I
n the wake of World War II,
classical music became
increasingly experimental,
as composers searched for more
adventurous ways to rework the
language of music. Turning their
back on the past, they looked to
new sources of inspiration, such
as mathematics and physics, and
overturned former concepts of
structure. They even questioned
fundamental aspects of music,
such as what constituted a musical
instrument, the necessity of a
“performer,” and what music
itself can be.
In Europe, the postwar
generation pushed the serial
method of composition pioneered
by Arnold Schoenberg in the 1920s
further by applying the technique
to volume and duration as well
as pitch. Encouraged by Olivier
Messiaen, their teacher at the
Paris Conservatoire, Pierre Boulez
and Karlheinz Stockhausen
became the leading lights of
serialism, while Iannis Xenakis
used it as a starting point for a
music that was based on a
combination of mathematical
and acoustic theories. Composers
also found rich inspiration in
technology, which provided access
to a whole new sound world. In
Paris, Pierre Henry and Pierre
Schaeffer pioneered a technique
known as musique concrète, using
sounds recorded onto magnetic
tape as their building blocks.
At the same time, a young
American composer, John Cage,
explored music determined by
chance, or aleatory music, and
examined the musical potential
of silence. He determined key
elements of his compositions by
tossing coins and sorting yarrow
sticks or giving ambiguous graphic
instructions to performers. One
of his works ( 4 ́ 33 ̋) specified four
minutes and 33 seconds of silence,
in which only the ambient sounds
of the auditorium could be heard.
Ideas spread
After the death of Joseph Stalin
in 1953, news of these fresh
developments began to reach
composers behind the Iron Curtain,
where the Soviet-dominated
regimes had censored music
that it considered degenerate or
subversive. György Ligeti, born
in communist Romania, made
his way to the West via Hungary
in 1956 and developed an
idiosyncratic style after coming
across the music of Stockhausen
INTRODUCTION
1950
1956
1960
1964
1956 –1957
1958
Three orchestras
simultaneously
bring Karlheinz
Stockhausen’s Gruppen
to life at its premiere
in Cologne, Germany.
In the Soviet Union,
Aram Khachaturian’s
ballet Spartacus, about
the first-century slave
revolt against Rome, wins
the Lenin Prize.
In France, Iannis
Xenakis composes
Pithoprakta, a
piece inspired by
mathematical and
engineering principles.
Pierre Schaeffer
and Pierre Henry
create Symphonie
pour un homme
seul from
recorded sounds.
Terry Riley writes
In C—one of the
first minimalist
compositions, with
no set number of
performers or duration.
Polish composer
Krzysztof Penderecki’s
Threnody for the Victims
of Hiroshima explores
sonorism with a 52-piece
string orchestra.
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