48
Middle Ages 450-1450 Historical Themes The spread of Christianity The development of a European culture The influence of Islamic culture Musical Context The music of the church The beginning of musical notation The birth of polyphony The rise of courtly culture Style For such a vast period of time, there is a remarkable continuity in musical styles in the Middle Ages. In order to understand them better, it is a good idea to group their distinctive features within the broad categories of monophonic and polyphonic styles. Monophonic Style Polyphonic Style HISTORICAL THEMES The spread of Christianity The Christian religion began as an underground sect of messianic Judaism in the first century C.E. Its practitioners were first persecuted, then tolerated; finally Christianity was accepted as the official religion of the Roman Empire. After the fall of the Western Empire, it emerged as the central unifying force in medieval Europe. The development of a European culture After the fall of the Roman Empire in the fifth century, the former Roman lands were ruled by various barbarian lords. These lands were eventually united by the Frankish kings, culminating in the crowning of Charlemagne (742-814) as Holy Roman Emperor. The influence of Islamic culture As the followers of the prophet Mohammed (570?-632) expanded their

Music History Outline

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

History of the Music

Citation preview

  • Middle Ages 450-1450 Historical Themes The spread of Christianity The development of a European culture The influence of Islamic culture

    Musical Context The music of the church The beginning of musical notation The birth of polyphony The rise of courtly culture

    Style For such a vast period of time, there is a remarkable continuity in musical styles in the Middle Ages. In order to understand them better, it is a good idea to group their distinctive features within the broad categories of monophonic and polyphonic styles. Monophonic Style Polyphonic Style

    HISTORICAL THEMES The spread of Christianity The Christian religion began as an underground sect of messianic Judaism in the first century C.E. Its practitioners were first persecuted, then tolerated; finally Christianity was accepted as the official religion of the Roman Empire. After the fall of the Western Empire, it emerged as the central unifying force in medieval Europe. The development of a European cul ture After the fall of the Roman Empire in the fifth century, the former Roman lands were ruled by various barbarian lords. These lands were eventually united by the Frankish kings, culminating in the crowning of Charlemagne (742-814) as Holy Roman Emperor. The influence of Islamic cul ture As the followers of the prophet Mohammed (570?-632) expanded their

  • territory through the Middle East and the Mediterranean, they preserved and built on the knowledge of the ancient Greeks and Romans. Through conflict (the Crusades) and coexistence (the multicultural Iberian Peninsula), Europe gained much from its contacts with this rich culture. MUSICAL CONTEXT The Music of the Church Music was an integral part of Christian worship. The daily liturgy

    provided innumerable texts, all set to music in the style we call Gregorian chant.

    The church served as an important patron of the arts, specifically of music

    Throughout the period, the majority of composers were associated with and supported by the church.

    The Beginning of Musical Notation As in many non-Western cultures, music in early medieval Europe did not

    have a system of notation. It was not until perhaps the ninth century that a basic system of notation was developed.

    Notating music was a difficult and time-consuming process. It was only in the cathedrals and monasteries that such work could be done on a regular basis.

    Therefore, nearly all the music preserved (until the twelfth century) was written for the church.

    The advent of notation also produced a markedly stable body of music, one of the features of Western musical culture.

    The Birth of Polyphony Descriptions of polyphonic singing date back to the ninth century, but the

    practice actually began earlier in improvised performances. Polyphony is a distinctive feature of Western music. Its development

    became the primary focus for composers from the thirteenth century on. Complex polyphony demanded specialized training for composers. The composition of plainchant was primarily an activity of the monastery

    and convent, but by the fourteenth century, composers were more often

  • members of the university-trained elite of the church. This change explains, in part, the lack of female composers of

    polyphony. The Rise of Courtly Cul ture The nobility of southern France created an elaborate society centered on

    the court, a practice that spread throughout the whole of Europe. Music was an important activity of these courts, and the aristocracy took

    part in the performance and composition of secular works. Surviving examples are found in music of the troubadours and trouvres, beginning in the twelfth century.

    By the fourteenth century, the polyphonic style took hold in secular music.

    Secular polyphony was produced by highly trained specialists in the art of music rather than by the aristocracy.

    MUSICAL STYLE Monophonic Style A simple monophonic texture might be enriched by the use of drones

    and (in secular music) percussion. Rhythm was often not notated. We assume that it was tied to text in vocal

    music and to dance in instrumental music. Melodies are often long and flowing. Texted music is often melismatic. Form comes from text in vocal music. The structure of instrumental music

    is based on repeating sections. Polyphonic Style Voices and instruments were often mixed. Nonimitative counterpoint, with voices moving at different rhythmic

    speeds, is the primary texture. Rhythms are often restless and active. Melodies are long and asymmetrical. Harmony is based on open fifths and octaves. Dissonances are often sharp and unexpected. Pieces are often built on a cantus firmus, and the structure is formed from

    repetitions of that melody.

  • COMPOSERS Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179) Moniot d'Arras (f l.1213-1239) Guillaume de Machaut (c.1300-1377) HILDEGARD VON BINGEN Born: 1098. Bermersheim, Germany Died: September 17, 1179. Rupertsberg, Germany Abbess, mystic, musician and writer. Composed plainchant and wrote learned treatises on natural science, medicine and theology. Was Hildegard inspired by divine visions, or did she suffer from migraines? The question has been asked in this century, but the answer only reveals our own view of the world. Hildegard's reality was indeed one of inspired visions and these visions reinforced a powerful will to succeed that made her one of the most remarkable women of the Middle Ages. Hildegard enjoyed a relatively privileged position as abbess of a wealthy convent. At the age of eight, her parents sent her to a local convent for religious training. She eventually rose to the rank of abbess, and succeeded in forming an independent convent near Rupertsberg. Over the course of her life, Hildegard managed to educate herself far beyond the knowledge demanded for a woman of her rank. Significantly, she passed this knowledge on in the form of learned studies of natural science, medicine and other matters. At the same time, Hildegard was a mystic, experiencing visions of what she called "the divine light" from an early age. These visions were accepted as authentic by the church, and this added to Hildegards stature. She exploited this by being an outspoken advocate of all she believed, even to the point of confronting popes and emperors when she thought they were not following

  • God's will. Hildegard also excelled in the craft of musical composition, and she wrote a large number of monophonic pieces for use in the church services, along with a mystery play with music (the Ordo virtutum ). Her musical style is individual. Perhaps because she wrote her works for female voices, her melodies explore a much wider range and often contain dramatic leaps. Her chants also use repeating melodic motives much more than other pieces in this style. Not surprisingly, since she never would have received the formal musical training that her male counterparts would have, her pieces have an improvisatory quality that suggests that they are the creations of a singer rather than of a "composer." Hildegard was not the only woman of her time to write music, but much of the music of others is lost to us or hidden in anonymity. Hildegard, however, uniquely among composers of her time, claimed authorship for all her works by overseeing their copying into manuscripts. It is thanks to this somewhat audacious act that we can listen to her music today. Works: 77 pieces in the Symphonia armonie celestium revelationum and a mystery play, Ordo virtutum (includes 82 musical pieces) GUILLAUME DE MACHAUT Born: c.1300. Rheims(?), France Died: April 13, 1377. Rheims, France French poet and musician. Composer of monophonic and polyphonic music. Leading representative of the Ars nova tradition. The fourteenth century was, as the historian Barbara Tuchman notes, "a calamitous century." Europe was ravaged by plague, which killed up to one-third of the population in a three year period. France and England embarked on the disastrous Hundred Years' War (1328-1450) which inflicted great misery on the French people. On top of this, political conflicts resulted first in

