Innovations of the 20th Century Specifics

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Mahler 6 date

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1

Mahler 6 date

1904

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2

Mahler 6

comically large hammer first use

b.120

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3

What was special about Mahler 6?

Late-romantic, use of triple-stopping (1 bar before fig.11), bells up for dramaticism (fig.11)

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4

Wagner Tristan Und Isolde date

1865

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5

Tristan chord

b.2 aug4, aug6, aug9

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6

What was special about Tristan und Isolde?

shifting tonal centres, use of leitmotifs

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7

Shostakovich 7 date

1942

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8

Shostakovich 7

invasion theme snare

fig.19

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9

Shostakovich 7

invasion theme melody repeats 12 times

b.23-45

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10

What was special about Shostakovich 7?

modified sonata form of first movement is disrupted by invasion theme, and later nazi theme on 12th repetition

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11

The Mighty Handful

Borodin, Mussorgsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, Balakirev, Cui

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12

Schoenberg Suite for Piano date

1921-1923

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13

Berg Wozzeck date

1925

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14

Berg Wozzeck

3.4 based on…

hexachord b.1 woodwind, b.38 strings

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15

What was special about Berg Wozzeck?

mixture of serialism and atonality, use of structures like prelude and fugue (2.2) and passacaglia (1.4)

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16

Steve Reich Different Trains

date

1988

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17

Steve Reich Different Trains

… used in rhythm

paradiddle

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18

Steve Reich Different Trains

mimicking train whistles

b.14

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19

Steve Reich Different Trains

violins mimicking speech song

b.33

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20

Steve Reich Clapping Music date

1972

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21

Steve Reich Clapping Music

each section repeats … times

12

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22

Steve Reich Clapping Music

halls holding…

200+ people should use omnidirectional mic or 2 directional mics

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23

Steve Reich Clapping Music

variation of…

african bell pattern

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24

Phillip Glass Einstein on the Beach date

1975

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25

Phillip Glass Einstein on the Beach Knee play 1

counting starts…

b.10

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26

Terry Riley in C date

1964

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27

Terry Riley In C

… bars that can be repeated at will

53

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28

Steve Reich WTC 9/11 date

2011

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29

Steve Reich WTC 9/11

Reich’s name for elongating vocal parts

stop-action sound

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30

Steve Reich WTC 9/11

Use of ____

Jewish Psalms in Movement 3

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31

John Adams The Chairman Dances date

1985

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32

John Adams The Chairman Dances

polyphonic chaos

b.28

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33

Kyle Gann was inspired rhythmically by the music of…

Zuni tribes

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34

Lois V Vierk was inspired by…

gagaku music (10th century Japanese imperial court music)

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35

Lois V Vierk “Yeah, Yeah, Yeah”

use of cluster chords

b.30

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36

Ravel ‘Tombeau de Couperin’

date

1914-1919

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37

Ravel ‘Tombeau de Couperin’

example of non-function harmony

b.14-15 Dmaj7, C#7, F#7, Bb7b5, E7b5

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38

Ravel ‘Tombeau de Couperin’

Baroque features

clear structures, dance suite, ornamentation happens on beat, hemiolas

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39

Ravel ‘Daphnis et Chloé’

date

1912

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40

Ravel ‘Daphnis et Chloé’

experimentation with sonority

note flourishes (flute/clarinet), con sordini (with mutes), use of two harps

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41

Ravel ‘Boléro’

date

1928

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42

Ravel ‘Boléro’

overtones

horn playing melody in C, celesta playing 2 and 3 octaves above, two piccolos play melody in G and E, reinforcing overtone series

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43

Ravel ‘Rapsodie Espagnole’

date

1907

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44

Ravel ‘Rapsodie Espagnole’

use of ____ motif throughout 1st and 2nd movements

tetrachord

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45

Debussy ‘Sarabande’

date

1894

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46

Debussy ‘Sarabande’

modality

b.1-8 C# aeolian

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47

Debussy ‘Sarabande’

quartal harmony

b.23

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48

Debussy ‘Sarabande’

chromatic melody

b.25

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49

Debussy ‘Sarabande’

maj13 chord

b.31

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50

Debussy ‘Sarabande’

D9 chord

b.11

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51

Debussy ‘Sarabande’

neoclassicism Renaissance

fourths and fifths, modality, chordal homophony, bare octaves (b.5), parallelism, hemiola (b.67-68)

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52

Debussy ‘Sarabande’

neoclassicism Baroque

Sarabande, ternary structure, repetitive rhythmic patterns, clear textures

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53

Features of Gamelan

Heterophony, cyclical structure, slow harmonic pace, ostinato patterns, countermelodies, no emphasis on downbeat

