Post-Romanticism in the 20th century and beyond
- Also called:
- orchestration
- Key People:
- Hector Berlioz
- Related Topics:
- musical composition
- arrangement
- orchestration
- transcription
Claude Debussy in France was probably the most important composer of the period from 1880 until the turn of the 20th century. The composers of this era attempted to describe scenes and evoke moods by the use of rich harmonies and a wide palette of timbre. No composer ever handled the colours of the orchestra with greater subtlety. Naturally, this is also dependent on his use of harmony, melody, and rhythm, but the dominant impression of a Debussy work is focussed on his use of orchestral instruments to create light and shadows. Works that exemplify his techniques are Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune (Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun; 1894), Nocturnes (1899), and La Mer (The Sea; 1905). In Nocturnes he uses a wordless women’s chorus as a section of the orchestra, functioning as another source of timbre rather than as the transmitter of a text.
Many of the composers who followed Debussy and Mahler brought about radical changes in the use of the orchestra. A good example of some of these changes is in The Rite of Spring (1913), by the Russian-born composer Igor Stravinsky. The strings frequently do not assume a dominant role but, rather, often play music that is subservient to the brass or woodwinds. Percussion instruments greatly increased in importance and have continued to do so. In 1931, Edgard Varèse composed an important work, Ionisation, for 13 percussion players, a landmark in the emergence of percussion instruments as equal partners in music.
The period between World War I and World War II was dominated by two main schools of composers with vastly differing results for orchestration. One was responsible for the Neoclassical style; the other, gathered around the Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg, drew heavily on the Romantic movement for its direction. The Neoclassical composers sought to free music from the influence of Impressionism. Whereas the Romantic composers had frequently employed the instrumental forces at hand to create a deliberate sense of vagueness, the Neoclassical composers, beginning in about 1917 with a group in France known as Les Six, attempted to recreate the clarity of the Classical period by turning to models found in the popular music of the period, the music of the dance halls and cabarets. The Neoclassical composers also turned away somewhat from the orchestra as a medium, finding the forces of chamber music more suitable for their ideals. Neoclassical music returned to a clearer concept of “sections” in orchestration. The music of a composer such as Paul Hindemith in Germany is closer to the music of Mozart in its sense of instrumentation than it is to Romanticism.
The music of Schoenberg and his fellow Austrian Alban Berg drew heavily on the Romantic movement and eventually became known as Expressionism, which stressed inner experience. Emphasis on the inner self produced a music that was thick, dark, and intense.
In the first half of the 20th century electronic music emerged, although it did not become important until after 1950. The principal reasons for the inclusion here of electronic music are that electronic sounds, either taped or live, frequently are included in a composition combined with traditional instruments, and it has had a decided influence on orchestration. (For a treatment of historical and compositional aspects of electronic music, see electronic music.) By the 1960s many composers were writing works for electronic sounds and instruments. The electronic sounds provide a dimension to instrumentation never before possible. A number of things are noteworthy. Electronic sounds are capable of incredibly subtle changes of timbre, pitch, and mode of attack. When combined with traditional instruments they add a rich new spectrum of colour. This in turn has influenced the composer to attempt to produce “electronic” sounds with standard instruments. The result has been a great extension of the sound possibilities of Western instruments.
Another 20th-century trend was away from large orchestras and toward chamber ensembles, often of nontraditional combinations. Compositions for such ensembles often excelled in economy of means and explored individual instrumental timbres.
Non-Western instrumentation
Much of music outside the West has entirely different aesthetic aims; the music of the Hindu world, best known to the West through the classical music of India, provides an example. Indian music always has had strong ties with mythology and religion and thus produced an art that is as different from Western music as Hinduism is from Christianity. It achieves unity through similarity rather than through change and is based on a more purely sensual approach. Hindu music is divided, for example, into ragas, or melody types. The word raga means colour or mood. Combined with the ragas are talas, or rhythmic structures. The possible combinations of talas and ragas are many, producing a music that is wonderfully subtle.
The instruments for this music consist of various drums made of terra-cotta, wood, or metal; cymbals also serve as percussion instruments. Probably the instrument best known to Western audiences is the tabla, a two-drum set capable of very subtle changes in sound. The two best known stringed instruments are the sitar (plucked) and the tambura, a four-stringed instrument that provides the omnipresent drone accompaniment. In addition, there are various wind instruments, such as the bamboo flute and the sheh’nai (oboe).
Balinese and Javanese music is centred on the gamelan orchestra, the instruments of which include the saron and gender metallophones (like xylophones but with metal, not wooden, keys), the gambang kayu xylophone, tuned gongs, flutes, and the rebab, a violin-like instrument with two strings. All the instruments follow the same nuclear melody but elaborate it in different ways. The heavy reliance on tuned percussion instruments has given this music a brilliant quality that Western audiences have found extremely attractive. The gamelan orchestra, for instance, influenced Debussy, who first heard the music at the Paris Exposition in 1889.
The approach to instrumentation in the music of India and Bali is quite different from that of Western music. The concept of contrast created through the various “choirs” of the Western orchestra is not a primary concern. In Indian music a sameness of colour is created through the use of the drone played on the tambura. This is not to say that this music is uncolourful but that a specific timbre is established for an entire composition. Since the time of Debussy, Western composers have come increasingly into contact with, in particular, the music of India, Bali, and Japan. A comparison of Balinese gamelan music with the Sonatas and Interludes for prepared piano by the 20th-century American composer John Cage shows how profound this influence can be.