peoplepill id: william-grant-still
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The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American composer
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Mississippi, USA
Place of death
Los Angeles, USA
Age
83 years
Family
Education
Oberlin College,
Wilberforce University,
Notable Works
Symphonie n°5
 
Symphonie n°4
 
Awards
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship
 
William E. Harmon Foundation award for distinguished achievement among Negroes
 
Genre(s):
Instruments:
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

William Grant Still, Jr. (May 11, 1895 – December 3, 1978) was an American composer of nearly 200 works, including five symphonies and nine operas.

Often referred to as the "Dean of Afro-American Composers", Still was the first American composer to have an opera produced by the New York City Opera. Still is known primarily for his first symphony, Afro-American Symphony, which was until 1950 the most widely performed symphony composed by an American.

Born in Mississippi, he grew up in Little Rock, Arkansas, attended Wilberforce University and Oberlin Conservatory of Music, and was a student of George Whitefield Chadwick and later Edgard Varèse.

Of note, Still was the first African American to conduct a major American symphony orchestra, the first to have a symphony (his 1st Symphony) performed by a leading orchestra, the first to have an opera performed by a major opera company, and the first to have an opera performed on national television.

Due to his close association and collaboration with prominent African-American literary and cultural figures, Still is considered to be part of the Harlem Renaissance movement.

Life

William Grant Still, Jr. was born on May 11, 1895, in Woodville, Mississippi. He was the son of two teachers, Carrie Lena Fambro (1872–1927) and William Grant Still Sr (1871–1895). His father was a partner in a grocery store and performed as a local bandleader. William Grant Still Sr. died when his infant son was three months old.

Still's mother moved with him to Little Rock, Arkansas, where she taught high school English. She met and in 1904 married Charles B. Shepperson, who nurtured his stepson William's musical interests by taking him to operettas and buying Red Seal recordings of classical music, which the boy greatly enjoyed. The two attended a number of performances by musicians on tour. His maternal grandmother Anne Fambro sang African-American spirituals to him.

Still started violin lessons in Little Rock at the age of 15. He taught himself to play the clarinet, saxophone, oboe, double bass, cello and viola, and showed a great interest in music. At 16 years old, he graduated from M. W. Gibbs High School in Little Rock.

His mother wanted him to go to medical school, so Still pursued a Bachelor of Science degree program at Wilberforce University, a historically black college in Ohio. Still became a member of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity. He conducted the university band, learned to play various instruments, and started to compose and to do orchestrations. He left Wilberforce without graduating.

He was awarded scholarships to the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, where he studied with Friedrick Lehmann and George Andrews. He also studied privately with the modern French composer Edgard Varèse and the American composer George Whitefield Chadwick.

On October 4, 1915, Still married Grace Bundy, whom he had met while they were both at Wilberforce. They had a son, William III, and three daughters, Gail, June, and Caroline. They separated in 1932 and divorced February 6, 1939. On February 8, 1939, he married pianist Verna Arvey, driving to Tijuana for the ceremony because interracial marriage was illegal in California. They had a daughter, Judith Anne, and a son, Duncan.

On December 1, 1976, his home was designated Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #169. It is located at 1262 Victoria Avenue in Oxford Square, Los Angeles.

Career

In 1916 Still worked in Memphis for W.C. Handy's band. In 1918 Still joined the United States Navy to serve in World War I. After the war he went to Harlem, where he continued to work for Handy. During his time in Harlem Still was involved with other important cultural figures of the Harlem Renaissance such as Langston Hughes, Alain Locke, Arna Bontemps, and Countee Cullen, and is considered to be part of that movement.

He recorded with Fletcher Henderson's Dance Orchestra in 1921, and later played in the pit orchestra for Noble Sissle and Eubie Blake's musical, Shuffle Along and in other pit orchestras for Sophie Tucker, Artie Shaw, and Paul Whiteman. With Henderson, he joined Henry Pace's Pace Phonograph Company (Black Swan). Later in the 1920s, Still served as the arranger of Yamekraw, a "Negro Rhapsody" composed by the Harlem stride pianist James P. Johnson.

In the 1930s Still worked as an arranger of popular music, writing for Willard Robison's Deep River Hour and Paul Whiteman's Old Gold Show, both popular NBC Radio broadcasts.

Still's first major orchestral composition, Symphony No. 1 "Afro-American", was performed in 1931 by the Rochester Philharmonic, conducted by Howard Hanson. It was the first time the complete score of a work by an African American was performed by a major orchestra. By the end of World War II the piece had been performed in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Berlin, Paris, and London. Until 1950 the symphony was the most popular of any composed by an American. Still developed a close professional relationship with Hanson; many of Still's compositions were performed for the first time in Rochester.

In 1934 Still moved to Los Angeles. He received his first Guggenheim Fellowship and started work on the first of his eight operas, Blue Steel.

In 1936, Still conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra at the Hollywood Bowl; he was the first African American to conduct a major American orchestra in a performance of his own works.

Still arranged music for films. These included Pennies from Heaven (the 1936 film starring Bing Crosby and Madge Evans) and Lost Horizon (the 1937 film starring Ronald Colman, Jane Wyatt and Sam Jaffe). For Lost Horizon, he arranged the music of Dimitri Tiomkin. Still was also hired to arrange the music for the 1943 film Stormy Weather, but left the assignment because "Twentieth-Century Fox 'degraded colored people.'"

Still composed Song of a City for the 1939 World's Fair in New York City. The song played continuously during the fair by the exhibit "Democracity." According to Still's granddaughter, he couldn't attend the fair except on "Negro Day" without police protection.

In 1949 his opera Troubled Island, originally completed in 1939, about Jean-Jacques Dessalines and Haiti, was performed by the New York City Opera. It was the first opera by an American to be performed by that company and the first by an African American to be performed by a major company. Still was upset by the negative reviews it received.

