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CHAPTER 24 1. How were nationalistic composers in Eastern Europe and Russia influenced by the New German School described in Chapter 22? Eastern European and Russian nationalist composers modeled themselves in many ways on the progressivism of the New German School while also bending this style to suit their specific aesthetic and political needs. As the most fashionable continental movement of the day, allegiance to the cause of the avant-garde put these marginal composers—already sensitive to charges of provincialism—into the orbit of the most cutting-edge international style. However, many Eastern European nationalist composers rejected the dominance of Germany. The “New Russian School,” for example, was a direct response to the supremacy of the German model, and to Rubinstein’s claim that music is “a German art.” Many composers had their cake and ate it too, appropriating the authority of the New German School while fashioning it into an authentic national style. 2. In what sense is Smetana both a New Germanist and a Czech nationalist? How and why were his works received differently in Bohemia and outside Bohemia? Smetana was ethnically Czech but culturally German: He chose to identify with Czech cultural nationalism as an adult, but his artistic imagination was nourished his whole life by (New) German music. Hearing Liszt at age sixteen inspired him to become a composer, and Liszt was his primary mentor. He excelled at that most Lisztian genre, the symphonic poem, and in his time he was considered to be one of Europe’s most avant-garde composers. But his works were received differently in Bohemia and outside Bohemia. At home, Smetana was best known for his New German, progressive works, while outside he gained a reputation for his charming, folksy works (the good-natured opera The Bartered Bride being a particularly good example). 3. What factors make people hear Vltava as a nationalist work? Vltava is programmatic and pictorial, with each section evoking a different aspect of the Czech river. The piece incorporates main themes from other movements of the Má vlast suite, each named after famous Czech landmarks and historical episodes. To listeners with knowledge of the associations, the end of the piece, which juxtaposes the Vltava theme with the “Vyšehrad motive,” is thus a cornucopia of Czechness. Although it does not borrow from Czech folk song (in fact, it is based on a Swedish folk song), its pictorial effects and explicitly Czech-titled sections and thematic materials make people hear it as a product of Czech nationalism. 4. Who were the “Mighty Five”? What were their goals? Which composers did they admire the most, and why? The “Mighty Five” were a group of progressive young composers formed by Mily Balakirev as the core of the “New Russian School.” It consisted of Balakirev, César Cui, Alexander Borodin, Modest Mussorgsky, and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. They aimed to create an authentic national voice for Russian music, and to do so outside the orbit of the German-dominated conservatories, by drawing on the wellspring of Russian folk song. However, the “Mighty Five” studied and admired Liszt, Berlioz, Chopin, and Glinka for their progressive tendencies. Their style was thus a fusion of Russian folksiness with New German experimentation and complexity. DCS Valued Customer 3/6/12 9:55 AM Comment [1]: AU: This word should be “Five,” no? Office 2004 Test Drive…, 3/29/12 1:15 PM 5. Describe Mussorgsky’s realism in Boris Godunov. How is it reflected in the text setting and orchestral writing of the Coronation Scene? Boris Godunov reflects Mussorgsky’s ideal of realism, which holds that music should be truthful to life. He believed librettos should be written in a conversational language to mimic natural speech. In the Coronation Scene, this is evidenced in the title character’s “melodic recitative,” which conforms to the rhythms of declamatory Russian. The scene also employs a prominent folk tune, but perhaps most novel is Mussorgsky’s unorthodox orchestral effect to mimic the pealing of bells. Consisting of the dissonant juxtaposition of A-flat and D dominant-seventh chords, this clanging quality pushes up against the limits of tonality for the sake of verisimilitude. Deleted: Fight DCS Valued Customer 3/29/12 1:16 PM Comment [2]: AU/PROD ED: Should this be the symbol, rather than the word, to match the text? Office 2004 Test Drive…, 3/29/12 1:16 PM 6. Discuss the importance of traditional song and dance for Tchaikovsky’s music, especially in the Fourth Symphony and in Eugene Onegin. Comment [3]: YES PLEASE—no text support for this character on my computer, unfortunately. Tchaikovsky employed traditional song and dance in the Fourth Symphony and Eugene Onegin for the sake of realism. In the symphony, these sources—the prominent waltz of the opening movement and the folk tune of the finale—serve a programmatic function, heightening dramatic realism. Eugene Onegin draws on the waltz and polonaise for their social connotations (respectively, rustic and high-class), and adds historical realism by incorporating melodies popular during the era in which the opera is set. 7. Compare and contrast Tchaikovsky’s Fourth Symphony with the symphonies you have studied by Beethoven. In what respect did Tchaikovsky’s symphonies break from tradition? Tchaikovsky shares certain features in common with Beethoven: For instance, both of them wrote symphonies that were heavily invested with drama and enigmatic questions. This is especially true of Tchaikovsky’s Fourth Symphony. However, it diverges from tradition in many ways. The symphony lacks motivic development (a Beethovenian mainstay and obsession of the New German School) and is driven instead by broad, expansive melodies. It is set in the traditional four-movement structure, but Tchaikovsky treated these movements as separate character pieces rather than an integrated whole. He seemed to bypass many aspects of German influence entirely: His affinities were instead with French and Italian music. Consistent with this allegiance, Tchaikovsky often drew on the overt influence of traditional song and dance. DCS Valued Customer 3/6/12 10:24 AM Comment [4]: AU: “this tradition” = what tradition? I deleted “this” bec. it is not clear what tradition you’re referring to. OK? Office 2004 Test Drive…, 3/29/12 1:17 PM Comment [5]: I didn’t write the question, but I’m assuming this means the Beethovenian tradition. How about “…break from the tradition of Beethoven”? 8. What is at stake when Tchaikovsky’s symphonies are understood as being autobiographical? What makes autobiographical interpretation persuasive or unpersuasive? Understanding Tchaikovsky’s symphonies to be autobiographical transfers the cause of the emotional force of his music to his (perceived) tragic life, and away from his skill as a composer. Autobiographical interpretations can be persuasive in helping to provide links between the emotional connotations of the music and the emotions that historians believe the composer was feeling at the time. The connection can add pathos and a quality of truth to the music. However, biographical readings are bound to mislead. Autobiographical interpretation assumes an immediate level of correspondence between subjective states and musical representation, but music is artful and requires mediation. Further, it assumes that every musical utterance represents the direct “voice” of the composer, when the composer could be writing from a range of contradictory perspectives. For example, Tchaikovsky wrote his melancholic Sixth Symphony during a happy period of his life, and Beethoven penned his cheery Second Symphony during a time of personal crisis.