  • the relocation of the papacy from Rome to Avignon in southern France (1309) and ultimately in the election of competing popes (at one point, numbering three) resulting in the Great Schism (1378-1417). Ironically, this was also a time of great achievement in music. A new class of highly trained composers continued the polyphonic traditions of the previous century and added new approaches to rhythm and structure. Among these composers of the so-called Ars nova (literally "new art") was Guillaume de Machaut. Machaut lived his life in the higher ranks of service, first as secretary to John of Luxembourg, King of Bohemia, and then as a canon (a church official) at the Cathedral of Rheims. Like many in the fourteenth century, Machaut's life and works reflect an equal measure of the sacred and secular. Most of his works were either secular (such as his many chansons) or a mix of sacred and ceremonial (including many of his motets and his hocket "David", which was probably written for the coronation service of King Charles V in 1364). At the same time, he wrote what is probably the first full setting of the Mass Ordinary by a single composer (the Messe de Nostre Dame ). He was a man of the cloth, having taken minor orders at an early age. Yet toward the end of his life he maintained a romantic/literary affair with a young woman named Perrone. Much of Machaut's polyphonic music reflects the interest that composers had in building complex structures based on the repetition and manipulation of borrowed melodies (a technique called isorhythm). In some of his works, these techniques are applied to all the voices. The harmonies found in Machaut's pieces are built around the fifth and the octave, the primary consonances of the period. His secular music carries on the musical and textual traditions of the troubadours and trouvres. Most are written in the fixed forms such as the virelei, rondeau and ballade. Works: Sacred/ceremonial music, including Messe de Nostre Dame , 23 motets, hocket "David" Secular music, including 42 ballades, 22 rondeaux, 33 virelais, 19 lais, 1 complainte, 1 chanson royale

  • Renaissance 1450-1600 Historical Themes A rebirth of classical learning The gradual change from the feudal system to the modern state A change in people's views of the earth and the cosmos

    Musical Context Increased interest in humanist learning Increased patronage of music Territorial expansion and increased wealth

    Style The composers of the Renaissance concerned themselves with three different areas of music All are unified by many shared musical features HISTORICAL THEMES A rebirth of Classical learning The rediscovery and reevaluation of writings of the ancient Greeks and Romans suggested a "rebirth". Nineteenth-century historians seized on the idea to create our present image of "The Renaissance". The gradual change from the feudal system to the modern state Starting in northern Italy, the hierarchical state -- led by either the urban bourgeoisie or despotic nobles -- replaced the fluid and often chaotic feudal system of the Middle Ages. For this reason, some historians refer to the Renaissance as the Early Modern Era. A change in the views of the earth and the cosmos Christopher Columbus (1451?-1506) and Ferdinand Magellan (c.1480-1521) expanded Europe's view of the world. The astronomical studies of Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) -- later championed by Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) --

  • called into question the old earth-centered view of the universe. MUSICAL CONTEXT Increased Interest in Humanist Learning The arts became an important measure of learning and culture. Music moved from the science of number to an expressive art viewed as

    an equal to rhetoric. The rise and rapid spread of music printing increased access to music

    and books about music. Increased Patronage of Music The rich courts and civic governments of the Renaissance supported

    music to a degree not previously seen. This level of musical support was also provided by the religious

    institutions of the day. Territorial Expansion and Increased Wealth As a result of colonial expansion, great wealth flowed into European

    cities and courts. Travel and the resulting musical exchange became a driving force for the

    creation of a more international musical style. MUSICAL STYLE The composers of the Renaissance concerned themselves with three different areas of music: Sacred music: Composers continued to work with the older forms such as

    the motet and Mass. It is in this music that we find the clearest international style.

    Secular music: Composers created new forms that reflected national trends, such as the Italian madrigal and the French chanson .

    Instrumental music: The rise of music printing encouraged the spread of instrumental music for amateurs, and more specific types emerged.

    All three types of music share many musical features: The use of four-voice choirs or groups of like-sounding instruments

  • (consorts) Imitative or homorhythmic textures (often alternating within a single

    piece). Smooth, gentle rhythms. Melodies with balanced phrases. Harmonies that use full triads. Vocal forms tied to structure of texts. Dances based on simple binary

    forms. COMPOSERS Guillaume Du Fay (1397-1474) Josquin Desprez (c.1440-1521) Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (c.1525-1594) John Farmer (f l.1591-1601) Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643) JOSQUIN DESPREZ Born: c.1440 Died: August 27, 1521. Cond-sur-l -Escaut, France French/Franco-Flemish composer. Generally acknowledged as the greatest composer of the High Renaissance. Martin Luther, who had a good knowledge of music, said of Josquin Desprez, "he alone is the master of the notes, they have to do as he bids them." Indeed, Josquin was acknowledged by nearly all his contemporaries as the greatest composer of his time. If so, he stands as the first among many great musicians,

  • for the composers of what we often term the Netherlands School created one of the richest periods in Western musical history. His contemporaries -- including Antoine Brumel (c.1460-c.1515), Pierre de la Rue (c.1460-1518) and Loyset Compre (c.1445-1518) -- and the previous generation -- led by Johannes Ockeghem (c.1410-1497) -- created a style of music that can rightly be compared to the art of Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo. As for Josquin himself, we know surprisingly little of his early life. We know that in the 1470s he began service in the court of Cardinal Ascanio Sforza, and that by 1489 he was a member of the papal choir in Rome. But we know nothing of his early training, or even when he came to Italy (it was believed that he came in 1459 as a choirboy in the Milan cathedral, but it seems that this was a case of mistaken identity). Later in his life he served Duke Ercole d'Este in Ferrara, and possibly King Louis XII of France. The final years of his life were spent in the town of Cond-sur-l'Escaut in northern France (possibly his birthplace). The rest of his biography is still subject to scholarly speculation. What we do know is just what Josquin's contemporaries knew: that he created wonderful music. What stands out most in this music is his care for the words. This is seen in part by the way he uses imitation to allow each voice to present the text before the texture becomes too dense to be clear. He also made use of homophonic textures to give the text an added clarity. Some of his works, especially his Masses, use the older cantus firmus technique. Here he uses the borrowed melody to create a huge scaffolding upon which he constructs the other melodies. Some of these pieces display a high level of technical complexity. At the same time, he could create pieces of marvelous simplicity and elegance, as he did so often in his motets and chansons. Works: Sacred works, including 18 masses (Missa "La sol fa re mi", 2 L'homme arm Masses, Missa "Pange lingua"), more than 100 motets Secular works, including nearly 70 French chansons and settings of German, Spanish and Italian texts GIOVANNI PIERLUIGI DA PALESTRINA

  • Born: c.1525. Palestrina, Italy Died: February 2, 1594. Rome, Italy Italian composer of sacred music. Active in Rome through most of his career. Did Palestrina save church music? This is the legend repeated by various authors, and even made into an operatic plot in the early part of this century! According to this myth, the members of the Council of Trent were poised on the brink of banning polyphonic music in the church. It was only after hearing a piece by Palestrina (often said to be the Pope Marcellus Mass ) that they relented. While the story is not true, it reflects a real aspect of Palestrina's life: his commitment to sacred music and his keen interest in satisfying the desires of church leaders in the sixteenth century. His Pope Marcellus Mass is justifiably held up as the perfect example of Counter Reformation style. Palestrina's career likewise reflects his commitment to the music of the church. He was born in the small town of Palestrina (outside of Rome) and received his early training and spent the great majority of his career in various churches in Rome, including the Pope's chapel. His music was universally recognized as a model of clarity and balance, and theorists of the time constantly pointed to his pieces to illustrate their points. While he did write some secular madrigals, later in his life he renounced them (saying that he "blushed and grieved" over them) and began writing "spiritual madrigals" -- pieces in the lighter style of the madrigal without the taint of a secular text. We can hear all these elements when we listen to Palestrina's music. All the melodies within the contrapuntal web he creates are beautiful, balanced and comfortable for the singer. The text is easy to understand, and the syllables of the words almost always receive the proper stress and length. Finally, the overall sound is always pleasing and varied. Palestrina treats the various combinations of high and low voices in the same way that an orchestral composer treats the instruments, allowing us to hear a wide variety of colors within a single piece. Palestrina's music is often considered "perfect" sacred music and it is no surprise that his contemporaries often called him "The Prince of Music."

  • Works: Sacred music, including 104 Masses, more than 250 motets, some 200 liturgical pieces (psalms, Magnificats, hymns, etc.) and 50 spiritual madrigals Secular music, comprising nearly 100 madrigals

    Baroque 1600-1750 Historical Themes The increasing importance of scientific investigation The culmination of royal despotism Development of the New World Artificiality and marvelous effect were valued in the arts

    Musical Context A time of experimentation Expanding roles for music A growing awareness of national styles The full equality of instrumental music

    HISTORICAL THEMES The increasing importance of scient if ic investigation Scientists such as Galileo Galilei (1564-1622) and Isaac Newton (1642-1727) broke away from the older model of science, whose purpose was the proof of an a priori assumption. Instead, through observation and experimentation, scientists devised hypotheses about why things happened. The culmination of royal despotism A small group of leaders (kings, queens, and emperors) wielded enormous power in Europe. Such was their power that Louis XIV (1638-1715) was to declare, "L'tat 'est moi" ("I am the state"). Development of the New World The English, French and Spanish holdings in the New World continued to supply Europe with wealth. But as the generations passed, colonists began to feel a growing allegiance to their new homes. Ultimately, such feelings would lead to the independence of these lands.