In 1955 he conducted the New Orleans Philharmonic Orchestra; he was the first African American to conduct a major orchestra in the Deep South. Still's works were performed internationally by the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, the London Symphony Orchestra, the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra, and the BBC Orchestra.

In 1981 the opera A Bayou Legend was the first by an African-American composer to be performed on national television.

Still was known as the "Dean of Afro-American Composers". Still and Arvey's papers are held by the University of Arkansas.

Legacy and honors

  • Still received three Guggenheim Fellowships in music composition (1934, 1935, 1938) and at least one Rosenwald Fellowship.
  • In 1949, he received a citation for Outstanding Service to American Music from the National Association for American Composers and Conductors
  • In 1976, his home in Los Angeles was designated a Historic-Cultural Monument.
  • He was awarded honorary doctorates from Oberlin College, Wilberforce University, Howard University, Bates College, the University of Arkansas, Pepperdine University, the New England Conservatory of Music, the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, and the University of Southern California.
  • He was posthumously awarded the 1982 Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters award for music composition for his opera A Bayou Legend.

Selected compositions

Still composed almost 200 works, including nine operas, five symphonies, four ballets, plus art songs, chamber music, and works for solo instruments. He composed more than thirty choral works. Many of his works are believed to be lost.

  • From the Land of Dreams (1924)
  • Darker America (1924)
  • Levee Land (1925)
  • From The Black Belt (1926)
  • La Guiablesse (1927)
  • Sahdji (1930)
  • Africa (1930)
  • Symphony No. 1, "Afro-American" (1930, revised in 1969)
  • A Deserted Plantation (1933)
  • The Sorcerer (1933)
  • Dismal Swamp (1933)
  • Kaintuck (1933)
  • Blue Steel (1934)
  • A Song A Dust (1936)
  • Summerland (1936)
  • Symphony No. 2 in G minor "Song of A New Race" (1937)
  • Lenox Avenue (1938)
  • Song of A City (1938)
  • Seven Traceries (1939)
  • And They Lynched Him on A Tree (1940)
  • Miss Sally's Party (1940)
  • Can'tcha line 'em, for orchestra (1940)
  • Old California (1941)
  • Troubled Island, opera, produced 1949 (1937–39)
  • A Bayou Legend, opera (1941)
  • Plain-Chant for America (1941)
  • Incantation and Dance (1941)
  • A Southern Interlude (1942)
  • In Memoriam: The Colored Soldiers Who Died for Democracy (1943)
  • Suite for Violin & Piano (1943)
  • Festival Overture (1944)
  • Poem for Orchestra (1944)
  • Bells (1944)
  • Symphony No. 5, "Western Hemisphere" (1945, revised 1970)
  • From The Delta (1945)
  • Wailing Woman (1946)
  • Archaic Ritual Suite (1946)
  • Symphony No. 4, "Autochthonous" (1947)
  • Danzas de Panama (1948)
  • From A Lost Continent (1948)
  • Constaso (1950)
  • To You, America (1951)
  • Grief, originally titled by Still as Weeping Angel (1953)
  • The Little Song That Wanted To Be A Symphony (1954)
  • A Psalm for The Living (1954)
  • Rhapsody (1954)
  • The American Scene (1957)
  • Serenade (1957)
  • Ennanga (1958)
  • Symphony No. 3, "The Sunday Symphony" (1958)
  • Lyric Quartette (1960)
  • Patterns (1960)
  • The Peaceful Land (1960)
  • Preludes (1962)
  • Highway 1 USA (1963)
  • Folk Suite No. 4 (1963)
  • Threnody: In Memory of Jan Sibelius (1965)
  • Little Red School House (1967)
  • Little Folk Suite (1968)
  • Choreographic Prelude (1970)

Sources

  • Horne, Aaron. Woodwind Music of Black Composers, Greenwood Press, 1990. ISBN 0-313272-65-4
  • Roach, Hildred. Black American Music. Past and Present, second edition, Krieger Publishing Company 1992. ISBN 0-894647-66-0
  • Sadie, Stanley; Hitchcock, H. Wiley. The New Grove Dictionary of American Music, Grove's Dictionaries of Music, 1986. ISBN 0-943818-36-2


The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 15 Apr 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQ
Who is William Grant Still?
William Grant Still (May 11, 1895 – December 3, 1978) was an American composer, conductor, and oboist. He was the first African American to conduct a major American symphony orchestra, the first to have a symphony (his First Symphony) performed by a leading orchestra, the first to have an opera (his Troubled Island) performed by a major opera company, and the first to have an opera performed on national television.
What type of music did William Grant Still compose?
Still composed over 150 works, including five symphonies, eight operas, ten ballets, and many other orchestral, chamber, choral, and solo works. His most famous composition is his Symphony No. 1, "Afro-American Symphony," which is one of the best-known symphonies by an American composer.
What are some notable works by William Grant Still?
Some notable works by Still include his Afro-American Symphony, his opera Troubled Island, his ballets Sahdji and A Bayou Legend, and his orchestral compositions In Memoriam: The Colored Soldiers Who Died for Democracy and Festive Overture.
How did William Grant Still contribute to African American music?
Still was a prominent figure in the Harlem Renaissance movement and played a significant role in promoting the contributions of African American composers and musicians. His compositions often incorporated elements of African American folk music and spirituals, making him a pioneering figure in African American classical music.
What awards and recognition did William Grant Still receive?
Still received numerous awards and accolades throughout his career, including four Guggenheim Fellowships, the Howard University Alumni Award, and the Medal of Honor from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). He was also posthumously inducted into the American Classical Music Hall of Fame in 1996.
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