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Welcome, my name is Garri Voodoo. My journal will feature articles by my good friend, the violinist and music scholar, Runa Fanany. She will mostly cover classical music, with perhaps a slightly alternative point of view. Enjoy!
The years between the World Wars saw a speeding up of musical history. Prior to this period, broad encompassing terms for periods of musical development, such as ‘classical’, ‘renaissance’, or ‘baroque’, usually spoke of periods of time lasting several centuries, or at least several generations. By the early twentieth century, the late romantic period had already mostly given way to a number of new musical directions - Debussy and Ravel experimented with ideas of impressionism in music, and composers such as Schoenberg, Webern and Berg were creating works based off serialist, 12-tone row procedures(to name only two). By the end of the Second World War, these movements and others had already given way to other directions – Bartok and Khachaturian pursued folk influences, numerous composers in America were influenced by jazz and works for stage and film, John Cage was looking into the music of chance and random sounds. Within this historically volatile climate of the early twentieth century, I would like to examine two similar musical genres which were explored by a number of extremely influential composers: neoclassicism and anti-romanticism.


Anti-romanticism, as the name suggests, was a reaction against the ideals of musical romanticism. This is realized in a number of different ways. Early anti-romanticism, such as that evidenced in the works of Debussy, showed a change in the focus of depictive music from the grand and all-encompassing(for instance, the symphonies of Mahler, which are akin to self contained universes of expression) to the subtle and personal. An instance of this can be shown in Debussy's piano etudes, which show a preponderance with rippling water like effects and delicate twinkling sonorities. Similarly, many of the piano works by Eric Satie show a focus on non-directional harmonies – this means chords are used not for their tonal function but simply for their unique colour and expressive qualities. The music is kept relatively simple and elegant to allow focus on these delicate and extremely personal sound worlds. The reduction from grandeur and dramaticism is not just a reduction from orchestral to piano textures – piano works by Liszt or Mussorgsky, with their massive explosive gestures show how the excesses of romanticism could be displayed in full swing on a keyboard. However, reduced scoring, whether due to limited funding during the war, or due to composer’s personal choice, is an oft-cited anti-romantic feature. Works such as Stravinsky’s ‘A Soldier’s Tale’, which uses a large chamber ensemble set up(7 musicians actors), or Olivier Messiaen’s ‘Quartet for the End of Time’, which used the meager available musicians of a concentration camp despite its extremely heavy and serious subject matter, demonstrate this. As one of the main ideals of musical romanticism was dramatic self expression, many works which demonstrate a return to structured formality exemplify both anti-romanticism and neoclassicism.


Paul Hindemith
Hindemith was a renowned composer of neoclassical works.
Whereas anti-romanticism was showing itself in a number of forms by the very late nineteenth century, it wasn’t until around the 1920s that neoclassicism started to develop a distinct following. Neoclassicism is often used to describe works which make use of classical or baroque musical references or compositional techniques juxtaposed with the increased rhythmic, harmonic and melodic vocabulary of the twentieth century. One simple example of this might be writing an alberti bass figure(type of classical harmonic compositional feature) which makes use of extended chords such as 9ths or 11ths. Some examples of composers who used neoclassical compositional techniques include Bartok(the first movement of his ‘Music for Strings, Percussion, and Celesta’ uses a traditional baroque form fugue structure but with winding chromatic melodies and constantly changing time signatures), Hindemith(his series of ‘Kammermusic’ works include numerous references to baroque forms such as the concerto grosso, and melodic figuration and ornamentation reminiscent of baroque dances) and most famously Stravinsky(whose notable ‘Octet’ for winds includes stripped down and exposed harmonic and rhythmic features, blatantly referencing classical mores). This style, which developed almost internationally, was a reaction to the extreme complexity of the Second Viennese School and other complex process derived composers such as Edgard Varese. Often, but not always, this music is typified by a construction which serves only to fulfill a musical form – in a similar manner perhaps as solving a musical puzzle. Stravinsky’s reasoning behind writing neoclassical works mostly for winds was that he felt that their tone was much harder and more exact, and less expressive and vague than that of string sections. A term strongly associated with this style is ‘Gebrauchsmusik’, translated to ‘utility music’, meaning music composed for a specific purpose such as an event or commission, as opposed to a personal desire for self expression.

