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The last page of Stravinsky’s
handwritten score for Le Sacre shows
the chaotic nature of the piece, with
some huge intervals between notes.
Lydia Sokolova, for example, later
reflected: “As soon as it was known
that the conductor was there, the
uproar began.” Some accounts
suggest that blows were even
exchanged and that as many as
40 audience members were
arrested for violence and disorder.
A year later, however, Le Sacre
was performed in Paris without
dancers, and it was the greatest
success of Stravinsky’s career. This
fact may have contributed to the
composer’s later tendency to prefer
Le Sacre as a concert piece. For
Diaghilev, however, any publicity
was good publicity; he later
claimed that Le Sacre’s premiere
was “exactly what [he] wanted.”
Stravinskian legacy
The influence of Le Sacre on
subsequent music is hard to
overstate. This is most strikingly
seen in Stravinsky’s revolutionary
use of rhythm, which surpassed
anything seen before. Stravinskian
“motor rhythms” would drive the
minimalism of the 1960s–1980s
as much as they permeated film
scores and influenced popular
styles. Stravinsky’s particular
style of modernism influenced
later composers in the trends of
primitivism, exoticism, and
experimental composition.
Perhaps because Stravinsky’s
musical style soon evolved in
a neoclassical direction, the
“Stravinskian aesthetic” was not
only to influence future neoclassical
composers but also to reenergize
the performing styles of Baroque
and Classical music in a way that
can still be heard today. ■
MODERN 1900 –1950
Diaghilev and the
Ballets Russes
Sergei Diaghilev founded his
ballet company in Paris in
- For two decades until
his death, the Ballets Russes
performed regularly in Paris,
throughout Europe, and in the
Americas. While the company
prominently featured highly
skilled Russian dancers, and
often showcased Russian
composers and works, they
never performed in Russia.
In stark contrast to the
conservative Russian artistic
culture from which he hailed,
the progressive Diaghilev was
responsible for commissioning
groundbreaking new work
from the leading composers of
the day. Chief among them
was Igor Stravinsky, whose
commissions are among his
most significant pieces. He
also commissioned works from
Sergei Prokofiev, Erik Satie,
and three members of the
Parisian group of composers
known as Les Six. Well-known
artists often designed sets or
costumes for his productions,
such as Pablo Picasso, Henri
Matisse, and Coco Chanel.
Sergei Diaghilev (right) greets
Igor Stravinsky at Croydon Airport,
London, UK, in 1926. The pair
collaborated on four ballets,
including Le Sacre du printemps.
I heard, and I wrote
what I heard. I was the
vessel through which
Le Sacre passed.
Igor Stravinsky
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