The Age of Rebellion Howard Goodall's Story of Music


The Age of Rebellion

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MUSIC: "Holberg Suite" by Grieg

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Music, one of the most dazzling fruits of human civilisation,

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can make us weep, or make us dance.

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It's reflected the times in which it was written,

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it has delighted, challenged, comforted and excited us.

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In this series I've been tracing the story of music from scratch.

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To follow it on its miraculous journey,

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misleading jargon and fancy labels are best put to one side.

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Instead, try to imagine how revolutionary and how exhilarating

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many of the innovations we take for granted today were

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to people at the time.

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There are a million ways of telling the story of music, this is mine.

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MUSIC: "The Rite Of Spring" by Stravinsky

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In the 31 years between the death of Richard Wagner in 1883

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and the outbreak of the First World War

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music was shaken by a series of rebellions.

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"Pictures At An Exhibition" by Mussorgsky

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MUSIC: "The Firebird" by Stravinsky

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Russian music swept westwards exuberantly,

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as did the exotic sounds of distant continents.

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"Voiles" by Debussy

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And symphonies and operas of astonishing intensity

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amazed and startled audiences.

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Modernism in music was born.

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The world was becoming a smaller place,

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with millions of poor European immigrants seeking refuge

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in the New World,

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to join the white settlers, African Americans and Chinese workers already there.

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From this rich mix of musical cultures,

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soon to be heard on newfangled record players and radios,

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would spring the blues, ragtime and jazz.

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"Maple Leaf Rag" by Scott Joplin

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In just over three decades music underwent a series of gigantic convulsions.

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Change came in many different forms, some exciting, some bewildering.

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Revolution was in the air

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and all of music's laws and traditions were about to be shaken to their roots.

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What happened was a series of musical rebellions.

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MUSIC: "The Rite Of Spring" by Stravinsky

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The first was aimed at displacing the musical giant of the late 19th century, Richard Wagner.

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His ideas, his style and his musical philosophy

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had been such a pervasive presence in classical music

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that what might have followed him was a plague of pseudo-Wagners.

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In fact what followed in his wake was an explosion of musical activity

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that sought to do things very differently indeed.

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It may not always have been deliberate

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but there was a kind of not-Wagner renaissance.

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All the things he hated most came to life. The French, for a start.

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MUSIC: "Carnival Of The Animals" by Saint-Saens

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In France a new wave of composers made it their business

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to write music of deliberate simplicity and clarity

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and to banish pretention and earnestness of all kinds.

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The French were about to enjoy a musical golden age

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thanks to their reaction against Wagner.

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Their best 50 years ever in music blossomed

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after he went off to his personal Valhalla,

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with Faure, Debussy and Ravel leading a glorious riposte

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to German musical dominance.

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MUSIC: "Gymnopedie Number 1" by Satie

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The movement was set in train by one of the most remarkable figures in music, Erik Satie.

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Erik Satie's first Gymnopedie of 1888,

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as well as sounding like a long, hot afternoon after a boozy lunch,

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can be seen as the first shot in a war

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to debunk pomposity and declutter French music.

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Satie, described by his tutors at the Paris conservatoire

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as "the laziest student ever", was an eccentric intellectual

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who hung out with other arty dreamers in Montmartre.

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Satie's music could hardly sound less like Wagner

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and what the Germans were up to.

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The irony is that there was a German influence

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on the work of Satie's Parisian contemporaries.

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Here's a clue. Composers like Cesar Franck, Charles-Marie Widor,

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Camille Saint-Saens and Gabriel Faure were all trained organists,

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and playing the organ means above all

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knowing one particular composer's work inside out - JS Bach.

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MUSIC: "Toccata" by Widor

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More than a hundred years after his death,

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these organist-composers in France

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were invigorated and inspired by Bach's clarity and economy.

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Even the master himself might have admired

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Charles-Marie Widor's famous Toccata.

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It was first performed by Widor himself

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at the Trocadero Palace in Paris in 1889

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and it's given a rousing send-off

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to many a newly hitched bride and groom ever since.

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The dignity and dexterity of Bach can also be heard

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in the music of Gabriel Faure,

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perhaps the most talented of these French organist-composers.

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Listening to Faure after Brahms, Liszt, Wagner or Tchaikovsky,

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it's as if someone has spring-cleaned and redecorated

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a teenage boy's bedroom.

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Gone are the posters of death, psychological torment,

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superheroes and tragedy.

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The augmented piles of clothes have been put away

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and the windows have been opened

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to dispel the diminished sneaker-smelling air.

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Faure's exquisite music simply says, "Chill,"

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or, perhaps, refrigerez-vous.

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The exquisite pieces of Satie, Saint-Saens, Faure

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and the new wave of French composers were mostly small in scale.

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The next important step in the non-Wagner rebellion took place

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in the realm of symphonic music.

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And the composer who carried the torch

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for large-scale orchestral and vocal music after Wagner

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was about as different from him as a human being could be.

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Though he championed Wagner's operas

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as music director of the Vienna State Opera House,

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Wagner would have despised him because he was Jewish.

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He was Gustav Mahler.

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The hallmark of Mahler's music is that of openness.

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Unlike Wagner, Mahler invited into his music

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all the sounds and rhythms and the noisy diversity

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of the bustling East European communities at Vienna's doorstep,

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capital of the sprawling Austro-Hungarian empire.

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As an outsider in Vienna - a Jew, a Czech,

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a poor country boy in a profession full of toffs -

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it's not surprising that Mahler should identify

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with the folklore and music of his small-town childhood.

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In his symphonies it's possible to identify, for example,

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the Klezmer style of strolling Jewish folk musicians.

