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MUSIC: "Holberg Suite" by Grieg | 0:00:02 | 0:00:05 | |
Music, one of the most dazzling fruits of human civilisation, | 0:00:05 | 0:00:08 | |
can make us weep, or make us dance. | 0:00:08 | 0:00:11 | |
It's reflected the times in which it was written, | 0:00:11 | 0:00:13 | |
it has delighted, challenged, comforted and excited us. | 0:00:13 | 0:00:17 | |
In this series I've been tracing the story of music from scratch. | 0:00:18 | 0:00:22 | |
To follow it on its miraculous journey, | 0:00:22 | 0:00:24 | |
misleading jargon and fancy labels are best put to one side. | 0:00:24 | 0:00:28 | |
Instead, try to imagine how revolutionary and how exhilarating | 0:00:32 | 0:00:37 | |
many of the innovations we take for granted today were | 0:00:37 | 0:00:40 | |
to people at the time. | 0:00:40 | 0:00:42 | |
There are a million ways of telling the story of music, this is mine. | 0:00:42 | 0:00:46 | |
MUSIC: "The Rite Of Spring" by Stravinsky | 0:01:02 | 0:01:04 | |
In the 31 years between the death of Richard Wagner in 1883 | 0:01:05 | 0:01:10 | |
and the outbreak of the First World War | 0:01:10 | 0:01:12 | |
music was shaken by a series of rebellions. | 0:01:12 | 0:01:15 | |
"Pictures At An Exhibition" by Mussorgsky | 0:01:15 | 0:01:17 | |
MUSIC: "The Firebird" by Stravinsky | 0:01:17 | 0:01:19 | |
Russian music swept westwards exuberantly, | 0:01:19 | 0:01:22 | |
as did the exotic sounds of distant continents. | 0:01:22 | 0:01:25 | |
"Voiles" by Debussy | 0:01:25 | 0:01:28 | |
And symphonies and operas of astonishing intensity | 0:01:28 | 0:01:31 | |
amazed and startled audiences. | 0:01:31 | 0:01:34 | |
Modernism in music was born. | 0:01:36 | 0:01:38 | |
The world was becoming a smaller place, | 0:01:40 | 0:01:42 | |
with millions of poor European immigrants seeking refuge | 0:01:42 | 0:01:46 | |
in the New World, | 0:01:46 | 0:01:47 | |
to join the white settlers, African Americans and Chinese workers already there. | 0:01:47 | 0:01:53 | |
From this rich mix of musical cultures, | 0:01:53 | 0:01:55 | |
soon to be heard on newfangled record players and radios, | 0:01:55 | 0:01:59 | |
would spring the blues, ragtime and jazz. | 0:01:59 | 0:02:02 | |
"Maple Leaf Rag" by Scott Joplin | 0:02:02 | 0:02:04 | |
In just over three decades music underwent a series of gigantic convulsions. | 0:02:04 | 0:02:11 | |
Change came in many different forms, some exciting, some bewildering. | 0:02:11 | 0:02:15 | |
Revolution was in the air | 0:02:15 | 0:02:17 | |
and all of music's laws and traditions were about to be shaken to their roots. | 0:02:17 | 0:02:22 | |
What happened was a series of musical rebellions. | 0:02:22 | 0:02:25 | |
MUSIC: "The Rite Of Spring" by Stravinsky | 0:02:25 | 0:02:28 | |
The first was aimed at displacing the musical giant of the late 19th century, Richard Wagner. | 0:02:32 | 0:02:38 | |
His ideas, his style and his musical philosophy | 0:02:39 | 0:02:42 | |
had been such a pervasive presence in classical music | 0:02:42 | 0:02:46 | |
that what might have followed him was a plague of pseudo-Wagners. | 0:02:46 | 0:02:50 | |
In fact what followed in his wake was an explosion of musical activity | 0:02:51 | 0:02:55 | |
that sought to do things very differently indeed. | 0:02:55 | 0:02:58 | |
It may not always have been deliberate | 0:02:58 | 0:03:00 | |
but there was a kind of not-Wagner renaissance. | 0:03:00 | 0:03:03 | |
All the things he hated most came to life. The French, for a start. | 0:03:03 | 0:03:08 | |
MUSIC: "Carnival Of The Animals" by Saint-Saens | 0:03:08 | 0:03:12 | |
In France a new wave of composers made it their business | 0:03:12 | 0:03:15 | |
to write music of deliberate simplicity and clarity | 0:03:15 | 0:03:19 | |
and to banish pretention and earnestness of all kinds. | 0:03:19 | 0:03:23 | |
The French were about to enjoy a musical golden age | 0:03:24 | 0:03:27 | |
thanks to their reaction against Wagner. | 0:03:27 | 0:03:31 | |
Their best 50 years ever in music blossomed | 0:03:32 | 0:03:35 | |
after he went off to his personal Valhalla, | 0:03:35 | 0:03:37 | |
with Faure, Debussy and Ravel leading a glorious riposte | 0:03:37 | 0:03:41 | |
to German musical dominance. | 0:03:41 | 0:03:43 | |
MUSIC: "Gymnopedie Number 1" by Satie | 0:03:43 | 0:03:47 | |
The movement was set in train by one of the most remarkable figures in music, Erik Satie. | 0:03:48 | 0:03:53 | |
Erik Satie's first Gymnopedie of 1888, | 0:04:07 | 0:04:11 | |
as well as sounding like a long, hot afternoon after a boozy lunch, | 0:04:11 | 0:04:15 | |
can be seen as the first shot in a war | 0:04:15 | 0:04:18 | |
to debunk pomposity and declutter French music. | 0:04:18 | 0:04:22 | |
Satie, described by his tutors at the Paris conservatoire | 0:04:22 | 0:04:25 | |
as "the laziest student ever", was an eccentric intellectual | 0:04:25 | 0:04:30 | |
who hung out with other arty dreamers in Montmartre. | 0:04:30 | 0:04:33 | |
Satie's music could hardly sound less like Wagner | 0:04:56 | 0:04:59 | |
and what the Germans were up to. | 0:04:59 | 0:05:01 | |
The irony is that there was a German influence | 0:05:01 | 0:05:04 | |
on the work of Satie's Parisian contemporaries. | 0:05:04 | 0:05:07 | |
Here's a clue. Composers like Cesar Franck, Charles-Marie Widor, | 0:05:07 | 0:05:12 | |
Camille Saint-Saens and Gabriel Faure were all trained organists, | 0:05:12 | 0:05:17 | |
and playing the organ means above all | 0:05:17 | 0:05:20 | |
knowing one particular composer's work inside out - JS Bach. | 0:05:20 | 0:05:25 | |
MUSIC: "Toccata" by Widor | 0:05:25 | 0:05:28 | |
More than a hundred years after his death, | 0:05:29 | 0:05:32 | |
these organist-composers in France | 0:05:32 | 0:05:34 | |
were invigorated and inspired by Bach's clarity and economy. | 0:05:34 | 0:05:38 | |
Even the master himself might have admired | 0:05:40 | 0:05:43 | |
Charles-Marie Widor's famous Toccata. | 0:05:43 | 0:05:46 | |
It was first performed by Widor himself | 0:05:46 | 0:05:48 | |
at the Trocadero Palace in Paris in 1889 | 0:05:48 | 0:05:51 | |
and it's given a rousing send-off | 0:05:51 | 0:05:53 | |
to many a newly hitched bride and groom ever since. | 0:05:53 | 0:05:57 | |
The dignity and dexterity of Bach can also be heard | 0:06:15 | 0:06:19 | |
in the music of Gabriel Faure, | 0:06:19 | 0:06:21 | |
perhaps the most talented of these French organist-composers. | 0:06:21 | 0:06:25 | |
Listening to Faure after Brahms, Liszt, Wagner or Tchaikovsky, | 0:06:39 | 0:06:44 | |
it's as if someone has spring-cleaned and redecorated | 0:06:44 | 0:06:47 | |
a teenage boy's bedroom. | 0:06:47 | 0:06:49 | |
Gone are the posters of death, psychological torment, | 0:06:49 | 0:06:52 | |
superheroes and tragedy. | 0:06:52 | 0:06:54 | |
The augmented piles of clothes have been put away | 0:06:54 | 0:06:57 | |
and the windows have been opened | 0:06:57 | 0:06:59 | |
to dispel the diminished sneaker-smelling air. | 0:06:59 | 0:07:02 | |
