by shostakovich » Wed Jan 31, 2001 9:18 am
It seems Stravinsky's Rite is pretty unpopular. I can understand that. When I tutored my classmates, way back in college days, I always had music going. One time the Rite was playing. My friends had managed to ignore most of part I. But when the drum roll and chaotic eruption came at the end of part I, it cleared the room.<P> It's definitely not love at first hearing with that piece. I had to push myself through it many times before being able to feel the thrill of it. The Rimskian Firebird (1910) and quirky Petrushka (1911) that preceded Rite (1913), all ballets for Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, were no preparation for the explosion that was Rite of Spring. It has no precedent. It came out of Stravinsky's brain like the relativity theories came from Einstein (at about the same, I think), from nowhere. And there is still NOTHING else like it. It came from nowhere, and it led nowhere. A touch of that primitivism appears in Symphony in 3 movements and more in Les Noces, but after 1913 Stravinsky must have been gun shy because of the storm of controversy it brought. <P>It appears totally unmusical, devoid of melody, formless, hamonically unstable (multiple tonalities), rhythmically impossible (multiple rhythms). I'm reminded of Toscanini's comment about Sibelius's 7th: "I look at score. I see no music in it. You have to show me where is music". Yet, to me, it's as fresh now as it was in 1913. That's the amazing thing about it. It doesn't get old. I expect there will be in 2013 a renewal of interest in that monumental work. It might take a dozen years if you want to love it. On the other hand, it's not worth losing your sanity trying. <P>If you want to approach it with pictures, get the old Fantasia. It accompanies (appropriately) the creation through the age of dinosaurs. The score is somehat butchered, but that hardly matters. It fits. There's a story about Disney calling Stravinsky to ask permission to use Rite in Fantasia. While Stravinsky (a good business man) paused to consider the implications, Disney (a better business man) reminded him that the US and USSR had no copyright agreement, and he would use it anyway. Under those circumstances, Stravinsky gave his permission. Later, when Stravinsky saw the film, and was shocked at the creation usage (his own idea had been scenes of ancient Russia), he said in mock bewilderment: "Well, that must have been what I meant in the first place".<BR>Shos