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MODERN & POSTMODERN ART MUSIC

WEEK SIX. MODERN & POSTMODERN ART MUSIC. 1880-present. Overview. This section of music history contains extreme ideas and music. It is a time of revolt and change. Tone color takes on a new importance. Computer electronics are being used to compose and perform music.

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MODERN & POSTMODERN ART MUSIC

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  1. WEEK SIX MODERN & POSTMODERN ART MUSIC 1880-present

  2. Overview • This section of music history contains extreme ideas and music. • It is a time of revolt and change. • Tone color takes on a new importance. • Computer electronics are being used to compose and perform music. • The Process of writing the music can be the Form of the music. • Dissonance is everywhere.

  3. Impressionism • Mainly in France, impressionism is most commonly known as a painting movement by Monet, Renoir and Degas. • Imagine writing music that’s aim is to sound like those picture look. • Impressionist composers Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel sought to write colors instead of melodies. They wanted their music to sound like a certain mood or feeling. They were not concerned about the traditional scale or other musical rules. • Harp and flute are common instruments used because of their light and floating quality.

  4. Exoticism • Music that is influenced by the Far East or exotic countries. • At this time Debussy and Ravel thought Spain was exotic. • Use of non-Western scales and non-Western instruments were some ways composers used exoticism in their music.

  5. Modernism • Composers wrote music purely for shock value. • They rejected the Romantic idea that music should be expressive and beautiful. • Composers such as Stravinsky and Schoenberg completely rejected past ideals. • These same trends can be seen in the visual art at this time as well. Picasso is a great example. Musical Characteristics • Melodies are angular and very chromatic. • The Traditional scale is not used traditionally or not used at all. • Rhythm and meter are very irregular and unpredictable. • Experimenting with tone color was very common. Composers wrote music that pushed the limits of the instruments. They were always in search of something new and different and shocking.

  6. Stravinsky • Cutting edge does not begin to describe Stravinsky. • He wrote many ballets, probably his most famous being The Rite of Spring. • At the premiere of The Rite of Spring in 1914 people rioted and threw things at the stage. The choreographer had to yell the counts to the dancers because they could not hear the music. Stravinsky ran out the back of the theater before the performance was over. Schoenberg • Created atonal music ~ which is music without tonality. In other words it does not use a traditional scale. • He used Sprechstimme in his works as well. This is a speech-song where the performer doesn’t really sing, but also doesn’t really just speak. There are pitches associated with each word. • He composed using Twelve-tone composition. All twelve notes of the chromatic scale are equally important. Schoenberg would create a tone row using some or all of the twelve notes in a specific order (whatever order he determined was best!). He would then write his music using the tone row as his scale.

  7. Nationalistic Composers • Prokofiev • Russian • He wrote many ballets and orchestral works, namely Romeo and Juliet. • Shostakovich • Russian • He wrote many symphonies and string quartets. • Bartok • Hungarian • He actively researched and used folk music of Eastern Europe in his pieces. • Ives • American • Very experimental in regards to all aspects of his music. • Copland • American • He was nationalistic (like the others) and as a result was not very experimental because the folk songs in America were very conservative. • His music is very tonal, clear, and beautiful.

  8. Postmodernism • All art is art. There is no hierarchy of good art or bad art. All art is good no matter what it is or what it depicts. • Types of music and overall Characteristics • Computer music • Computers are used to create and perform music. • Chance music • Music composed by chance: i.e. Rolling a die to determine the length of a musical pitch. • John Cage was a great composer of chance music. • Minimalism • Very much like Pop Music. • The process of the music can be heard, and it is very repetitive. • Steve Reich, John Adams, and Philip Glass are all Minimalist composers. • Classical forms are of no use or value to these composers. • Music is often made in the moment rather than thoroughly planned.

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