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5.20 Music and Modernism

  • 1890-1940

    • WWI and WWII

  • Both bolder expression and technique and “new vitality” in traditional techniques

Varieties of Modernism

  • Modernist/ism refers to “a special self-consciousness,” and artists and intellectuals who “insisted on” anti-traditionalism

  • Claude Debussy, Arnold Schoenberg, Igor Stravinsky

  • Avant-garde (“vanguard”), a military term repurposed to describe the activity of radical artists and thinkers

    • Not all modernist composers, just some

Progress and Uncertainty

  • Industrialization and the emergence of nation-states were factors influencing 19th century music

    • “Confidence in progress”

  • The 20th century brought the development of our modern technologies

  • There was development in weaponry too (Civil War, WWs)

  • Einstein’s theory of relativity

  • WWI brought “horrifying” nationalism

  • Charles Darwin (evolution) lead to a religious “crisis”

  • Sigmund Freud had psychological theories

The Response of Modernism

  • Rules and assumptions surrounding the arts were challenged

  • The idea “that visual art had to represent something from the external world” was challenged

    • Abstract pairing (aka “nonrepresentational”)

    • Avant-garde artists developed “new languages” for art (cubism, etc.)

  • Assumption of typical sentence structure, syntax, and grammar in literature was challenged

    • ex. stream-of-consciousness method of writing

  • Logic of musical styles were questioned/rejected

  • Artists joined in formal/informal groups

Literature and Art Before WW1

  • New art languages were difficult, and hard to understand

  • Avant-garde music was less involved with the public

  • Schematic/mathematical devices used in arts

Impressionists and Symbolists

  • Impressionism is the modernist movement in which light-capturing techniques are developed (“realists”) starting in the 1870s

    • Claude Monet

  • Symbolism is an unrealistic movement after impressionism in which words freely symbolized/signified

    • “Musical”

    • Symbolists were fascinated by Richard Wagner

  • Claude Debussy represents impressionism, w/ “fragmentary motives and little flashes of tone color,” but also symbolism, w/ suggestion

Expressionists and Fauves

  • Expressionism “sought to express the most extreme human feelings by divorcing art from everyday literalness”

    • German movement

    • Russian-born painter Vasily Kadinsky

    • Picasso (Les Demoiselles d’Avignon)

  • Parallel group was Les fauves in Paris (“the wild beasts”), who “experimented with distorted images bordering on the grotesque”; called it “primitive” art

Modernist Music Before WWI

The norm was logic in tune, motive, harmony, tonality, tone color, and rhythm. Avant-garde modernist music strayed from this logic.

Pre-WWII, emphasis on developments in melody, harmony, and tonality.

Experiment and Transformation: Melody

  • Wagner had a “confusing quality” in his singing lines

  • Mahler had “bittersweet distortions” applied to folklike tunes

  • Arnold Schoenberg (Viennese composer) had hard-to-comprehend complex melodies w/ exaggerated “intense rhythms” and “anguished intervals”

  • Debussy had “shadowy motives” (“suggestion of melody”)

New Horizons, New Scales

  • Debussy was inspired by Indonesian gamelan music that he heard at the 1889 Paris world’s fair

  • Diatonic scale was the foundation in Western music

  • Pentatonic scale is a 5 note scale playable on the black keys of a piano

    • From folk song and Asian music

    • Featured in Debussy’s Clouds

  • Whole-tone scale divides the octave into 6 equal parts

    • Whole step intervals

    • “Dreamy, ambiguous sound”

  • Octatonic scale “fits eight pitches into the octave by alternating whole and half steps”

    • Stravinsky

  • Serialism was the use of the “new language for music” invented by Schoenberg in the 1920s

“The Emancipation of Dissonance”

  • Consonance is when pitches sound stable and at rest in combination

  • Dissonance is when pitches sound tense in combination- sound like they need to resolve to consonance, but they now were not always resolved

  • Some music was atonal, with no tonal (home) center

  • Conservatives joked that melody, harmony, and tonality were the “holy trinity” of music