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His music encompasses passing military bands.

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And he's not afraid to include boisterous children's choruses.

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Mahler's symphonies are music's gateway to the 20th century,

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a musical equivalent of New York's Ellis Island,

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where Europe's exhausted and oppressed peoples

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sought refuge and a new start.

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The musical cultures they left behind in Europe

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found a home in Mahler's generous symphonic embrace.

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One way we can see a modern perspective emerging in his music is

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its sense of reality, of truthfulness, warts and all.

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The frankness of his approach is a major break with the past

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and is much more characteristic of the 20th than the 19th centuries.

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How can music be honest?

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Well, before Mahler if you were composer

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and you wanted to write a piece about loneliness or despair or depression,

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you'd call it something generic like a nocturne, or a sonata pathetique.

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In an opera you could have singers act out emotional or political issues

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pretending to be someone from another era, in a fancy costume.

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But Mahler stopped all this role-playing.

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He wanted to evoke the real, contemporary world

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with all its actual suffering and joy, without pretence.

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He told it how it was.

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Mahler took our worst fears and set them to music.

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This may seem an unremarkable concept to us

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but in 1900 it was shockingly, distressingly new.

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The unflinching honesty of Mahler's approach is at times unbearable.

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From 1901, for example,

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he set to music five German poems called Kindertotenlieder -

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Songs On The Death Of Children.

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The sentiments of the songs are those of a parent's most unspeakable nightmares.

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MEZZO SINGING IN GERMAN

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In Mahler's unflinching settings,

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these distant people of another century suddenly become like us.

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He's made them real.

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In a horrible irony, four years after he wrote the songs

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Mahler's own five-year-old daughter, Anna-Maria, died of scarlet fever,

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and Mahler himself was diagnosed with a terminal heart condition.

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When he died in 1911 he was laid to rest in her grave.

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But despite the understandable sadness and alienation we hear in his music

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there is, incredibly, hope of something better,

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usually associated with childhood and youth,

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as in his Song Of The Earth.

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The final chord of The Song Of The Earth was described

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by the mid-20th century English composer Benjamin Britten

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as being "imprinted on the atmosphere."

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STRINGS, HARP AND OBOE CREATE A WASH OF SOUND

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-MEZZO:

-# Ewig... #

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MUSIC FADES

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But there's something else going on in Mahler's music

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that wasn't perhaps obvious at the time.

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It's deceptive.

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Because of its all-inclusive style

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with its borrowings from ethnic folk music

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and because of the intensity of feeling he wanted to convey,

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Mahler's music began to destabilise

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the centuries-old Western musical system he'd inherited.

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His pupils in Vienna, led by Arnold Schoenberg,

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actively wanted to dismantle completely

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the familiar systems that had underpinned all music

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for hundreds of years

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and replace them with a brand new system.

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This academic rebellion was later labelled serialism, or atonality,

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and it produced decades of scholarly hot air, books, debates and seminars.

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And, in its purest, strictest form, not one piece of music

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that a normal person could understand or enjoy in 100 years.

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That's not to say that serialism hasn't always had a cultish following

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but for sure these composers weren't courting a mainstream audience.

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Had serialism had any chance of appealing to a paying public,

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one composer who would surely have opted into it

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was the musical magpie Richard Strauss,

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Germany's leading composer after Mahler's death.

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But he had other, far more mischievous plans up his sleeve.

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He began his career conventionally enough

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in a musical style that owed much to Liszt

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and a little to Wagner.

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Thus Spake Zarathustra is pretty typical,

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with its now legendary opening, Sunrise, made even more famous

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by Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey.

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Kubrick uses the power of the piece

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to underscore a momentous leap forward in the evolution of Man.

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The power of the idea the film wants to convey,

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man's discovery of weapons, needs equally portentous music.

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No one did it better than Strauss.

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And yet, the ever-versatile Strauss

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could also write songs of heart-breaking, Mahlerish delicacy,

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like the song Tomorrow, composed as a wedding present for his wife.

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On the surface of it the words of Morgen! seem

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to be optimistic about the future.

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"And tomorrow the sun will shine again."

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But it's also strangely melancholy.

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It seems to suggest, in fact, that there will be no tomorrow.

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It seemed at this point as if Strauss would continue to compose

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in this wistful but fairly traditional manner.

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But then he suddenly catapulted himself into musical notoriety

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with an opera of savage, erotic power

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that shocked bourgeois society and created a sensation.

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In one fell swoop,

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from being the genteel Kapellmeister of the Austrian Belle Epoch,

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Strauss had transformed himself into the Che Guevara

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of the musical rebels.

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The opera in question was Salome, staged in 1905.

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It was immediately banned in several countries

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and it gave new meaning to the term discord...

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..even before Salome herself had stripped off

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for the Dance Of The Seven Veils

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and scandalised the first night audience.

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Salome's final, passionate solo,

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addressed to the severed head of John the Baptist,

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which she then kisses, was the Quentin Tarantino moment.

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You can either read Salome as a strong, independent young woman

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who gets what she wants by exploiting her sexuality,

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cleverly outwitting her stepfather the king in the process,

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or as a kind of demented junkie

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who lowers humanity's moral standards to rock bottom.

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Take your pick.

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Strauss apparently hedges his bets,

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giving the first mention of the necrophiliac kiss

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possibly the most dissonant chord ever used in music at that point.

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It's like the final howl of a busted civilisation.

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HIGH DISCORD

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CLUSTER OF NOTES

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But we're not finished with her yet.

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After asking whether the taste of blood on his lips is

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actually the taste of love,

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Salome revisits the kiss in supreme triumph.

