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Rhythmic Complexity Nonsymmetrical patterns based on odd numbers (5,7,11, or 13 beats per measure) Constantly changing meters Polyrhythm (simultaneous use of two or more rhythmic patterns)
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Composers rejected the neatly balanced phrases of earlier music Melody was no longer the focus of a composition. Composers tried to make the instruments sing Melody is no longer conceived in relation to the voice Music Clip
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Polychords (simultaneous sounding of two or more different chords; creating untraditional harmonies and tension in music. Music Clip Tutorial
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Atonal- music with no key center Polytonal– A composition in two different keys played simultaneously Twelve-Tone Row (Serialism)- A method of composing by Arnold Schoenberg, where equal importance is given to the 12 tones of the chromatic scale, by placing them in an organized series. Twelve-Tone Row This method shattered all western ideals of tonal harmony by making dissonance (with no resolution to consonance) the norm Music Clip
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A French Movement developed by painters who tried to capture their “first impression” of a subject through varied treatments of light and color Impression: Sun Rising Claude Monet
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Composers used vague outlines of melody and rhythm to paint pictures with their music Composers used new scales and harmonies to create mood and atmosphere Composers began to use dissonance more freely to create tension Claire de LuneClaire de Lune, Debussy
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The most important French composer of the early 20 th Century. Attended the Paris Conservatory at age 11. Shocked his professors with his bizarre harmonies that broke the traditional rules of composition Created a distinctive new style of writing for the piano, using non-western scales Called the “father of modern music” Died during a bombardment in Paris,1918
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The German response to French Impressionism Sought to represent the world in a distorted way, to evoke mood, ideas, and extreme emotion Emerged as an avant-garde movement in poetry and painting. The Scream, 1893 Edvard Munch
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Generally characteristic of Schoenberg’s atonal music and the twelve-tone system Sought to express the subconscious through highly dissonant music
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Born in Vienna, Austria Began to study the violin at 8 years old, and soon after begin composing Received only a few months of musical training Created 12-tone system at age 50 Emigrated to America after Hilter’s rise to power and taught at UCLA Considered the first “great” teacher since Bach.
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Early music reflected the Romantic style, staying within the boundaries of tonality. Transfigured Night In his second period, he abolished the distinction between consonance and dissonance and any sense of a home key. This period marked him as an atonal-Expressionist. The high point of this period was the piece, (sprechstimme) Pierrot LunairePierrot Lunaire
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The Gaze (1910) Schoenberg The Scream (1893) Edvard Munch
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Continued use Schoenberg’s 12-tone system Neo-Classicism Electronic Music Aleatoric Music (Chance Music)
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Composers returned to forms and techniques from the Baroque and Classical era, as a vehicle for expressing ideas. Characterized by order, balance, clarity, and emotional restraint A reaction against the unrestrained emotionalism of the Romantic Period Brought more order to the increasing experimental forms of the early 20 th century Pulcinella, ballet by Igor Stravinsky
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Russian composer, who experimented boldly with rhythm Explored the percussive use of dissonance, polyrhythms and polytonality His style evolved continuously throughout his career Composed using Neoclassical and 12-tone techniques Early works are strongly nationalistic, including his ballet, The Rite of Spring
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Subtitled “Scenes of Pagan Russia” It’s premiere performance in1913 sparked one of the most famous classical music riots In history The choreography was primitive and sensual The dissonance was percussive The piece featured polyrhythms and polytonality Sacrificial Dance
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This Matisse painting is suggestive of a primitive dance, inspired by the Rite of Spring
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Musique Concrete Began in Paris in the late 1940s and used natural sounds (including musical instruments) recorded on magnetic tape as a new medium for composition Once recorded, the sounds were manipulated by various means (changing the playback speed, reversing the direction of the tape, etc) Musique Concrete Video
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Electronische Musik Began in Germany in the early 1950s and created compositions using electronically generated sounds This paved the way to keyboard synthesizers. One of the most widely used was the Moog Synthesizer created by Robert Moog.Moog Synthesizer
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Also referred to as “Chance Music” rebelled against Schoenberg’s stricter organization of the 12-tone system. Sought to achieve a greater, even total, freedom from all predetermined forms and procedures. In Aleatoric music some element of the composition is left up to choice or chance (clip)(clip) Composers may opt to throw dice to determine rhythm and melody, or perhaps base their compositions on a series of random numbers Generated by a computer.
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Born in Los Angeles, and attended Pomona College Exhibited an early interest in non-Western scales A pioneer in aleatoric music (4’33 secs) Cage was a student of Arnold Schoenberg Discovered that the division between consonance and dissonance had given way to a new opposition between music and noise. Invented music for “prepared piano”, to resemble the sound of a Javanese gamelan from Indonesiaprepared pianoJavanese gamelan
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