  • Artif iciality and marvelous effect were valued in the arts Sculptors, building on the techniques of artists such as Giovanni Bernini (1598-1680), found ways to create the illusion of energetic and even violent movement in their works. Painters created larger and more crowded canvases. Virtuosity was highly prized in all the arts. MUSICAL CONTEXT A Time of Experimentation Musicians embraced the idea that music could move the listener in a real

    and physical way. Opera, with its blend of music and drama, was the full realization of this

    ideal. In instrumental music, no less than in opera, composers experimented

    with ways of creating impressive effects. Expanding Roles for Music Music continued to be used as an important tool of statecraft. The new and extravagant styles served as a rich adornment to religious

    services in both Catholic and Protestant traditions. Music, especially opera, was as an important source of entertainment to

    the growing merchant and landed classes. A Growing Awareness of National Styles Distinct styles of both vocal and instrumental music developed in Italy,

    France and Germany. Composers were aware of these differences and made use of them in

    their music. A French composer, for example, might label a piece "In the Italian Style".

    The question of the superiority of various styles was often the subject of heated debate.

    The Full Equality of Instrumental Music New instrumental forms, such as the concerto and sonata developed. Instrument makers created new types of instruments (especially wind

    instruments).

  • The violin moved to center stage as the most important string instrument. Performers reached new heights of expression and technique. Virtuoso

    players (such as Archangelo Corelli and Antonio Vivaldi) reflected these abilities in their own compositions.

    Even in vocal music, instruments played an important role. Instruments not only served as accompaniment, but often played equal roles with the voices.

    MUSICAL STYLE The basso continuo is ever-present in Baroque music. Textures are primarily melody and accompaniment or contrapuntal. Voices and instruments were freely mixed. Newly developed instruments provided a rich palette of tone color. Rhythms are often derived from dance rhythms. Melodies are ornate and often make use of dramatic leaps. Harmony is based on major/minor tonality, and dissonances become

    more common. Repetition and simple binary and ternary forms provide the basis for

    musical structure. COMPOSERS Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643) Henry Purcell (1659-1695) Elisabeth-Claude Jacquet de la Guerre (c.1666-1729) Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741) George Frideric Handel (1685-1759)

  • Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)

    GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL Born: February 23, 1685. Halle, Germany Died: April 14, 1759. London, England English composer, German by birth. Composed in all genres, but primarily remembered for his operas and oratorios. George Frideric Handel began his life in Germany, the son of a barber-surgeon who wanted him to study law. He died an English citizen, the most renowned musical figure of his day and a national treasure. The career that led him there was, in almost every way, a complete contrast to that of his contemporary and fellow countryman, Johann Sebastian Bach (born less than a month after him). Where Bach composed for the church and for his patrons, Handel composed for the general public. Where Bach was primarily of man of God, Handel was a man of the world. And where Bach was a man who never left his native country, Handel was a world traveler. Handel showed great musical talent at an early age, and his father allowed him to study with a local organist and composer. At age seventeen, the young Handel went to Hamburg, where he played violin in the opera orchestra. He was soon composing in the Italian style that he heard and played, and his first opera, Almira , was a rousing success. The next three years were spent in Italy, where his operas were extremely popular and where he continued to perfect his operatic style. He returned to Germany in 1710 to take the post of music director for the elector of Hanover, but almost immediately was invited to

  • England to produce his opera Rinaldo . His return to Hanover was short-lived. In 1712 he again asked leave to go to England. His request was granted, but Handel never returned. In an interesting irony, the royal patron he left behind followed him to London in 1714 as the successor to the English throne, where he reigned as George I, the first of the Hanoverian kings. It was for his former employer that Handel wrote his Water Music . In England, Handel continued to write operas in the serious Italian style, but his position as the leading operatic composer in England was soon challenged, first by the advent of a rival opera company (the Opera of the Nobility) and then by the development of a new and lighter style of the ballad opera. This latter style was begun by John Gay with The Beggar's Opera of 1728. As the popularity of Italian opera faded, Handel turned to another popular genre, the oratorio. Over the course of the next twenty years, he created a series of works that became some of the most popular in all of the Western tradition. Most famous among these was his telling of the life of Jesus, his Messiah (1742), and the "Hallelujah Chorus" from this work is arguably the most immediately recognizable piece of Western classical music. Handel's output as a composer declined in his later years, but he continued to conduct and perform (he was a brilliant organist). Indeed, it was at the end of a performance of Messiah that he collapsed, dying three days later. Works: Over 40 operas, including Almira (1705), Rinaldo (1711), Giulio Cesare (Julius Caesar , 1724) and Orlando (1733) Oratorios, including Esther (1718), Alexander's Feast (1736), Israel in Egypt (1739), Messiah (1742), Sampson (1743), Belshazzar (1745), Judas Maccabaeus (1747), Solomon (1749) and Jephtha (1752); other sacred vocal music, including Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne (c.1713), Acis and Galatea (masque, 1718), Ode for St. Cecilia's Day (1739), Utrech Te Deum (1713), anthems and Latin church music Secular vocal music, including solo and duo cantatas; arias Orchestral music, including Water Music (1717) and Music for the Royal Fireworks (1749); concertos for oboe, organ, horn Chamber music, including solo and trio sonatas Keyboard music, including harpsichord suites, fugues, preludes, airs and

  • dances JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH Born: March 21, 1685. Eisenach, Germany Died: July 28, 1750. Leipzig, Germany In his own words... "Whereas the Honorable and Most Wise Council of this Town of Leipzig have engaged me as Cantor of the St. Thomas School... I shall set the boys a shining example... serve the school industriously... bring the music in both the principal churches of this town into good estate... faithfully instruct the boys not only in vocal but also in instrumental music... arrange the music so that it shall not last too long, and shall... not make an operatic impression, but rather incite the listeners to devotion... treat the boys in a friendly manner and with caution, but, in case they do not wish to obey, chastise them with moderation or report them to the proper place." German composer and organist . Culminating f igure of the German Baroque. When we say that a composer such as Johann Sebastian Bach was a genius, what are we really saying? It is easy to call someone a genius, but far more difficult to explain what that means. The word itself tends to intimidate us, and we often feel that it is impossible to bridge the gap and find the human side of genius. So we simply call him or her a genius and are done with it. In the case of Bach, however, his genius is a combination of a number of simpler qualities, all of which point to that human side. First, Bach was a

  • craftsman. He lived in an age in which the composer created works according to the demands of his employer. For Bach, this meant that his various positions demanded different kinds of music. As court organist in Weimar, he produced his most important organ works, and as a composer for the Prince of Anhalt-Cthen he created music that his patron desired: ensemble music (including the famous Brandenburg Concertos , written for another royal patron, the Margrave of Brandenburg). But his most important and long-term position was as cantor of St. Thomas' Church in Leipzig. Not surprisingly, it is in this period that he wrote the bulk of his great church music. Because of the demands of his various employers, Bach was able to create works in a wide variety of genres, providing a breadth of expression not often seen. A second quality we find in Bach is that of a student or an emulator. The composer constantly surrounded himself with the music of his contemporaries, and his study of these pieces (often involving rearranging pieces for different combinations of instruments) provided him an insight into a wide variety of national and personal styles. Throughout his life, he integrated these ideas into his own unique style. Bach was also a deeply religious man. His personal Bible is filled with annotations and comments, and this depth of feeling finds its way into his sacred music, which often strikes the listener as an intensely personal statement of faith. Finally, Bach had a passion for completeness. Many of his works seem to be exercises in exploring every conceivable possibility. An example of this is his two collections of preludes and fugues, the Well-Tempered Clavier . In them, Bach explores every possible major and minor key. But it is in his final works that this encyclopedic quality stands out. His Musical Offering is a tour de force of variations and contrapuntal inventions on a theme suggested to him by Frederick the Great. His Mass in B minor is not a liturgical work, but a summation of his sacred style, much of it reworked from earlier pieces. And his Art of Fugue (unfinished at his death) is a compendium of contrapuntal techniques unequaled before or since. None of these qualities, by themselves, explain Bach's genius. In some aspects, he has no equal, and in all aspects, his music is unique. Taken together,

