The Rite Of Spring

  • December 2019
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STRAVINSKY – RUSSIAN PERIOD

1. Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971) Biography outline Grew up in St. Petersburg and family estate at Ustilug (in Ukraine near Polish border Father was opera singer – Stravinsky privately trained, disciple of Rimsky-Korsakov (d. 1908) – member of circle of young, “progressive,” nationalist composers around Rimsky – early works performed in Russia Firebird commmission from Diaghilev, 1910 – other Paris ballets (see below) – Back and forth from France to Russia – participated in musical life of both War and Revolution, 1914-1918 – Stravinsky already living in Switzerland because of wife’s health – Very opposed to Bolshevik Revolution (1918) – Lost family fortune and artistic contacts European years, 1919-1938 - resided mainly in France – Associates were now modernist European musicians, artists, authors - supported self and family by composing, performing – Involved in a great variety of productions: ballets, theater pieces, concert pieces, chamber music – A couple tours of US and South America American years, 1939-1971 – Went to US because of onset of WW II – lectures at Harvard in 1939 (Poetics of Music) – To Hollywood in 1941 – Associated mainly with other exiles, with Robert Craft from 1949 – Diverse projects (e.g. Fantasia, ballets, tours, opera) – Back and forth to Europe in 60s Periodization of works 1) Russian period (1906-1920) - Most works have to do with Russia and Russian folklore Nightingale, 3 ballets for Paris: Firebird, Petrushka, Rite; Les Noces 2) Neoclassical period (1918-1953) - Characterized by anti-romantic aesthetic, borrowings from earlier music - many famous works: Octet (1920), Apollo (1927), Symphony of Psalms (1930), Symphony in 3 Movements (1945), Rake's Progress (1951) – Still uses many techniques of Russian works (e.g. octotonic scale) 3) 12-tone period (1954-1971) - Adopted Schönberg's 12-tone techniques – Works: Canticum Sacrum (1956), Agon (1957), Threni (Lamentations) (1958) – What were motivations? Influence of Craft, Death of Schoenberg (1951), desire to reinvent self as modernist – Again uses earlier techniques Stravinsky as autobiographer – Spoke and wrote a lot about his music and his life – e.g. “What I wanted to express in the Rite” (1913) “Some ideas about my Octuor” (1924), Chronique de ma vie (1935), Poetics of Music (1939), Conversations (with Craft) (1959), Dialogues etc. with Craft – Notoriously untrustworthy – e.g. denies importance of Russian folklore, takes credit for collaborators’ ideas, etc.

2. Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes Firebird, Petrushka, Rite were all written for them – So were several later Stravinsky ballets: Pulcinella (1920), Renard (1922), Les Noces (1923), Apollo (1928)

Sergei Diaghilev (1872-1929) -- D. was a producer, not a musician or a dancer – essentially a dilletante - worked in Royal ballet in St. Petersburg Moved to Paris in 1909, imported most of his dancers from Russia – His operation was called the Ballets Russes – 1909 season included ballets on Russian music: Prince Igor, Sheherazade – D. commissioned a lot of new music from both Russian and Western composers, e.g. Stravinsky, Debussy (Afternoon, Jeux), Prokofiev (Scythian Suite), de Falla (3-cornered hat), Poulenc (Les Biches), Satie (Parade), Ravel (La Valse, but rejected by Diaghilev) What did D. offer Paris? -- dance technique, novelty, exoticism (Russian fad in France), new music, new ballets, modernism, occasional scandal Stravinsky's first 3 ballets all for Diaghilev Firebird - 1910 - his great triumph at age 28 Petrushka - 1911 Rite of Spring – 1913 Later projects with Diaghiliev: Nightingale (1914), Pulcinella (1920), Mavra (1922), Reynard (1922), The Wedding (1923), Oedipus rex (1927) and Apollo (1928).