Faure's exquisite music simply says, "Chill," | 0:07:02 | 0:07:05 | |
or, perhaps, refrigerez-vous. | 0:07:05 | 0:07:07 | |
The exquisite pieces of Satie, Saint-Saens, Faure | 0:07:19 | 0:07:23 | |
and the new wave of French composers were mostly small in scale. | 0:07:23 | 0:07:27 | |
The next important step in the non-Wagner rebellion took place | 0:07:28 | 0:07:32 | |
in the realm of symphonic music. | 0:07:32 | 0:07:35 | |
And the composer who carried the torch | 0:07:36 | 0:07:38 | |
for large-scale orchestral and vocal music after Wagner | 0:07:38 | 0:07:42 | |
was about as different from him as a human being could be. | 0:07:42 | 0:07:46 | |
Though he championed Wagner's operas | 0:07:46 | 0:07:48 | |
as music director of the Vienna State Opera House, | 0:07:48 | 0:07:50 | |
Wagner would have despised him because he was Jewish. | 0:07:50 | 0:07:53 | |
He was Gustav Mahler. | 0:07:53 | 0:07:55 | |
The hallmark of Mahler's music is that of openness. | 0:08:02 | 0:08:05 | |
Unlike Wagner, Mahler invited into his music | 0:08:05 | 0:08:08 | |
all the sounds and rhythms and the noisy diversity | 0:08:08 | 0:08:12 | |
of the bustling East European communities at Vienna's doorstep, | 0:08:12 | 0:08:16 | |
capital of the sprawling Austro-Hungarian empire. | 0:08:16 | 0:08:19 | |
As an outsider in Vienna - a Jew, a Czech, | 0:08:24 | 0:08:28 | |
a poor country boy in a profession full of toffs - | 0:08:28 | 0:08:31 | |
it's not surprising that Mahler should identify | 0:08:31 | 0:08:33 | |
with the folklore and music of his small-town childhood. | 0:08:33 | 0:08:37 | |
In his symphonies it's possible to identify, for example, | 0:08:38 | 0:08:42 | |
the Klezmer style of strolling Jewish folk musicians. | 0:08:42 | 0:08:45 | |
His music encompasses passing military bands. | 0:08:48 | 0:08:52 | |
And he's not afraid to include boisterous children's choruses. | 0:09:02 | 0:09:06 | |
Mahler's symphonies are music's gateway to the 20th century, | 0:09:12 | 0:09:16 | |
a musical equivalent of New York's Ellis Island, | 0:09:16 | 0:09:19 | |
where Europe's exhausted and oppressed peoples | 0:09:19 | 0:09:22 | |
sought refuge and a new start. | 0:09:22 | 0:09:24 | |
The musical cultures they left behind in Europe | 0:09:24 | 0:09:27 | |
found a home in Mahler's generous symphonic embrace. | 0:09:27 | 0:09:31 | |
One way we can see a modern perspective emerging in his music is | 0:09:34 | 0:09:37 | |
its sense of reality, of truthfulness, warts and all. | 0:09:37 | 0:09:41 | |
The frankness of his approach is a major break with the past | 0:09:41 | 0:09:44 | |
and is much more characteristic of the 20th than the 19th centuries. | 0:09:44 | 0:09:48 | |
How can music be honest? | 0:09:48 | 0:09:51 | |
Well, before Mahler if you were composer | 0:09:51 | 0:09:53 | |
and you wanted to write a piece about loneliness or despair or depression, | 0:09:53 | 0:09:57 | |
you'd call it something generic like a nocturne, or a sonata pathetique. | 0:09:57 | 0:10:03 | |
In an opera you could have singers act out emotional or political issues | 0:10:03 | 0:10:08 | |
pretending to be someone from another era, in a fancy costume. | 0:10:08 | 0:10:11 | |
But Mahler stopped all this role-playing. | 0:10:12 | 0:10:15 | |
He wanted to evoke the real, contemporary world | 0:10:15 | 0:10:17 | |
with all its actual suffering and joy, without pretence. | 0:10:17 | 0:10:21 | |
He told it how it was. | 0:10:21 | 0:10:23 | |
Mahler took our worst fears and set them to music. | 0:10:23 | 0:10:26 | |
This may seem an unremarkable concept to us | 0:10:26 | 0:10:29 | |
but in 1900 it was shockingly, distressingly new. | 0:10:29 | 0:10:33 | |
The unflinching honesty of Mahler's approach is at times unbearable. | 0:10:33 | 0:10:38 | |
From 1901, for example, | 0:10:38 | 0:10:40 | |
he set to music five German poems called Kindertotenlieder - | 0:10:40 | 0:10:44 | |
Songs On The Death Of Children. | 0:10:44 | 0:10:46 | |
The sentiments of the songs are those of a parent's most unspeakable nightmares. | 0:10:46 | 0:10:51 | |
MEZZO SINGING IN GERMAN | 0:10:51 | 0:10:53 | |
In Mahler's unflinching settings, | 0:11:30 | 0:11:32 | |
these distant people of another century suddenly become like us. | 0:11:32 | 0:11:37 | |
He's made them real. | 0:11:37 | 0:11:38 | |
In a horrible irony, four years after he wrote the songs | 0:11:38 | 0:11:42 | |
Mahler's own five-year-old daughter, Anna-Maria, died of scarlet fever, | 0:11:42 | 0:11:46 | |
and Mahler himself was diagnosed with a terminal heart condition. | 0:11:46 | 0:11:50 | |
When he died in 1911 he was laid to rest in her grave. | 0:11:50 | 0:11:54 | |
But despite the understandable sadness and alienation we hear in his music | 0:12:01 | 0:12:05 | |
there is, incredibly, hope of something better, | 0:12:05 | 0:12:08 | |
usually associated with childhood and youth, | 0:12:08 | 0:12:11 | |
as in his Song Of The Earth. | 0:12:11 | 0:12:13 | |
The final chord of The Song Of The Earth was described | 0:12:14 | 0:12:18 | |
by the mid-20th century English composer Benjamin Britten | 0:12:18 | 0:12:21 | |
as being "imprinted on the atmosphere." | 0:12:21 | 0:12:24 | |
STRINGS, HARP AND OBOE CREATE A WASH OF SOUND | 0:12:24 | 0:12:28 | |
-MEZZO: -# Ewig... # | 0:12:35 | 0:12:40 | |
MUSIC FADES | 0:12:45 | 0:12:49 | |
But there's something else going on in Mahler's music | 0:12:56 | 0:12:59 | |
that wasn't perhaps obvious at the time. | 0:12:59 | 0:13:01 | |
It's deceptive. | 0:13:01 | 0:13:03 | |
Because of its all-inclusive style | 0:13:03 | 0:13:05 | |
with its borrowings from ethnic folk music | 0:13:05 | 0:13:07 | |
and because of the intensity of feeling he wanted to convey, | 0:13:07 | 0:13:11 | |
Mahler's music began to destabilise | 0:13:11 | 0:13:13 | |
the centuries-old Western musical system he'd inherited. | 0:13:13 | 0:13:17 | |
His pupils in Vienna, led by Arnold Schoenberg, | 0:13:17 | 0:13:21 | |
actively wanted to dismantle completely | 0:13:21 | 0:13:24 | |
the familiar systems that had underpinned all music | 0:13:24 | 0:13:27 | |
for hundreds of years | 0:13:27 | 0:13:28 | |
and replace them with a brand new system. | 0:13:28 | 0:13:31 | |
This academic rebellion was later labelled serialism, or atonality, | 0:13:42 | 0:13:47 | |
and it produced decades of scholarly hot air, books, debates and seminars. | 0:13:47 | 0:13:52 | |
And, in its purest, strictest form, not one piece of music | 0:13:52 | 0:13:56 | |
that a normal person could understand or enjoy in 100 years. | 0:13:56 | 0:14:01 | |
That's not to say that serialism hasn't always had a cultish following | 0:14:04 | 0:14:08 | |
but for sure these composers weren't courting a mainstream audience. | 0:14:08 | 0:14:12 | |
Had serialism had any chance of appealing to a paying public, | 0:14:20 | 0:14:23 | |
one composer who would surely have opted into it | 0:14:23 | 0:14:27 | |
was the musical magpie Richard Strauss, | 0:14:27 | 0:14:29 | |
Germany's leading composer after Mahler's death. | 0:14:29 | 0:14:33 | |