  • however, they constitute the human elements of that genius. They help us to understand why and how Bach created what he did, and perhaps that is as close as we can come. Works: Sacred vocal works, including over 200 church cantatas; 7 motets; Magnificat (1723); St.John Passion (1724); St.Matthew Passion (1727); Christmas Oratorio (1734); Mass in B minor (1749) Secular vocal works, including over 20 cantatas Orchestral music, including 4 orchestral suites, 6 Brandenburg Concertos , concertos for 1 and 2 violins, and for 1, 2, 3 and 4 harpsichords Chamber music, including 6 sonatas and partitas for unaccompanied violin, 6 sonatas for violin and harpsichord, 6 suites for cello, Musical Offering (1747), flute sonatas and viola da gamba sonatas Keyboard music, including 2 volumes of Das wohltemperirte Clavier (The Well-Tempered Clavier , 1722, 1742), 6 English Suites (c.1722), 6 French Suites (c.1722), Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue (c.1720), Italian Concerto (1735), Goldberg Variations (1741-1742), and Die Kunst der Fuge (The Art of Fugue c.1745-1750); suites, fugues, capriccios, concertos, inventions, sinfonias Organ music, including over 150 chorale preludes, toccatas, fantasias, preludes, fugues and passacaglias

  • Classical 1750-1825 Historical Themes The Industrial Revolution The philosophy of the Enlightenment The political ideals of republican government

    Musical Context Art and "Nature" The social role of music The concept of nature in the arts

    Style Simpler textures Simpler melodies The piano Simpler, rational forms

    HISTORICAL THEMES The Industrial Revolution New developments in the means of production led to increases in material goods and wealth. As production was centralized, urban society became more central to life in Europe and the Americas. The philosophy of the Enlightenment This world view placed an emphasis on the natural rights of people, and on the ability of humans to shape their own environment. Writers such as Jean Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) and Voltaire (1694-1778) helped shape these ideals. The political ideals of republican government The Enlightenment's emphasis on the individual led to the elevation of the

  • individual's role in political life. The idea of the social contract lay behind two of the most momentous events of the period, the American and French Revolutions. MUSICAL CONTEXT Art and "Nature" People's view of the nature of this world, and of their relationship to it,

    was undergoing fundamental change. Political theories saw people as free agents in the world, with a nature

    that, if not fundamentally good, was at least not fundamentally bad. The concept of "natural" became an important component in artistic

    thought. The Social Role of Music Improved economic conditions -- fostered by better production methods --

    yielded more goods and greater wealth. "The pursuit of happiness" was available to a broader class of society. Music began to be seen as "an innocent luxury". European composers reacted to increased demand for music.

    The Concept of Nature in the Arts The "unnatural" and "artificial" gestures of Baroque painting and

    sculpture were replaced with "natural" ideals of simplicity and balance. Allegorical subjects in art and literature were cast aside in favor of "real"

    people and situations, and the genre of the novel was born. In music, simplicity, balance and an interest in real emotions were critical

    for the composer. MUSICAL STYLE The style of the Classical era is marked by many of these ideals, and it i s reflected in a number of musical elements: Simpler textures: Homophonic textures (usually melody and

    accompaniment) became the standard. Contrapuntal texture was used

  • sparingly, and for specific purposes. Simpler melodies: Classical melodies usually fall into even phrases, and

    often were organized into symmetrical "question and answer" structures. Many composers found inspiration in folk melodies.

    The piano: The piano, with its ability to produce gradations of dynamics, became the most important solo instrument for Classical composers.

    Simple, rational forms: Simple two- and three-part forms became the essential building blocks of all Classical forms, especially the Sonata Allegro form.

    COMPOSERS John Gay (1685-1732) Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) Ludwig Van Beethoven (1770-1827) WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART Born: January 27, 1756. Salzburg, Austria Died: December 5, 1791. Vienna, Austria In his own words... "People make a mistake who think that my art has come easily to me. Nobody has devoted so much time and thought to composition as I. There is not a famous master whose music I have not studied over and over." Austrian composer. One of the leading composers of the Classical

  • era, and a master in all genres. Our picture of Mozart depends upon where we focus. Was he a brilliant, successful composer or a child prodigy who never grew up? Was he a facile composer who created nothing original or a composer of great emotional depth? He was all of these and more. For many of us, our focus is guided by our exposure to Mozart's personality in the film Amadeus , but is that an accurate picture? Mozart's life remains a complicated puzzle. As a child, he seemed gifted beyond all measure, playing at age six before the empress, and composing at an even earlier age. By twelve he had written an opera, and his talents seemed to know no bounds. From this auspicious beginning, one would have predicted a future filled with prestigious royal appointments, the brilliant composer and performer constantly sought out by emperors and kings. But his career, which ended tragically with his death at age thirty-five, was a constant disappointment. When once asked about a meager court appointment he held, Mozart replied: "I get paid far too much for what I do, and far too little for what I could do." His music did not always please those in power: "Too many notes," Emperor Joseph II was reported to have said. And Mozart himself, who always felt that his talents were never adequately recognized, was often difficult. The difficulties of Mozart the man, however, are eclipsed by the enormous power of Mozart the musician. His music was often joyous and almost raucous, and yet he could also write melodies of simple and haunting beauty. Like Haydn and Beethoven , Mozart was just as comfortable writing simple, direct melodies as he was writing complicated contrapuntal works. There seems to have been no genre in which he was not comfortable, and we can rightly point to his best work in any of them as the epitome of that genre. Works: Orchestral music, including some 40 symphonies (late symphonies: No.35 "Haffner", 1782; No.36 "Linz", 1783; No.38 "Prague", 1786; Nos.39, 40 and 41 "Jupiter", all from 1788); cassations, divertimentos, serenades, marches and dances

  • Concertos, including 27 for piano, 5 for violin, concertos for clarinet, oboe, French horn, bassoon, flute, and flute and harp Operas, including Idomeneo (1781), The Abduction from the Seraglio (Die Entfhrung aus dem Serail , 1782), The Marriage of Figaro (Le nozze di Figaro , 1786), Don Giovanni (1787), Women are Like That (Cos fan tutte , 1790) and The Magic Flute (Die Zauberflte , 1791) Choral music, including 18 Masses, the Requiem K.626 (incomplete, 1791), and other liturgical music Chamber music, including 23 string quartets, string quintets, clarinet quintet, oboe quartet, flute quartet, piano trios and quartets, sonatas for violin and piano, and divertimentos and serenades ( Eine kleine Nachtmusik K.525, 1787) Keyboard music, including 17 piano sonatas and Fantasia in C minor K.475 (1785) Secular vocal music LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN Born (baptized): December 17, 1770. Bonn, Germany Died: March 26, 1827. Vienna, Austria In his own words... "I carry my thoughts about with me for a long time... before writing them down... once I have grasped a theme. I shall not forget it even years later. I change many things, discard others, and try again and again until I am satisfied; then, in my head... [the work] rises, it grows, I hear and see the image n front of me from every angle... and only the labor of writing it down remains... I turn my ideas into tones that resound, roar, and rage until at last they stand before me in the form of notes." German composer. Often considered a transitional f igure from the Classical to the Romantic era. Ludwig van Beethoven is often described by musicians as a "giant straddling two styles": the Classical and the Romantic. Indeed, it is a testimony to

  • Beethoven's place in history that he is claimed for both periods. Whether Beethoven was a Classical or a Romantic composer, however, is beside the point. Instead, we might best view him as a new composer for a new age -- an age that is reflected in both musical as well as the nonmusical worlds. Haydn and Mozart lived during a time of nascent ideals of liberty and two major revolutions. They also lived in a world of royal patronage, in which Haydn flourished but Mozart floundered. In contrast, Beethoven came of age as an artist when the consequences of revolutions had to be confronted and when the burden of patronage had already shifted to the less reliable mechanisms of the commercial sphere: publications and concerts proceeds, supplemented by sporadic noble patronage. It was a far more disorderly world for Beethoven, yet one full of exciting potential. It is in this world of change that we find Beethoven one of the most enigmatic composers. By the middle of his life he was almost totally deaf, and had yet to produce his most profound works. In many ways cut off from the world, Beethoven was still committed to the idea of "brotherhood" as so powerfully expressed in his Ninth Symphony . These tensions and contradictions find a voice in many of his compositions. His symphonies starting with the Third (the "Eroica") are huge works, as are some of the late quartets. Yet at the same time, he could compress his works. These sometimes contradictory aspects are part of Beethoven's character and part of the times in which he lived. And they make Beethoven one of the most interesting of all the great composers. Works: Orchestral music, including 9 symphonies: No.1 (1800); No.2 (1802); No.3 "Eroica" (1803); No.4 (1806); No.5 (1808); No.6 "Pastoral" (1808); No.7 (1812); No.8 (1812); No.9 "Choral" (1824); overtures, including Leonore (Nos.1, 2, 3) and Egmont ; incidental music Concertos, including 5 for piano, 1 for violin (1806), and 1 triple concerto (piano, violin, and cello, 1804) Chamber music, including string quartets, piano trios, quartets, 1 quintet, 1 septet, violin and cello sonatas, serenades, and wind chamber music 32 piano sonatas, including Op.13 "Pathtique" (1806); Op.27, No.2 "Moonlight" (1801); Op.53 "Waldstein" (1804); and Op.57 "Appassionata" (1805)

