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Submit ReviewToday’s date marks the premiere of two chamber works from the 1920s, both landmark and transitional works from two of the 20th century’s most influential composers.
On this date in 1920, at London’s Wigmore Hall, the Swiss conductor Ernest Ansermet led the first performance of a Grand Suite from Igor Stravinsky’s biting anti-war stage fable The Soldier’s Tale. During and immediately following World War I, Stravinsky had developed a spiky, jagged, and occasionally jazzy style, and music from The Soldier’s Tale is typical of this period. But Stravinsky did a compositional about-face that same year with one of his earliest neo-classical scores: the ballet Pulcinella, based on themes borrowed from 18th century composers.
Stravinsky’s neo-classical period would last for another three decades until the 1950s, when he became fascinated with the 12-tone method of composition developed by the Austrian composer, Arnold Schoenberg.
And speaking of Schoenberg, on today’s date in 1924, his Serenade received its premiere at the Fourth Donaueschingen Festival in Germany. Serenade was the first work in which Schoenberg employed his strict 12-tone method of composition, avoiding traditional 18th century rules of melody and harmony — and only its Mozartean sounding title could be considered neo-classical.
Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971): L’histoire du Soldat Suite; Harmonie Ensemble; Steven Richman, conductor; Koch 7438
Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971): Pulcinella Suite; Columbia Chamber Ensemble; Sony 64136
Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951): Serenade; Ensemble InterContemporain; Sony 48463
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