- Summerland is a movement from Three Visions, a piano suite that Still composed in 1935 for his wife, Verna Arvey. Arvey played the suite’s premiere in Los Angeles in 1936. 1
- Still also arranged “Summerland” as a standalone work for chamber orchestra.2
- Still’s Three Visions is “dedicated to my friends who have departed this life.”3
“The three segments of the suite, Dark Horsemen, Summerland, and Radiant Pinnacle, tell the story of the human soul after death: the body expires, and the soul goes on to an apocalyptic judgment. If it is seen that the past life has been a good one, the soul may enter ‘heaven,’ or ‘Summerland’. After a period of time, the soul may reincarnate to learn additional earthly lessons on the human plane. Some souls reincarnate many times in a constant circular progress toward Godly perfection.”
Judith Anne Still, the composer’s daughter and biographer, on Three Visions4
Sources
- Judith Anne Still, Michael J. Dabrishus, and Carolyn L. Quin, William Grant Still: A Bio-Bibliography (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996), 193.
- Verna Arvey, “William Grant Still,” in William Grant Still: A Study in Contradictions by Catherine Parsons Smith (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000), 329, accessed August 12, 2021, https://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft1h4nb0g0;brand=ucpress.
- Judith Anne Still, Michael J. Dabrishus, and Carolyn L. Quin, William Grant Still: A Bio-Bibliography (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996), 193.
- Judith Anne Still, liner notes to William Grant Still: Piano Music, Mark Boozer, piano, Naxos 8.559210, CD, 2005.
Cut IDs
11509 45866