  • 1 opera, Fidelio (1805) Choral music, including Missa solemnis (1823) Songs, including song cycle To the Distant Beloved (An die ferne Geliebte , 1816)

    Romantic 1825-1900 Historical Themes The increasing importance of science in defining a worldview The rise of European nationalism A growing autonomy for the arts

    Musical Context Increased interest in nature and the supernatural The rise of program music Nationalism and exoticism Changing status of musicians

    HISTORICAL THEMES The increasing role of science in defining a worldview The skepticism resulting from by a clearer understanding of the world and humanity's place in it changed the way people thought of themselves and society. Charles Darwin's (1809-1882) The Origin of the Species is one example of the new attitude. The rise of European nationalism Many areas of Europe (especially Italy and Central Europe) struggled to free themselves from foreign control. The years around 1850 saw many revolutions and attempts at revolutions. At the same time, Germany -- never a fully unified country -- struggled to create a separate national identity. A growing autonomy for the arts More and more, art was removed from functional roles and came to be appreciated for its aesthetic worth. The art of the past became increasingly revered, and our modern notions of the "artist" and of the "fine arts" were

  • born. MUSICAL CONTEXT Increased Interest in Nature and the Supernatural Romantic artists saw nature in a less idealized way than the artists of the

    Classical period had. The natural world was considered less a model of perfection and more a

    source of mysterious powers. Romantic composers gravitated toward supernatural texts and stories.

    Schubert's Erlking and Berlioz' Symphonie fantastique are two good examples.

    The Rise of Program Music Music began to be used to tell stories, or to imply meaning beyond the

    purely musical. Composers found ways to make their musical ideas represent people,

    things, and dramatic situations as well as emotional states and even philosophical ideas.

    Nationalism and Exoticism Composers used music as a tool for highlighting national identity. Instrumental composers such as Bedrich Smetana made reference to folk

    music and national images (as in The Moldau ), while operatic composers such as Giuseppe Verdi set stories with strong patriotic undercurrents.

    Composers took an interest in the music of various ethnic groups and incorporated it into their own music.

    Composers also wrote works based on stories of exotic lands and people.

    Changing Status of Musicians A composer was no longer dependent for income on the steady

    employment by nobility but relied instead on the support of the public and the patronage of individuals.

    Music was seen less as an occupation and more as a calling. Specialized training institutions (conservatories) replaced the apprentice

    system of the church and the court.

  • Women found more opportunities for musical expression, especially as performers, but social and cultural barriers still limited their participation as composers.

    MUSICAL STYLE The nineteenth century saw the development of many different musical styles, so it i s diff icult to describe the Romantic style. But as in all the periods you are studying, cer tain elements stand out: Dynamic range is wider, and there is a larger range of sound. There is a greater variety of instruments, including improved or newly-

    invented wind instruments. Melodies are longer, more dramatic and emotional. Tempos are more extreme, and tempo rubato is often called for. Harmonies are fuller, often more dissonant. Formal structures are expanded. These are often determined by the

    programmatic content of the piece.

    COMPOSERS Franz Schubert (1797-1828) Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel (1805-1847) Hector Berlioz (1803-1869) Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) Frdric Chopin (1810-1849)

  • Robert Schumann (1810-1856) Franz Liszt (1811-1886) Richard Wagner (1813-1883) Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901) Clara Schumann (1819-1896) Bedrich Smetana (1824-1884) Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) Georges Bizet (1838-1875) Peter Il ich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) Antonin Dvork (1841-1904) Ruggiero Leoncavallo (1857-1919) Gustav Mahler (1860-1911) Claude Debussy (1862-1918) Richard Strauss (1864-1949) Amy Beach (1867-1944)

    FRANZ PETER SCHUBERT Born: January 31, 1797. Vienna, Austria Died: November 19, 1828. Vienna, Austria

  • In his own words... "No one understands another's grief, no one understands another's joy... My music is the product of my talent and my misery. And that which I have written in my greatest distress is what the world seems to like best." Austrian composer, one of the earl iest of the Romantic movement. Schubert wrote prolif ically in all genres, but is best remembered for his songs. Schubert died at the age of thirty-one. One of his last wishes was to be buried near the composer he had most admired: Ludwig van Beethoven . The similarities of their lives are easy to see. Both struggled in many ways to create; both expressed in their music qualities that we identify with both the Classical and Romantic styles. Schubert was the son of a middle-class schoolteacher who expected that his son would follow in his career. Franz's musical gift was recognized early and as a boy he sang in the Imperial Court. As a young man, however, he followed the wishes of his father and accepted a teaching post. His musical activities continued in his spare time and he surrounded himself with educated and like-minded members of the middle class. Here he found an immediate outlet for his music. By 1818, he resigned his teaching duties and turned to full-time composition. He continued to have the support of his friends, even while his success with publishers was limited. Before long, however, Schubert had another battle to fight -- illness. As early as 1822 the debilitating effects of syphilis began to take their toll, and along with his health, his financial condition declined. Nonetheless, he continued to compose to the end, producing some of his most profoundly beautiful music in his final years. Schubert is most clearly identified with his more than 600 songs. Such a large output is, in and of itself, remarkable. What is more remarkable is the quality of these works. Some are simple strophic pieces, almost like folk songs, while others are complex through-composed settings that create miniature dramas. All, however, aimed toward the Romantic ideal of poetic expression. Along with this, Schubert often allowed the accompaniment to take an equal role with the singer in setting a mood or evoking an image. His "Erlknig" is a perfect example of this, with the thundering of the piano imitating the galloping of a

  • horse. Schubert perfected these techniques and put them to use in more ambitious works, his song cycles. Here each song possesses its own identity, and yet they are dramatically and musically linked. His were some of the earliest song cycles, and still stand as some of the finest. Schubert wrote more than songs, however, even if these pieces were not fully appreciated during his lifetime. His symphonies are relatively conservative in their approach to form, but Schubert infused them with a lyrical content that seemed to overflow these bounds. The same is true of his chamber music, especially his string quartets and the famous "Trout" quintet. One of his last works, the "Great" C major Symphony (so-called by Robert Schumann , who rescued it from oblivion), represents this side of Schubert. Schumann talked about its "heavenly length" -- perhaps not so much a measure of time, but a description of the way Schubert's melody flows onward, sometimes with surprising harmonic twists. Works: More than 600 Lieder, including "Erlknig" ("Erlking", 1815) and 3 song cycles, among them Die schne Mllerin (The Lovely Maid of the Mill , 1823) and Winterreise (Winter's Journey , 1827) 9 symphonies, including No.8 ("Unfinished", 1822) Chamber music, including 15 string quartets, 1 string quintet, 2 piano trios, the "Trout" Quintet, one octet, various sonatas Piano sonatas, dances and character pieces Choral music, including 7 Masses, other liturgical pieces and part songs Operas and incidental music for dramas Schubert, like Mozart, composed a huge number of works in his short life. In concert programs and recordings his works are often identified by a number preceded by the letter "D". This stands for Otto Erich Deutsch, who catalogued them in chronological order (so that a low "D number" indicates an early work.) RICHARD WAGNER Born: May 22, 1813. Leipzig, Germany

