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Russian-American composer, one of the most influential figures of music
in the 20th century.
Stravinsky was born June 17,
1882, in Oranienbaum (now Lomonosov), the son of a leading bass
singer at the imperial opera house in Saint Petersburg. Although
a mediocre student, Stravinsky studied law at the University
of St. Petersburg. There he met the son of the Russian composer
Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, and his friend's famous father guided
Stravinsky's early compositional efforts.
Ballets and Other Early Works.
In 1908 the Russian impresario Sergey Diaghilev, impressed by Stravinsky's
orchestral works Scherzo fantastique (1908) and Fireworks (1910), asked
the composer to write for his Ballets Russes; thus began an association
of many years. His first ballets for Diaghilev, The Firebird (1910) and
Petrushka (1911), won immediate success and were greatly admired for their
dramatic impact, rich orchestration, and melodies evoking Russian folk
song. At the first performance of The Rite of Spring (1913), however,
the unconventional choreography and the harsh dissonances and driving,
asymmetrical, shifting rhythms of the music prompted a hostile uproar
so noisy that the dancers could not hear the orchestra. Later concert
performances were well received.
The following year, with the outbreak
of World War I, Stravinsky settled in Switzerland. There, partly because
the difficult social and economic conditions during and after the war
made it practically impossible to secure performances for large-scale
works, he composed The Soldier's Tale (1918); it calls for limited resources:
six instruments and percussion (representing the four sections of the
orchestra), three actors, and a dancer. The disillusion of the war years
can be seen in this work, as can the impact of jazz, which is also evident
in his Rag-time (1918) for 11 instruments and in his Piano Rag-Music (1919).
In 1920 Stravinsky moved to Paris.
To the years just after this move date the important Symphonies of Wind
Instruments (1920), the comic opera Mavra (1922), and the ballet-cantata
Les noces (The Wedding), suggested by Russian folk verse and first performed
by the Ballets Russes in 1923. Scored for four pianos, percussion, and
voices, and influenced by the style of Russian folk melody, Les noces
displays a freedom from natural word stresses that became typical of Stravinsky's
works.
While living in Paris, Stravinsky
also began appearing as a pianist and conductor to help support his family.
He thus began writing works suitable for his own pianistic ability, such
as the Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments (1924). In the early 1920s
he fell in love with the actor Vera de Bosset Soudeikine (1888-1982),
whom he married in 1940, after his first wife's death.
Neoclassical Works.
After about 1923, Stravinsky's neoclassical works began to appear, characterized
by an interest in the forms of the 17th and 18th centuries. The works
of this period are also marked by an ideal of objectivity that was in
part a reaction against the emotionalism of the late romantic period.
This latter ideal was reflected later in his Autobiography (1935), where
he wrote that "Music is, by its very nature . . . powerless to express
anything at all" and declared that performers should follow composers'
intentions without adding their own ideas or "self-expression"-an
aesthetic position that had a strong impact on the course of modern music.
Works from this period include the opera-oratorio Oedipus Rex (1927) and
the melodrama Perséphone (1934), as well as the ballet Apollo Musagète
(1928, later retitled Apollo), among the earliest of the many Stravinsky
works that were written for the Russian-born choreographer George Balanchine.
In the mid-1920s Stravinsky underwent
a spiritual crisis, and in 1926 he rejoined the Russian Orthodox church
(which he had left at the age of 18). Not long afterward, in 1930, he
composed his Symphony of Psalms, for chorus and orchestra. Written to
a Latin biblical text, this work seemed to represent a temporary disregard
of his ideals of strict musical objectivity.
In 1939 Stravinsky left Europe for
the U.S., settling in Hollywood, Calif. There, he supported himself by
commissions. Among diverse works written to order were the Circus Polka
(1942), to be danced by circus elephants; Danses concertantes (1942) for
orchestra; and Scènes de ballet (1944) for a Broadway revue. More
significant works from these years included the Symphony in Three Movements
(1945), his Mass (1948), and the highly successful opera The Rake's Progress
(1951), a work that can be seen as the summation of his neoclassical period.
Interest in Serialism.
In 1948 the young American conductor Robert Craft (1923- ) became Stravinsky's
friend and musical assistant. Craft encouraged Stravinsky to listen to
the music of the serialists, who treated atonal melody as a series of
pitches without key-oriented harmonic or melodic relationships, and whose
techniques had as a starting point the twelve-tone system of the Austrian
composer Arnold Schoenberg. Although Stravinsky had earlier rejected Schoenberg's
theories, he became interested in the music of Schoenberg's disciple,
the Austrian composer Anton Webern. Gradually Stravinsky drew more and
more on serial techniques-integrating them into his own approach, as he
had done with every previous musical influence-in works such as the cantata
Threni (1958), the Movements for Piano and Orchestra (1959), and his last
major work, the Requiem Canticles (1966).
In 1967, in his mid-80s and failing
in health, Stravinsky conducted a recording of his music for the last
time. He died on April 6, 1971, in New York City and was buried in Venice,
not far from Diaghilev's grave.
During his lifetime, Stravinsky used
many musical styles-a coloristic, Russian-influenced style, primitivism,
jazz, neoclassicism, bitonality (simultaneous use of two keys), atonality,
and serialism. To continue in one path, in his words, was "to go
backward." Stravinsky's works both reflected and influenced the most
important trends of 20th-century music. Their enduring significance stems
from all the technical devices, originality, power, and rationality he
brought to them.
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