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5.22 Modernism Between the Wars

  • Radical modernism was a primary source of creative energy

  • American modernists after Ives included Carl Ruggles (1876–1971), Roger Sessions (1896–1985), and Edgard Varèse (1883–1965; Varèse came to America from France)

  • “More ambivalent view of avant-garde innovation

    • Most avant-garde music was only played for a small audience

  • More traditionalist American composers included Charlies Giffes (1884-1920), Samuel Barber (1910-1981), William Schuman (1910-1992), William Grant Still (1985-1978), and Aaron Copland (1900-1990)

  • Some opera composers maintained popularity- Puccini, Richard Strauss

  • Russians such as Sergei Prokofiev and Sergei Rachmaninov had nothing to do with avant-garde music

  • Formality of concert life grew in the early twentieth century

Mixing Classical Form and Jazz: Maurice Ravel

  • Ravel’s music was “marked by refinement, hyper-elegance, and a certain crispness”

  • Between impressionism and Neoclassism

  • Clarity, precision, and instant communication were priorities

  • Musical exoticism (Vienna to Asia to Madagascar to America to ancient Greece)

Piano Concerto in G (1931)

  • “Tribute to jazz”

    • Ravel was fascinated by jazz

  • “Lighthearted” piece for piano and small orchestra

  • First Movement (Allegramente)

    • Not jazzy

    • Long, lively, folklike tune

    • Fabulous orchestration

      • Whip, piccolo, pizzicato strings, piano, and a “special” high trumpet (in C), later more instruments like the harp

    • Uses short breaks (instrumental interludes)

      • High (E-flat) clarinet and muted trumpet

    • Three themes, each repetitively presented with different instruments

  • Last work (except one other) before Ravel contracted a rare brain disease

Maurice Ravel (1875-1937) Biography

  • Born in France near Spain

    • Spanish mother, uses exotic Spanish resonances often

  • Studied at the Paris Conservatory (16 years)

  • Succeeded Debussy (in a sense) in France

  • Amazing ear for sonority

  • Meticulous, aimed for clarity over all else

  • Lived a lonely and uneventful life in Paris

  • Once went to America in 1928, met George Gershwin and Charlie Chaplin, and came back richer

  • Had a rare brain disease (1932, died in 1937)

Folk Music, Nationalism, and Modernism: Béla Bartók

  • Grew up in Hungary in 1890s

  • Bartók was inspired first by Debussy and Richard Strauss, then by Stravinsky later in life

  • Pianist, educator, musicologist, and composer

  • Committed to folk music deeply

    • Not as abstract as much modernist music

    • Early feel

Béla Bartók (1881-1945) Biography

  • Talented and trained from a young age in music

  • Prolific composer and fine pianist

  • Directed the Budapest Academy of Music

  • Wrote Mikrokosmos (153 graded piano pieces)

  • Wrote books on folk music

  • Strongly opposed to Nazis

  • Not popular in America, even after moving there

    • More popular in death

Music for Strings, Percussion, and Celesta (1936)

  • Informal symphony (3 mvts) for a small orchestra

  • Strings, piano, harp, celesta, timpani, and other percussion

  • Second Movement (Allegro)

    • Motive a “energizes” the preface (pizzicato), theme 1, and contrapuntal bridge passage

    • Full stop after bridge

    • Second groups of 3+ short themes

    • Then piano theme w/ off note repetitions

      • Cadence theme

    • Exaggerated cadence ends exposition

    • Development has motive b

    • Syncopated passage for piano, snare drum, and xylophone

    • Imitative polyphony and folklike tunes

    • Recapitulation has a very unstable meter

Varieties of American Modernism

  • Modernism in America took off in the 1920s

  • Composers associated w/ European modernism

  • Innovative musical styles

Ruth Crawford

  • Aka Ruth Crawford Seeger

  • Very early American avant-garde modernist

  • Women in male-dominated field

  • Composed full time 1925-1933

  • Skilled pianist

  • Atonal, w/ dissonant harmonies

  • Counterpoint

  • Later collected/transcribed American folk songs

Prelude for Piano No. 6 (Andante Mystico; 1928)

  • Published in Henry Cowell’s New Music Society of San Francisco's quarterly NEW MUSIC publication