  • Died: February 13, 1884. Venice, Italy In his own words... "True drama can be conceived only as resulting from the collective impulse of all the arts to communicate in the most immediate way with a collective public... Thus especially the art of tone, developed with such singular diversity in instrumental music, will realize in the collective artwork its richest potential -- will indeed incite the pantomimic art of dancing in turn to wholly new discoveries and inspire the breath of poetry no less to an undreamed-of fullness. For in its isolation music has formed itself an organ capable of the most immeasurable expression -- the orchestra." German opera composer, conductor and musical writer. Wagner changed the concept of opera by v iewing i t as a "total art work" ( Gesamptkunstwerk ). It is telling that Richard Wagner's artistic beginnings lie in both music and drama. At the age of fifteen he wrote his first play and a year later his first musical composition. He was largely self-taught in music, although he did study privately when he was a university student in Leipzig. His career centered almost exclusively on the theater, and he wrote his first opera at the age of twenty, while serving as chorus master at the opera theater in Wrzburg. His first great success came with Rienzi in 1842, followed soon after by The Flying Dutchman ,Tannhuser and Lohengrin . Wagner fled Germany after the political upheavals of 1848, spending the bulk of this time in Zurich writing the text for his Ring Cycle , as well as a number of books on music. The most famous is the two-volume Opera and Drama , in which he set out his new ideas on reforming opera. The most infamous is his Jewishness in Music , a virulent antisemitic diatribe. In 1862 he returned to Germany, settling in Bavaria under the patronage of young Ludwig II. Here Wagner completed Tristan und Isolde , a tale of forbidden love made all the more fitting by the fact that he was at that time having an affair with Cosima von Bulow, daughter of Franz Liszt and the wife of Tristan 's conductor, Hans von Bulow. In 1866 Wagner returned to Switzerland and continued work on the Ring , taking time out to compose a completely different type of work, the comedic Die Meistersinger von Nrnberg .

  • As each part of the Ring Cycle was finished and performed, Wagner became more and more determined to create a theater capable of realizing the complicated lighting and staging he envisioned. Once again, Ludwig stepped in. In 1874 he committed to building just such a theater in Bayreuth. Two years later, Wagner's complete cycle of four music dramas was presented there. While an artistic success, it was a financial disaster, and Wagner had to turn his efforts to recouping his losses. Out of this effort grew his final music drama, Parsifal , a tale of love and redemption. It premiered in 1882; Wagner died that winter while on a trip to Venice. It is no overstatement to say that Wagner changed the face of opera. From his earliest works, he began to break away from the structure of separate numbers to one of continuous drama (he ultimately called them music dramas rather than operas). Other composers were heading in this direction, but none so relentlessly as Wagner. Perhaps more important was his concept of the "total art work," in which the composer controlled all the elements of the dramatic production and put them to work in projecting the drama. Musically, this was reflected in the idea of the Leitmotif, a musical theme that stands for a person, thing or idea. Wagner's music dramas are seamless webs of these musical ideas, with the music itself telling as much of the story as the action on the stage. Perhaps due to the uncompromising nature of Wagner's musical ideals, or perhaps due to the difficulty of his politics and personality, he served (and still serves) as a polarizing figure in music. His admirers (often devotees) carried his legacy into the twentieth century, while his detractors either went in opposite directions or made use of some of his ideas while distancing themselves from him as much as possible. Although Wagner's place in history is established, the judgment of that position will be a source of controversy far into the future. Works: 13 operas (music dramas), including Rienzi (1842); Der fliegende Hollnder (The Flying Dutchman , 1843); Tannhuser (1845); Lohengrin (1850); Tristan und Isolde (1865); Die Meistersinger von Nrnberg (The Meistersingers of

  • Nuremberg , 1868); Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelung ), consisting of Das Rheingold (The Rhine Gold , 1869), Die Walkre (The Valkyrie , 1870), Siegfried (1876) and Gtterdmmerung (The Twilight of the Gods , 1876); and Parsifal (1882) Orchestral music, including Sigfried Idyll (1870) Piano music, vocal music, choral music JOHANNES BRAHMS Born: May 7, 1833. Hamburg, Germany Died: April 3, 1897. Vienna, Austria In his own words... "It is not hard to compose, but it is wonderfully hard to let the superfluous notes fall under the table." German composer. Brahms created a style that blended the lyrical and intel lectual and served as a contrast to the progressive style of the New German School. Johannes Brahms grew up surrounded by a practical world of music. His father was a double bass player, and Brahms took early lessons in piano, theory and composition. As a teenager, he gained intimate familiarity with serious and popular styles, arranging music for his father's orchestra and playing piano in local dance halls. At twenty he began touring as an accompanist and began to make important contacts. Among these were Robert and Clara Schumann , both of whom had a lasting effect on his life and career. Robert, in his role as a critic, first brought Brahms' name to the notice of the German public, calling him a "young eagle." Clara became an emotional focus for Brahms, one that would last throughout his life. Brahms spent many years working as a conductor and pianist, hoping for a prestigious appointment that never materialized. He did, however, serve two years as director of the Berlin Singakademie. In 1868 he settled in Vienna, where he would remain for the rest of his life. He soon composed two works

  • that assured him both fame and financial security: the German Requiem (premiered in 1869) and his orchestral Variations on a Theme by Haydn (1873). With this success behind him, he finally finished his first attempt at a symphony. The work was premiered in 1876 to great acclaim, and Brahms was hailed as the true successor of Beethoven . This was followed by three other symphonies, all of which have become standards of repertory, along with a large body of important works in virtually every genre (except for opera, which, like marriage, he consciously avoided throughout his life). In 1890, at the age of fifty-seven, Brahms announced his retirement from composition. He was coaxed out of retirement by the clarinetist Richard Mhlfeld, for whom Brahms wrote some of his last (and greatest) chamber works. Brahms died of cancer in 1897, not long after the death of his one love and close friend, Clara Schumann. Brahms is an important figure in German music, standing almost as a rock of classicism in the onrushing stream of the new styles created by Wagner ,Liszt and others. His music is unshakably absolute, never drawing on extramusical images or ideas. His study of the music of earlier composers, including those of the Renaissance, added to the more conservative elements of his music. He often turned to older forms of expression, most notably that of variation. At the same time, his music has a strong personal aspect to it. His German Requiem , for example, is neither a sectarian religious work, nor a dramatic stage work (as was Berlioz 's). Rather, it is a response to the subject of death, freely drawing passages from the Bible to create a piece that is both personal and national. All these qualities combine to make Brahms one of the truly distinctive voices of the late nineteenth century. Works: Orchestral music, including 4 symphonies (1867, 1877, 1883, 1884-1885); Variations on a Theme by Haydn (1873); 2 overtures ( Academic Festival , 1880 and Tragic , 1886); 4 concertos (2 for piano, 1858, 1881; 1 for violin, 1878; 1 double concerto for violin and cello, 1887) Chamber music, including string quartets, quintets, sextets; piano trios, quartets, and 1 quintet; 1 clarinet quintet; sonatas (violin, cello, clarinet/viola) Piano music, including sonatas, character pieces, dances and variation sets (on a theme by Handel, 1861; on a theme by Paganini, 1862-1863)

  • Choral music, including A German Requiem (1868), Alto Rhapsody (1869), and part songs Lieder, including Vergebliches Stndchen (Futile Serenade , 1881), Four Serious Songs (1896), and folk song arrangements

    20th Century 1900-Present Historical Themes Phenomenal changes in technology The advent of instantaneous global communications The growth and eventual decline of totalitarian culture

    Musical Context Ambivalant attitudes toward the musical past A widening gap between "art" and "popular" music The advent of sound recording The birth of a "World Music" culture

    HISTORICAL THEMES Phenomenal changes in technology We live in a century that has moved from the earliest automobiles to supersonic

  • jets and space travel. Science has progressed at a rate unthinkable to earlier generations. We have learned how to eradicate some of the most dangerous of diseases, and to predict and control the forces of nature. We possess the technological ability to control nearly every aspect of our lives. And we also have developed the tools to end all life in an instant. The advent of instantaneous global communication We take for granted the fact that we can send and receive messages instantly, at the click of a button. All aspects of communication, entertainment and learning have been fundamentally reshaped by these advances. In fact, what you are doing at this very minute would have been unthinkable a generation ago. The growth and eventual decline of totalitarian cultures The Russian and Chinese revolutions and the rise of Adolf Hitler in Germany ushered in governments the likes of which had never been seen. The totality of their control and their ability to crush not only human life but also the human spirit is one of the most troubling legacies of our day. At the same time, their decline, along with movements for freedom and democracy in places as different as Poland and South Africa, is a testament to the ultimate strength of the human spirit. MUSICAL CONTEXT Ambivalent Atti tudes toward the Musical Past Some composers have made the conscious decision to distance

    themselves from the styles and values of the past. Claude Debussy said: "The century of the airplane ought to have its own

    music." Other composers have just as consciously tried to return to some aspects

    of the past, especially the elements of the Classical style. A Widening Gap between "Art" and "Popular" Music Popular music, especially jazz, country and rock, became the central

    musical focus of the majority of people in the Western world, and its reach covers the globe.

