An Introduction to America’s Music

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

CHAPTER 13 | BLACK CONCERT MUSIC AND THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE 327


Listening Guide 13.3
Afro-American Symphony, fi rst movement (Moderato assai)
WILLIAM GRANT STILL
CD 2.16

timing section subsection comments
6:03 fi rst theme Blues theme now with all three trumpets
with Harmon mutes and a more swinging
rhythm.
6:40 coda Harp leads into a short closing section, with
bass clarinet on blues theme underneath
high strings, then clarinets. Woodwinds,
then strings, create a fi nal blues-tinged
cadence. The last chord contains an added
sixth, common in popular music but unusual
in classical harmony.
note Still originally titled this movement “Longings” and attached the following lines from a poem
with the same title by the African American poet Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872–1906):
All my life long twell de night has pas’
Let de wo’k come ez it will,
So dat I fi n’ you, my honey, at last,
Somewhaih des ovah de hill.

Listen & Refl ect



  1. What do you think it might have meant to William Grant Still, an African American com-
    poser, arranger, and performer, to write a movement of a symphony built around a theme
    based on the twelve-bar blues structure? What do the resources of an orchestra bring to
    this traditional genre?

  2. The epigraph by Dunbar uses black dialect, a literary device that presents an obstacle for
    many present-day readers, for whom such language suggests offensive stereotypes. Can
    any parallels be drawn between the language of Dunbar’s poem and the musical language
    of Still’s symphony?


popular songs, and a stint as a silent movie accompanist. During a long career
that lasted until her death in 1953, she also continued to compose. Her list of com-
positions includes four symphonies and other orchestral works, chamber pieces,
solo works for piano and organ, choral pieces, and art songs.
Along with her contemporaries William Dawson and Roland Hayes, Price also
carried forward the development of the concert spiritual as begun by Harry T.
Burleigh. Her arrangements were taken up by a new generation of performers,
which included not only Hayes, a classically trained tenor, but also Paul Robeson
and Marian Anderson. Robeson was a singer, actor, and political activist whose
commanding, cultivated baritone voice conveyed the dignity and emotional
force of a music that expressed long centuries of oppression. Anderson was one

concert spirituals

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