But he had other, far more mischievous plans up his sleeve. | 0:14:33 | 0:14:37 | |
He began his career conventionally enough | 0:14:37 | 0:14:40 | |
in a musical style that owed much to Liszt | 0:14:40 | 0:14:43 | |
and a little to Wagner. | 0:14:43 | 0:14:44 | |
Thus Spake Zarathustra is pretty typical, | 0:14:45 | 0:14:47 | |
with its now legendary opening, Sunrise, made even more famous | 0:14:47 | 0:14:52 | |
by Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. | 0:14:52 | 0:14:56 | |
Kubrick uses the power of the piece | 0:14:58 | 0:14:59 | |
to underscore a momentous leap forward in the evolution of Man. | 0:14:59 | 0:15:03 | |
The power of the idea the film wants to convey, | 0:15:38 | 0:15:40 | |
man's discovery of weapons, needs equally portentous music. | 0:15:40 | 0:15:45 | |
No one did it better than Strauss. | 0:15:45 | 0:15:47 | |
And yet, the ever-versatile Strauss | 0:15:57 | 0:16:00 | |
could also write songs of heart-breaking, Mahlerish delicacy, | 0:16:00 | 0:16:04 | |
like the song Tomorrow, composed as a wedding present for his wife. | 0:16:04 | 0:16:08 | |
On the surface of it the words of Morgen! seem | 0:16:27 | 0:16:31 | |
to be optimistic about the future. | 0:16:31 | 0:16:33 | |
"And tomorrow the sun will shine again." | 0:16:33 | 0:16:35 | |
But it's also strangely melancholy. | 0:16:35 | 0:16:37 | |
It seems to suggest, in fact, that there will be no tomorrow. | 0:16:37 | 0:16:42 | |
It seemed at this point as if Strauss would continue to compose | 0:16:46 | 0:16:49 | |
in this wistful but fairly traditional manner. | 0:16:49 | 0:16:52 | |
But then he suddenly catapulted himself into musical notoriety | 0:16:52 | 0:16:57 | |
with an opera of savage, erotic power | 0:16:57 | 0:17:00 | |
that shocked bourgeois society and created a sensation. | 0:17:00 | 0:17:03 | |
In one fell swoop, | 0:17:03 | 0:17:05 | |
from being the genteel Kapellmeister of the Austrian Belle Epoch, | 0:17:05 | 0:17:09 | |
Strauss had transformed himself into the Che Guevara | 0:17:09 | 0:17:13 | |
of the musical rebels. | 0:17:13 | 0:17:14 | |
The opera in question was Salome, staged in 1905. | 0:17:16 | 0:17:20 | |
It was immediately banned in several countries | 0:17:27 | 0:17:30 | |
and it gave new meaning to the term discord... | 0:17:30 | 0:17:33 | |
..even before Salome herself had stripped off | 0:17:40 | 0:17:43 | |
for the Dance Of The Seven Veils | 0:17:43 | 0:17:45 | |
and scandalised the first night audience. | 0:17:45 | 0:17:48 | |
Salome's final, passionate solo, | 0:17:54 | 0:17:56 | |
addressed to the severed head of John the Baptist, | 0:17:56 | 0:17:59 | |
which she then kisses, was the Quentin Tarantino moment. | 0:17:59 | 0:18:03 | |
You can either read Salome as a strong, independent young woman | 0:18:10 | 0:18:13 | |
who gets what she wants by exploiting her sexuality, | 0:18:13 | 0:18:16 | |
cleverly outwitting her stepfather the king in the process, | 0:18:16 | 0:18:20 | |
or as a kind of demented junkie | 0:18:20 | 0:18:22 | |
who lowers humanity's moral standards to rock bottom. | 0:18:22 | 0:18:25 | |
Take your pick. | 0:18:25 | 0:18:27 | |
Strauss apparently hedges his bets, | 0:18:27 | 0:18:29 | |
giving the first mention of the necrophiliac kiss | 0:18:29 | 0:18:32 | |
possibly the most dissonant chord ever used in music at that point. | 0:18:32 | 0:18:36 | |
It's like the final howl of a busted civilisation. | 0:18:36 | 0:18:40 | |
HIGH DISCORD | 0:18:40 | 0:18:42 | |
CLUSTER OF NOTES | 0:18:42 | 0:18:44 | |
But we're not finished with her yet. | 0:18:47 | 0:18:49 | |
After asking whether the taste of blood on his lips is | 0:18:49 | 0:18:52 | |
actually the taste of love, | 0:18:52 | 0:18:54 | |
Salome revisits the kiss in supreme triumph. | 0:18:54 | 0:18:57 | |
"I have now kissed your mouth, Jochanaan," she screams | 0:18:57 | 0:19:02 | |
and Strauss unleashes a musical earthquake | 0:19:02 | 0:19:05 | |
which might be construed as a sexual consummation. | 0:19:05 | 0:19:08 | |
Again, make up your own mind. | 0:19:08 | 0:19:11 | |
GRAND, ECSTATIC MUSIC | 0:19:11 | 0:19:13 | |
King Herod, who had encouraged his stepdaughter to dance in the first place, | 0:19:32 | 0:19:37 | |
now ordered his soldiers to kill her. | 0:19:37 | 0:19:40 | |
For this climax Strauss reserved his most discordant and angry music yet. | 0:19:46 | 0:19:50 | |
VIOLENT, DISCORDANT MUSIC | 0:19:50 | 0:19:52 | |
REPEATED BRASS CHORDS | 0:19:56 | 0:19:57 | |
At this point in musical history | 0:20:02 | 0:20:04 | |
it looked as though the dominance of Austro-German music | 0:20:04 | 0:20:07 | |
that began with Bach in 1700 might continue indefinitely. | 0:20:07 | 0:20:12 | |
Instead, a new force had emerged | 0:20:12 | 0:20:15 | |
and was by the early 20th century | 0:20:15 | 0:20:17 | |
the most exhilarating sound in Europe. | 0:20:17 | 0:20:20 | |
In the closing decades of the 19th century | 0:20:20 | 0:20:22 | |
the sleeping giant of Russia had awoken. | 0:20:22 | 0:20:26 | |
Music was never going to be the same again. | 0:20:26 | 0:20:29 | |
And when it comes to rebellions, Russia is in a class of its own. | 0:20:31 | 0:20:34 | |
For all of the 18th and most of the 19th centuries | 0:20:46 | 0:20:49 | |
Russia doggedly copied the culture of Western Europe, | 0:20:49 | 0:20:53 | |
which the Russian court deemed more sophisticated and interesting | 0:20:53 | 0:20:56 | |
than anything home-grown. | 0:20:56 | 0:20:58 | |
Even Russia's most famous composer of them all, Tchaikovsky, | 0:21:00 | 0:21:03 | |
who became a worldwide star in the 1880s and '90s, | 0:21:03 | 0:21:06 | |
was still composing in a style that owed more to Beethoven or Brahms | 0:21:06 | 0:21:11 | |
than to anything he'd picked up on the banks of the Volga. | 0:21:11 | 0:21:14 | |
But there was something Tchaikovsky excelled at | 0:21:14 | 0:21:17 | |
that was distinctly Russian | 0:21:17 | 0:21:18 | |
and that contained within it the seeds of a coming revolution - | 0:21:18 | 0:21:21 | |
dance. | 0:21:21 | 0:21:23 | |
If for Italians the supreme expression of their love of music | 0:21:34 | 0:21:38 | |
was the emotionally charged operatic aria, | 0:21:38 | 0:21:41 | |
for Russians it was dance, | 0:21:41 | 0:21:43 | |
and Tchaikovsky wrote some of the most celebrated and memorable | 0:21:43 | 0:21:46 | |
dance music of all time. | 0:21:46 | 0:21:48 | |
The result of this flowering of dance is | 0:22:15 | 0:22:17 | |
that the need for a driving rhythm | 0:22:17 | 0:22:20 | |
began to change the character of the music itself, | 0:22:20 | 0:22:23 | |
making it more robust, muscular and exciting. | 0:22:23 | 0:22:27 | |
Russian music was about to explode into life | 0:22:27 | 0:22:30 | |
in a manner that was unprecedented, | 0:22:30 | 0:22:33 | |
and subsequently unmatched in history. | 0:22:33 | 0:22:36 | |
In Russia the invigorating, regulated beat of dance is everywhere, | 0:22:41 | 0:22:45 | |
at the ballet, in operas, on the concert stage, | 0:22:45 | 0:22:47 | |
lilting, driving, whirling, tiptoeing, leaping, gliding, | 0:22:47 | 0:22:51 | |
