20th century classical music
20th century classical music, the
classical music of the
20th century, was extremely diverse, beginning with the late
Romantic style of
Sergei Rachmaninoff,
Impressionism of
Claude Debussy and the
Neoclassicism (music) of
Maurice Ravel, and ranging to such distant sound-worlds as the complete
serialism of
Pierre Boulez, the simple triadic
harmonies of
minimalist composers such as
Steve Reich, and
Philip Glass, the
musique concrète of
Pierre Schaeffer, the
microtonal music adopted by
Harry Partch,
Alois Hába and others, and the
aleatoric music of
John Cage.
Among the most prominent composers of the 20th century were
Béla Bartók,
Gustav Mahler,
Richard Strauss,
Giacomo Puccini,
Claude Debussy,
Maurice Ravel,
Charles Ives,
Edward Elgar,
Arnold Schoenberg,
Sergei Rachmaninoff,
Sergei Prokofiev,
Igor Stravinsky,
Dmitri Shostakovich,
Benjamin Britten,
Aaron Copland and
Carl Nielsen. Classical music also had an intense cross fertilization with
jazz, with several composers being able to work in both genres, including
George Gershwin. An important feature of 20th century concert music is the existence of the splitting of the audience into traditional and
avant-garde, with many figures prominent in one world considered minor or unacceptable in the other. Composers such as
Anton Webern,
Elliot Carter,
Edgard Varèse,
Milton Babbitt, and
Luciano Berio have devoted followings within the avant-garde, but are often attacked outside of it. As time has passed, however, it is increasingly accepted, though by no means universally so, that the boundaries are more porous than the many polemics would lead one to believe: many of the techniques pioneered by the above composers show up in popular music by
The Beatles,
Pink Floyd,
Mike Oldfield,
Nirvana,
Muse,
Radiohead,
R.E.M. and in
film scores that draw mass audiences.
It should be kept in mind that this article presents an overview of 20th century classical music and many of the composers listed under the following trends and movements may not identify exclusively as such and may be considered as participating in different movements. For instance, at different times during his career, Igor Stravinsky may be considered a
romantic,
modernist,
neoclassicist, and a
serialist.
The 20th century was also an age where recording and broadcast changed the economics and social relationships inherent in music. An individual in the 19th century made most music themselves, or attended performances. An individual in the industrialized world had access to radio, television, phonograph and later digital music such as the CD.
Particularly in the early part of the century, many composers wrote music which was an extension of 19th century
Romantic music.
Harmony, though sometimes complex, was
tonal, and traditional instrumental groupings such as the
orchestra and
string quartet remained the most usual. Traditional forms such as the
symphony and
concerto remained in use. (See
Romantic Music)
Many prominent composers — among them
Dmitri Kabalevsky,
Dmitri Shostakovich,
Maurice Ravel, and
Benjamin Britten — made significant advances in style and technique while still employing a melodic, harmonic, structural and textural language which was related to that of the 19th century and quite accessible to the average listener.
Music along these lines was written throughout the 20th century, and continues to be written today. Some other twentieth-century composers of works in a more-or-less-traditional idiom include:
*
Samuel Barber*
Leonard Bernstein*
Aaron Copland *
John Corigliano *
George Gershwin *
Henryk Górecki*
Howard Hanson *
Roy Harris *
Alan Hovhaness *
Gustav Holst *
Aram Khachaturian*
Colin McPhee *
Carl Nielsen*
Sergei Rachmaninoff*
Ned Rorem*
Jean Sibelius*
Ralph Vaughan WilliamsMinimalist composers such as
Philip Glass can also be said to evoke some sense of nineteenth-century melodic and harmonic language, but depart radically in structure and texture, harmony, ideas, development, counterpoint and rhythm.
Many other 20th century composers took more experimental routes.
Main article:
ModernismModernism is the name given to a series of movements (See
Modernism) arising out of the idea that the 20th century presented a new basis for society and activity, and therefore art should adopt this new basis, however construed, as the fundamental of aesthetics. Modernism took the progressive spirit of the late 19th century, its love of rigor and of technical advancement, and unhinged it from the norms and forms of late 19th century art. To take one example, architect
Frank Lloyd Wright did his drafting work with tools, not because he could not draw freehand, but because "the machine was the coming thing, therefore I wanted to make beauty with the machine". Various movements in 20th century music, including neo-classicism, serialism, experimentalism, conceptualism can be traced to this idea.
