William Grant Still 
                is often seen as the nexus between European 
                derived classicism and African-African 
                procedures. And that’s something that 
                emerged from his studies with Chadwick 
                and Varèse and his writing for 
                the Paul Whiteman band et al 
                and also of course his espousal of jazz, 
                spirituals and blues in his own music. 
              
 
              
This disc collates 
                some significant piano (or piano adapted) 
                works from the 1930s, with the exception 
                of Africa which is in any case 
                an orchestral work heard in this realisation 
                for solo piano by the composer’s wife, 
                Verna Arvey. 
              
 
              
The notes by Judith 
                Anne Still are very keen to co-opt everything 
                here to the religiose and to black experience 
                so maybe I’m missing something but the 
                Three Visions sound to me pure 
                Ravel-and-water. The jagged impressionism 
                of Dark Horsemen, the first of 
                the three, is followed by big hued romanticism 
                and the radiant chords of the last are 
                attractive – but no more. There’s more 
                Ravel in the Seven Traceries, written 
                in 1939, where the tints of the blues 
                in the second Mystic Pool is 
                more evident. But these are really disappointingly 
                undifferentiated from each other for 
                all the pictorialism and quasi-descriptiveness. 
                Wailing Dawn is perhaps one of 
                the more distinctive with its strong 
                chording, the subtlety of which was 
                a Still speciality. 
              
 
              
Many will know The 
                Blues, which is derived from the 
                ballet Lenox Avenue and was so 
                memorably recorded by Louis Kaufman 
                and receives a pleasing reading here, 
                though I prefer the bite of the string 
                and piano arrangement. A Deserted 
                Plantation was one of the works 
                Still wrote for the Whiteman orchestra 
                and he writes a nicely harmonised Spiritual, 
                an echt-Broadway type song and a jazzy 
                dance, with Ragtime hints, in that order. 
                Africa embeds some ruminative 
                bluesy chord sequences with clear impressionism 
                but it doesn’t sustain its length and 
                it’s no surprise that Still took it 
                apart and recycled it later in other 
                works. 
              
 
              
Still was at his finest 
                in his larger scale orchestral music 
                and his piano works, however adeptly 
                done by Mark Boozer, left me disappointed. 
                I’ve no problem with political agendas 
                (they exist to be ignored) but I do 
                have a problem with thinness of thematic 
                material. Much of this sounds like the 
                scraping of the Still barrel. 
              
 
               
              
Jonathan Woolf