jumping, gyrating and twirling - | 0:22:51 | 0:22:53 | |
Russian music can't get enough of it. | 0:22:53 | 0:22:55 | |
Presumably, it's the cold - | 0:22:55 | 0:22:57 | |
you have to keep moving or your circulation will pack in. | 0:22:57 | 0:23:00 | |
The rhythms of dance first powered this Russian awakening. | 0:23:10 | 0:23:14 | |
The second vital element which changed the melody and harmony | 0:23:14 | 0:23:17 | |
came from a renewed interest in Russia's own religious heritage. | 0:23:17 | 0:23:22 | |
PRIEST CHANTING | 0:23:22 | 0:23:24 | |
A new breed of composers, starting in the 1880s, | 0:23:26 | 0:23:29 | |
turned their attention, not to the musical traditions of Western Europe, | 0:23:29 | 0:23:33 | |
but to those of their own, | 0:23:33 | 0:23:35 | |
especially the centuries-old Russian Orthodox chants, | 0:23:35 | 0:23:39 | |
with their deep basses and thick eight or 16-voice block chords. | 0:23:39 | 0:23:43 | |
In the decades to follow, this ancient sound, | 0:23:50 | 0:23:53 | |
known as Znamenny Chant, was to flow like a river | 0:23:53 | 0:23:56 | |
into the choral texture of all Russian composers. | 0:23:56 | 0:24:00 | |
No longer did they look west for inspiration. | 0:24:00 | 0:24:03 | |
The fuse-lighter of the Russian firework display about to unfold, | 0:24:06 | 0:24:10 | |
the truly original, creative path-finder, | 0:24:10 | 0:24:13 | |
wasn't cosmopolitan, well-travelled friend of the Romanovs Tchaikovsky, | 0:24:13 | 0:24:18 | |
but a former military cadet who worked in the civil service | 0:24:18 | 0:24:21 | |
and had a fatal vodka habit - Modest Mussorgsky. | 0:24:21 | 0:24:25 | |
MUSIC: "Promenade Pictures At An Exhibition" | 0:24:25 | 0:24:28 | |
Mussorgsky is quite simply the most original composer of the late 19th century, | 0:24:32 | 0:24:37 | |
a one-off whose ideas were new, | 0:24:37 | 0:24:40 | |
not derived from other composers of his time. | 0:24:40 | 0:24:43 | |
There's a reason for this. | 0:24:44 | 0:24:46 | |
Mussorgsky wasn't musically trained at a conservatoire | 0:24:46 | 0:24:49 | |
and he wasn't a professional composer. | 0:24:49 | 0:24:51 | |
He was self-taught | 0:24:51 | 0:24:52 | |
and therefore blissfully unaware of the rules he was breaking. | 0:24:52 | 0:24:56 | |
It was like he'd wandered onto Tsarist Russia's Got Talent, | 0:24:56 | 0:25:00 | |
slightly drunk, and started improvising at the piano, | 0:25:00 | 0:25:04 | |
to everyone's amazement. | 0:25:04 | 0:25:06 | |
"Promenade - Pictures At An Exhibition" | 0:25:06 | 0:25:09 | |
But despite the naivety of his style, | 0:25:22 | 0:25:24 | |
which earned him more than a little ridicule at the time, | 0:25:24 | 0:25:26 | |
Mussorgsky showed that Russian music could carve its own identity. | 0:25:26 | 0:25:30 | |
To see how radically the music of Russia had changed | 0:25:40 | 0:25:43 | |
in fewer than 40 years, | 0:25:43 | 0:25:45 | |
listen to this coronation scene from A Life For The Tsar, | 0:25:45 | 0:25:48 | |
an opera written by the Russian composer Mikhail Glinka in 1836. | 0:25:48 | 0:25:54 | |
BIG, FOURSQUARE CHORDS | 0:25:54 | 0:25:57 | |
Glinka had his musical training in Italy, Austria and Germany, | 0:26:03 | 0:26:07 | |
and it shows. | 0:26:07 | 0:26:09 | |
BRAHMSLIKE WRITING | 0:26:09 | 0:26:11 | |
Now listen to another Kremlin coronation scene | 0:26:16 | 0:26:19 | |
from the thoroughly Russian opera by Mussorgsky, Boris Godunov. | 0:26:19 | 0:26:23 | |
VIVID, ENERGETIC MUSIC | 0:26:23 | 0:26:25 | |
This time, complete with colours, voices and glittering effects, | 0:26:41 | 0:26:45 | |
tolling bells and echoing orchestra chimes, | 0:26:45 | 0:26:48 | |
it's been thoroughly Russianised. | 0:26:48 | 0:26:50 | |
Mussorgsky died in 1881, his music virtually unknown outside of Russia. | 0:26:54 | 0:26:59 | |
But that was about to change. | 0:26:59 | 0:27:01 | |
"Carnival Of The Animals" by Saint-Saens. | 0:27:01 | 0:27:04 | |
So many of the seeds of the rebellions of late 19th century music | 0:27:09 | 0:27:13 | |
can be traced to one extraordinarily fertile event. | 0:27:13 | 0:27:16 | |
It took place in Paris in 1889, the centenary of the French Revolution. | 0:27:16 | 0:27:22 | |
It was the World's Fair. | 0:27:22 | 0:27:24 | |
Here in the Trocadero, which overlooked the newly-built Eiffel Tower, | 0:27:30 | 0:27:34 | |
Widor first played his famous organ Toccata | 0:27:34 | 0:27:37 | |
and here also non-Russian composers heard | 0:27:37 | 0:27:41 | |
the music of Mussorgsky for the first time. | 0:27:41 | 0:27:44 | |
One such composer, then aged 27, was Claude Debussy. | 0:27:44 | 0:27:48 | |
His visit to the World's Fair was a life- and music-changing experience. | 0:27:48 | 0:27:53 | |
What Debussy learnt from Mussorgsky | 0:27:55 | 0:27:57 | |
was that there was a way of building up the architecture of a piece of music | 0:27:57 | 0:28:00 | |
that was an alternative to the developmental method | 0:28:00 | 0:28:03 | |
that was bread and butter to Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven. | 0:28:03 | 0:28:06 | |
The development approach was to take small cells of melody or rhythm, | 0:28:06 | 0:28:10 | |
or both, and make up a whole discourse from them | 0:28:10 | 0:28:14 | |
over a 15 or 20 minute period. | 0:28:14 | 0:28:16 | |
So Beethoven is able to construct a whole symphony movement from this tiny idea. | 0:28:16 | 0:28:21 | |
MOTIF FROM BEETHOVEN'S FIFTH | 0:28:21 | 0:28:23 | |
Count how many times he uses it in just the first 40 bars of the symphony. | 0:28:23 | 0:28:26 | |
HE MOUTHS | 0:28:28 | 0:28:29 | |
That's 13. | 0:28:42 | 0:28:44 | |
That's already 33, and counting. | 0:29:00 | 0:29:03 | |
Debussy, inspired by Mussorgsky, | 0:29:06 | 0:29:08 | |
ditched 100 years of studious development technique | 0:29:08 | 0:29:12 | |
and started over - | 0:29:12 | 0:29:13 | |
Mussorgsky, because he knew no better, | 0:29:13 | 0:29:15 | |
and Debussy, because it suited his taste for experiment. | 0:29:15 | 0:29:19 | |
GAMELAN PLAYS | 0:29:20 | 0:29:22 | |
What revolutionised Debussy's music more than anything, though, was | 0:29:26 | 0:29:30 | |
a wind of change blowing to the Paris World's Fair from very far afield. | 0:29:30 | 0:29:34 | |
The World's Fair showcased exhibits and cultural tableaux | 0:29:38 | 0:29:42 | |
from all over the planet. | 0:29:42 | 0:29:44 | |
Thanks to increased communications, | 0:29:45 | 0:29:47 | |
the global village was starting to become a reality. | 0:29:47 | 0:29:50 | |
What especially mesmerised Debussy was a Javanese village, | 0:29:52 | 0:29:56 | |
complete with a gamelan orchestra, | 0:29:56 | 0:29:58 | |
with its gongs, bells, bowls and xylophone-like chimes. | 0:29:58 | 0:30:03 | |
The particular sonorities and scales of the Gamelan orchestra | 0:30:04 | 0:30:07 | |
intrigued Debussy so much he was inspired to attempt | 0:30:07 | 0:30:10 | |
an evocation of its Eastern sounds on a Western piano. | 0:30:10 | 0:30:14 | |
Although he couldn't replicate the unfamiliar tuning of the bells, | 0:30:14 | 0:30:18 | |