The Second Viennese School, atonality and serialism
(See
atonality)
Arnold Schoenberg is one of the most significant figures in 20th century music. His early works are in a late Romantic style, influenced by
Richard Wagner and
Gustav Mahler, but he later abandoned a tonal framework altogether, instead writing freely
atonal music — he is often reckoned to have been the first composer to have done so. In time, he developed the
twelve-tone technique of composition, intended to be a replacement for traditional tonal pitch organisation. His pupils
Anton Webern and
Alban Berg also developed and furthered the use of the twelve-tone system and were notable for their use of the technique in their own right. They together are known, colloquially, as the Schoenberg "trinity" or the
Second Viennese School. This name was created to imply that this "New Music" would have the same effect as the "First Viennese School" of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven.
Schoenberg's music and that of his followers was very controversial in its day, and remains so to some degree now. Many listeners found, and still find, his music hard to follow, lacking a sense of definite melody. Nonetheless, works such as
Pierrot Lunaire continue to be performed, studied and listened to, while many of the contemporary works which were considered more acceptable have been forgotten. A larger measure of the reason for this is that the style he pioneered was very influential, even among composers who continued to compose tonal music. Many composers have since written music which does not rely on traditional tonality.
The twelve-tone technique itself was later adapted by other composers to control aspects of music other than the pitch of the notes, such as
dynamics and methods of attack, creating completely
serialised music.
Milton Babbitt created his time point system, where the distance in time between attack points for the notes is serialized also, while some composers serialized aspects such as register or dynamics. The "pointillistic" style of Webern — in which individual sounds are carefully placed within the piece such that each has importance — was very influential in the years following
World War II among composers such as
Pierre Boulez and
Karlheinz Stockhausen. Ironically, after years of unpopularity, the twelve tone technique became the norm in Europe during the 50's and 60's, but then experienced a backlash as generations of younger and older composers returned to writing tonal music, either in a
neoclassical,
romantic, or
minimalist vein. Stravinsky, who studied as a young man with
Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, became a modernist, then a neoclassicist, and ultimately became a serialist upon Schoenberg's death.
Free dissonance and experimentalism
In the early part of the 20th century
modernist composers such as
George Antheil and others produced music that was shocking to audiences of the time for its disregard or flaunting of musical conventions.
Charles Ives quoted popular music, often had multiple or
bitonal layers of music, extreme
dissonance, and seemingly unplayable
rhythmic complexity.
Henry Cowell performed his solo piano pieces by strumming or plucking the inside of the piano, knocking on the outside, or depressing
tone clusters with his arms or boards. Edgard Varèse wrote highly dissonant pieces that utilized unusual sonorities and futuristic, scientific sounding names; he also dreamed of producing music electronically. Charles Seeger enunciated the concept of
dissonant counterpoint, a technique used by
Carl Ruggles,
Ruth Crawford-Seeger, and others.
Igor Stravinsky and
Serge Diaghilev fled the riot that greeted
The Rite of Spring and
Vaslav Nijinsky's choreography.
Darius Milhaud and
Paul Hindemith explored
bitonality.
Amadeo Roldán brought music written specifically for percussion ensemble into the classical tradition; he was soon followed by Varèse and then others.
Kurt Weill wrote the popular
Threepenny Opera entirely in the popular idiom of German cabarets. Modernist composers being the avant-garde, they often wrote
atonally, sometimes explored
twelve tone technique, used liberal amounts of dissonance, quoted or imitated
popular music, or somehow provoked their audience.
Neoclassicism
Main article:
Neoclassicism (music)Neo-classicism, in music, means the movement in the 20th century to return to a revived "common practice" harmony, mixed with greater dissonance and rhythm, as the basic point of departure for music.
Maurice Ravel,
Igor Stravinsky,
Paul Hindemith,
Sergei Prokofiev and
Béla Bartók are usually listed as the most important composers in this mode, but also the prolific
Darius Milhaud and his contemporary
Francis Poulenc.
Neo-classicism was born at the same time as the general return to rational models in the arts in response to
World War I. Smaller, more spare, more orderly was conceived of as the response to the overwrought emotionalism which many felt had herded people into the trenches. Since economics also favored smaller ensembles, the search for doing "more with less" took on a practical imperative as well. Stravinsky's
L'Histoire du Soldat is thought of as a seminal "neo-classical piece", as are his
Dumbarton Oaks Concerto and his "Symphonies of Wind Instruments", as well as his
Symphony in C. Stravinsky's neo-classicism culminated with his opera
Rake's Progress, with the book done by the well known modernist poet,
W. H. Auden.
Stravinsky's rival for a time in neo-classicism was the German Paul Hindemith, who mixed spiky dissonance, polyphony and free ranging chromaticism into a style which was "useful". He produced both chamber works and orchestral works in this style, perhaps most famously "Mathis der Maler". His chamber output includes his Sonata for French Horn, an expressionistic work filled with dark detail and internal connections.
