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5. Neoclassicism

In the decades between World War I and World War II, many composers in the Western world began to write in a style we now call Neoclassicism. When composing in a neoclassic manner, composers attempted to infuse many of the characteristics of the classic period into their music, incorporating concepts like balance (of form and phrase), economy of material, emotional restraint, and clarity in design. They also returned to popular classical forms like fugue, concerto grosso, and symphony.

Numerous well-known composers incorporated neoclassic techniques and philosophy into their compositions. Stravinsky was among them, and his ballet Pulcinella (1920) is an early example of neoclassical style. It was based on music that Stravinsky originally thought was written by the Baroque composer Giovanni Pergolesi. Music historians later deduced that the compositions were actually written by contemporaries of Pergolesi and not by Pergolesi himself. Stravinsky borrowed specific themes from these earlier works and combined them with more modern harmonies and rhythms. Listen to how in some sections the music closely approximates the style and sounds of Baroque composers, while in other sections it sounds much more aggressive, primitive, and modern.

One composer who was able to combine elements of neoclassicism with the traditions of his homeland was Béla Bartók (1881–1945). Bartok was born in Nagyszentmiklós, Hungary, and was an important figure in the music of the early 20th century. A noted composer, teacher, pianist, and ethnomusicologist, he was appointed to a position in the Royal Academy of Music in Budapest in 1907 and worked there until 1934. Along with his friend and colleague Zoltán Kodály, Bartók enthusiastically researched and sought out the music of Hungarian peasants, and both composers transcribed the music they found for piano, as well as using it as inspiration for their own original compositions.

Photograph of Béla Bartók
Figure 7.8 | Photograph of Béla Bartók, by RIA Novosti, via Wikimedia Commons, license CC-BY-SA 3.0

In addition to Hungarian folk music, Bartók’s style was also influenced by the Romantic music of Richard Strauss and the Hungarian composer Franz Liszt, as well as the impressionist style of Claude Debussy, and the more modern music of Igor Stravinsky and Arnold Schoenberg. As a result of all of these influences, his music was often quite rhythmic, and it incorporated both tonal and chromatic (moving by half-steps) elements. Bartók composed numerous piano works, six string quartets, an opera Duke Bluebeard’s Castle (1911), as well as music for a ballet The Wooden Prince (1916), and a pantomime entitled The Miraculous Mandarin (1919). His string quartets and his Concerto for Orchestra have become part of the standard repertoire of professional performing groups around the world.

Focus Composition: Fifth Movement, Concerto for Orchestra by Béla Bartók

Listening Guide

Chicago Symphony Orchestra, conducted by George Solti

Composer: Béla Bartók (1881–1945)

Composition: Fifth Movement “Finale”, Concerto for Orchestra

Date: 1944

Genre: orchestral composition featuring all of the different sections of the orchestra

Form: sonata-allegro form

Performing Forces: full orchestra

Timing Performing Forces, Melody, and Texture Form
26:12 French horns
Tonal scales; chord tones
Exposition
26:20 Violins
Strings and timpani added
Fast scale patterns; tonal scales
26:38 Violins
Flute background figures added
Fast scale patterns; tonal scales
26:40 Violins
Muted brass background figures added
Fast scale patterns
26:49 Violins
Full brass and woodwind fanfare like accompaniment added
Violin scales; chords played by other instruments
26:55 Oboes
Brief interlude figure
26:56 Cellos
Scale patterns
26:57 Violas
Scale patterns
27:01 Violins
Very fast and high scale patterns
27:14 Brass chords and figures from other strings added
Strings and brass
Rhythm changes to include triplets.
27:25 Trombones and tuba on low accented notes added
Strings and brass
27:33 Section featuring different woodwinds begins.
Flutes and oboes, with harp accompaniment
27:36 Clarinet
27:44 Oboe
27:47 Section featuring alternation between fast string scale figures and fast woodwind scale figures begins.
Woodwinds and violins.
28:00 Strings
Timpani added
28:05 Trombones
28:15 Strings
28:18 Bassoons
Clarinet, oboe, then flute added
Instruments follow one another playing similar material.
28:30 Lyrical section with flute melody and clarinet accompaniment, in a slower tempo
Flute and bass clarinet added
28:42 Bassoon
28:46 Violins
Oboes in the background
28:51 Violins
Clarinet in the background
28:56 Violins
French horn added
29:02 Oboe
Clarinet in the background
Tempo gradually speeds up.
29:10 Violins
29:14 Trumpet fanfare begins.
Fanfare outlines minor sounding tonality.
29:24 Fanfare continues.
French horns added
29:43 Flute added
Fanfare continues.
29:51 Rhythm changes.
Chords played loudly by the orchestra with timpani.
Timpani ends the section alone and quietly.
30:02 Harp begins simple background beat pattern with violins playing a long tone.
Rhythm changes.
Development (fugue style)
30:07 Violins
30:14 Violas play a new melody.
Woodwinds in the background
30:25 Violins take over the melody.
Woodwinds in the background
30:40 Cellos take over the melody.
Violins and woodwinds in the background
30:56 New section begins.
Strings
31:05 Oboes
Woodwinds and strings
31:30 Oboe plays a fragment of the new theme.
31:34 Horn repeats the fragment.
31:41 Woodwinds pass the fragment around.
Strings in the background.
31:49 Strings
Strings and woodwinds
New, faster, and more intense rhythms
32:05 Timpani
32:06 Strings
Strings restate fast scale figures from earlier in the movement.
Recapitulation
32:25 Brass and strings alternate.
Full orchestra with timpani
Fanfare rhythm
32:34 Brass
32:46 Strings begin the scale figures again.
32:55 Strings
Getting slower and softer
33:03 Strings
Softer, slower, and more relaxed interlude
33:31 Woodwinds
33:54 Bassoons bring back the opening theme.
Other woodwinds added
Strings in the background
Brass enters softly with fanfare figures and music continues to build.
Complexity increases with dynamic increase.
Woodwinds join brass.
Big crescendo into the next section.
34:47 Big brass fanfare with fast string patterns in the background
Slower but stronger brass
35:04 Strings alternate with loud brass fanfare figures to end.
Faster, more aggressive rhythms

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Understanding Music: BMCC Edition Copyright © by Yi-Chuan Chen is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.