gongs, and other metal bars of the gamelan, | 0:30:18 | 0:30:21 | |
or the exact division of the Asian musical scale, | 0:30:21 | 0:30:24 | |
he could approximate it in two ways. | 0:30:24 | 0:30:27 | |
One was to make use of the so-called pentatonic scale, | 0:30:27 | 0:30:30 | |
the five notes that are common to all the world's musical systems | 0:30:30 | 0:30:34 | |
and which are especially prevalent in Eastern music. | 0:30:34 | 0:30:36 | |
On a piano the pentatonic notes can be found by playing just the black notes. | 0:30:36 | 0:30:41 | |
There's a whole section of his prelude Voiles, sails, | 0:30:46 | 0:30:50 | |
which is all pentatonic. | 0:30:50 | 0:30:51 | |
The other trick Debussy deployed was to allow his chords to hang over each other, | 0:31:22 | 0:31:26 | |
overlapping and ricocheting from one to the next. | 0:31:26 | 0:31:30 | |
This technique, on a piano at any rate, | 0:31:30 | 0:31:32 | |
has the effect of eking out | 0:31:32 | 0:31:34 | |
the sympathetic resonances, or harmonics, | 0:31:34 | 0:31:37 | |
latent in the reverberating strings. | 0:31:37 | 0:31:40 | |
Natural harmonics are hidden extra notes, usually quite high in pitch, | 0:31:43 | 0:31:48 | |
that are found within any given sound, | 0:31:48 | 0:31:50 | |
like the additional colours of the spectrum | 0:31:50 | 0:31:52 | |
contained within white light. | 0:31:52 | 0:31:54 | |
Every time you allow the felt dampers on a piano to clamp down on the strings | 0:31:54 | 0:31:58 | |
you shut off the natural harmonics from resonating. | 0:31:58 | 0:32:02 | |
CHORD STOPS | 0:32:03 | 0:32:04 | |
But Debussy wanted to do the opposite, | 0:32:07 | 0:32:09 | |
to allow the strings to ring like they would on a harp. | 0:32:09 | 0:32:13 | |
His hanging chords with the dampers kept away from the strings | 0:32:13 | 0:32:17 | |
were a kind of return to nature. | 0:32:17 | 0:32:19 | |
"Claire de Lune" by Debussy | 0:32:20 | 0:32:22 | |
Putting these ideas into action, | 0:32:33 | 0:32:35 | |
Debussy created a new soundscape for the piano. | 0:32:35 | 0:32:38 | |
The reformation of scales and harmonies that he introduced | 0:32:38 | 0:32:42 | |
offered a whole new palette of aural possibilities. | 0:32:42 | 0:32:45 | |
The piano had never sounded so exotic and so rich. | 0:32:45 | 0:32:48 | |
By recalibrating the traditional Western scale on Eastern lines, | 0:33:18 | 0:33:23 | |
Debussy's music was a radical departure | 0:33:23 | 0:33:26 | |
from the classical style he'd grown up with, | 0:33:26 | 0:33:28 | |
and his harmonic experiments based on Asian sound combinations | 0:33:28 | 0:33:33 | |
were still influencing musicians, especially in jazz, half a century later. | 0:33:33 | 0:33:38 | |
As well as kicking off a highly fruitful interest | 0:33:57 | 0:33:59 | |
in what we'd call world music, | 0:33:59 | 0:34:01 | |
the World's Fair in Paris had also put the new music of Russia on the map. | 0:34:01 | 0:34:06 | |
Another of St Petersburg's musical dynamos, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, | 0:34:07 | 0:34:12 | |
took over the torch and mined the golden seam of Slavic folklore | 0:34:12 | 0:34:16 | |
in a series of operatic pageants put on around the turn of the century. | 0:34:16 | 0:34:20 | |
Rimsky didn't just use folk stories in his plots. | 0:34:20 | 0:34:25 | |
Crucially he also started to borrow the melodic building blocks of Russian folk music. | 0:34:25 | 0:34:30 | |
These sparkling entertainments laid down a challenge | 0:34:52 | 0:34:55 | |
to Rimsky-Korsakov's most talented pupil, then a complete unknown. | 0:34:55 | 0:35:00 | |
That challenge was to blaze a path for Russian music | 0:35:00 | 0:35:03 | |
and put Russia onto the cultural map once and for all, | 0:35:03 | 0:35:07 | |
and boy, was the challenge accepted. | 0:35:07 | 0:35:10 | |
Rimsky-Korsakov's pupil was Igor Stravinsky. | 0:35:10 | 0:35:13 | |
Stravinsky's combustible arrival on the world music scene | 0:35:17 | 0:35:20 | |
was stage-managed | 0:35:20 | 0:35:21 | |
by an entrepreneurial art, dance and music impresario, Sergei Diaghilev. | 0:35:21 | 0:35:27 | |
In 1909 he created a dance company in Paris, the Ballets Russes, | 0:35:27 | 0:35:31 | |
in order to produce annual festivals of modernist Russian ballets. | 0:35:31 | 0:35:36 | |
He approached Stravinsky to compose the music for one | 0:35:36 | 0:35:39 | |
based on an ancient Russian fairytale, The Firebird. | 0:35:39 | 0:35:42 | |
When he was commissioned Stravinsky was unknown | 0:35:46 | 0:35:49 | |
and third choice for the job. | 0:35:49 | 0:35:51 | |
Three years later he was both the most notorious | 0:35:51 | 0:35:54 | |
and the most eagerly championed composer in all Europe. | 0:35:54 | 0:35:57 | |
The Firebird's scenario, | 0:35:58 | 0:36:00 | |
an amalgam of several versions of folk tales about a magical bird, | 0:36:00 | 0:36:04 | |
combines supernatural characters and beasts with the natural, | 0:36:04 | 0:36:08 | |
the fantastical world with the human world. | 0:36:08 | 0:36:11 | |
Stravinsky gives these two worlds different styles of music. | 0:36:13 | 0:36:17 | |
Human characters, like the 12 princesses in the story, are given | 0:36:17 | 0:36:20 | |
folk song derived melodies based on the common Western musical scale. | 0:36:20 | 0:36:24 | |
C MAJOR SCALE | 0:36:25 | 0:36:26 | |
The fantastical creatures and characters on the other hand are allotted | 0:37:16 | 0:37:20 | |
a much more exotic and complex musical palette, | 0:37:20 | 0:37:23 | |
often based on the so-called octotonic scale. | 0:37:23 | 0:37:26 | |
SEQUENCE OF TONES AND SEMITONES | 0:37:27 | 0:37:29 | |
This non-Western sounding octotonic scale had been the feature | 0:37:31 | 0:37:35 | |
of the music of Stravinsky's teacher, Rimsky-Korsakov, | 0:37:35 | 0:37:38 | |
especially when depicting the magical, malevolent | 0:37:38 | 0:37:41 | |
or the mysterious. | 0:37:41 | 0:37:43 | |
When Stravinsky borrows from Russian ethnic folk music like this | 0:37:59 | 0:38:03 | |
he doesn't lift it straight | 0:38:03 | 0:38:05 | |
but distorts it through a mischievous prism. | 0:38:05 | 0:38:07 | |
In field recordings of peasant folk music, | 0:38:07 | 0:38:10 | |
the educated, bourgeois Stravinsky had discovered | 0:38:10 | 0:38:14 | |
a raw, ritualistic world | 0:38:14 | 0:38:16 | |
from way beyond the frontiers of industrial civilisation. | 0:38:16 | 0:38:19 | |
His instinct to repackage it for a Parisian audience | 0:38:19 | 0:38:23 | |
was brilliantly provocative. | 0:38:23 | 0:38:25 | |
Stravinsky's rebellion against established musical conventions | 0:38:33 | 0:38:37 | |
wasn't just about exotic scales and weird jingly-jangly sounds | 0:38:37 | 0:38:42 | |
he injected into the orchestra. | 0:38:42 | 0:38:45 | |
Stravinsky, like Mussorgsky and Debussy before him, | 0:38:45 | 0:38:48 | |
wanted to find a way of assembling a musical structure | 0:38:48 | 0:38:51 | |
without using constantly developing nuggets of tune. | 0:38:51 | 0:38:55 | |