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"I have now kissed your mouth, Jochanaan," she screams

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and Strauss unleashes a musical earthquake

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which might be construed as a sexual consummation.

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Again, make up your own mind.

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GRAND, ECSTATIC MUSIC

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King Herod, who had encouraged his stepdaughter to dance in the first place,

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now ordered his soldiers to kill her.

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For this climax Strauss reserved his most discordant and angry music yet.

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VIOLENT, DISCORDANT MUSIC

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REPEATED BRASS CHORDS

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At this point in musical history

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it looked as though the dominance of Austro-German music

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that began with Bach in 1700 might continue indefinitely.

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Instead, a new force had emerged

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and was by the early 20th century

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the most exhilarating sound in Europe.

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In the closing decades of the 19th century

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the sleeping giant of Russia had awoken.

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Music was never going to be the same again.

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And when it comes to rebellions, Russia is in a class of its own.

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For all of the 18th and most of the 19th centuries

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Russia doggedly copied the culture of Western Europe,

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which the Russian court deemed more sophisticated and interesting

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than anything home-grown.

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Even Russia's most famous composer of them all, Tchaikovsky,

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who became a worldwide star in the 1880s and '90s,

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was still composing in a style that owed more to Beethoven or Brahms

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than to anything he'd picked up on the banks of the Volga.

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But there was something Tchaikovsky excelled at

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that was distinctly Russian

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and that contained within it the seeds of a coming revolution -

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dance.

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If for Italians the supreme expression of their love of music

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was the emotionally charged operatic aria,

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for Russians it was dance,

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and Tchaikovsky wrote some of the most celebrated and memorable

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dance music of all time.

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The result of this flowering of dance is

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that the need for a driving rhythm

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began to change the character of the music itself,

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making it more robust, muscular and exciting.

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Russian music was about to explode into life

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in a manner that was unprecedented,

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and subsequently unmatched in history.

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In Russia the invigorating, regulated beat of dance is everywhere,

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at the ballet, in operas, on the concert stage,

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lilting, driving, whirling, tiptoeing, leaping, gliding,

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jumping, gyrating and twirling -

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Russian music can't get enough of it.

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Presumably, it's the cold -

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you have to keep moving or your circulation will pack in.

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The rhythms of dance first powered this Russian awakening.

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The second vital element which changed the melody and harmony

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came from a renewed interest in Russia's own religious heritage.

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PRIEST CHANTING

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A new breed of composers, starting in the 1880s,

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turned their attention, not to the musical traditions of Western Europe,

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but to those of their own,

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especially the centuries-old Russian Orthodox chants,

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with their deep basses and thick eight or 16-voice block chords.

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In the decades to follow, this ancient sound,

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known as Znamenny Chant, was to flow like a river

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into the choral texture of all Russian composers.

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No longer did they look west for inspiration.

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The fuse-lighter of the Russian firework display about to unfold,

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the truly original, creative path-finder,

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wasn't cosmopolitan, well-travelled friend of the Romanovs Tchaikovsky,

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but a former military cadet who worked in the civil service

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and had a fatal vodka habit - Modest Mussorgsky.

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MUSIC: "Promenade Pictures At An Exhibition"

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Mussorgsky is quite simply the most original composer of the late 19th century,

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a one-off whose ideas were new,

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not derived from other composers of his time.

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There's a reason for this.

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Mussorgsky wasn't musically trained at a conservatoire

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and he wasn't a professional composer.

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He was self-taught

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and therefore blissfully unaware of the rules he was breaking.

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It was like he'd wandered onto Tsarist Russia's Got Talent,

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slightly drunk, and started improvising at the piano,

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to everyone's amazement.

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"Promenade - Pictures At An Exhibition"

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But despite the naivety of his style,

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which earned him more than a little ridicule at the time,

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Mussorgsky showed that Russian music could carve its own identity.

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To see how radically the music of Russia had changed

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in fewer than 40 years,

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listen to this coronation scene from A Life For The Tsar,

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an opera written by the Russian composer Mikhail Glinka in 1836.

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BIG, FOURSQUARE CHORDS

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Glinka had his musical training in Italy, Austria and Germany,

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and it shows.

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BRAHMSLIKE WRITING

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Now listen to another Kremlin coronation scene

0:26:160:26:19

from the thoroughly Russian opera by Mussorgsky, Boris Godunov.

0:26:190:26:23

VIVID, ENERGETIC MUSIC

0:26:230:26:25

This time, complete with colours, voices and glittering effects,

0:26:410:26:45

tolling bells and echoing orchestra chimes,

0:26:450:26:48

it's been thoroughly Russianised.

0:26:480:26:50

Mussorgsky died in 1881, his music virtually unknown outside of Russia.

0:26:540:26:59

But that was about to change.

0:26:590:27:01

"Carnival Of The Animals" by Saint-Saens.

0:27:010:27:04

So many of the seeds of the rebellions of late 19th century music

0:27:090:27:13

can be traced to one extraordinarily fertile event.

0:27:130:27:16

It took place in Paris in 1889, the centenary of the French Revolution.

0:27:160:27:22

It was the World's Fair.

0:27:220:27:24

Here in the Trocadero, which overlooked the newly-built Eiffel Tower,

0:27:300:27:34

Widor first played his famous organ Toccata

0:27:340:27:37

and here also non-Russian composers heard

0:27:370:27:41

the music of Mussorgsky for the first time.

0:27:410:27:44

One such composer, then aged 27, was Claude Debussy.

0:27:440:27:48

His visit to the World's Fair was a life- and music-changing experience.

