Bartok, Bela (1881-1945)
Bela Bartok was a famous Hungarian composer
who transcribed Hungarian folk songs and also wrote his own orchestral,
opera, ballet, and chamber music. Stylistically, he mixed his innate musical
talent along with his intellectual skill to create his mastery of modern
form. His most famous works are the Sonata for Two Pianos and
Percussion, Concerto for Orchestra, and Mikrokosmos.
Britten, Benjamin (1913-1976)
Born in 1913, Benjamin Britten was an
English composer. He wrote music in choral, orchestral, solo vocal, and
operatic styles. He is also well known as being a significant composer of
opera. He used various themes from American, Japanese, and British cultures
in his works. His most famous opera is Peter Grimes. Britten was very
opposed to war, and this can be seen in his War Requiem, which was a
statement about his ojection against militarism.
Bernstein, Leonard (1918-1990)
Leonard Bernstein was one of the most
influential composers of the 20th century. He was a
virtuoso
pianist, a television star, a gifted conductor, a businessman, and a
classroom teacher.
Bernstein was first inspired by music when,
at eight years old, he heard music played in his first trip to a synagogue.
He was moved to tears by the choir and the organ sounds. He would never be
the same again, and the musical world can be thankful for that. He learned
how to play the piano, and continued playing and performimg for the rest of
his life. Composer Serge Koussevitsky gave him positive encouragement and
helped him to become a successful conductor when he was only in his
twenties. Some of the famous groups that he conducted were the New York
Philharmonic, The New York City Symphony Orchestra, and the Boston, St.
Louis, Cincinnati, and Israeli orchestras.
Some of his well known works are the
symphony Jeremiah and Serenade for Violin Solo, String Orchestra
and Percussion. His compositions Masque
and Turkey
Trot are known for being very lively and rhythmic. He is also known
for his ballet Fancy Free, his musical, On the Town, and his
opera Candide.
Copland, Aaron (1900-1990)
The composer Aaron Copland was born in 1900
in Brooklyn, New York. His personality often clashed with his musical
compositions, as he was a quiet and soft-spoken man, while his music was
loud, brilliant, and tense. As a child, he studied the piano and music
theory. When he was old enough to leave home, he traveled to France to
further immerse himself in the musical world. There he made his first
business mistake, as he sold a short composition of his, The Cat and The
Mouse, for twenty-five dollars. Thousands of copies were sold and he did not
receive and royalties from the song.
Copland returned to New York after his
education in France. While back in the United States, he composed his famous
Symphony for Organ and Orchestra. He went on to become the director
of many musical foundations such as the International Society for
Contemporary Music, the League of Composers, and his own foundation.
Copland was very interested in educating
people about modern music. He gave concerts with fellow friend and composer
Roger Sessions. These Copland-Sessions concerts, served to educate audiences
about the new and dissonant music that he and Sessions composed. He was also
the director of the Berkshire School of Music in Tanglewood, Massachusetts
after the great conductor Serge Koussevitzky died.
Some of his most famous works are
Lincoln Portrait, a large orchestral piece with text from the
Gettysburg address, and Appalachian
Spring, which was a Pulitzer Prize and Critic's Circle of New York
winning ballet. Additional songs for which he is known are Hoedown
and Simple
Gifts. Copalnd was an extremely versatile composer and composed
music for choruses, orchestras, theater, and chamber music groups. It is a
special honor of his that he was one of the first major composers asked to
write a piece of music for a radio broadcast. Additionally, he wrote the
scores for the films The Heiress, The City, Our Town, and Of Mice
and Men. His compositions for film are emotional and have also been
performed in concert halls.
Aaron Copland retired from composing music
in 1965. This was due to the fact that younger composers were ignoring him,
and the general public did not receive his newer works very well. Among
these works that were ignored by the public was Inscapes, one of the
great postwar American scores. From then on, Copland focused on a conducting
career, specializing in his own scores.
Gershwin, George (1898-1937)
American born composer George Gershwin was
born in Brooklyn, New York in 1898. He was a composer of both pop and
concert music. As a child, Gershwin learned about music by playing the
piano. At age sixteen, he received additional piano practice at a job where
he played popular song hits all day long. He began to compose and play some
of his original works but was largely ignored.
Eventually, Gershwin took a job as a
rehearsal pianist at a Ziegfeld production. At this point in his life, he
wrote his first musical comedy, La La Lucille, which turned out to be
a hit. From then on he rapidly turned out Broadway successes. These were the
famous Oh Kay, Strike Up the Band, Girl Crazy, Funny Face, Of Thee I
Sing, Lady Be Good, and George White's Scandals. These scores
contained songs that the country would grow to love, full of popular music
and touches of early rock and roll.
Soon after, George Gershwin produced
another one of his most famous works, Rhapsody
in Blue. This was a jazz piece written as a form of art. This whole
philosophy was very new to the public, and yet they instantaneously fell in
love with this piece. It was performed in concerts, broadcast on radio
stations, and recorded and distributed in high volume, making it a
well-known musical composition throughout the world. After Rhapsody in Blue,
he composed two very famous compositions, American
in Paris and the Cuban Overture.
Porgy and
Bess was George Gershwin's last important composition. This was a
grand opera folk opera written about the African American Southern culture.
