20/21st Century Vocabulary Flashcards
(44 cards)
Impressionism
A style of music from the late 1800’s, mainly associated with French composers. It focused on exotic harmonies, subtle rhythms and timbres.
Chromatic Harmony
The use of “color” tones to embellish harmonies with unusual and emotional dissonances.
Atonal
Music that purposely avoids the use of traditional harmonies. It tends to focus on dissonant harmonies and melodies, but might be very traditional in other elements of music.
12-tone
A very structured style of composing atonal music, developed by Arnold Schoenberg.
Experimentalism
A purposeful exploration of non-traditional ways to experience sound and performances.
Populism
A philosophy in composing that values connection to people and serving society through music.
Minimalism
A music style that embraces repetition, and applies subtle variations in melodic and rhythmic ideas.
Rhythm
I’d say that rhythm is the most important characteristic, but that’s my opinion.
Melody and harmony
There are many tonal systems now. (See tonality, below) There is MUCH more use of dissonance now. In the romantic period and before, you always had to “resolve” dissonances into consonances. Not anymore. Phrases can end, and don’t necessarily sound “final”.
Form
Sometimes traditional forms are used, but composers were (and are) free to do what they want.
Tonality
Tonality has to do with the major and minor scales, (and also those roman numerals I, V, etc).
Impressionism (1875-1925)
Impressionism is almost exclusively a French off-shoot from the Romantic Period. The ideas and exploration of sound in Impressionism paved the way for many 20th Century composers and some of their radical ideas.
What are key characteristics of Impressionist music?
- Timbre (tone color) takes a prominent role. Composers in this style would use instruments in interesting and creative combinations. They would also use some more modern instruments in unusual ways (muted trumpets, pedal harps, different kinds of cymbals).
- Rhythms can be very obscure, and the steady beat is very hard to find at times. Some other music might be very rhythmic, but can be very tricky and intricate in detail.
- Impressionist music is usually abstract in subject matter. It might seem programmatic, but does not always give specifics of a story, just hints and suggestions.
- The harmonies used by impressionist composers are usually very creative, abstract, and dissonant. Some of this came from using scales that were not in the Major/minor tradition of past music styles. Impressionists would use new combinations of pitches to create unusual or exotic scales - and this led to very unusual harmonies, and melodies.
Who are the prominent composers of Impressionism?
Debussy and Ravel
Atonal and 12-tone Music (1911-present)
Atonal music is one of the most revolutionary ideas in music history. Romantic composers at the end of the 1800s were incorporating more and more dissonance, trying to bend the traditions of harmony into new ways of individual expression. Atonal music builds off of this, and purposefully tries to break away from historical conventions. Atonal style is more of a artistic movement in music, defied hundreds of years of tradition, led to a wide exploration of musical values, and even questioning of the elements of music. Some atonal composers and pieces are likely most influential things in music, but ironically you probably have never heard of them.
What are key characteristics of Atonal music?
- Traditional harmonies were absolutely avoided. Since the 1500s, European composers had focused music on a finite grammar of harmonies, a set collection of chords. Atonal composers sought to explore sound and expression in newer ways, and purposefully avoided traditional harmonies. This has two very significant effects: 1) Harmonies in most atonal music are VERY dissonant, and 2) Melodies are almost always very abstract and un-tuneful.
- Atonal music is often very organized in its form. Some of this music weaves very intricate polyphonic textures. Most listeners might think it is just a pile of random pitches. However, this is far from true. Atonal masterworks are usually highly organized and planned out.
- Atonal is a generic term, referencing music that avoids traditional harmonic and melodic patterns. 12-tone is a term that is more specific in how atonal music can be organized. The 12-tone language is a specific grammar for composing and understanding atonal music. Serial music is an even more specific variation of 12-tone composition.
Who are the prominent composers of atonal music?
Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg, and Anton Webern
Experimentalism (1911-present, but it really became more popular in the 1950s)
Atonal composers opened the door for Experimentalism. Atonal composers showed that music could be freed from the expectations of history, and that music could evolve into unique forms of human expression. Experimentalists embrace this value, and truly explore the idea of sound. Perhaps the way to understand this music is to ask yourself, “What is music?” Experimentalist music often will force to to confront this question, and try to make decisions about how music serves humans as an art form. Experimentalism is perhaps the most radical and defiant modern music style.
What are key characteristics of Experimentalist music?
- Anything goes! The important ingredient seems to be sound (most of the time).
- Some experimentalists use untraditional objects as instruments. Maybe breaking glass, power tool sounds, of other objects framed in a musical context.
- Sometimes instruments are played in very unusual ways. For example: the “prepared piano” is a normal acoustic piano, but with materials shoved into some of the piano wires. The result is a very unique timbre quality. Another way instruments could be played in unusual manner - instead of using the keys to make sound on the piano, the player reaches into the instrument and plucks the strings with her fingers.
- Some experimentalist music is aleatoric - based on chance. This usually happens in a couple of ways: 1) the composer might use some random way to determine pitches or rhythms in the composition. Rolling dice, flipping a coin, etc. 2) Players might have passages in a composition that give no specifics, just general ideas. Tempo, pitches, and rhythms might be made up on the spot. Kind of like improvisation, but usually much more dissonant and noisy sounding.
Who are the prominent composers of the experimentalist style?
- John Cage (the most widely recognized name in experimentalism.
- George Anthie (a rebel in his time, and laid the groundwork for other experimentalists.)
- Edgard Varèse (father of electronic music, and composed pieces for percussion ensembles)
Populism (1920-present)
Populists sought to connect to listeners by offering traditional forms, familiar melodies, and conventional use of instruments. Populists were influenced by the rhythmic and harmonic freedom of other modern music styles, but they sought to compose music that served people, and connected humans to each other through a shared experience. For a populist, music was not just self expression, it was a way to unite ideas and emotions across different people - through music.
What are key characteristics of Populist music?
- Sometimes uses familiar melodies, or familiar programmatic stories. There is often a effort to connect to what people know. Folk tales, folk songs, fairy tales, etc.
- Harmonies tend to be modern, but not always dissonant and harsh like atonal composers. Populist music does not sound like Romantic period dissonance. There is usually a more modern quality to the harmonies.
- Some Populists used the emergence of Jazz and Blues as a platform for expression. These composers wrote music that pulled chords, rhythms, and melodies from jazz music - and brought these influences into the formal chamber music and orchestra settings.
- Some populists tried to compose music that would also serve the musicians. Paul Hindemith wanted to write great music for all instruments. While historically, many composers focused on violin and piano as solo instruments, Hindemith sought to write quality music for instruments that rarely got to be featured. Hindemith wrote solo works for viola, tuba, trombone, bassoon, and much more! Hindemith also tried to write music that was technically not too advanced, so that a decent amateur musician could prepare and performa his works.
Who are the prominent composers of the populist style?
Aaron Copland, Paul Hindemith, George Gershwnin
Minimalism (~1960-present)
Compared to other modern music styles, minimalism reflects its name - it uses minimal material. It is like a reaction to all the complex and chaotic embellishments of Impressionist, Atonal, and Experimental styles. Minimalism is also a reaction against the familiarity of Populism. Minimalism is a unique and new perspective on what music can be, and frames the elements of music with its own values and meanings.