3. Petrushka (1911) Collaboration of several people Music: Stravinsky; Choreography: Michel Fokine; Scenario and scenery: Alexandre Benois; Dancer: Vaslav Nijinsky Producer: Sergei Diaghilev Russian setting – St. Petersburg fair in bygone times (1830s) (Shrovetide = Carnival = mardi gras), puppet show, magic puppets that come to life: Petrushka, Ballerina, Blackamoor Elements taken from Russian folklore: Setting, characters, scenery, tunes, modes – To Russians these elements were nostalgic – To Parisians and other western Europeans they were exotic, i.e. “representation of one culture for consumption by another” Stravinsky took tunes from published collections – Some of these were obscure, some were very familiar - HANDOUT - Stravinsky usually takes only a motif or a suggestion, not an entire tune Tunes given exotic harmonizations to give feeling of exotic, mysterious East - compare Firebird, where "eastern" elements were given more romantic harmonizations - juxtapositions and dissonances make the materials sound strange and exotic – Octatonic harmonizations – i.e. harmonizing passage with chords formed from octatonic collection of principal melodic notes, e.g. Petrushka chord Stravinsky also some tunes from non-Russian sources -"Elle avait une jambe en bois" by Emile

Spencer was still under copyright and Diaghilev had to pay royalties – Also 2 Austrian waltz tunes by Joseph Lanner – Non-Russian materials make the ballet sound “popular” as well as folkloric – These usually get diatonic harmonizations PLAY DVD from RN 51 or so through flute playing and dance of puppets - This is recreation of original Fokine choreography, original sets and costumes - Note exotic elements in music, costumes, and choreography - Note how music and dance tell story together as in classic ballet Given that the materials are so traditional, why does Petrushka seem “modern”? – Because it’s an exotic tradition, because traditional elements are disassembled, distorted, and juxtaposed, because of the combination of tragedy and banality Petrushka was a huge success – People found the score dissonant and challenging but the best “modern” music, particularly as combined with the story and dance (2nd half of Hamm reading, not assigned) – But not successful in Russia – Because not exotic? Because nostalgic rather than nationalistic?

4. Rite of Spring (NAWM 145) Premiere MAY 29, 1913 in Paris – Know this date Producer: Diaghilev, Music: Stravinsky Scenario and scenery: Nicholas Roerich Choreography: Vaslav Nijinsky - He didn't dance in Rite; although he did dance other ballets on the same program Scandal -- withdrawn after 2nd performance -- 2 performances in London got same reception – Diaghilev’s "leaks" to the press before the performance were calculated to create a scandal Nijinsky's unusual choreography was as much responsible for the scandal as the music Stravinsky’s score was immensely influential musically, from first performance on - Perhaps the most famous piece of the century Why? - Aggressively modern, yet primitive and vital - Same combination as Picasso, Gaugin and other artists were successful with in same period. We hear the Rite now almost exclusively as a concert piece - We need to remember that it was a ballet and that the elements of dance, staging and scenery were very important Similarities to Petrushka: Russian theme - Ritual dance in prehistoric Russia - It was probably Roerich who first thought up the idea Russian melodic material - cribbed again from printed collections - Stravinsky worked over the melodies in his sketchbook, making them less folkloric, more "primitive" - HANDOUT Differences from Petrushka: Russian elements are interpreted as "primitive" rather than as "exotic" - Instead of being quaint and touching, the ballet is "mythic" - Ballet is ritual to bring back spring and renew the fertility of

the earth - Part 1 is warm-up - basically unsuccessful rites - Part 2 is sacrifice of virgin, which brings about spring Costumes and scenes - scenes are semi-abstract, emphasizing nature rather than Russian village life - costumes based on American Indians rather than Russian peasants Dance - Nijinsky's choreography was self-consciously radical - rejected gestures, movements, configurations of traditional ballet - Aimed at elemental, archetypal human situations and emotions - Rejected leaps, upward gestures, solo dancing, expressive gestures – Replaced these with: downward movement, stamping, group choreography (rival tribes, men vs. women), stylized gesture Melodies - Procedures aren't fundamentally different from Petrushka, but more emphasis on rhythm and repetition -– melodies from folklore collections are sliced and diced and re-combined – We can see this process in his sketchbooks – Stravinsky uses rhythms, ornaments and dissonance to make them seem “primitive” instead of “exotic” – PLAY beginning Rhythms – Repetitious but not periodic – i.e. rhythmic groupings don’t repeat predictably – Stravinsky disturbs periodic rhythms by unexpected accents and by changing time signatures PLAY video – Background of video – This was a re-creation by the Joffrey Ballet of the original choreography which had been lost (After the failure of the original ballet, Diaghilev had it rechoreographed by Fokine) – A couple of the oriignal dancers were still alive in the 1970s (esp. Mary Rambert) Dance of the adolescents – DVD 6 (29:50) Sacrificial Dance – DVD 10 (46:00)

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