Igor Stravinsky Rite Of Spring

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Igor Stravinsky’s musical composition Rite of Spring was written for the 1913 Paris season of ballet. The style was unique and ushered in a new form of music by reinventing the rules regarding use of tonality, meter, rhythm, stress, and dissonance, as well as exploring the use of Russian folklore and music. Stravinsky was at the forefront of the Modernist period of music, creating controversy over the value of such work. Combining a musical score that seems to constantly lead a different direction than the audience expects and puppets performing a ballet in jerky, primitive movements, the composer creates a shift in the cultural norm of music by taking the ordinary and switching it up. While music is most always nonrepresentational, music combined …show more content…

World War II was threatening the globe, and with it all the horrors of modern warfare such as poison gas. The plague had returned, and a new and virulent flu was on the rise; it seemed that death was everywhere and life was forever changing. The values of freedom and sacrifice are evident in both time periods, reflected easily in the negative criticism by Julius Harrison who said the music demonstrated the “abhorrence of everything for which music has stood these many centuries…all human endeavor and progress are being swept aside to make room for hideous sounds.” This was a portrait of the shift in culture in response to world events. Freedom was being threatened and the only way to alleviate or conquer the threat was through sacrifice of millions of people and a lifestyle which had become so comfortable and routine. Society had to become accustomed to the dissonance of a new way of life. In much the same way, the War of Independence created this same dissonance in America. This land quickly transformed from a safe haven for immigrants to a place of infinite death and destruction. Life was uncertain, allegiance was uncertain, and the war machine had created a horror of unimaginable breadth in the human condition. Cannon and musket, both meant to maim and murder, left the quality of life diminished for soldiers and families alike. Both wars were a reminder of innocence lost, and left in their wake poverty, hunger, orphans, and mutilated

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