0:27:480:27:53

What Debussy learnt from Mussorgsky

0:27:550:27:57

was that there was a way of building up the architecture of a piece of music

0:27:570:28:00

that was an alternative to the developmental method

0:28:000:28:03

that was bread and butter to Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven.

0:28:030:28:06

The development approach was to take small cells of melody or rhythm,

0:28:060:28:10

or both, and make up a whole discourse from them

0:28:100:28:14

over a 15 or 20 minute period.

0:28:140:28:16

So Beethoven is able to construct a whole symphony movement from this tiny idea.

0:28:160:28:21

MOTIF FROM BEETHOVEN'S FIFTH

0:28:210:28:23

Count how many times he uses it in just the first 40 bars of the symphony.

0:28:230:28:26

HE MOUTHS

0:28:280:28:29

That's 13.

0:28:420:28:44

That's already 33, and counting.

0:29:000:29:03

Debussy, inspired by Mussorgsky,

0:29:060:29:08

ditched 100 years of studious development technique

0:29:080:29:12

and started over -

0:29:120:29:13

Mussorgsky, because he knew no better,

0:29:130:29:15

and Debussy, because it suited his taste for experiment.

0:29:150:29:19

GAMELAN PLAYS

0:29:200:29:22

What revolutionised Debussy's music more than anything, though, was

0:29:260:29:30

a wind of change blowing to the Paris World's Fair from very far afield.

0:29:300:29:34

The World's Fair showcased exhibits and cultural tableaux

0:29:380:29:42

from all over the planet.

0:29:420:29:44

Thanks to increased communications,

0:29:450:29:47

the global village was starting to become a reality.

0:29:470:29:50

What especially mesmerised Debussy was a Javanese village,

0:29:520:29:56

complete with a gamelan orchestra,

0:29:560:29:58

with its gongs, bells, bowls and xylophone-like chimes.

0:29:580:30:03

The particular sonorities and scales of the Gamelan orchestra

0:30:040:30:07

intrigued Debussy so much he was inspired to attempt

0:30:070:30:10

an evocation of its Eastern sounds on a Western piano.

0:30:100:30:14

Although he couldn't replicate the unfamiliar tuning of the bells,

0:30:140:30:18

gongs, and other metal bars of the gamelan,

0:30:180:30:21

or the exact division of the Asian musical scale,

0:30:210:30:24

he could approximate it in two ways.

0:30:240:30:27

One was to make use of the so-called pentatonic scale,

0:30:270:30:30

the five notes that are common to all the world's musical systems

0:30:300:30:34

and which are especially prevalent in Eastern music.

0:30:340:30:36

On a piano the pentatonic notes can be found by playing just the black notes.

0:30:360:30:41

There's a whole section of his prelude Voiles, sails,

0:30:460:30:50

which is all pentatonic.

0:30:500:30:51

The other trick Debussy deployed was to allow his chords to hang over each other,

0:31:220:31:26

overlapping and ricocheting from one to the next.

0:31:260:31:30

This technique, on a piano at any rate,

0:31:300:31:32

has the effect of eking out

0:31:320:31:34

the sympathetic resonances, or harmonics,

0:31:340:31:37

latent in the reverberating strings.

0:31:370:31:40

Natural harmonics are hidden extra notes, usually quite high in pitch,

0:31:430:31:48

that are found within any given sound,

0:31:480:31:50

like the additional colours of the spectrum

0:31:500:31:52

contained within white light.

0:31:520:31:54

Every time you allow the felt dampers on a piano to clamp down on the strings

0:31:540:31:58

you shut off the natural harmonics from resonating.

0:31:580:32:02

CHORD STOPS

0:32:030:32:04

But Debussy wanted to do the opposite,

0:32:070:32:09

to allow the strings to ring like they would on a harp.

0:32:090:32:13

His hanging chords with the dampers kept away from the strings

0:32:130:32:17

were a kind of return to nature.

0:32:170:32:19

"Claire de Lune" by Debussy

0:32:200:32:22

Putting these ideas into action,

0:32:330:32:35

Debussy created a new soundscape for the piano.

0:32:350:32:38

The reformation of scales and harmonies that he introduced

0:32:380:32:42

offered a whole new palette of aural possibilities.

0:32:420:32:45

The piano had never sounded so exotic and so rich.

0:32:450:32:48

By recalibrating the traditional Western scale on Eastern lines,

0:33:180:33:23

Debussy's music was a radical departure

0:33:230:33:26

from the classical style he'd grown up with,

0:33:260:33:28

and his harmonic experiments based on Asian sound combinations

0:33:280:33:33

were still influencing musicians, especially in jazz, half a century later.

0:33:330:33:38

As well as kicking off a highly fruitful interest

0:33:570:33:59

in what we'd call world music,

0:33:590:34:01

the World's Fair in Paris had also put the new music of Russia on the map.

0:34:010:34:06

Another of St Petersburg's musical dynamos, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov,

0:34:070:34:12

took over the torch and mined the golden seam of Slavic folklore

0:34:120:34:16

in a series of operatic pageants put on around the turn of the century.

0:34:160:34:20

Rimsky didn't just use folk stories in his plots.

0:34:200:34:25

Crucially he also started to borrow the melodic building blocks of Russian folk music.

0:34:250:34:30

These sparkling entertainments laid down a challenge

0:34:520:34:55

to Rimsky-Korsakov's most talented pupil, then a complete unknown.

0:34:550:35:00

That challenge was to blaze a path for Russian music

0:35:000:35:03

and put Russia onto the cultural map once and for all,

0:35:030:35:07

and boy, was the challenge accepted.