The all-African cast was so important that it was hailed as the first
completely successful and completely American opera. It was written so
emotionally and dramatically that members of the cast could not believe that
the opera's composer wasn't at least partially African American. Porgy and
Bess exemplified the skill and talent that George Gershwin possessed.
Tragically, Gershwin died at the young age
of thirty-nine due to a cancerous brain tumor. His legacy continued on and
Gershwin's music is still influential today, making him one of the most
important composers of the twentieth century.
Ives, Charles (1874-1954)
Charles Ives was born in 1874 in Danbury,
Connecticut. He learned about music from his father who was the lead member
of the town band. At Yale he took a course in music, but rather than use
conventional notation, he invented his own musical alphabet. Ives' unusual
philosophy certainly did not make him a conservative musician.
From 1906 to 1930, when he retired, Ives
was a businessman at an insurance company. From that point on he focused
wholeheartedly on his music. Throughout his life, he tried not to miss a
musical affair in his hometown of Danbury. He attended performances by the
town band and played the organ in church. When he wrote music he
incorporated the sounds he heard in town performances into it, faults and
all. Some typical characteristics of his music were off-key singing, squeaky
and out of tune violin playing, and the wheeze of the harmonium.
Ives wrote his music in a manner as cryptic
as its sound. His score would have notes jotted all over the page with no
bar separations and strange chords, rhythms, and quarter tones. One of his
most famous works, written in this style, is his second
sonata
for the piano, entitled Concord, Massachusetts. This was arranged
into four movements known separately as "Emerson," "Hawthorne," "The
Alcotts," and "Thoreau." This piece brought out the spirit of Concord in the
middle of the century, and was hailed for its power and display of emotion.
Another popular piece of Charles Ives' was his Symphony for Orchestra and
Piano.
Charles Ives was certainly one of the most
influential, original, and unique composers of the 20th century. He died at
eighty years of age, leaving eleven volumes of chamber music and six volumes
of orchestral scores, most never performed. He was only semi appreciated in
his lifetime, but the world today now appreciates his importance to the
world of music. He was innovative, well ahead of his time, and risky and
bold in his musical experimentation. Ives and his music are studied today
for their freshness and daring.
Stravinsky, Igor (1882-1971)
Igor Stravinsky was born in Russia in 1882.
His earlier works, such as his symphony No. 1 in E Flat, showed the old
school Romantic musical style of Russia. However, Stravinsky began to turn
away from this style of music and progressed towards the music of Claude
Debussy, while adding a Russian flavor to it. Some of the works he completed
in this new style were The Faun and the Shepherdess, Fireworks, and
the major ballet Firebird.
In these compositions, clean orchestral textures, irregular rhythms, and
emphasis on stamping were used. Two additional ballets written in this style
were Le Sacre du Printemps and Petrouchka.
These works were less Romantic and had more of a barbaric feeling to them.
Eventually tiring of this style, Stravinsky
decided to search for a new style of music once again. In this transitional
peroid, he wrote the opera Le Rossignol, and Symphonies for Wind
Instruments. After World War I, he moved further away from his fiery
ballets by composing Tango, Ragtime, and L'Histoire du Soldat.
These new scores were less aesthetically pleasing but used more
objectification. At this time, he also reworked the old masterpieces of
Pulcinella and Oedipus Rex. This style was called
neo-Classicism,
which was a return to classical music with modern day elements added in.
Stravinsky is regarded as the most influential modern composer in both
France and America. His most famous Neoclassicist works are the Concerto for
Two Solo Pianofortes, the ballets Apollo and Jeu de Cartes, Symphony in
Three Movements, Symphony in C, Ebony Concerto, Mass, Symphony of Psalms,
and the classic full length opera, The Rake's Progress.
After Stravinsky finished The Rake's
Progress he moved away from neo-Classicism and towards the serial music
style. His most famous works in this category were Movements for Piano
and Orchestra, Cantata, In Memoriam Dylan Thomas, Three Shakespeare Songs,
Threni, Introit, The Dove Descending Breaks the Air for chorus, and
Requiem Canticles. Stravinksy was a multifaceted and talented man who
left an impression still burning on the musical world today.
Vaughn Williams, Ralph (1872-1958)
Ralph Vaughan Williams was born in England
during the year 1872. Composers influenced in the musical style of Brahms
were his musical mentors. His earlier music showed the influence of Brahms,
yet they also has Williams' unique and original sound to them. Throughout
his life, he was fascinated by the English folk song.
Vaughan Williams had the unique talent of
being able to absorb musical techniques and styles from other composers
while still remaining true and original to himself. Composers who influenced
him were Stravinksy, Bach, Brahms, Byrd, and Debussy. His earliest
compositions were French impressionist music, such as his In the Fen
Country, and String Quartet No. 1. He soon changed his musical style to
incidental music. In this format, his famous works were The Wasps,
the song cycle On Wenlock Edge and Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas
Tallis.
Vaughan Williams was a composer in almost
every category of music. He wrote a few of operas, none which had success on
stage, even though they were filled with artistically pleasing music. His
other major musical compositions were Hodie, Merciless Beauty, Serenade
to Music, 10 Blake Songs, Five Mystical Songs, Dona nobis pacem, and
Sancta Civitas. All of his symphonies show Ralph Vaughan Williams'
wide range of style and form, each piece having a truly unique sound. His
music was always original and unique, with much drama and emotion.
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