Stravinsky in particular wanted to tell his ballet stories | 0:38:57 | 0:39:00 | |
a different way. | 0:39:00 | 0:39:01 | |
He created a montage, an aural jigsaw, | 0:39:01 | 0:39:05 | |
one tune followed by a different tune, followed by a different tune | 0:39:05 | 0:39:08 | |
in tumbling succession. | 0:39:08 | 0:39:10 | |
For this reason, ballet, with its short, restless kaleidoscopic episodes, | 0:39:10 | 0:39:15 | |
was the form for which Stravinsky was born to compose. | 0:39:15 | 0:39:19 | |
We find the idea of musical collage, the mix, | 0:39:38 | 0:39:41 | |
the remix, the iPod shuffle and the mash-up, completely normal, | 0:39:41 | 0:39:45 | |
but we shouldn't forget | 0:39:45 | 0:39:47 | |
how bewilderingly unfamiliar an idea this was | 0:39:47 | 0:39:50 | |
to the musical establishment of the early 1900s. | 0:39:50 | 0:39:54 | |
When the Ballets Russes took Stravinsky's second ballet, Petrushka, to Vienna in 1913 | 0:39:54 | 0:40:01 | |
the scandalised musicians refused to play it, | 0:40:01 | 0:40:04 | |
describing it as "dirty music". | 0:40:04 | 0:40:07 | |
All of the radicals, Mahler, Debussy and Stravinsky, | 0:40:07 | 0:40:10 | |
were dismantling the old system | 0:40:10 | 0:40:11 | |
whereby musical ideas carefully unfolded, one thing after another. | 0:40:11 | 0:40:17 | |
They wanted everything at once. | 0:40:17 | 0:40:19 | |
Stravinsky, like all Russian composers, was turned on | 0:40:20 | 0:40:23 | |
by the rhythmic urgency of dance | 0:40:23 | 0:40:26 | |
but he did something very unusual with that rhythm. | 0:40:26 | 0:40:29 | |
Whilst Mahler had layered melody on melody, | 0:40:29 | 0:40:32 | |
tangled together like a twisted knot, | 0:40:32 | 0:40:35 | |
and Debussy had manipulated blocks of adjacent sound overlapping one another, | 0:40:35 | 0:40:40 | |
Stravinsky went one step further, | 0:40:40 | 0:40:42 | |
superimposing simultaneous rhythms on top of each other. | 0:40:42 | 0:40:46 | |
Polyrhythm, as it has since been dubbed, | 0:40:49 | 0:40:51 | |
had long existed in African tribal drumming, | 0:40:51 | 0:40:54 | |
improvised on the spot by highly intuitive, skilful players. | 0:40:54 | 0:40:58 | |
But polyrhythm, conceived from scratch by a composer, | 0:41:01 | 0:41:05 | |
written down on the page, | 0:41:05 | 0:41:07 | |
imposed on the Western symphony orchestra player by player, | 0:41:07 | 0:41:10 | |
this was utterly, breathtakingly novel a concept. | 0:41:10 | 0:41:15 | |
It was as if Stravinsky wanted the past and the present to coexist | 0:41:15 | 0:41:18 | |
in one dimension, | 0:41:18 | 0:41:20 | |
the prehistoric ritual of his dancers | 0:41:20 | 0:41:22 | |
and the modern cacophony of the industrial world | 0:41:22 | 0:41:25 | |
and the only way he could conceive it | 0:41:25 | 0:41:28 | |
was to make parallel, competing rhythmic patterns fight | 0:41:28 | 0:41:31 | |
for the same space. | 0:41:31 | 0:41:33 | |
It's complicated but it's magnificent. | 0:41:33 | 0:41:36 | |
But here's the thing. | 0:41:56 | 0:41:57 | |
The Rite of Spring, which premiered a hundred years ago, | 0:41:57 | 0:42:01 | |
was the high-water mark of musical modernism. | 0:42:01 | 0:42:03 | |
It therefore presented progressive music with a dilemma. | 0:42:03 | 0:42:07 | |
Where the hell to go from here? | 0:42:07 | 0:42:09 | |
Neither Stravinsky nor Debussy in 1913 would've guessed | 0:42:09 | 0:42:13 | |
where the answer to that question would come from, | 0:42:13 | 0:42:16 | |
never mind just how massive the forces of change were going to be. | 0:42:16 | 0:42:20 | |
After all, revolutions don't always start with a bang. | 0:42:20 | 0:42:24 | |
'Mary had a little lamb, its fleece was white as snow, | 0:42:25 | 0:42:28 | |
'and everywhere that Mary went the lamb was sure to go.' | 0:42:28 | 0:42:32 | |
Thomas Edison is credited with the invention of recorded sound in 1877 | 0:42:32 | 0:42:36 | |
but in fact the first ever recording was made nearly 20 years earlier, | 0:42:36 | 0:42:41 | |
in France. | 0:42:41 | 0:42:43 | |
This is the earliest-known surviving recording of a person singing, | 0:42:44 | 0:42:48 | |
making the man who made it, Edouard-Leon Scott de Martinville, | 0:42:48 | 0:42:52 | |
the true inventor of recording, not Edison. | 0:42:52 | 0:42:55 | |
BUZZING NOISE | 0:42:55 | 0:42:57 | |
The recording was made on a machine now virtually forgotten, | 0:42:57 | 0:43:01 | |
the phonautograph. | 0:43:01 | 0:43:03 | |
Here's the amazing bit. | 0:43:03 | 0:43:04 | |
The inventor's aim was to be able to study sound in graph-like form. | 0:43:04 | 0:43:09 | |
What he couldn't do was play the sound back. | 0:43:09 | 0:43:12 | |
Then, in 2008, | 0:43:12 | 0:43:15 | |
American engineers using sophisticated digital technology | 0:43:15 | 0:43:19 | |
were able to convert the markings on the paper back into sound. | 0:43:19 | 0:43:23 | |
The French folk singer of 1860 miraculously sang again. | 0:43:23 | 0:43:28 | |
-BUZZING NOISE -Sort of. | 0:43:28 | 0:43:31 | |
The phonautograph had begun a process | 0:43:34 | 0:43:36 | |
that was totally to transform music. | 0:43:36 | 0:43:39 | |
Very soon after Edison invented a machine | 0:43:39 | 0:43:41 | |
that could play recordings back, | 0:43:41 | 0:43:43 | |
a new breed of musician researcher popped up | 0:43:43 | 0:43:47 | |
in virtually every country, | 0:43:47 | 0:43:48 | |
travelling around remote, rural areas, | 0:43:48 | 0:43:51 | |
recording and preserving the folk songs | 0:43:51 | 0:43:53 | |
they persuaded doubtless bemused locals to perform for them. | 0:43:53 | 0:43:58 | |
These field recordists captured the oral and musical culture | 0:43:58 | 0:44:02 | |
of communities now long disappeared. | 0:44:02 | 0:44:05 | |
SINGING AND DRUMMING | 0:44:05 | 0:44:07 | |
But the real future for recorded sound was in | 0:44:07 | 0:44:10 | |
the reproduction of music that was already popular. | 0:44:10 | 0:44:13 | |
-TENOR: -# Vesti la giubba | 0:44:13 | 0:44:18 | |
# E la faccia infarina... # | 0:44:18 | 0:44:21 | |
The first million-selling record was Caruso's Vesti La Giubba in 1907, | 0:44:21 | 0:44:26 | |
just before radio broadcasts began. | 0:44:26 | 0:44:30 | |
As well as live music, radio also played records, | 0:44:30 | 0:44:32 | |
thus boosting their sales. | 0:44:32 | 0:44:34 | |
# ..t'invola Colombina... # | 0:44:34 | 0:44:41 | |
The advent of recording made | 0:44:41 | 0:44:43 | |
the huge wealth of music already written by 1900 | 0:44:43 | 0:44:47 | |
increasingly available to millions of people across the world, | 0:44:47 | 0:44:50 | |
vastly expanding their musical horizons | 0:44:50 | 0:44:53 | |
and turning something hitherto expensive and elitist | 0:44:53 | 0:44:56 | |
into an ordinary commodity. | 0:44:56 | 0:44:58 | |
This was a very good thing. | 0:44:58 | 0:45:01 | |
Recording also began to put in front of a mass audience | 0:45:01 | 0:45:04 | |
forms of folk and ethnic music that were up to then unknown | 0:45:04 | 0:45:08 | |
outside their local communities. | 0:45:08 | 0:45:10 | |