From this it can be seen that while there is some common ground between neoclassicism and anti-romanticism, they are still separate musical movements, and certainly not interchangeable. I hope this has helped to increase your understanding of these oft confused terms.
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The Reform Operas of Gluck

October 2nd 2006 13:26
I'm struggling to write an update with work pressures this week, so I thought I might put up an essay I wrote last semester as a Music History assessment. Be warned, it's more than a little long in comparison to my regular updates!

It is a discussion of Gluck's role in the reform of Opera based on his composition of Orfeo ed Euridice. Unfortunately, the footnotes don't come up here at all, if anyone is that interested in my accountability in this writing, I can gladly give a copy of the original document


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Chopin and the Large Scale Miniature

September 4th 2006 04:06
One of the things I find so fascinating about the romantic movement in music is how it wasn’t just a development in one direction, or a simple extension of traditional practices. There were many changes which were triumphed in different areas by different composers, and they could often be contradicting as well as complimentary. Demonstrating this contradiction are the 24 preludes for piano by Frédéric Chopin.

The romantic movement is often credited with the expansion to the fantastic in music. In Paris, huge display operas of Hoffmeister ruled the stage with elaborate staging effects. Co-inciding with the Nationalistic movement, many composers created grand symphonic displays taking influence from national or folk idiom, such as Sibelius and Dvorak. Liszt in his tone poems and extended keyboard works pursued ever greater variety of harmony and texture, and created extended single movement works comprising many unique developing thematic ideas


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Today my violin, clarinet, and piano trio won the instrumental ensemble category of the McDonalds Performing Arts Challenge. Possibly not meaning very much to anyone overseas, the competition spans many, many categories, and draws musicians from across Australia. The piece we performed was the Khachaturian Trio, which draws heavy influence from Armenian folk music. The attention we’ve payed to this piece, along with some of what I’ve heard from the ‘world music’ section of the competition got me thinking about folk music and what it’s impact on the classical scene has been.

From the beginning of the 20th century there have been efforts by classical composers to document and incorporate folk music into their works. Examples are numerous: Vaughn Williams in England, Bartok in Hungary and Khachaturian in Armenia. Classical conventions of instrumentation and performance are almost always retained, it would be a while yet before traditional instruments were performed with in the socially understood large genre of ‘world music


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C. P. E. Bach, a classical composer living between 1714 and 1788, is not the most well known of his family. In fact, in comparison to contemporaries such as Haydn, Mozart and Gluck, much of his work unfortunately pales in historical comparison. However, in a small group of composers of who Bach is the most well known, a musical movement was taking place which not only had repercussions through all classical music, but actually anticipated many of the ideals of romanticism some hundred years later. This important movement came to be known as the emfindsam style.

C. P. E. Bach
Possibly a response to the simplicity and non complexity of the rococo era galante style, which had a function of merely entertaining the ear with pleasant sounds, emfindsam music was complex, varied, surprising and more stirring. The ideal of the style has been said to stir the emotions, to surprise and stun the listener, and to present through various musical techniques unexpected qualities


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Around the middle of the nineteenth century, Franz Liszt is credited with the general creation of the ‘Symphonic Poem’ or ‘Tone Poem’. In actuality, this was little more than a new term for a genre that had been around for perhaps as much as half a century. But what actually are, and what is the significance of tone poems?

Fingal's Cave, inspiration for Mendelssohn's famous concert overture
A tone poem is defined as a single movement work for orchestra, which aims to depict a particular piece of imagery or narrative. Some famous tone poems include Debussy’s ‘Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun’ and Sibelius’ ‘Finlandia’. Tone poems are an evolution from concert overtures. It is probably debatable that these are one and the same with different names at different times in history. Both tone poems and concert overtures are one movement works for orchestra, and almost always concert overtures attempted to depict a scene, idea or emotion. Some famous concert overtures include Beethoven’s ‘Leonore’ overture and Mendelssohn’s ‘Fingal’s Cave’ overture (The Hebrides


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It is well known that it is impossible for a composer to specify every condition of the sound of their compositions. The tone of instrumentalists varies greatly between players, players may choose their own embellishments and cadenzas, and no two performances can ever be exactly the same. Even in electronic music, where all sounds can be controlled on a recording, playback will vary depending on the acoustics and sound system where the music is played. Some composers over the years have taken influence from this principle - that so much of music is uncontrolled - and expanded it to make compositions where sections of material can depend on entirely random factors.

Probably the most well known exponent of this style is John Cage(1912 - 1992). While his early works don’t hint at the styles he was to pursue later, by the 1950s he was producing works which were composed by aleatoric methods, some of which had factors of their performances decided by chance


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