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Bell Ringer. M.Socrative.com – Room #38178 Questions: 1. What building is introduced? 2. What was the new style of architectural decoration?. Impressionism . -- Music Part 1. Impressionism in Music.
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Bell Ringer • M.Socrative.com – Room #38178 • Questions: • 1. What building is introduced? • 2. What was the new style of architectural decoration?
Impressionism -- Music Part 1
Impressionism in Music • The anti-Romantic spirit also produced a style of music similar to that of the impressionist painters • Several characteristics are still apart of contemporary music • Some composers made free use of chromatic harmony and key shifts (but stayed within the parameters of traditional harmony.) Others rejected traditional tonality completely • A new atonal harmonic expression was invented
Nontraditional Transitions • As painting diverged from its heritage, music did too. Its new directions parted with past traditions in 3 ways. • Rhythmic complexity • Focus on dissonant harmonies • Rejection of traditional tonality
Nontraditional Transitions • Rhythmic complexity: • the characteristic accents of double and triple meters helped to unify and clarify compositions, but modern composers did away with these patterns and regular accents • Instead, they choose to employ complex, changing rhythms in which it is often virtually impossible to determine meter, or even the actual beat (you can’t quite tap your foot)
Nontraditional Transitions • Focus on Dissonant Harmonies: • Before consonance was the norm and dissonances were expected to be brief and passing, just for emotional impact • By the 20th century, composers were using more and more dissonance and not resolving it. • You will hear things that sound WRONG to your ears – like wrong notes
Nontraditional Transitions • Rejection of Traditional Harmonies: • Traditional idea was that one note, the “doh” or tonic of a scale was the most important • Now, composers choose different paths – one was to get rid of any tonal center at all • No one tone was more important than any other, all twelve pitches are now equal at all times
Impressionism in Music • Claude Debussy – 1862-1918 – the primary champion of Impressionist Music • He was French (like all the painters) • Debussy maintained that he as “an old Romantic who has thrown the worries of success out the window.” • His use of tone color has been described as “wedges of color” much like those the painters provided with brushstrokes
Debussy • He wished, above all, to return French music to fundamental sources in nature and move it away from the “heaviness” of the German tradition • He delighted in natural scenes, as did the impressionist painters, and he sought to capture the effects of shimmering light in music • The Girl with the Flaxen Hair
Debussy • Unlike his predecessors, Debussy reduced melodic development to limited short motifs and moved away from traditional progressions of harmony • Debussy considered a chord strictly on the merits of its expressive capabilities, not to follow any rules • He created the ‘gliding chord’ – the repetition of a chord up and down the scale avoiding tonality • Playing a C Major chord, then a D Major chord, then an E Major chord, on up (or down.) The key center is unclear
Debussy • Debussy uses dissonance and irregular rhythm • Form and content are subordinate to expressive intent • His works suggest rather than state, leaving the listener only with an impression, even it’s an ambiguous one • It makes an impression on you and its up to your interpretation what it means
Prelude to The Afternoon of a Faun • Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun • A faun in a mythological creature with the body of a man and the horns, ears, tails, and sometimes the legs, of a goat • Uses a large orchestra, with emphasis on the woodwinds • Has virtually no tonal center • All notes on all the instruments are equally important
Stravinsky • Igor Stravinksy (1882-1971) • Russian • The Firebird Suite was his first major work, but The Rite of Spring created greater impact • Both were ballets as well • We’ll look at them when we talk about dance. Today we’ll focus on what they sound like • The Rite of Spring created a riot because of its revolutionary orchestrations and driving, primitive rhythms • More on this when we talk about dance
The Firebird Suite • Written in 1910 for the French Ballet in Paris • Based on Russian folk tales of the magical glowing bird of the same name (that is both a blessing and a curse to its captor) • Critics were very enthusiastic • Stravinksy’s first big break
The Firebird Suite • Written for a nearly 100 piece orchestra (HUGE) • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QlCzpkpQ3qs
Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring • CONTROVERSY – a riot at the premiere! • It is subtitled “Pictures of Pagan Russia” • Stravinsky explained it as “representing pagan Russia unified by a single idea: the mystery and great surge of the creative power of Spring.” • It depicts the cruel rites of spring that culminate in the sacrifice of a virgin, who dances herself to death accompanied by frenetic music
Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring • The compelling rhythms give the work its impressive character • Rapid, irregular mixtures of very short note values create an almost intolerable tension (or at least to the public of that day) • The melodic treatment is unconventional – short driving motifs stop short of thematic fulfillment
Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring • First performed in 1913 in Paris (French dancers and choreographers) • Although designed as a work for the stage, the music achieved growing success on its own • Recognized as one of the most influential musical works of the 20th century • Lots of experimentation – in rhythm, meter, tonality, and dissonance • Honestly, you’re probably not going to like it • Its harsh and uncomfortable
Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring The Rite of Spring (Full Suite) • Beginning sounds very similar to Debussy • (22 minutes) – intense rhythms, short motifs, aggressive timbres
Rite of Spring • Disney’s Interpretation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3VqcTDf6l4
About 10 minutes short… • Olympic ceremony version?