  • By Crawford, influenced by Alexander Scriabin

  • Triple layered counterpoint

  • Ostinato

Ruth Crawford (1901-1953) Biography

  • Minister’s daughter in Ohio

  • Studied at the American Conservatory in Chicago, w/ Djane Lavoie-Herz, and also in Berlin and Paris for a year

    • Studied abroad using the Guggenheim Fellowship in composition (first woman to win it)

  • Studied with Charles Seeger (met him through Henry Cowell) in NY, later married and had 4 kids with him

  • Died from cancer after starting to write her own compositions again

William Grant Still

  • Distinctive African American identity and sound in his music

    • Rare

  • Involved w/ the Harlem Renaissance

  • “Musical nationalism in modernist guise”

William Grant Still (1895-1978) Biography

  • Born in Mississippi

  • Middle-class parents

    • Father died when Still was an infant, mother and stepfather encouraged musical interest

  • Studied science at Wilberforce University, but then studied music at Oberlin College and the New England Conservatory on scholarship

  • Won two Guggenheim Fellowships, along with many other awards and commissions

  • Arranger for dance bands, musicals, recordings, and radio shows, along with in Hollywood films

  • Remembered for his concert music, opera, and ballet, etc.

    • Large output

    • Pathbreaking

Afro-American Symphony (1930)

  • Still’s first symphony

  • Relatively conventional Romantic orchestra, plus a few (tenor banjo…)

  • Four movements w/ mostly conventional tempos and forms

    • First: fast, modified sonata form

    • Second: slow, melodic

    • Third: quick, dance-like

    • Fourth: slow, rondo-like

  • Clear tense of key and tonic

  • “Flavor” of jazz and blues in melodies, harmonies, and rhythms (syncopation, usage of the blues scale)

Aaron Copland

  • America’s leading composer for a time

  • Several stylistic phases

    • Started with avant-garde modernism

    • Dry, rhythmic, anti-Romantic (Stravinsky) style

    • More traditional music

  • Nationalist

    • Used jazz, cowboy songs, square dancing, and old hymns

Appalachian Spring (1945)

  • Ballet- choreographed and danced by Martha Graham

  • Eight sections

  • Consists of “a pioneer celebration in spring around a newly built farmhouse in the Pennsylvania hills”

Aaron Copland (1900-1990) Biography

  • Russian-Jewish kid that grew up in Brooklyn with a musical education

  • Studied in Paris and worked with Nadia Boulanger

    • Encouraged Stravinsky interests

  • Promoted American music; formed the American Composers’ Alliance

  • Avant-garde around 1930

  • More accessible/populist style in later 1930s and 40s, w/ American folk roots

  • Worked with the Boston Symphony Orchestra composing at a summer school

  • Composed less and taught later in life

The Rise of Film Music

  • Film reach large audiences, and use a wide variety of music

  • Lots of films use symphony orchestras, similar to later Romanticism

    • Silent film (1910s-20s)

    • Leitmotiv techniques

Composers for Film

Film composers include Max Steiner (Gone with the Wind, King Kong), John Williams (Star Wars), Bernard Herrmann w/ Alfred Hitchcock (Vertigo, Psycho), William Grant Still, Aaron Copland (Our Town), Leonard Bernstein (On the Waterfront), and others, even for USSR propaganda.

Sergei Prokofiev, Alexander Nevsky Cantata (1938)

  • Monumental and innovative early sound film

  • Propaganda- about a 13th century Russian hero fighting against Germans

  • Music consists of “a series of vivid sound-pictures of the action” and parts where the orchestra stops for battle noise.

  • Battle calls, growing dynamics and texture

Sergei Prokofiev (1891-1953) Biography

  • Child prodigy, concert pianist, conductor, composer

  • Born in Ukraine, worked w/ the St. Petersburg Conservatory

  • Started w/ radical works, then moved towards “clear tonality, tunefulness, and the use of Russian folk themes”

  • Global star by the 1930s

  • Returned to Russia, 12 years later performances of his music were banned

  • Wrote Peter and the Wolf

Music and Totalitarianism

  • Economic, political, and military “upheavals”

    • Inflation

  • Orchestras and opera companies commonly disappeared

  • Nazi Germany- Beethoven and Wagner were promoted by Hitler, modernist music was banned, Richard Strauss was supported, Jewish composers/musicians fled

  • Soviet Union- Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975) was a (maybe) communist that used surprisingly dissonant harmonies

