William Grant Still
Born in Woodville, Mississippi, and reared in Little Rock, Arkansas, William
Grant Still (1895-1978) became the first African American composer to have
a symphony performed by an American orchestra. Mr. Still's Afro-American
Symphony was premiered by the Eastman Rochester Philharmonic with Howard
Hanson in 1931. The symphony was performed by 34 other American and European
orchestras during the 1930s.
Still would continue to add to his list of firsts, being the first African
American to conduct a major symphony orchestra, the first African American
to have an opera (Troubled Island) performed by a major opera company
(1949), and the first to have an opera (A Bayou Legend) performed
on national television (1981). The period from 1926 to the early 1940s was
Still's most prolific; during this time he wrote Levee Land (1925),
a suite for orchestra and soprano that combines traditional western musical
elements with jazz; From the Black Belt (1926), a work for chamber
orchestra based on seven short characteristic sketches; Sahdji (1930),
a choral ballet, based on an African story; the Afro-American Symphony
(1931), his most popular work; Lenox Avenue (1936), a ballet depicting
life in Harlem; and his opera Troubled Island (1941), about the Haitian
slave rebellion and consequent troubles of their leader Jean Jacques Dessalines.
During the 1950s Still turned to writing for young audiences. This period
includes The Little Song That Wanted to Be a Symphony (1954), the
Little Red Schoolhouse (1957), The American Scene (1957), which
is a set of five descriptive suites for young Americans based on geographic
regions of the country, and various songs and arrangements written for children's
music text books.
Opening measures of the
Afro-American Symphony
(170KB au file)
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