0:35:070:35:10

Rimsky-Korsakov's pupil was Igor Stravinsky.

0:35:100:35:13

Stravinsky's combustible arrival on the world music scene

0:35:170:35:20

was stage-managed

0:35:200:35:21

by an entrepreneurial art, dance and music impresario, Sergei Diaghilev.

0:35:210:35:27

In 1909 he created a dance company in Paris, the Ballets Russes,

0:35:270:35:31

in order to produce annual festivals of modernist Russian ballets.

0:35:310:35:36

He approached Stravinsky to compose the music for one

0:35:360:35:39

based on an ancient Russian fairytale, The Firebird.

0:35:390:35:42

When he was commissioned Stravinsky was unknown

0:35:460:35:49

and third choice for the job.

0:35:490:35:51

Three years later he was both the most notorious

0:35:510:35:54

and the most eagerly championed composer in all Europe.

0:35:540:35:57

The Firebird's scenario,

0:35:580:36:00

an amalgam of several versions of folk tales about a magical bird,

0:36:000:36:04

combines supernatural characters and beasts with the natural,

0:36:040:36:08

the fantastical world with the human world.

0:36:080:36:11

Stravinsky gives these two worlds different styles of music.

0:36:130:36:17

Human characters, like the 12 princesses in the story, are given

0:36:170:36:20

folk song derived melodies based on the common Western musical scale.

0:36:200:36:24

C MAJOR SCALE

0:36:250:36:26

The fantastical creatures and characters on the other hand are allotted

0:37:160:37:20

a much more exotic and complex musical palette,

0:37:200:37:23

often based on the so-called octotonic scale.

0:37:230:37:26

SEQUENCE OF TONES AND SEMITONES

0:37:270:37:29

This non-Western sounding octotonic scale had been the feature

0:37:310:37:35

of the music of Stravinsky's teacher, Rimsky-Korsakov,

0:37:350:37:38

especially when depicting the magical, malevolent

0:37:380:37:41

or the mysterious.

0:37:410:37:43

When Stravinsky borrows from Russian ethnic folk music like this

0:37:590:38:03

he doesn't lift it straight

0:38:030:38:05

but distorts it through a mischievous prism.

0:38:050:38:07

In field recordings of peasant folk music,

0:38:070:38:10

the educated, bourgeois Stravinsky had discovered

0:38:100:38:14

a raw, ritualistic world

0:38:140:38:16

from way beyond the frontiers of industrial civilisation.

0:38:160:38:19

His instinct to repackage it for a Parisian audience

0:38:190:38:23

was brilliantly provocative.

0:38:230:38:25

Stravinsky's rebellion against established musical conventions

0:38:330:38:37

wasn't just about exotic scales and weird jingly-jangly sounds

0:38:370:38:42

he injected into the orchestra.

0:38:420:38:45

Stravinsky, like Mussorgsky and Debussy before him,

0:38:450:38:48

wanted to find a way of assembling a musical structure

0:38:480:38:51

without using constantly developing nuggets of tune.

0:38:510:38:55

Stravinsky in particular wanted to tell his ballet stories

0:38:570:39:00

a different way.

0:39:000:39:01

He created a montage, an aural jigsaw,

0:39:010:39:05

one tune followed by a different tune, followed by a different tune

0:39:050:39:08

in tumbling succession.

0:39:080:39:10

For this reason, ballet, with its short, restless kaleidoscopic episodes,

0:39:100:39:15

was the form for which Stravinsky was born to compose.

0:39:150:39:19

We find the idea of musical collage, the mix,

0:39:380:39:41

the remix, the iPod shuffle and the mash-up, completely normal,

0:39:410:39:45

but we shouldn't forget

0:39:450:39:47

how bewilderingly unfamiliar an idea this was

0:39:470:39:50

to the musical establishment of the early 1900s.

0:39:500:39:54

When the Ballets Russes took Stravinsky's second ballet, Petrushka, to Vienna in 1913

0:39:540:40:01

the scandalised musicians refused to play it,

0:40:010:40:04

describing it as "dirty music".

0:40:040:40:07

All of the radicals, Mahler, Debussy and Stravinsky,

0:40:070:40:10

were dismantling the old system

0:40:100:40:11

whereby musical ideas carefully unfolded, one thing after another.

0:40:110:40:17

They wanted everything at once.

0:40:170:40:19

Stravinsky, like all Russian composers, was turned on

0:40:200:40:23

by the rhythmic urgency of dance

0:40:230:40:26

but he did something very unusual with that rhythm.

0:40:260:40:29

Whilst Mahler had layered melody on melody,

0:40:290:40:32

tangled together like a twisted knot,

0:40:320:40:35

and Debussy had manipulated blocks of adjacent sound overlapping one another,

0:40:350:40:40

Stravinsky went one step further,

0:40:400:40:42

superimposing simultaneous rhythms on top of each other.

0:40:420:40:46

Polyrhythm, as it has since been dubbed,

0:40:490:40:51

had long existed in African tribal drumming,

0:40:510:40:54

improvised on the spot by highly intuitive, skilful players.

0:40:540:40:58

But polyrhythm, conceived from scratch by a composer,

0:41:010:41:05

written down on the page,

0:41:050:41:07

imposed on the Western symphony orchestra player by player,

0:41:070:41:10

this was utterly, breathtakingly novel a concept.

0:41:100:41:15

It was as if Stravinsky wanted the past and the present to coexist

0:41:150:41:18

in one dimension,

0:41:180:41:20

the prehistoric ritual of his dancers

0:41:200:41:22

and the modern cacophony of the industrial world

0:41:220:41:25

and the only way he could conceive it

0:41:250:41:28

was to make parallel, competing rhythmic patterns fight

0:41:280:41:31

for the same space.

