four movements
Q. Who was the first African American man to write a symphonic work and have it performed by a major symphony orchestra?
William Grant Still’s
Table of Contents
- Q. Who was the first African American man to write a symphonic work and have it performed by a major symphony orchestra?
- Q. Which work made William Grant Still Famous?
- Q. Why did still favor the Blues over spirituals?
- Q. Why is a black Pierrot considered through composed?
- Q. Why did slaves sing the blues?
- Q. What style is rite of spring?
- Q. How did the audience react to the first performance of The Rite of Spring?
- Q. What instruments were used in Rite of Spring?
- Q. Is Rite of Spring atonal?
- Q. What was the significance of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring?
- Q. What influenced the rite of spring?
Q. Which work made William Grant Still Famous?
Though a prolific composer of operas, ballets, symphonies, and other works, he was best known for his Afro-American Symphony (1931). Still was brought up by his mother and grandmother in Little Rock, Arkansas, and studied medicine at Wilberforce University, Ohio, before turning to music.
Q. Why did still favor the Blues over spirituals?
Why did Still favor the blues over spirituals as source material for his compositions? He felt that the blues did not exhibit Caucasian influence. looked to Harlem Renaissance artists and writers for inspiration. William Grant Still made little contribution to the search for a modern American sound.
Q. Why is a black Pierrot considered through composed?
Why is “A Black Pierrot” considered through-composed? The music is different in each strophe. He was the first African American composer to have a symphony performed by a major orchestra.
Q. Why did slaves sing the blues?
The Blues really started when African people were taken to America to work as slaves on plantation fields. The slaves would sing songs of their despair and suffering to make the time pass more quickly. The Blues music is about the black peoples struggle to survive and their efforts to win back their freedom.
Q. What style is rite of spring?
The Rite of Spring (Russian: Весна священная, romanized: Vesna svyashchennaya, lit. ‘sacred spring’; French: Le Sacre du printemps) is a ballet and orchestral concert work by the Russian composer Igor Stravinsky.
Q. How did the audience react to the first performance of The Rite of Spring?
When the curtain rose the audience saw a row of ‘knock-kneed and long-braided Lolitas jumping up and down’ as Stravinsky called them, who seemed to jerk rather than dance. Classical dance aspired upwards, in defiance of gravity, whereas Nijinsky’s dancers seemed pulled down to the earth.
Q. What instruments were used in Rite of Spring?
Instrumentation: 5 flutes (2 doubling on piccolo), 5 oboes (2 doubling on English horn), 5 clarinets, 5 bassoons; 8 horns, 5trumpets, 3 trombones, 2 tubas; strings; percussion.
Q. Is Rite of Spring atonal?
The Rite is clearly not atonal – there are passages in B flat minor, though it is often impossible to say what key the music is in. Careful analysis seems to show that it relies on combinations of evolved modes, like Debussy’s whole-tone scale.
Q. What was the significance of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring?
Igor Stravinsky wrote The Rite of Spring in 1913. It redefined 20th-century music, much as Beethoven’s Eroica had transformed music a century before. With it, Stravinsky took himself far into the realm of the unconscious. The music seemed designed with no apparent order but driven by pure gut feeling.
Q. What influenced the rite of spring?
Like Stravinsky’s earlier works for the Ballet Russes, The Rite of Spring was inspired by Russian culture, but, unlike them, it challenged the audience with its chaotic percussive momentum. Igor Stravinsky, c. 1920.