Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971)
Probably the greatest figure in 20th Century music, Stravinsky was
the son of a leading bass at the Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg, Russia.
He
studied with Rimsky-Korsakov (1902-8), who was an influence on his early music,
though so were Tchaikovsky, Borodin, Glazunov and
(from 1907-8) Debussy and Dukas. This colourful
mixture of sources lies behind The Firebird (1910), commissioned by
Dyagilev for his Ballets Russes. Stravinsky went with the company to Paris in
1910 and spent much of his time in France from then onwards, continuing his
association with Dyagilev in Petrushka (1911) and The Rite of
Spring (1913).
These scores show an extraordinary development. Both use folktunes, but not
in any symphonic manner: Stravinsky's forms are additive rather than symphonic,
created from placing blocks of material together without disguising the joins.
The binding energy is much more rhythmic than harmonic, and the driving
pulsations of The Rite marked a crucial change in the nature of Western
music. Stravinsky, however, left it to others to use that change in the most
obvious manner. He himself, after completing his Chinese opera The
Nightingale, turned aside from large resources to concentrate on chamber
forces and the piano.
Partly this was a result of World War I, which disrupted the activities of
the Ballets Russes and caused Stravinsky to seek refuge in Switzerland. He was
not to return to Russia until 1962, though his works of 1914-18 are almost
exclusively concerned with Russian folk tales and songs: they include the choral
ballet Les noces ('The Wedding'), the smaller sung and danced fable
Renard, a short play doubly formalized with spoken narration and
instrumental music (The Soldier's Tale) and several groups of songs. In
The Wedding, where block form is geared to highly mechanical rhythm to
give an objective ceremonial effect, it took him some while to find an
appropriately objective instrumentation; he eventually set it with pianos and
percussion. Meanwhile, for the revived Ballets Russes, he produced a startling
transformation of 18th-century Italian music (ascribed to Pergolesi) in
Pulcinella (1920), which opened the way to a long period of
'neo-classicism', or re-exploring past forms, styles and gestures with the irony
of nondevelopmental material being placed in developmental moulds. The
Symphonies of Wind Instruments, an apotheosis of the wartime 'Russian' style,
was thus followed by the short number-opera Mavra, the Octet for wind,
and three works he wrote to help him earn his living as a pianist: the Piano
Concerto, the Sonata and the Serenade in A.
During this period of the early 1920s he avoided string instruments because
of their expressive nuances, preferring the clear articulation of wind,
percussion, piano and even pianola. But he returned to the full orchestra to
achieve the starkly presented Handel-Verdi imagery of the opera-oratorio
Oedipus rex, and then wrote for strings alone in Apollon musagete
(1928), the last of his works to be presented by Dyagilev. All this while he was
living in France, and Apollon, with its Lullian echoes, suggests an
identification with French classicism which also marks the Duo concertant
for violin and piano and the stage work on which he collaborated with Gide:
Perséphone, a classical rite of spring. However, his Russianness
remained deep. He orchestrated pieces by Tchaikovsky, now established as his
chosen ancestor, to make the ballet Le baiser de la fée, and in 1926 he
rejoined the Orthodox Church. The Symphony of Psalms was the first major work in
which his ritual music engaged with the Christian tradition.
The other important works of the 1930s, apart from Persephone, are all
instrumental, and include the Violin Concerto, the Concerto for two pianos, the
post-Brandenburg 'Dumbarton Oaks' Concerto and the Symphony in C, which disrupts
diatonic normality on its home ground. It was during the composition of this
work, in 1939, that Stravinsky moved to the USA, followed by Vera Sudeikina,
whom he had loved since 1921 and who was to be his second wife (his first wife
and his mother had both died earlier the same year). In 1940 they settled in
Hollywood, which was henceforth their home. Various film projects ensued, though
all foundered, perhaps inevitably: the Hollywood cinema of the period demanded
grand continuity; Stravinsky's patterned discontinuities were much better suited
to dancing. He had a more suitable collaborator in Balanchine, with whom he had
worked since Apollon, and for whom in America he composed Orpheus
and Agon. Meanwhile music intended for films went into orchestral pieces,
including the Symphony in Three Movements (1945).
The later 1940s were devoted to The Rake's Progress, a parable using
the conventions of Mozart's mature comedies and composed to a libretto by Auden
and Kallman. Early in its composition, in 1948, Stravinsky met Robert Craft, who
soon became a member of his household and whose enthusiasm for Schönberg and Webern(as
well as Stravinsky) probably helped make possible the gradual achievement of a
highly personal serial style after The Rake. The process was completed in
1953 during the composition of the brilliant, tightly pattemed Agon,
though most of the serial works are religious or commemorative, being sacred
cantatas (Canticum sacrum, Threni, Requiem Canticles) or
elegies (In memoriam Dylan Thomas, Elegy for J.F.K.). All these
were written after Stravinsky's 70th birthday, and he continued to compose into
his mid-80s, also conducting concerts and making many gramophone records of his
music. During this period, too, he and Craft published several volumes of
conversations.
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