The music that was boosted most of all by recording, as it turned out, | 0:45:10 | 0:45:14 | |
was that produced by African Americans, | 0:45:14 | 0:45:17 | |
beginning with spiritual songs. | 0:45:17 | 0:45:19 | |
# When Israel was in Egypt's land | 0:45:19 | 0:45:25 | |
# Let my people go | 0:45:25 | 0:45:28 | |
# Oppressed so hard they could not stand | 0:45:28 | 0:45:33 | |
# Let my people go | 0:45:33 | 0:45:37 | |
-# Go down, Moses -# Go down, Moses | 0:45:37 | 0:45:40 | |
# Way down in Egypt's land | 0:45:42 | 0:45:46 | |
# Tell old pharaoh | 0:45:46 | 0:45:50 | |
-# You got to let my people go -# Let them go | 0:45:54 | 0:45:59 | |
# You got to let my people go | 0:45:59 | 0:46:02 | |
# Let them go | 0:46:02 | 0:46:03 | |
# You got to let my people go | 0:46:03 | 0:46:06 | |
# Let them go | 0:46:06 | 0:46:08 | |
# You got to let my people go | 0:46:08 | 0:46:11 | |
# Let them go, let them go | 0:46:11 | 0:46:15 | |
# Let them go. # | 0:46:15 | 0:46:19 | |
Huh! | 0:46:19 | 0:46:20 | |
African American slaves and their descendants | 0:46:20 | 0:46:23 | |
living in conditions of oppressive poverty developed | 0:46:23 | 0:46:26 | |
a form of religious song, the spiritual, | 0:46:26 | 0:46:28 | |
which seems to have been an amalgam | 0:46:28 | 0:46:30 | |
of half-remembered African call and response chants | 0:46:30 | 0:46:34 | |
and missionary hymns. | 0:46:34 | 0:46:36 | |
# Swing low, sweet chariot | 0:46:36 | 0:46:43 | |
# Comin' for to carry me home | 0:46:43 | 0:46:49 | |
# Swing low, sweet chariot... # | 0:46:49 | 0:46:52 | |
These spirituals of the Deep South were rich | 0:46:52 | 0:46:54 | |
with Old Testament references to the slavery of the Israelites, | 0:46:54 | 0:46:58 | |
visions of redemption and heavenly justice. | 0:46:58 | 0:47:02 | |
# I looked over Jordan What did I see? | 0:47:02 | 0:47:07 | |
# Comin' for to carry me home? | 0:47:07 | 0:47:10 | |
# A band of angels Coming after me... # | 0:47:10 | 0:47:15 | |
The existence of the spiritual was for a long time mostly unknown | 0:47:15 | 0:47:19 | |
to the white population of the United States, | 0:47:19 | 0:47:21 | |
let alone the rest of the world but a long fuse had been lit. | 0:47:21 | 0:47:26 | |
# People, they are faithful And like to say a good prayer, too | 0:47:26 | 0:47:32 | |
# If you ask them about their religion | 0:47:32 | 0:47:38 | |
# They'll say they're just as good as you... # | 0:47:38 | 0:47:40 | |
The Fisk Jubilee Singers, who were themselves the children of slaves, | 0:47:40 | 0:47:45 | |
began to make fundraising tours | 0:47:45 | 0:47:47 | |
singing what were called at the time negro spirituals. | 0:47:47 | 0:47:50 | |
But strangely, one of the first musicians | 0:47:50 | 0:47:53 | |
to put this music in front of a middle-class American audience | 0:47:53 | 0:47:56 | |
was an Englishman. | 0:47:56 | 0:47:58 | |
The Edwardian Samuel Coleridge-Taylor caused a sensation | 0:48:08 | 0:48:12 | |
on three trips to the USA, conducting his own compositions. | 0:48:12 | 0:48:17 | |
In one of them we can hear early and tantalising evidence | 0:48:17 | 0:48:20 | |
of the melodic style of what came to be known as the blues, | 0:48:20 | 0:48:23 | |
which, albeit in different disguises, | 0:48:23 | 0:48:25 | |
went on to dominate the music of the 20th century and beyond. | 0:48:25 | 0:48:28 | |
The clues we're looking for | 0:48:28 | 0:48:29 | |
are so-called flattened degrees of the musical ladder, or scale, | 0:48:29 | 0:48:33 | |
at the third and seventh position, | 0:48:33 | 0:48:35 | |
especially when the phrase is heading in a downward direction. | 0:48:35 | 0:48:38 | |
And here they both are, one after another, in this melody. | 0:48:38 | 0:48:42 | |
Third. | 0:48:44 | 0:48:45 | |
Seventh. | 0:48:46 | 0:48:48 | |
The blues, as it developed slowly and piecemeal | 0:48:48 | 0:48:50 | |
amongst former slave communities in the USA | 0:48:50 | 0:48:53 | |
in the final decades of the 19th century, | 0:48:53 | 0:48:55 | |
clung resolutely to the flattened thirds and sevenths, | 0:48:55 | 0:48:58 | |
and does so to the present day. | 0:48:58 | 0:49:00 | |
Indeed, they became known as blue notes. | 0:49:00 | 0:49:03 | |
MAN: Play that thing, boy. | 0:49:17 | 0:49:19 | |
Blue notes, revivalist spirituals, | 0:49:26 | 0:49:29 | |
the call and response or holler songs of the Deep South, | 0:49:29 | 0:49:32 | |
all derived from their African origins, | 0:49:32 | 0:49:34 | |
went into the mixing pot of the early blues. | 0:49:34 | 0:49:36 | |
But also mixed in were chords borrowed | 0:49:36 | 0:49:40 | |
from hymns and parlour and vaudeville songs, | 0:49:40 | 0:49:42 | |
and the folk songs of other members of the American underclass. | 0:49:42 | 0:49:47 | |
MAN SINGS BLUES | 0:49:47 | 0:49:50 | |
There's been considerable research | 0:49:58 | 0:50:00 | |
into song forms of the poorest Americans of all ethnic groups | 0:50:00 | 0:50:03 | |
in the 19th century. | 0:50:03 | 0:50:05 | |
It reveals the influence of Anglo-Celtic folk music | 0:50:05 | 0:50:08 | |
on the growth of the blues. | 0:50:08 | 0:50:10 | |
This folk music was learnt from the African Americans' co-workers | 0:50:10 | 0:50:14 | |
in the cotton fields and on the railroads, | 0:50:14 | 0:50:15 | |
many of whom were from the British Isles. | 0:50:15 | 0:50:18 | |
Amongst these song types are hundreds | 0:50:21 | 0:50:22 | |
which lament the burden and misery of the labourer's life. | 0:50:22 | 0:50:26 | |
Typical is the iconic American work song, | 0:50:29 | 0:50:31 | |
The Ballad of John Henry, The Steel Driving Man, | 0:50:31 | 0:50:34 | |
which eventually became a blues standard. | 0:50:34 | 0:50:37 | |
It celebrates the futile battle | 0:50:37 | 0:50:39 | |
between an African American railroad worker | 0:50:39 | 0:50:41 | |
and a new machine designed to replace him. | 0:50:41 | 0:50:43 | |
Music historians have traced the shape | 0:50:43 | 0:50:46 | |
back to the much earlier British ballad, The Birmingham Boys. | 0:50:46 | 0:50:50 | |
Listen out for the overall storytelling shape | 0:50:50 | 0:50:52 | |
and the repeated line at the end. | 0:50:52 | 0:50:54 | |
# In Birmingham town there lived a man | 0:50:55 | 0:50:58 | |
# And he had such a lovely wife | 0:50:58 | 0:51:02 | |
# And so dearly she loved company | 0:51:02 | 0:51:05 | |
# As dearly as she loved life, boys, life, | 0:51:05 | 0:51:10 | |
# As dearly as she loved life. # | 0:51:10 | 0:51:13 | |
Now here's one of the many later versions of John Henry. | 0:51:13 | 0:51:17 | |
# John Henry was a little baby, sitting on his mother's knee | 0:51:17 | 0:51:24 | |
# He picked up a hammer in his little right hand | 0:51:24 | 0:51:28 | |
# Says, "A hammer's gonna be the death of me, O Lord | 0:51:28 | 0:51:32 | |
# "A hammer's gonna be the death of me." # | 0:51:32 | 0:51:35 | |
One of the changes that's happened to the tune crossing the Atlantic | 0:51:36 | 0:51:40 | |
is that it's become entirely pentatonic. | 0:51:40 | 0:51:42 | |