    Composers in the "art" traditions have come to be seen as less relevant in day-to-day life.

  • Composers whose music has become more and more complex have widened the gap between art and popular music.

    The Advent of Sound Recording The distribution of music made possible by recording was instrumental in

    the growth of popular styles. Recordings have changed the way we listen to music. Works from all

    musical periods are available at any time. The techniques of recording and audio production have become

    important musical elements in their own right. The Birth of a World Music Culture Western music, popular as well as art traditions, has become a world

    language. At the same time, Western musicians have become more and more

    interested in the music of other cultures. Western composers with non-Western ancestry have likewise sought out the music of their heritage.

    Non-Western ideas have enriched Western styles and have been accepted enthusiastically.

    In the age of global communication, a new "world music" style is starting to emerge. This style freely mixes elements from multiple cultures and is not dependent on the heritage of its creator.

    MUSICAL STYLE All sounds are possible (even no sounds). New instruments and the sounds of popular music have changed the

    soundscape of the twentieth century. Contrapuntal textures prevail in art traditions. Popular traditions are

    centered on homophonic textures. Rhythmic language can be enormously complex. Melodies can be long and abstract or reduced to small gestures. Any harmonic combination is possible. Composers have made use of

    extreme dissonance as well as microtonal intervals. Form can be controlled to an almost infinite degree, or it may be the

    result of improvisation and chance.

  • COMPOSERS Scott Joplin (1868-1917) Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951) Charles Ives (1874-1954) Maurice Ravel (1875-1937) Bla Bartk (1881-1945) Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971) Anton Webern (1883-1945) Alban Berg (1885-1935) Serge Prokofiev (1891-1953) Lil l ian Hardin (1898-1971) Duke Ell ington (1899-1974) Aaron Copland (1900-1990) Richard Rodgers (1902-1979) Olivier Messiaen (1908-1992) Witold Lutoslawski (1913-1994) Leonard Bernstein (1918-1990) Gyrgy Ligeti (1923- )

  • Pierre Boulez (1925- ) George Crumb (1929- ) Steve Reich (1936- ) Chinary Ung (1942- ) Paul Lansky (1944- ) Libby Larsen (1950- ) ARNOLD SCHOENBERG Born: September 13, 1874. Vienna, Austria Died: July 13, 1951. Los Angeles, CA In his own words... "Whether one calls oneself conservative or revolutionary, whether one composes in a conventional or progressive manner, whether one tries to imitate old styles or is destined to express new ideas -- one must be convinced of the infallibility of one's own fantasy and one must believe in one's own inspiration. The desire for a conscious control of the new means and forms will arise in every artist's mind; and he will wish to follow consciously the laws and rules that govern the forms he has conceived 'as in a dream.' " Austrian composer. Schoenberg's development of the twelve- tone method of composition was a turning point in twentieth century music. Few composers have presented as radically new an idea as Schoenberg did with what he called his "Method of Composing with Twelve Tones Related Only to Each Other." In it, he broke with a system of tonal organization that had

  • developed over hundreds of years and had become a hallmark of Western music. Schoenberg began his musical studies on violin at age eight. Although he had no compositional training, he began composing his own music. In 1895, he began lessons with Alexander von Zemlinsky, only three years his elder. From 1901 to 1903 he held various conducting posts in Berlin. In 1904 he moved to Vienna, and there began teaching ( Alban Berg and Anton Webern were early pupils). In 1919 he founded a society for performance of new music, and in 1925 returned to Berlin to teach. In 1933 he was forced, as a Jew, to leave Berlin. Ironically, he had converted to Lutheranism in 1898, but after fleeing to Paris he renounced the Christian faith and returned to Judaism. In 1934 he emigrated to the United States and in 1936 began teaching at UCLA. He remained in Los Angeles until his death in 1951. Schoenberg's early music was clearly marked by the style of the late nineteenth century, and influences of Brahms ,Mahler and others can be seen in pieces such as his Verklrte Nacht . But as his compositional style developed, it became more concise and contrapuntally intricate. At the same time, Schoenberg's chromaticism intensified to the point that any strong tonal focus disappeared. Such works as Pierrot lunaire are in a fully atonal style. The music of this period is also marked by a style that is referred to as expressionist, and Schoenberg had contact with, and a great deal of admiration for, the expressionist painters and writers (Schoenberg himself painted in an expressionist style). These ideals can be seen in the dark and dreamlike atmosphere conveyed in Pierrot lunaire , based on the expressionist poetry of Albert Giraud. The kinds of internal conflicts we associate with Freud and his school of psychoanalysis are played out in exquisite musical detail. From 1915 to 1923, Schoenberg produced relatively few works, in part due to wartime service. At the same time, he was working on his theoretical ideas of twelve-tone writing. Starting in 1923, with his Suite for Piano , he began writing in a fully twelve-tone musical language. Along with this came a return to more classical means of formal organization and larger works such as his Variations for Orchestra . Although he never abandoned these principles, he never extended them to other elements as his student Webern had. And after his move to the United States, he more freely blended tonal elements within his

  • twelve-tone writing. Works: Orchestral music, including Five Pieces for Orchestra (1909), Variations for Orchestra (1928), and concertos for violin (1936) and piano (1942) Operas, including Die glckliche Hand (The Blessed Hand , 1913) and Moses und Aron (incomplete, 1932) Choral music, including Gurrelieder (1911), Jakobsleiter (Jacob's Ladder , 1922) and A Survivor from Warsaw (1947); smaller choral works, including Friede auf Erden (Peace on Earth , 1907) Chamber music, including 4 string quartets, serenade, wind quintet, string trio, and string sextet Verklrte Nacht (Transfigured Night , 1899) Vocal music, including Pierrot lunaire (Moonstruck Peter , 1912) Piano music, including Three Piano Pieces, Op.11 (1909)

    IGOR STRAVINSKY Born: June 17, 1882. Oranienbaum, Russia Died: April 6, 1971. New York, NY In his own words... "Consonance, says the dictionary, is the combination of several tones into a harmonic unit. Dissonance results from the deranging of this harmony by the addition of tones foreign to it. One must admit that all this is not clear. Ever since it appeared in our vocabulary, the word 'dissonance' has carried with it a certain odor of sinfulness. Let us light our lantern: in textbook language, dissonance is an element of transition, a complex or interval of tones that is not complete in itself and that must be resolved to the ear's satisfaction into a perfect consonance." Composer and conductor. Russian by birth, later a ci tizen of France and the United States. Igor Stravinsky is often considered something of a revolutionary, in part based

  • on the riotous reception of his ballet The Rite of Spring . Stravinsky's career, however, suggests more evolution than revolution. Perhaps no other composer in this century -- or any -- has written in such a variety of styles. And it is the unique genius of Stravinsky that his musical personality is detectable in each of these styles. Stravinsky came from a musical family, although his training was limited, reflecting his family's desire that he pursue studies in law. As a student at the university in St. Petersburg, he made the acquaintance of Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov, and studied with the older composer. His music quickly caught the attention of Serge Diaghilev, the director of the Ballets Russes in Paris. Stravinsky was commissioned to write a ballet for the theater, his Firebird . This was quickly followed by Petrushka and The Rite of Spring . Stravinsky continued his association with Paris, but with the advent of World War I and the turmoil in Russia that would lead to the October Revolution, Stravinsky took refuge in Switzerland. After the war he returned to Paris, writing more ballets for Diaghilev, as well as a wide variety of other works, many (such as his Piano Concerto) serving as performance vehicles for the composer. In 1939, he emigrated to the United States, where he attempted unsuccessfully to write music for films. He continued composing late into his life, and when he was well into his eighties he embarked on a full schedule of performances as conductor, both in concert and on record. These recordings serve as valuable documentation of Stravinsky's ideas concerning his own music. Along with his changing nationalities, Stravinsky's music underwent remarkable change over the course of his life. His early music (for example, the Symphony in E flat ) show the influences of his Russian models. His ballets show a wider range of influences, including that of Claude Debussy . By The Rite of Spring , Stravinsky had broken new ground entirely, writing in a complex rhythmic style and a harmonic style that included the use of polytonality. This increasing complexity came to an abrupt end with his move to Switzerland, and he produced a seminal group of pieces in a pared-down instrumental style (often without strings), the most notable being the small dramatic work, Histoire du soldat for four speakers and a small instrumental ensemble. When he returned to Paris, he continued this more austere style, and added to it an interest in

