20 Century / Modern Music: Stravinsky (Rites of Spring), Schoenberg (5 Pieces For Orchestra), Britten (Peter Grimes)
20 Century / Modern Music: Stravinsky (Rites of Spring), Schoenberg (5 Pieces For Orchestra), Britten (Peter Grimes)
20 Century / Modern Music: Stravinsky (Rites of Spring), Schoenberg (5 Pieces For Orchestra), Britten (Peter Grimes)
2oth Century music is largely exploratory and experimental which in turn leads to trends,
techniques and sounds. As each new trend appeared, it was labelled resulting in a whole array of
new terms.
Timbres tone colour all important; percussive sounds; extreme pitches; electronic;
Stravinsky (rites of spring), Schoenberg (5 pieces for orchestra), Britten (Peter Grimes)
Impressionism
This term is a term borrowed from the style of painting of a group of French artists. Rather
than make their painting look real, they gave a mere impression of vague. This was a move away
from the German romanticism. They way in which impressionism was achieved in music was by
playing with tone colours and timbres. There was a vague feel of metre and beat, as well as
tonality. Whole tone, pentatonic and modes were used. 7th, 9th and 13th chords were used and
parallelism caused a vague feel as well. In piano music, a huge amount of pedal was used. Debussy
is the most well-known composer of this style. Violes by Debussy (uses whole tone scale in
beginning)
Nationalism started during the second half of the Romantic era and continued during the 20th
Century. Vaughn Williams from England, Bartok and Kodaly from Hungary and Charles Ives from
America started using folk songs and rhythms and incorporating them into their compositions,
often using a different scale or in a new way. Bartok music for strings percussion and celesta
Jazz
American Jazz influenced some 20th Century music by adding a new vitality in rhythm
(syncopation); melodies based on the blues scale and an introduction of more percussive sounds.
Gershwin was a forerunner in this area. He often described his pieces as a jazz-influenced
Polytonality
This is when composers write music in two or more keys at once. (Two keys at once can also be
referred to as bitonality). Putnams Camp from three places in New England by Charles Ives an
impression is given of marching bands competing at the same time in different keys.
Atonality
This is when a piece is absent of tonality. Atonal music avoids using any key or mode by making
Expressionism
This is another term borrowed from painting where artists used their vivid pictures to express
the inner-most experiences and their subconscious, often expressing mental breakdown.
poured out their most intense emotional expressiveness into their music. Expressionist music
was often atonal, disjointed with ‘un-pretty’ melodies, often using violent, explosive contrasts of
instruments playing harshly at extreme ranges. Schoenberg five pieces for orchestra
Pointillism
All instruments are treated soloists often playing single notes in isolation. The result is a fabric
of sound which consists of dabs of instrumental colour. This can be compared to pointillistic art
where artists used ‘points’ of colour rather than brush strokes. Webern symphony 21
Serialism / Twelve-note music
A composer first arranges all twelve notes of the chromatic scale in any order of choice. This
becomes the basic series upon which the entire composition is based. No notes should appear
out of turn. Besides using these notes in its original form, it can be inverted; used in retrograde
or retrograde inversion. These themes are then woven together contrapuntally or vertically (in a
chord).
Neoclassicism
Many composers wanted to react to the thick, congested textures of the late Romantic era, so
they replaced this with clarity of line and texture. The expression of intense emotion was
avoided. They used stylistic features and musical forms of previous periods. Prokofiev composed
the Classical symphony and explained it as ‘a symphony that Haydn might have written had he
Aleatoric music allows for greater freedom involving a degree of chance or unpredictability.
Examples: In Cage’s Imaginary Landscape he composes for 12 radios all tuned to different
stations. Each radio has two players, one to adjust the volume and the other the station. In
Stockhausen’s Piano Piece XI, there are 19 sections to be played in ant order. The pianist can
Electronic Music