Neo-classicism found a welcome audience in America, the school of
Nadia Boulanger promulgated ideas about music based on their understanding of Stravinsky's music. Students of theirs include neo-classicists Elliott Carter (in his early years), Aaron Copland,
Roy Harris, Darius Milhaud,
Ástor Piazzolla and
Virgil Thomson.
Neo-classicism's most audible traits are melodies which use the tritone as a stable interval, and coloristically add dissonant notes to
ostinato and block harmonies, along with the free mixture of
polyrhythms. Neo-classicism won greater audience acceptance more quickly, and was taken to heart by those opposed to atonality as the true "modern" music. Neo-classicism also embraced the use of
folk musics to give greater rhythmic and harmonic variety. Modernists such as the Hungarians
Béla Bartók and Romantically inclined
Zoltán Kodály and the Czech
Leoš Janáček collected and studied their native folk musics which then influenced their compositions.
Post-modernism's birth
Post-modernism can be said to be a response to modernism which asserts that the products of human activity — particularly manufactured or created by artifice — are the central subject for art itself, and that the purpose of art is to focus people's attention on objects for contemplation, as composer-critic
Steve Hicken explained it. This strain of modernism looks backward to the dada school of art exemplified by Duchamp, and to the collage of "concrete" music, as well as experiments with electronic music by
Edgard Varèse and others. However, post-modernism asserted that this was the primary mode of human existence, an individual aswim in a sea of the products of people.
John Cage is a prominent figure in 20th century music whose influence steadily grew during his lifetime, and who is regarded by many as the founder of post-modernist music. Cage questioned the very
definition of music in his pieces, and stressed a philosophy that
all sounds are essentially music. Cage in the "silent"
4'33" presents the listener with his idea that the unintentional sounds are just as musically valid as the sounds originating from an instrument. Cage also notably used
aleatoric music, and "found sounds" in order to create an interesting and different type of music. His music not only rested on his argument that there was no "music" or "noise" only "sound", and that combinations of found sound were musical events as well - but on the importance of focusing of attention and "framing" as essential to art. (See
Post-Modernism)
Cage, though, has been seen by some to be too
avant-garde in his approach; for this reason, many find his music unappealing. Interestingly, the seeming opposite of Cage's indeterminism is the overdetermined music of the serialists, which both schools have noted produce similar sounding pieces, yet many serialists, such as
Pierre Boulez and
Karlheinz Stockhausen have used aleatoric processes.
Michael Nyman argues in
Experimental Music that minimalism was a reaction to and made possible by both serialism and indeterminism. (See also
experimental music)
Post-modernism reached music and painting at very similar moments, on one hand, the spareness, purity, love of mechanism, abstraction and the grid which are very modernist traits were preserved, as was the emphasis on personalizing style and experimentalism. However, post-modernism rejected the hermeneutic stance - the need to be "in" on the joke as it were - of modernism. Instead post-modernism took the popular and pared down as its aesthetic guide. One of the first movements to overtly break with the modernist took inspiration from Cage's work, and its emphasis on layering sounds: Minimalism.
Minimalism
Main article:
Minimalist musicMany composers in the later 20th century began to explore what is now called
minimalism. The most specific definition of minimalism refers to the dominance of process in music — where fragments are layered on top of each other, often looped, to produce the entirety of the sonic canvas. Early examples include
Terry Riley's
In C and Steve Reich's
Drumming. Riley is seen by some as the "father" of
minimalist music with
In C, a work comprised of melodic cells that each performer in an ensemble plays through at their own rate. The minimalist wave of composers "
Terry Riley,
Mike Oldfield,
Philip Glass,
Steve Reich, and
La Monte Young to name the most prominent " wanted music to be "accessible" to ordinary listeners, and wanted to express concrete specific questions of dramatic and music form, not hidden in layers of technique, but very overtly. One key difference between minimalism and previous music is the use of different cells being "out of phase" or determined by the performers; contrast this with the opening of
Das Rheingold by
Richard Wagner which, despite its use of triadic cells, has each part controlled by the same impulse and moving at the same speed.