NG

5.22 Modernism Between the Wars

  • Radical modernism was a primary source of creative energy

  • American modernists after Ives included Carl Ruggles (1876–1971), Roger Sessions (1896–1985), and Edgard Varèse (1883–1965; Varèse came to America from France)

  • “More ambivalent view of avant-garde innovation

    • Most avant-garde music was only played for a small audience

  • More traditionalist American composers included Charlies Giffes (1884-1920), Samuel Barber (1910-1981), William Schuman (1910-1992), William Grant Still (1985-1978), and Aaron Copland (1900-1990)

  • Some opera composers maintained popularity- Puccini, Richard Strauss

  • Russians such as Sergei Prokofiev and Sergei Rachmaninov had nothing to do with avant-garde music

  • Formality of concert life grew in the early twentieth century

Mixing Classical Form and Jazz: Maurice Ravel

  • Ravel’s music was “marked by refinement, hyper-elegance, and a certain crispness”

  • Between impressionism and Neoclassism

  • Clarity, precision, and instant communication were priorities

  • Musical exoticism (Vienna to Asia to Madagascar to America to ancient Greece)

Piano Concerto in G (1931)

  • “Tribute to jazz”

    • Ravel was fascinated by jazz

  • “Lighthearted” piece for piano and small orchestra

  • First Movement (Allegramente)

    • Not jazzy

    • Long, lively, folklike tune

    • Fabulous orchestration

      • Whip, piccolo, pizzicato strings, piano, and a “special” high trumpet (in C), later more instruments like the harp

    • Uses short breaks (instrumental interludes)

      • High (E-flat) clarinet and muted trumpet

    • Three themes, each repetitively presented with different instruments

  • Last work (except one other) before Ravel contracted a rare brain disease

Maurice Ravel (1875-1937) Biography

  • Born in France near Spain

    • Spanish mother, uses exotic Spanish resonances often

  • Studied at the Paris Conservatory (16 years)

  • Succeeded Debussy (in a sense) in France

  • Amazing ear for sonority

  • Meticulous, aimed for clarity over all else

  • Lived a lonely and uneventful life in Paris

  • Once went to America in 1928, met George Gershwin and Charlie Chaplin, and came back richer

  • Had a rare brain disease (1932, died in 1937)

Folk Music, Nationalism, and Modernism: Béla Bartók

  • Grew up in Hungary in 1890s

  • Bartók was inspired first by Debussy and Richard Strauss, then by Stravinsky later in life

  • Pianist, educator, musicologist, and composer

  • Committed to folk music deeply

    • Not as abstract as much modernist music

    • Early feel

Béla Bartók (1881-1945) Biography

  • Talented and trained from a young age in music

  • Prolific composer and fine pianist

  • Directed the Budapest Academy of Music

  • Wrote Mikrokosmos (153 graded piano pieces)

  • Wrote books on folk music

  • Strongly opposed to Nazis

  • Not popular in America, even after moving there

    • More popular in death

Music for Strings, Percussion, and Celesta (1936)

  • Informal symphony (3 mvts) for a small orchestra

  • Strings, piano, harp, celesta, timpani, and other percussion

  • Second Movement (Allegro)

    • Motive a “energizes” the preface (pizzicato), theme 1, and contrapuntal bridge passage

    • Full stop after bridge

    • Second groups of 3+ short themes

    • Then piano theme w/ off note repetitions

      • Cadence theme

    • Exaggerated cadence ends exposition

    • Development has motive b

    • Syncopated passage for piano, snare drum, and xylophone

    • Imitative polyphony and folklike tunes

    • Recapitulation has a very unstable meter

Varieties of American Modernism

  • Modernism in America took off in the 1920s

  • Composers associated w/ European modernism

  • Innovative musical styles

Ruth Crawford

  • Aka Ruth Crawford Seeger

  • Very early American avant-garde modernist

  • Women in male-dominated field

  • Composed full time 1925-1933

  • Skilled pianist

  • Atonal, w/ dissonant harmonies

  • Counterpoint

  • Later collected/transcribed American folk songs

Prelude for Piano No. 6 (Andante Mystico; 1928)

  • Published in Henry Cowell’s New Music Society of San Francisco's quarterly NEW MUSIC publication