NG

5.20 Music and Modernism

  • 1890-1940

    • WWI and WWII

  • Both bolder expression and technique and “new vitality” in traditional techniques

Varieties of Modernism

  • Modernist/ism refers to “a special self-consciousness,” and artists and intellectuals who “insisted on” anti-traditionalism

  • Claude Debussy, Arnold Schoenberg, Igor Stravinsky

  • Avant-garde (“vanguard”), a military term repurposed to describe the activity of radical artists and thinkers

    • Not all modernist composers, just some

Progress and Uncertainty

  • Industrialization and the emergence of nation-states were factors influencing 19th century music

    • “Confidence in progress”

  • The 20th century brought the development of our modern technologies

  • There was development in weaponry too (Civil War, WWs)

  • Einstein’s theory of relativity

  • WWI brought “horrifying” nationalism

  • Charles Darwin (evolution) lead to a religious “crisis”

  • Sigmund Freud had psychological theories

The Response of Modernism

  • Rules and assumptions surrounding the arts were challenged

  • The idea “that visual art had to represent something from the external world” was challenged

    • Abstract pairing (aka “nonrepresentational”)

    • Avant-garde artists developed “new languages” for art (cubism, etc.)

  • Assumption of typical sentence structure, syntax, and grammar in literature was challenged

    • ex. stream-of-consciousness method of writing

  • Logic of musical styles were questioned/rejected

  • Artists joined in formal/informal groups

Literature and Art Before WW1

  • New art languages were difficult, and hard to understand

  • Avant-garde music was less involved with the public

  • Schematic/mathematical devices used in arts

Impressionists and Symbolists

  • Impressionism is the modernist movement in which light-capturing techniques are developed (“realists”) starting in the 1870s

    • Claude Monet

  • Symbolism is an unrealistic movement after impressionism in which words freely symbolized/signified

    • “Musical”

    • Symbolists were fascinated by Richard Wagner

  • Claude Debussy represents impressionism, w/ “fragmentary motives and little flashes of tone color,” but also symbolism, w/ suggestion

Expressionists and Fauves

  • Expressionism “sought to express the most extreme human feelings by divorcing art from everyday literalness”

    • German movement

    • Russian-born painter Vasily Kadinsky

    • Picasso (Les Demoiselles d’Avignon)

  • Parallel group was Les fauves in Paris (“the wild beasts”), who “experimented with distorted images bordering on the grotesque”; called it “primitive” art

Modernist Music Before WWI

The norm was logic in tune, motive, harmony, tonality, tone color, and rhythm. Avant-garde modernist music strayed from this logic.

Pre-WWII, emphasis on developments in melody, harmony, and tonality.

Experiment and Transformation: Melody

  • Wagner had a “confusing quality” in his singing lines

  • Mahler had “bittersweet distortions” applied to folklike tunes

  • Arnold Schoenberg (Viennese composer) had hard-to-comprehend complex melodies w/ exaggerated “intense rhythms” and “anguished intervals”

  • Debussy had “shadowy motives” (“suggestion of melody”)

New Horizons, New Scales

  • Debussy was inspired by Indonesian gamelan music that he heard at the 1889 Paris world’s fair

  • Diatonic scale was the foundation in Western music

  • Pentatonic scale is a 5 note scale playable on the black keys of a piano

    • From folk song and Asian music

    • Featured in Debussy’s Clouds

  • Whole-tone scale divides the octave into 6 equal parts

    • Whole step intervals

    • “Dreamy, ambiguous sound”

  • Octatonic scale “fits eight pitches into the octave by alternating whole and half steps”

    • Stravinsky

  • Serialism was the use of the “new language for music” invented by Schoenberg in the 1920s

“The Emancipation of Dissonance”

  • Consonance is when pitches sound stable and at rest in combination

  • Dissonance is when pitches sound tense in combination- sound like they need to resolve to consonance, but they now were not always resolved

  • Some music was atonal, with no tonal (home) center

  • Conservatives joked that melody, harmony, and tonality were the “holy trinity” of music