Minimalist music is often contentious amongst traditional listeners. Its critics find it to be overly repetitive and empty while proponents argue that the static elements that are often prevalent draw more interest to small changes. Minimalism has, however, inspired and influenced many composers not usually labeled "minimalist" such as Karlheinz Stockhausen and
György Ligeti. Composers such as
Arvo Pärt,
John Tavener, and
Henryk Górecki, whose
Symphony No. 3 was the highest selling classical album of the 1990s, have found great success with what has been called "Holy Minimalism" in their deeply felt religious works.
The next wave of composers working in this tradition are not called "Minimalist" by some, but are by others. These include opera composer
John Adams and his student
Aaron Jay Kernis. The expansion of minimalism from process music, to music which relies on texture to hold together the movement of the music has created a wider diversity of compositions and composers.
Main article:
Electronic art musicTechnological advances in the 20th century enabled composers to use
electronic means of producing sound. The first electronic instrument was invented in
Russia in
1919 by
Leon Theremin, and was called the
theremin. Some composers simply incorporated electronic instruments into relatively conventional pieces.
Olivier Messiaen, for example, used the
ondes martenot in a number of works.
Other composers abandoned conventional instruments and used
magnetic tape to create music, recording sounds and then manipulating them in some way.
Pierre Schaeffer was the pioneer of such music, termed
Musique concrète. Some figures, such as
Karlheinz Stockhausen, used purely electronic means to create their work. In the
United States of America,
Milton Babbitt used the
RCA Mark II Synthesizer to create music. Sometimes such electronic music was combined with more conventional instruments, Stockhausen's
Hymnen,
Edgard Varèse's
Déserts, and
Mario Davidovsky's
Synchronisms offer a few examples (although
Déserts is sometimes performed today without the tape part).
Oskar Sala, created the non-musical soundtrack for
Alfred Hitchcock's film
The Birds, using the
trautonium electronic instrument he helped develop.
Morton Subotnick provided the electronic music for the film
2001: A Space Odyssey.
Some well known electronic works generally regarded as in the classical tradition include "Film Music" by Vladimir Ussachevsky,
A Rainbow in Curved Air and
Shri Camel by
Terry Riley, "Silver Apples", "The Wild Bull", and "Return" by Morton Subotnick,
Sonic Seasonings and
Switched-On Bach by
Wendy Carlos, "Light Over Water" by John Adams,
Aqua by
Edgar Froese, and
Poème électronique by Edgar Varèse.
Iannis Xenakis is another modern composer who used computers and electronic instruments, including one he invented, in many compositions. Some of his electronic works are gentle ambient pieces and some are savage sonic violence.Composers such as
Alvin Lucier,
Gordon Mumma, and
David Tudor created and performed live electronic music, often designing their own electronics or using tape.A number of institutions sprung up in the 20th century specialising in electronic music, with
IRCAM in
Paris perhaps the best known.
The influences of minimalists such as
Steve Reich (in particular 'Drumming') are clear in much of the work of
DJ Spooky showing a perfect example of the crossover between 20th century classical, and electronic music such as
trip-hop and even
trance and
drum n bass.
A number of composers combined elements of the
jazz idiom with classical compositional styles. Notable examples include:
*
George Gershwin,
Rhapsody in Blue*
Claude Debussy,
Golliwog's Cakewalk (from
Children's Corner, 1908)
*
Igor Stravinsky's
Ragtime for 11 instruments (1918)
*
Paul Hindemith,
1922 Suite für Klavier*
Kurt Weill,
Threepenny Opera (1928)
*
Maurice Ravel,
Piano Concerto in G'' (
1929–
1931)
*
Ernst Krenek,
Jonny spielt auf (1926)
*
Bruce Arnold,
A Few Dozen (1955)
*
Elie Siegmeister,
Clarinet Concerto (1956)
"New Complexity" is a current within today's European contemporary avant-garde music scene. Composers are
Brian Ferneyhough,
James Dillon and
Michael Finnissy. Another prominent development is the extension of instrumental technique and timbre, for instance in the music of
Helmut Lachenmann and
Salvatore Sciarrino. Another notable movement is
spectral music. Prominent spectral composers include
Tristan Murail and
Gérard Grisey, and the 'post-spectral' composers
Kaija Saariaho and
Magnus Lindberg.
*
List of 20th century classical composers*
Contemporary music*
Ircam Paris*
MICROCOSMS: A Simplified Approach to Musical Styles of the Twentieth Century by Phillip Magnuson*
Dolmetsch.com: music history online: music of the 20th century by Dr. Brian Blood*
Art of the StatesPublishers
*
Boosey&Hawkes Music Publishers*
Schott Music International*
4´33" Vierdreiunddreißig München Musikverlag*
Atopos Foundation for Contemporary Classical Music