  • By Crawford, influenced by Alexander Scriabin

  • Triple layered counterpoint

  • Ostinato

Ruth Crawford (1901-1953) Biography

  • Minister’s daughter in Ohio

  • Studied at the American Conservatory in Chicago, w/ Djane Lavoie-Herz, and also in Berlin and Paris for a year

    • Studied abroad using the Guggenheim Fellowship in composition (first woman to win it)

  • Studied with Charles Seeger (met him through Henry Cowell) in NY, later married and had 4 kids with him

  • Died from cancer after starting to write her own compositions again

William Grant Still

  • Distinctive African American identity and sound in his music

    • Rare

  • Involved w/ the Harlem Renaissance

  • “Musical nationalism in modernist guise”

William Grant Still (1895-1978) Biography

  • Born in Mississippi

  • Middle-class parents

    • Father died when Still was an infant, mother and stepfather encouraged musical interest

  • Studied science at Wilberforce University, but then studied music at Oberlin College and the New England Conservatory on scholarship

  • Won two Guggenheim Fellowships, along with many other awards and commissions

  • Arranger for dance bands, musicals, recordings, and radio shows, along with in Hollywood films

  • Remembered for his concert music, opera, and ballet, etc.

    • Large output

    • Pathbreaking

Afro-American Symphony (1930)

  • Still’s first symphony

  • Relatively conventional Romantic orchestra, plus a few (tenor banjo…)

  • Four movements w/ mostly conventional tempos and forms

    • First: fast, modified sonata form

    • Second: slow, melodic

    • Third: quick, dance-like

    • Fourth: slow, rondo-like

  • Clear tense of key and tonic

  • “Flavor” of jazz and blues in melodies, harmonies, and rhythms (syncopation, usage of the blues scale)

Aaron Copland

  • America’s leading composer for a time

  • Several stylistic phases

    • Started with avant-garde modernism

    • Dry, rhythmic, anti-Romantic (Stravinsky) style

    • More traditional music

  • Nationalist

    • Used jazz, cowboy songs, square dancing, and old hymns

Appalachian Spring (1945)

  • Ballet- choreographed and danced by Martha Graham

  • Eight sections

  • Consists of “a pioneer celebration in spring around a newly built farmhouse in the Pennsylvania hills”

Aaron Copland (1900-1990) Biography

  • Russian-Jewish kid that grew up in Brooklyn with a musical education

  • Studied in Paris and worked with Nadia Boulanger

    • Encouraged Stravinsky interests

  • Promoted American music; formed the American Composers’ Alliance

  • Avant-garde around 1930

  • More accessible/populist style in later 1930s and 40s, w/ American folk roots

  • Worked with the Boston Symphony Orchestra composing at a summer school

  • Composed less and taught later in life

The Rise of Film Music

  • Film reach large audiences, and use a wide variety of music

  • Lots of films use symphony orchestras, similar to later Romanticism

    • Silent film (1910s-20s)

    • Leitmotiv techniques

Composers for Film

Film composers include Max Steiner (Gone with the Wind, King Kong), John Williams (Star Wars), Bernard Herrmann w/ Alfred Hitchcock (Vertigo, Psycho), William Grant Still, Aaron Copland (Our Town), Leonard Bernstein (On the Waterfront), and others, even for USSR propaganda.

Sergei Prokofiev, Alexander Nevsky Cantata (1938)

  • Monumental and innovative early sound film

  • Propaganda- about a 13th century Russian hero fighting against Germans

  • Music consists of “a series of vivid sound-pictures of the action” and parts where the orchestra stops for battle noise.

  • Battle calls, growing dynamics and texture

Sergei Prokofiev (1891-1953) Biography

  • Child prodigy, concert pianist, conductor, composer

  • Born in Ukraine, worked w/ the St. Petersburg Conservatory

  • Started w/ radical works, then moved towards “clear tonality, tunefulness, and the use of Russian folk themes”

  • Global star by the 1930s

  • Returned to Russia, 12 years later performances of his music were banned

  • Wrote Peter and the Wolf

Music and Totalitarianism

  • Economic, political, and military “upheavals”

    • Inflation

  • Orchestras and opera companies commonly disappeared

  • Nazi Germany- Beethoven and Wagner were promoted by Hitler, modernist music was banned, Richard Strauss was supported, Jewish composers/musicians fled

  • Soviet Union- Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975) was a (maybe) communist that used surprisingly dissonant harmonies