Modernism
Modernism
- Modernism was a phenomenon that affected all of the arts in the 20th century, including literature, painting, and music.
- Modernism is not a style: think of it as an attitude/idea that resulted in a variety of prominent styles.
- Can be described as the desire for novelty at any cost; the new must be as different as possible from the old.
- In music, this can be seen in the abandonment of traditional forms and tonality.
- The most extreme forms sought to erase all links to the past.
- Modernism resulted in the following new approaches: impressionism, expressionism, atonality, serial composition, and minimalism.
Expressionism
- Expressionism is a broad artistic movement that sought to give voice to the unconscious and to explore humanity’s deepest and darkest emotions.
- Tried to avoid traditional forms of beauty and confront the human existence, often making it unpleasant.
- This movement is often seen as abstract and is characterized by extreme emotional intensity.
- It rejects conventional techniques of representation, favoring exaggeration and distortion.
Atonality and Serial Composition
- Atonality is the absence of a tonal center (key or “home base”).
- Composers such as Schoenberg, Webern, and Berg were searching for a new way of writing music with a more direct and immediate emotional impact than any music before.
- In vocal music, these composers used a technique called Sprechstimme, which is literally translated as “speech-voice” and is a mixture of speaking and singing.
- Creates a surreal quality in the music
- Serial Composition: based on the use of numbers to create “rows” and “series” of pitches for an atonal work
- Provided a means for organization without conforming to traditional forms.
Aleatory Music and Minimalism
- Aleatory Music: music of chance that leaves certain elements of the performance to randomly determined circumstances such as the roll of a dice.
- Some actions can even be determined at the whim of the performer.
- These works differ from one performance to the next.
- Minimalism: A movement that emerged in the 1960’s that relied on multiple repetitions of small units that differ only slightly or are varied only gradually over long stretches of time.
- Technology was important to many of these works.
Reactions to Modernism
- Much of the music that was influenced by Modernism was widely condemned by listeners.
- This music did not conform to the mainstream ideas of traditional music, and even seemed to threaten the existing social order.
- These works were seen as a rebellion against the social status quo, and performances occasionally led to riots in concert halls.
- Later genres such as ragtime, jazz, rock and roll, and rap would also be controversial at their start.