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54

Name of scale used in Gamelan

slendro

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55

Name of Gamelan melody

Balungan

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56

Name of Gamelan countermelody

Bonang

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57

Debussy ‘Estampes’

date

1903

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58

Debussy ‘Estampes: Pagodes’

Debussy uses ___ scale to imitate Javanese slendro scale

pentatonic

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59

Debussy ‘Estampes: Pagodes’

Texture similar to Gamelan

Balungan is lower and slower, Bonang is higher and faster, shown in b.11 with 3 different layers of sound at different speeds and pitches

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60

Debussy ‘Estampes: La Soirée Dans Grenade’

rhythm used

Habanera b.5

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61

Debussy ‘Estampes: La Soirée Dans Grenade’

ornamentation mimicking flamenco

acciaccaturas, spread chords b.15-18

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62

Debussy ‘Estampes: La Soirée Dans Grenade’

interval used in flamenco

aug2 b.9

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63

Debussy ‘Estampes: La Soirée Dans Grenade’

fluid rhythm

expressif (et lointain) b.7

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64

Paris Exhibition/Exposition/World Fair

date

1889

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65

Stravinsky ‘Rite of Spring’

date

1913

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66

Stravinsky ‘Rite of Spring’

note that starts the bassoon solo

C5

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67

Stravinsky ‘Rite of Spring’

Augurs chord

Eb7 and Fb major heard at the same time

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68

Stravinsky ‘Rite of Spring’

metre rapidly changes multiple times

fig.43

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69

Stravinsky ‘Rite of Spring’

Ritual of Abduction

9/8 in everything except timpani in 3/4, horns play C major, trumpets play Eb7

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70

Prokofiev ‘Classical Symphony’

date

1917

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71

Prokofiev ‘Classical Symphony’

tonic pedal note

gavotta fig.43

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72

Prokofiev ‘Classical Symphony’

replication of alberti bass

gavotta fig.50 in flute and oboe

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73

Prokofiev ‘Classical Symphony’

perfect cadence

gavotta b.13-14

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74

Stravinsky ‘Pulcinella Suite’

date

1922

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75

Neoclassicism was a reaction against…

excessive Romanticism

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76

Stravinsky ‘Pulcinella Suite’

gavotta is based on…

Carlo Monza Suite in D major (movement 4)

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77

Stravinsky ‘Pulcinella Suite’

virtuosic bassoon writing

b.15-17 begins on top A, glissandi

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78

Messiaen ‘Quartet for the End of Time’

date

1941

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79

Messiaen ‘Quartet for the End of Time’

inspired by…

Revelation 10

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80

Messiaen ‘Quartet for the End of Time’

example of indian rhythm used

ra(triangle)gavardhana retrograde and augmented

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81

Messiaen ‘Quartet for the End of Time’

use of modes of limited transposition

Liturgie de Cristal: RH uses 3rd mode, cello uses 1st mode

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82

Messiaen ‘Quartet for the End of Time’

liturgie de cristal piano and cello

overall isorhythmic cycle would take over 2 hours to realign, the movement is left incomplete, showing the music continues even if the listener doesn’t experience it

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83

Harry Partch piece

Seventeen Lyrics of Li Po for the Adapted viola has no rhythmic notation, performer should follow natural rhythms of poem

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84

Harry Partch theories of microtonality

otonality and utonality, calculated through tonality diamonds

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85

John Cage ‘Story’ from ‘Living Room Music’

date

1940

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86

John Cage ‘Story’ from ‘Living Room Music’

fragmentation

b.2 voice 2

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87

John Cage ‘Three dances for 2 prepared pianos’

date

1944

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88

example of aleatoric music

grace by Jordan Nobles

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89

John Cage ‘Three dances for 2 prepared pianos’

non-traditional accidental notation

b.27

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90

John Cage ‘Three dances for 2 prepared pianos’

motifs

b.211

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91

John Cage 4’33’’

date

1952

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92

Ligeti ‘Etudes’

date

1985

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93

Ligeti ‘Etudes’

inspiration

Mandelbrot’s 1983 book ‘The Fractal Geometry of Nature’

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94

Ligeti ‘Etudes’

Désordre RH

melody is repeated 14 times, each time a step higher, only white notes are used

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95

Ligeti ‘Etudes’

Désordre LH

longer melody, descends every time it’s repeated, black notes only

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96

Ligeti ‘Etudes’

musical inspirations

Gamelan, Bill Evans, Balkan Folk Music

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97

Reich ‘Electric Counterpoint’

date

1987

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98

Saariaho ‘Petals’

date

1988

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99

Saariaho ‘Petals’

conjunct microtonal movement

stave 4

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100

Saariaho ‘Petals’

extended technique creating noise

stave 2, add bow pressure to produce a scratching sound, pitch is obscured by noise

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