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Historial Development of African Americans in Opera




My notes: I discovered the genius of William Grant Still around 1985. During that year, I worked as an museum curator at the National African American Museum located on the Wilberforce campus in Ohio. Still pursued a Bachelor of Science Degree at Wilberforce college. During my tenure at the Museum, I helped the staff organize and set-up an exhibit which celebrated the life and music of William Grant Still.
Bio taken from Wikipedia/
William Grant Still (May 11, 1895 – December 3, 1978) was an African-American classical composer who wrote more than 150 compositions. 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 performed by a major opera company, and the first to have an opera performed on national television. He is often referred to as "the Dean" of African-American composers.


Life

William Grant Still was born in Woodville, Mississippi. He was the son of two teachers, Carrie Lena Fambro Still (1872–1927) and William Grant Still (1871–1895), who was also a partner in a grocery store and performed as a local bandleader. His father William Grant Still Sr. died when his infant son was 3 months old.
Still moved to Little Rock, Arkansas with his mother, Carrie Lena Fambro Still, where she taught high school English for 33 years. She met and 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. Still grew up in Little Rock, and started violin lessons at age 15. He taught himself to play the clarinet, saxophone, oboe, double bass, cello and viola, and showed a great interest in music. His maternal grandmother sang African-American spirituals to him. At age 16 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.
Still was awarded scholarships to study at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music with Friedrick Lehmann and with George Whitefield Chadwick. He also studied with the modern composer Edgard Varèse.


Career
In 1918, Still joined the United States Navy to serve in World War I. Between 1919 and 1921, Still worked as an arranger for W.C. Handy's band and later played in the pit orchestra for Noble Sissle and Eubie Blake's musical Shuffle Along. Later in the twenties, he served as the arranger of Yamekraw, a "Negro Rhapsody" composed by the noted 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 and in 1936, Still conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra as the first African-American to conduct a major American orchestra.
In 1934, Still was the recipient of his first Guggenheim Fellowship and it was then that he began work on the first of his eight operas, Blue Steele. 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 African-American to be performed by a major company. In 1955 he conducted the New Orleans Philharmonic Orchestra and became the first African-American to conduct a major orchestra in the Deep South. Still's works were performed by the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, the London Symphony Orchestra, the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra, and the BBC Orchestra. He was the first African American to have an opera performed on national United States television when Bayou Legend, originally penned in 1941, premiered on PBS. Additionally, he was the recording manager of the Black Swan Phonograph Company.
Still eventually moved to Los Angeles, California, where he 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 film Stormy Weather, but left the assignment after a few weeks due to artistic disagreements.

• From the Land of Dreams (1924, believed lost until 1997)
• Levee Land (1925)
• From the Black Belt (1926)
• La Guiablese, ballet (1927)
• Sahdji, ballet (1930)
• Africa (1930)
• Symphony No. 1 "Afro-American" (1930)
• A Deserted Plantation (1933)
• Blue Steel, opera (1934)
• Symphony in G minor (1937)
• Lenox Avenue, for radio announcer, chorus, & orch. (1937)
• Seven Traceries (1939)
• And They Lynched him on a Tree (1940)
• Miss Sally's Party, ballet (1940)
• Can'tcha line 'em, for orchestra (1940)
• Old California, for orchestra (1941)
• Troubled Island, opera, produced 1949 (1937–39)
• A Bayou Legend, opera (1941)
• A Southern Interlude, opera (1942)
• Incantation and Dance, for oboe & pf.
• In Memoriam: The Colored Soldiers Who Died for Democracy (1943)
• Suite for Violin & Piano, including the movement later arranged for String Orchestra as Mother and Child (1943)
• Festive Overture (1944)
• Poem for Orchestra (1944)
• Symphony No. 5, "Western Hemisphere" (1945)
• Wailing Women, for soprano and chorus (1946)
• Symphony No. 4, "Autochthonous" (1947)
• Grief, originally titled by Still as Weeping Angel (1953)
• Danzas de Panama (Dances of Panama) (1953)
• The Little Song That Wanted to Be a Symphony (1954)
• Little Red Schoolhouse (1957)




Still’s Operas


Blue Steel
Libretto by Bruce Forsythe.
1934
• A Bayou Legend
Libretto by Verna Arvey.
1941
• A Southern Interlude (1942)
• Costaso
Libretto by Verna Arvey.
1949
• Troubled Island, opera in three acts
Libretto by Langston Hughes after his play The Drums of Haiti.
March 31, 1949, New York City Opera, New York, New York
• Mota
Libretto by Verna Arvey.
1951
• The Pillar
Libretto by Verna Arvey.
1955
• Minette Fontaine
Libretto by Verna Arvey.
1958
• Highway One, U.S.A.
Libretto by Verna Arvey.
1962


William Grant Still -- Afro-American
Symphony


William Grant Still's Archaic Ritual






Poem For Orchestra by William Grant Still



William Grant Still: Symphony No.5 4th Movement




William Grant Still's Archaic Ritual



William Grant Still - "Danzas de Panama" for String Quartet Part 1






William Grant Still Black Pierrot


WILLIAM GRANT STILL: "Highway One, USA" (1963) - Scene 1 (excerpt)





William Grant Still: Phantom Chapel


William Grant Still (1895-1978) : Sunday Symphony (1958) 2/2




Eleanor Alberga: Suite from Dancing with the shadow (1990)



Songs of Separation / William Grant Still

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