0:41:310:41:33

It's complicated but it's magnificent.

0:41:330:41:36

But here's the thing.

0:41:560:41:57

The Rite of Spring, which premiered a hundred years ago,

0:41:570:42:01

was the high-water mark of musical modernism.

0:42:010:42:03

It therefore presented progressive music with a dilemma.

0:42:030:42:07

Where the hell to go from here?

0:42:070:42:09

Neither Stravinsky nor Debussy in 1913 would've guessed

0:42:090:42:13

where the answer to that question would come from,

0:42:130:42:16

never mind just how massive the forces of change were going to be.

0:42:160:42:20

After all, revolutions don't always start with a bang.

0:42:200:42:24

'Mary had a little lamb, its fleece was white as snow,

0:42:250:42:28

'and everywhere that Mary went the lamb was sure to go.'

0:42:280:42:32

Thomas Edison is credited with the invention of recorded sound in 1877

0:42:320:42:36

but in fact the first ever recording was made nearly 20 years earlier,

0:42:360:42:41

in France.

0:42:410:42:43

This is the earliest-known surviving recording of a person singing,

0:42:440:42:48

making the man who made it, Edouard-Leon Scott de Martinville,

0:42:480:42:52

the true inventor of recording, not Edison.

0:42:520:42:55

BUZZING NOISE

0:42:550:42:57

The recording was made on a machine now virtually forgotten,

0:42:570:43:01

the phonautograph.

0:43:010:43:03

Here's the amazing bit.

0:43:030:43:04

The inventor's aim was to be able to study sound in graph-like form.

0:43:040:43:09

What he couldn't do was play the sound back.

0:43:090:43:12

Then, in 2008,

0:43:120:43:15

American engineers using sophisticated digital technology

0:43:150:43:19

were able to convert the markings on the paper back into sound.

0:43:190:43:23

The French folk singer of 1860 miraculously sang again.

0:43:230:43:28

-BUZZING NOISE

-Sort of.

0:43:280:43:31

The phonautograph had begun a process

0:43:340:43:36

that was totally to transform music.

0:43:360:43:39

Very soon after Edison invented a machine

0:43:390:43:41

that could play recordings back,

0:43:410:43:43

a new breed of musician researcher popped up

0:43:430:43:47

in virtually every country,

0:43:470:43:48

travelling around remote, rural areas,

0:43:480:43:51

recording and preserving the folk songs

0:43:510:43:53

they persuaded doubtless bemused locals to perform for them.

0:43:530:43:58

These field recordists captured the oral and musical culture

0:43:580:44:02

of communities now long disappeared.

0:44:020:44:05

SINGING AND DRUMMING

0:44:050:44:07

But the real future for recorded sound was in

0:44:070:44:10

the reproduction of music that was already popular.

0:44:100:44:13

-TENOR:

-# Vesti la giubba

0:44:130:44:18

# E la faccia infarina... #

0:44:180:44:21

The first million-selling record was Caruso's Vesti La Giubba in 1907,

0:44:210:44:26

just before radio broadcasts began.

0:44:260:44:30

As well as live music, radio also played records,

0:44:300:44:32

thus boosting their sales.

0:44:320:44:34

# ..t'invola Colombina... #

0:44:340:44:41

The advent of recording made

0:44:410:44:43

the huge wealth of music already written by 1900

0:44:430:44:47

increasingly available to millions of people across the world,

0:44:470:44:50

vastly expanding their musical horizons

0:44:500:44:53

and turning something hitherto expensive and elitist

0:44:530:44:56

into an ordinary commodity.

0:44:560:44:58

This was a very good thing.

0:44:580:45:01

Recording also began to put in front of a mass audience

0:45:010:45:04

forms of folk and ethnic music that were up to then unknown

0:45:040:45:08

outside their local communities.

0:45:080:45:10

The music that was boosted most of all by recording, as it turned out,

0:45:100:45:14

was that produced by African Americans,

0:45:140:45:17

beginning with spiritual songs.

0:45:170:45:19

# When Israel was in Egypt's land

0:45:190:45:25

# Let my people go

0:45:250:45:28

# Oppressed so hard they could not stand

0:45:280:45:33

# Let my people go

0:45:330:45:37

-# Go down, Moses

-# Go down, Moses

0:45:370:45:40

# Way down in Egypt's land

0:45:420:45:46

# Tell old pharaoh

0:45:460:45:50

-# You got to let my people go

-# Let them go

0:45:540:45:59

# You got to let my people go

0:45:590:46:02

# Let them go

0:46:020:46:03

# You got to let my people go

0:46:030:46:06

# Let them go

0:46:060:46:08

# You got to let my people go

0:46:080:46:11

# Let them go, let them go

0:46:110:46:15

# Let them go. #

0:46:150:46:19

Huh!

0:46:190:46:20

African American slaves and their descendants

0:46:200:46:23

living in conditions of oppressive poverty developed

0:46:230:46:26

a form of religious song, the spiritual,

0:46:260:46:28

which seems to have been an amalgam

0:46:280:46:30

of half-remembered African call and response chants

0:46:300:46:34

and missionary hymns.

0:46:340:46:36

# Swing low, sweet chariot

0:46:360:46:43

# Comin' for to carry me home

0:46:430:46:49

# Swing low, sweet chariot... #

0:46:490:46:52

These spirituals of the Deep South were rich

0:46:520:46:54

with Old Testament references to the slavery of the Israelites,

0:46:540:46:58

visions of redemption and heavenly justice.

