - 1:13
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VI. Wailing Dawn - 4:12
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VII. A Bit of Wit - 1:03
Lenox Avenue: The Blues (more info)
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Lenox Avenue: The Blues - 2:50
A Deserted Plantation (more info)
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I. Spiritual - 3:30
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II. Young Missy - 5:45
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III. Dance - 3:08
Africa (arr. for piano) (more info)
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I. Land of Peace - 10:08
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II. Land of Romance - 6:20
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III. Land of Superstition - 7:22