The Classical Music Book

(Tuis.) #1

A


s the 19th century
progressed, a growing
mood of nationalism
developed, and people sought
individual identities as nations
distinct from the old empires. The
dominant culture in Europe was
Germanic, and this was especially
true of the music being written for
the concert halls and opera houses.
A tradition of folk music thrived
almost everywhere, as regional and
local cultures of the many different
people asserted themselves. It was
this that provided the inspiration
for composers wishing to establish
a musical identity that matched the
nationalistic ideals of their people.
Opera was an obvious starting
point, as it could be based on
national history and legends, but
the same ideas were also expressed
in programmatic orchestral works.

Nationalism in music did not
confine itself to subject matter.
Composers incorporated folk songs
and dances into their music or
composed their own melodies
using elements of a particular
tradition of folk music, such as
its scales and rhythms.

Russia leads
The first signs of nationalism
in music came from Russia,
which had started to assert its
independence from European
culture at the beginning of the
Romantic period. Mikhail Glinka’s
operas were based on Russian
stories, with Russian folk tunes
presented in the Romantic style,
inspiring more than a century of
distinctively Russian music. Quick
to take up the baton, Mily Balakirev
gathered together a group of

Russian composers who became
known as the “Five” or “Mighty
Handful” (Aleksandr Borodin,
César Cui, Modest Mussorgsky,
and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov),
whose work later influenced Pyotr
Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Alexander
Glazunov, and, in the 20th century,
Sergei Rachmaninoff.
The wave of nationalism gained
momentum in the mid-19th century,
especially as the Austro-Hungarian
Empire crumbled. Countries were
proud of their own folk culture, and
especially their music. Chopin
tinged much of his piano music
with inflections of folk melodies
from his native Poland, and wrote
several polonaises, while Liszt
incorporated Hungarian dance
styles into his work. More overtly
nationalistic was Bedrˇ ich Smetana,
who became a champion of Czech

INTRODUCTION


1863


1869


1887–1890


1890


1874


1875


1893


Gabriel Fauré’s
Requiem introduces
a new, more subtle
style to the form,
inspiring other
French composers.

Mily Balakirev
establishes the “Five,”
a group of Russian
composers who sought
to create music with a
Russian identity.

Russian composer
Modest Mussorgsky
writes Pictures at an
Exhibition, inspired by the
death of the Russian artist
Viktor Hartmann.

In Norway, Edvard
Grieg completes the
music for Henrik Ibsen’s
Peer Gynt. Based on a
folk tale, the work
becomes a national epic.

Bed rˇ ich Smetana
establishes Czech opera
with The Bartered Bride,
incorporating Czech
themes and written in
the Czech language.

Antonín Dvo rˇ ák’s
Symphony No. 9,
inspired by Native
American music and
African American
songs, premieres.

One of Russia’s “Five,”
Aleksandr Borodin
adapts the 12th-century
epic prose poem The Lay
of Igor’s Host to develop
his opera Prince Igor.

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