0:46:580:47:02

# I looked over Jordan What did I see?

0:47:020:47:07

# Comin' for to carry me home?

0:47:070:47:10

# A band of angels Coming after me... #

0:47:100:47:15

The existence of the spiritual was for a long time mostly unknown

0:47:150:47:19

to the white population of the United States,

0:47:190:47:21

let alone the rest of the world but a long fuse had been lit.

0:47:210:47:26

# People, they are faithful And like to say a good prayer, too

0:47:260:47:32

# If you ask them about their religion

0:47:320:47:38

# They'll say they're just as good as you... #

0:47:380:47:40

The Fisk Jubilee Singers, who were themselves the children of slaves,

0:47:400:47:45

began to make fundraising tours

0:47:450:47:47

singing what were called at the time negro spirituals.

0:47:470:47:50

But strangely, one of the first musicians

0:47:500:47:53

to put this music in front of a middle-class American audience

0:47:530:47:56

was an Englishman.

0:47:560:47:58

The Edwardian Samuel Coleridge-Taylor caused a sensation

0:48:080:48:12

on three trips to the USA, conducting his own compositions.

0:48:120:48:17

In one of them we can hear early and tantalising evidence

0:48:170:48:20

of the melodic style of what came to be known as the blues,

0:48:200:48:23

which, albeit in different disguises,

0:48:230:48:25

went on to dominate the music of the 20th century and beyond.

0:48:250:48:28

The clues we're looking for

0:48:280:48:29

are so-called flattened degrees of the musical ladder, or scale,

0:48:290:48:33

at the third and seventh position,

0:48:330:48:35

especially when the phrase is heading in a downward direction.

0:48:350:48:38

And here they both are, one after another, in this melody.

0:48:380:48:42

Third.

0:48:440:48:45

Seventh.

0:48:460:48:48

The blues, as it developed slowly and piecemeal

0:48:480:48:50

amongst former slave communities in the USA

0:48:500:48:53

in the final decades of the 19th century,

0:48:530:48:55

clung resolutely to the flattened thirds and sevenths,

0:48:550:48:58

and does so to the present day.

0:48:580:49:00

Indeed, they became known as blue notes.

0:49:000:49:03

MAN: Play that thing, boy.

0:49:170:49:19

Blue notes, revivalist spirituals,

0:49:260:49:29

the call and response or holler songs of the Deep South,

0:49:290:49:32

all derived from their African origins,

0:49:320:49:34

went into the mixing pot of the early blues.

0:49:340:49:36

But also mixed in were chords borrowed

0:49:360:49:40

from hymns and parlour and vaudeville songs,

0:49:400:49:42

and the folk songs of other members of the American underclass.

0:49:420:49:47

MAN SINGS BLUES

0:49:470:49:50

There's been considerable research

0:49:580:50:00

into song forms of the poorest Americans of all ethnic groups

0:50:000:50:03

in the 19th century.

0:50:030:50:05

It reveals the influence of Anglo-Celtic folk music

0:50:050:50:08

on the growth of the blues.

0:50:080:50:10

This folk music was learnt from the African Americans' co-workers

0:50:100:50:14

in the cotton fields and on the railroads,

0:50:140:50:15

many of whom were from the British Isles.

0:50:150:50:18

Amongst these song types are hundreds

0:50:210:50:22

which lament the burden and misery of the labourer's life.

0:50:220:50:26

Typical is the iconic American work song,

0:50:290:50:31

The Ballad of John Henry, The Steel Driving Man,

0:50:310:50:34

which eventually became a blues standard.

0:50:340:50:37

It celebrates the futile battle

0:50:370:50:39

between an African American railroad worker

0:50:390:50:41

and a new machine designed to replace him.

0:50:410:50:43

Music historians have traced the shape

0:50:430:50:46

back to the much earlier British ballad, The Birmingham Boys.

0:50:460:50:50

Listen out for the overall storytelling shape

0:50:500:50:52

and the repeated line at the end.

0:50:520:50:54

# In Birmingham town there lived a man

0:50:550:50:58

# And he had such a lovely wife

0:50:580:51:02

# And so dearly she loved company

0:51:020:51:05

# As dearly as she loved life, boys, life,

0:51:050:51:10

# As dearly as she loved life. #

0:51:100:51:13

Now here's one of the many later versions of John Henry.

0:51:130:51:17

# John Henry was a little baby, sitting on his mother's knee

0:51:170:51:24

# He picked up a hammer in his little right hand

0:51:240:51:28

# Says, "A hammer's gonna be the death of me, O Lord

0:51:280:51:32

# "A hammer's gonna be the death of me." #

0:51:320:51:35

One of the changes that's happened to the tune crossing the Atlantic

0:51:360:51:40

is that it's become entirely pentatonic.

0:51:400:51:42

Remember those five basic notes prevalent in Eastern music

0:51:420:51:46

that Debussy imitated?

0:51:460:51:47

And who were the other railroad workers

0:51:520:51:54

toiling alongside the British, Irish and African American labourers?

0:51:540:51:59

Now, even to suggest any European influence

0:52:050:52:09

on the blues is controversial,

0:52:090:52:10

and it's entirely understandable

0:52:100:52:12

that there should be sensitivity about any non-African elements

0:52:120:52:16

in the origin of the blues.

0:52:160:52:18

Since the music of the slaves, from which it sprang, was

0:52:180:52:21

so often a lament,

0:52:210:52:22

or a coded protest against the harsh treatment they received,

0:52:220:52:26

some African Americans quite naturally resent the idea

0:52:260:52:29

that the blues could in any way have been influenced

0:52:290:52:32

by the very people who enslaved their ancestors.

