An Introduction to America’s Music

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324 PART 3 | FROM WORLD WAR I THROUGH WORLD WAR II


since the uncut opera’s fi rst performance in 1976, have opera lovers come to appre-
ciate its reliance on other sources as well. Gershwin acknowledged the infl uence
of Bizet’s Carmen and Wagner’s Die Meistersinger, to which recent scholarship has
added Wozzeck, an expressionistic opera by the Viennese modernist composer
Alban Berg. Gershwin met Berg during his 1928 European visit, studied his atonal
music closely, and attended Wozzeck’s introduction to the United States in a 1931
concert performance conducted by Leopold Stokowski in Philadelphia. More than
any other single work, perhaps, Porg y and Bess demonstrates Gershwin’s ability to
forge a distinctive personal style from a huge range of diverse infl uences.
Gershwin achieved celebrity in his lifetime as a songwriter, a dazzling pianist,
and a composer of concert music and opera. His friend and fellow song writer
Kay Swift once said that “he heard his music simultaneously through his and
yours and anyone else’s ears.” That empathy between composer and audience
helps to explain not only the music’s popularity but also its remarkable afterlife,
judging by the number of recordings, arrangements, and concert performances
of Gershwin’s music from his lifetime to the present. Through the history of his
music’s performances and recordings, Gershwin emerges as one of the most sig-
nifi cant composers of the twentieth century.

BLACK CONCERT MUSIC AND THE
HARLEM RENAISSANCE

Our study of African American music so far has emphasized the folk and popular
spheres. But in the years between World War I and World War II, black musicians
also worked to establish a beachhead in the concert hall. The cultural movement
known as the Harlem Renaissance—under way by around 1920 and led by black
intellectuals including philosopher Alain Locke, social scientist W. E. B. DuBois,
and poet and author James Weldon Johnson—focused primarily on the arts. Cul-
tural achievement, the leaders hoped, would crack the seemingly impregnable
wall of racism, for once black writers, painters, and composers showed their mas-
tery of classical techniques, whites would be forced to give up their stereotype of
black inferiority. The Harlem Renaissance’s aesthetic ideal prescribed work that
refl ected the artists’ black heritage but in culturally prestigious (i.e., European-
derived) forms. That call to action resulted in the creation of an impressive body
of music rooted in both European classical and African American folk traditions.

WILLIAM GRANT STILL


The generation’s most versatile black composer was William Grant Still. Born in
1895 in Mississippi, Still grew up in Little Rock, Arkansas. He attended Wilberforce
College and the Oberlin Conservatory in Ohio. Later formal study included lessons
with George Chadwick and Edgard Varèse. Still earned his living in popular music,
however, beginning in 1914 as a dance orchestra performer. In 1916 he worked as
an arranger for W. C. Handy’s music-publishing company in Memphis, produc-
ing the fi rst band version of St. Louis Blues. In 1919 Still accompanied Handy to New
York, where he continued in the publishing business and played in Handy’s bands.
He joined the Black Swan Phonograph Company in 1921 as manager and arranger,
and from 1921 to 1923 he played oboe in the pit orchestra of Eubie Blake and Noble

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