Remember those five basic notes prevalent in Eastern music | 0:51:42 | 0:51:46 | |
that Debussy imitated? | 0:51:46 | 0:51:47 | |
And who were the other railroad workers | 0:51:52 | 0:51:54 | |
toiling alongside the British, Irish and African American labourers? | 0:51:54 | 0:51:59 | |
Now, even to suggest any European influence | 0:52:05 | 0:52:09 | |
on the blues is controversial, | 0:52:09 | 0:52:10 | |
and it's entirely understandable | 0:52:10 | 0:52:12 | |
that there should be sensitivity about any non-African elements | 0:52:12 | 0:52:16 | |
in the origin of the blues. | 0:52:16 | 0:52:18 | |
Since the music of the slaves, from which it sprang, was | 0:52:18 | 0:52:21 | |
so often a lament, | 0:52:21 | 0:52:22 | |
or a coded protest against the harsh treatment they received, | 0:52:22 | 0:52:26 | |
some African Americans quite naturally resent the idea | 0:52:26 | 0:52:29 | |
that the blues could in any way have been influenced | 0:52:29 | 0:52:32 | |
by the very people who enslaved their ancestors. | 0:52:32 | 0:52:35 | |
But the fact is that music does not observe racial or national boundaries. | 0:52:35 | 0:52:40 | |
It's a free-flowing river, open and available to all cultures, | 0:52:40 | 0:52:44 | |
owned by none. | 0:52:44 | 0:52:47 | |
Whatever elements went into its kit of parts, | 0:52:47 | 0:52:50 | |
the early blues musicians made something | 0:52:50 | 0:52:52 | |
unique and lasting of their own. | 0:52:52 | 0:52:54 | |
This same intermingling of styles and traditions can be seen | 0:52:55 | 0:52:58 | |
in the arrival at around the same time of ragtime, | 0:52:58 | 0:53:02 | |
which became a kind of craze. | 0:53:02 | 0:53:04 | |
Rag or ragtime music originated | 0:53:12 | 0:53:15 | |
in St Louis and Chicago bars and brothels, | 0:53:15 | 0:53:17 | |
from house pianists copying the popular marching band style | 0:53:17 | 0:53:21 | |
of the 1880s and '90s, | 0:53:21 | 0:53:23 | |
a fashion that reached its peak with the band leader John Philip Sousa. | 0:53:23 | 0:53:27 | |
In order to emulate the whole band - bass, accompanying chords and tune - | 0:53:27 | 0:53:32 | |
the pianist had to leap about the keys frantically, | 0:53:32 | 0:53:35 | |
resulting in a quite virtuoso left-hand motion | 0:53:35 | 0:53:37 | |
from bass to chord and back. | 0:53:37 | 0:53:40 | |
On top of this accompanying oom-pa the rag pianists wove a catchy tune | 0:53:47 | 0:53:51 | |
that pulled the rhythm around - a technique called syncopation. | 0:53:51 | 0:53:55 | |
Syncopation is LIKE talk-ING with THE emph-A-sis ON the wrong words | 0:54:08 | 0:54:13 | |
TO cre-ATE a jer-KY sound. | 0:54:13 | 0:54:16 | |
Listen to this bit of Scott Joplin's Maple Leaf Rag without syncopation. | 0:54:16 | 0:54:21 | |
HE PLAYS A SIMPLIFIED VERSION OF RAG | 0:54:22 | 0:54:24 | |
And now with Joplin's syncopations, | 0:54:36 | 0:54:39 | |
which feel like they're tripping ahead of where you'd expect them to fall. | 0:54:39 | 0:54:42 | |
MUSIC: "Maple Leaf Rag" by Joplin | 0:54:42 | 0:54:44 | |
Ragtime picked up syncopation, a playful jumping ahead of a tune, | 0:54:51 | 0:54:55 | |
from the banjo or piano accompaniments for cake walks, | 0:54:55 | 0:54:59 | |
a jokey form of dancing that plantation workers had invented | 0:54:59 | 0:55:02 | |
for their own amusement, | 0:55:02 | 0:55:04 | |
in lampooning imitation of white folks' la-di-da ballroom dancing. | 0:55:04 | 0:55:09 | |
The white folks in question used to enjoy | 0:55:09 | 0:55:12 | |
watching their staff's cake walk parties, | 0:55:12 | 0:55:15 | |
not realising that what they thought was a comic and ludicrous African American dance step | 0:55:15 | 0:55:20 | |
was actually a caricature of them. | 0:55:20 | 0:55:23 | |
Along with the cake walk another offspring of ragtime was | 0:55:26 | 0:55:30 | |
a hyper-syncopated form of piano and band-playing | 0:55:30 | 0:55:33 | |
that flickered into life in the Storyville district of New Orleans. | 0:55:33 | 0:55:37 | |
Charismatic performers like Jelly Roll Morton took it on tour | 0:55:37 | 0:55:41 | |
around the southern states in travelling vaudeville shows. | 0:55:41 | 0:55:44 | |
Though Jelly Roll called a lot of his numbers blues, | 0:55:44 | 0:55:47 | |
we now know this is the beginning of a distinct genre of its own, jazz. | 0:55:47 | 0:55:52 | |
From now on this music took on a life of its own. | 0:56:01 | 0:56:04 | |
As up-to-the-minute blues and its many offspring began | 0:56:08 | 0:56:11 | |
to revolutionise popular music, | 0:56:11 | 0:56:14 | |
classically-trained composers found themselves outflanked | 0:56:14 | 0:56:17 | |
and increasingly unloved. | 0:56:17 | 0:56:19 | |
Given the choice the general public voted with their feet in their millions | 0:56:20 | 0:56:24 | |
and took the populist path. | 0:56:24 | 0:56:27 | |
The coming century would see popular music, | 0:56:27 | 0:56:29 | |
especially American popular music, sweeping the planet. | 0:56:29 | 0:56:32 | |
And yet, faced with the twin rebellions | 0:56:32 | 0:56:36 | |
of dissonant modernism and the mass market, | 0:56:36 | 0:56:39 | |
the classical tradition found an ace up its sleeve | 0:56:39 | 0:56:42 | |
and played it with impeccable timing. | 0:56:42 | 0:56:45 | |
In a world of turmoil and change its response was nostalgia. | 0:56:45 | 0:56:49 | |
Edward Elgar's most famous piece, Enigma Variations, | 0:56:49 | 0:56:52 | |
embodies this response. | 0:56:52 | 0:56:54 | |
As the world began to slide | 0:56:54 | 0:56:56 | |
towards a final showdown of the European empires, | 0:56:56 | 0:56:59 | |
this music reminded people what they were about to lose. | 0:56:59 | 0:57:03 | |
From Elgar and Vaughan Williams in Britain, | 0:57:22 | 0:57:24 | |
Grieg in Norway, Sibelius in Finland, | 0:57:24 | 0:57:27 | |
Respighi in Italy, | 0:57:27 | 0:57:28 | |
Rachmaninov in Russia and Richard Strauss in Germany, | 0:57:28 | 0:57:32 | |
a musical style of tender, old-fashioned melancholy | 0:57:32 | 0:57:36 | |
seemed to want to hold back the relentless passage of time and progress. | 0:57:36 | 0:57:41 | |
That this music is so popular in our own time | 0:57:43 | 0:57:46 | |
testifies to its enduring appeal, | 0:57:46 | 0:57:48 | |
and perhaps our own continuing need for its soothing balm. | 0:57:48 | 0:57:53 | |
It may also indicate that in a crowded market | 0:57:53 | 0:57:56 | |
classical music's unique selling point is, like it or not, | 0:57:56 | 0:58:00 | |
its ability to wrap up the past like a beautiful gift. | 0:58:00 | 0:58:04 | |
MUSIC: "Rhapsody In Blue" by Gershwin | 0:58:15 | 0:58:17 | |
In the next programme we trace how all the developments of this 30-year period | 0:58:21 | 0:58:25 | |
found affirmation in a golden age of popular music. | 0:58:25 | 0:58:29 | |
Classical music went undercover, | 0:58:30 | 0:58:32 | |
morphing gloriously into a variety of new musical forms, | 0:58:32 | 0:58:36 | |
made possible by the onwards march of technology. | 0:58:36 | 0:58:40 | |
Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd | 0:58:43 | 0:58:45 |