0:52:320:52:35

But the fact is that music does not observe racial or national boundaries.

0:52:350:52:40

It's a free-flowing river, open and available to all cultures,

0:52:400:52:44

owned by none.

0:52:440:52:47

Whatever elements went into its kit of parts,

0:52:470:52:50

the early blues musicians made something

0:52:500:52:52

unique and lasting of their own.

0:52:520:52:54

This same intermingling of styles and traditions can be seen

0:52:550:52:58

in the arrival at around the same time of ragtime,

0:52:580:53:02

which became a kind of craze.

0:53:020:53:04

Rag or ragtime music originated

0:53:120:53:15

in St Louis and Chicago bars and brothels,

0:53:150:53:17

from house pianists copying the popular marching band style

0:53:170:53:21

of the 1880s and '90s,

0:53:210:53:23

a fashion that reached its peak with the band leader John Philip Sousa.

0:53:230:53:27

In order to emulate the whole band - bass, accompanying chords and tune -

0:53:270:53:32

the pianist had to leap about the keys frantically,

0:53:320:53:35

resulting in a quite virtuoso left-hand motion

0:53:350:53:37

from bass to chord and back.

0:53:370:53:40

On top of this accompanying oom-pa the rag pianists wove a catchy tune

0:53:470:53:51

that pulled the rhythm around - a technique called syncopation.

0:53:510:53:55

Syncopation is LIKE talk-ING with THE emph-A-sis ON the wrong words

0:54:080:54:13

TO cre-ATE a jer-KY sound.

0:54:130:54:16

Listen to this bit of Scott Joplin's Maple Leaf Rag without syncopation.

0:54:160:54:21

HE PLAYS A SIMPLIFIED VERSION OF RAG

0:54:220:54:24

And now with Joplin's syncopations,

0:54:360:54:39

which feel like they're tripping ahead of where you'd expect them to fall.

0:54:390:54:42

MUSIC: "Maple Leaf Rag" by Joplin

0:54:420:54:44

Ragtime picked up syncopation, a playful jumping ahead of a tune,

0:54:510:54:55

from the banjo or piano accompaniments for cake walks,

0:54:550:54:59

a jokey form of dancing that plantation workers had invented

0:54:590:55:02

for their own amusement,

0:55:020:55:04

in lampooning imitation of white folks' la-di-da ballroom dancing.

0:55:040:55:09

The white folks in question used to enjoy

0:55:090:55:12

watching their staff's cake walk parties,

0:55:120:55:15

not realising that what they thought was a comic and ludicrous African American dance step

0:55:150:55:20

was actually a caricature of them.

0:55:200:55:23

Along with the cake walk another offspring of ragtime was

0:55:260:55:30

a hyper-syncopated form of piano and band-playing

0:55:300:55:33

that flickered into life in the Storyville district of New Orleans.

0:55:330:55:37

Charismatic performers like Jelly Roll Morton took it on tour

0:55:370:55:41

around the southern states in travelling vaudeville shows.

0:55:410:55:44

Though Jelly Roll called a lot of his numbers blues,

0:55:440:55:47

we now know this is the beginning of a distinct genre of its own, jazz.

0:55:470:55:52

From now on this music took on a life of its own.

0:56:010:56:04

As up-to-the-minute blues and its many offspring began

0:56:080:56:11

to revolutionise popular music,

0:56:110:56:14

classically-trained composers found themselves outflanked

0:56:140:56:17

and increasingly unloved.

0:56:170:56:19

Given the choice the general public voted with their feet in their millions

0:56:200:56:24

and took the populist path.

0:56:240:56:27

The coming century would see popular music,

0:56:270:56:29

especially American popular music, sweeping the planet.

0:56:290:56:32

And yet, faced with the twin rebellions

0:56:320:56:36

of dissonant modernism and the mass market,

0:56:360:56:39

the classical tradition found an ace up its sleeve

0:56:390:56:42

and played it with impeccable timing.

0:56:420:56:45

In a world of turmoil and change its response was nostalgia.

0:56:450:56:49

Edward Elgar's most famous piece, Enigma Variations,

0:56:490:56:52

embodies this response.

0:56:520:56:54

As the world began to slide

0:56:540:56:56

towards a final showdown of the European empires,

0:56:560:56:59

this music reminded people what they were about to lose.

0:56:590:57:03

From Elgar and Vaughan Williams in Britain,

0:57:220:57:24

Grieg in Norway, Sibelius in Finland,

0:57:240:57:27

Respighi in Italy,

0:57:270:57:28

Rachmaninov in Russia and Richard Strauss in Germany,

0:57:280:57:32

a musical style of tender, old-fashioned melancholy

0:57:320:57:36

seemed to want to hold back the relentless passage of time and progress.

0:57:360:57:41

That this music is so popular in our own time

0:57:430:57:46

testifies to its enduring appeal,

0:57:460:57:48

and perhaps our own continuing need for its soothing balm.

0:57:480:57:53

It may also indicate that in a crowded market

0:57:530:57:56

classical music's unique selling point is, like it or not,

0:57:560:58:00

its ability to wrap up the past like a beautiful gift.

0:58:000:58:04

MUSIC: "Rhapsody In Blue" by Gershwin

0:58:150:58:17

In the next programme we trace how all the developments of this 30-year period

0:58:210:58:25

found affirmation in a golden age of popular music.

0:58:250:58:29

Classical music went undercover,

0:58:300:58:32

morphing gloriously into a variety of new musical forms,

0:58:320:58:36

made possible by the onwards march of technology.

0:58:360:58:40

Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

0:58:430:58:45

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