  • older forms and methods, beginning his well-known neoclassical period. The culmination of this can be seen in his opera The Rake's Progress , a modern adaptation of the classical style of Mozart 's late comedies. Late in his life, Stravinsky once more changed styles, embracing the methods of twelve-tone and serial composition. What resulted is a remarkable series of works including his ballet Agon and a great deal of religious music. In all these works, certain qualities remain constant. First and foremost is a clarity of sound, an almost transparent texture heightened by his masterful use of orchestration. Along with this is an approach to rhythm that articulates his melodies with a certain dryness, adding to the clarity of sound. Finally, there is a concise and economical approach to form. This has its roots in the simplified style of his music from the 1920s, but was a hallmark of his style throughout his career. Musical Examples: "Augers of Spring" from Le Sacre du Printemps "Ragtime" from L'histoire du soldat Symphony in C, first movement Works: Orchestral music, including Symphonies of Wind Instruments (1920), Concerto for Piano and Winds (1924), Dumbarton Oaks Concerto (1938), Symphony in C (1940), Symphony in Three Movements (1945) and Ebony Concerto (1945) Ballets, including L'oiseau de feu (The Firebird , 1910), Petrushka (1911), Le sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring , 1913), Les noces (The Wedding , 1923) and Agon (1957) Operas, including The Rake's Progress (1951), opera-oratorio Oedipus Rex (1927), other dramatic works including Histoire du soldat (The Soldier's Tale , 1918) Choral music, including Symphony of Psalms (1930), Canticum sacrum (1955), Threni (1958) and Requiem Canticles (1966) Chamber music, piano music (solo and for two pianos), songs

  • GEORGE CRUMB Born: October 24, 1929. Charleston, WV In his own words... "In Ancient Voices of Children , as in earlier Lorca settings, I have sought musical images that enhance and reinforce the powerful yet strangely haunting imagery of Lorca's poetry. I feel that the essential meaning of this poetry is concerned with the most primary things: life death, love, the smell of the earth, the sounds of the wind and the sea. These ur-concepts are embodied in a language which is primitive and stark, but which is capable of infinitely subtle nuance." American composer and teacher. Crumb has developed a style that uses new techniques in a dramatic, narrative manner. George Crumb's career is rather typical for American composers in the second half of the twentieth century. His training was largely in American universities (he received his Doctor of Musical Arts from the University of Michigan). In turn, he has spent the majority of his career teaching composition at various universities. He is now Professor Emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania, where he began teaching in 1965. He has received a number of awards (including a Pulitzer Prize in 1968 for his Echoes of Time and the River ), as well as numerous honorary degrees. Crumb's music is a rich blend of new and innovative techniques, often involving aspects of theater. His scores often call for unusual instrumental combinations. His Lux aeterna , for example, adds a sitar to a chamber ensemble, and his Black Angels is written for an amplified string quartet, which he calls on to play various percussion instruments as well as bowing water goblets. In addition, he asks his players and singers to use new ways of producing sounds. This is especially true of his vocal music. Here Crumb allows the singer to turn her voice into a different kind of instrument, using clicks, sighs, laughs and yells to create dramatic effects (he also asks instrumentalists to speak, sing or shout, often as a part of playing). Other techniques, such as singing into the piano (to produce extra resonance) or singing though a cardboard tube (to create a

  • sense of physical and even spiritual distance) add new tonal colors to the human voice. Many of his works were written for the virtuoso singer Jan DeGaetani, and their collaborations have been a rich source of new vocal technique. Crumb's music also stands out for his use of theater. In Vox balanae he calls for the musicians to wear masks and to perform under a blue light. In his pieces, musicians often leave and reenter the stage, or play from offstage. The written scores also share this sense of theater and symbolism -- repetitive sections, for instance, might be written on a circular staff -- and his music is as visually intriguing as it is musically satisfying. The majority of his vocal pieces are settings of the Spanish poet Federico Garca Lorca, and it is in these pieces that he seems to have found his most successful and immediate style. Not surprisingly, these are among his most often performed works. Works: Orchestral music, including Echoes of Time and the River (1967) and A Haunted Landscape (1984) Vocal music based on Lorca poetry, including Night Music I (1963), four books of madrigals (1965-1969), Songs, Drones and Refrains of Death (1968), Night of the Four Moons (1969) and Ancient Voices of Children (1970) Chamber music, including Black Angels (for electrified string quartet, 1970), Lux aeterna (Eternal Light , for voice and chamber ensemble including sitar, 1971), Vox balanae (The Voice of the Whales , for amplified instruments, 1971) and Quest (for guitar and chamber ensemble, 1994) Music for amplified piano, including 2 volumes of Makrokosmos (1972 and 1973), Music for a Summer Evening (1974) and Zeitgeist (1988); piano music ( Processional , 1984) LEONARD BERNSTEIN Born: August 25, 1918. Lawrence, MA Died: October 14, 1990. New York, NY American composer, conductor, pianist and writer. He wrote in

  • virtually all genres, often merging popular and classical styles. Leonard Bernstein was something of a musical polymath. In the world of Western art music he enjoyed a worldwide reputation as a conductor and a composer. He was also a great communicator, and perhaps more than anybody else he was able to explain music (especially Western art music) to a wide audience. At the same time, he created music for the Broadway stage, and successfully integrated popular styles (especially jazz) into his musical vocabulary. For all this, Bernstein began his musical study rather late. His family bought a piano when he was ten years old, and he began study without real encouragement from his family. He progressed, studying with various teachers, and attended the prestigious Boston Latin School. He went from there to Harvard (1935-1939) and then to the Curtis Institute, where he studied conducting with Fritz Reiner and Serge Koussevitsky. He also kept one foot in the more popular world, playing with the Revuers in New York (a musical theater group that included Betty Comden and Adolph Green). By 1943 he was assistant to Arthur Rodzinski, the conductor of the New York Philharmonic. It was here that he gained national and worldwide attention, substituting for an ill Bruno Walter in a broadcast concert. His conducting career progressed rapidly, and he was closely associated with the New York Philharmonic (where he served as music director from 1958 to 1969), the Israel Philharmonic and the Boston Symphony Orchestra. He was in demand throughout the world and was the first American to conduct at Milan's La Scala opera house. Through most of his career he was a passionate supporter of contemporary music, though in his later years he also turned back to older styles, especially the late romantics such as Mahler . Bernstein also used the podium as a way to popularize the music he loved. In 1958, he began a series of televised Young People's Concerts that brought symphonic music into the homes of Americans. During this time, Bernstein was also prolific as a composer. He is best remembered for his music for the stage and films. In 1944 he created the ballet Fancy Free for Jerome Robbins, and in the same year a musical based on a similar theme, On the Town . He also composed music for the film On the

  • Waterfront . But his most spectacular success was the musical West Side Story , a modern retelling of Romeo and Juliet . It has enjoyed both critical and popular success on stage, and was eventually made into a hit film. Bernstein also wrote a great deal of concert music, some of which was popularly influenced and some of which was more clearly oriented toward the mainstream classical style of the twentieth century. Although he was conversant in just about any approach (including the use of twelve-tone techniques), he concentrated on a modern tonal language, sparked by a dynamic rhythmic sense and his brilliant sense of orchestration. In all of his endeavors he promoted not only himself, but also the causes of music in America and American music. He was able, in the words of his biographer, Joan Peyser, "to proclaim that an American can be a remarkable and exciting musician." Works: Orchestral works, including the Jeremiah Symphony (1942), Symphony No.2 "The Age of Anxiety" (piano and orchestra, 1949), Serenade (violin, strings and percussion, 1954), and Symphony No.3 "Kaddish" (1963) Works for chorus and orchestra, including Chichester Psalms (1965) and Songfest (1977) Operas, including A Quiet Place (1983) Musicals, including On the Town (1944), Wonderful Town (1953), Candide (1956), and West Side Story (1957) Other dramatic music, including the ballet Fancy Free (1944), the film score On the Waterfront (1954), and Mass (1971) Chamber and instrumental music, solo vocal music