STRAVINSKY, IGOR FEDOROVICH

ēˈgər fyôˈdərôˌvyĭch strəvĭnˈskē, 1882–1971, Russian-American composer. Considered by many the greatest and most versatile composer of the 20th cent., Stravinsky helped to revolutionize modern music.

Stravinsky's father, an actor and singer in St. Petersburg, had him educated for the law. Music was only an avocation for Stravinsky until his meeting in 1902 with Rimsky-Korsakov, with whom he studied formally from 1907 to 1908. Stravinsky's First Symphony in E Flat Major (1907) is pervaded by the influence of Rimsky-Korsakov's nationalistic style. The work of Stravinsky interested the ballet impressario Sergei Diaghilev, and Stravinsky's first strikingly original compositions—L'Oiseau de Feu (The Firebird, 1910) and Petrouchka (1911)—were written for Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in Paris.

In the ballet Le Sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring, 1913) he departed radically from musical tradition by using irregular, primitive rhythms and harsh dissonances. The audience at the premiere of the ballet reacted with riotous disfavor. However, in the following year the work was performed by a symphony orchestra, and ever since it has been recognized as a landmark and masterpiece of modern music.

At the beginning of World War I, Stravinsky moved to Switzerland, where he composed several works based on Russian themes, including the ballet Les Noces (The Wedding, 1923). Influenced by 18th-century music, he embarked on an austere, neoclassical style in such works as the poetic dance-drama Histoire du Soldat (The Soldier's Tale, 1918), the opera-oratorio Oedipus Rex (1927; text by Jean Cocteau after Sophocles), and the choral composition Symphonie de psaumes (Symphony of Psalms, 1930).

In the 1930s, Stravinsky toured throughout Europe and the United States as a pianist and conductor of his own works. He became a French citizen in 1934, but five years later he moved to the United States, becoming an American citizen in 1945. Compositions of the 1940s include such diverse works as the Ebony Concerto (1946) for clarinet and swing band; the Third Symphony (1946) in three movements; the ballet Orpheus (1948); and a mass (1948) for voices and double wind quintet.

After composing the opera The Rake's Progress (1951; inspired by Hogarth's engravings, with libretto by W. H. Auden and Chester Kallman), Stravinsky turned to experiments with serial techniques (see serial music). In Cantata (1952) the new technique was evident, and in the chamber piece Septet (1953) he made the full transition to serialism. He continued to compose in this exacting style in the abstract ballet Agon (1957) and in Threni (1958), a work for voices and orchestra. His creative originality was undiminished in his late works, which display remarkable freshness, meticulous craftsmanship, and an experimental quality.

Stravinsky's influence on 20th-century music is immeasurable. He revitalized the rhythms of European music and achieved entirely new sonorities and blends of orchestral colors. A series of lectures he delivered at Harvard were published as Poétique musicale (1942, tr. Poetics of Music, 1948).

Bibliography

See his autobiography Chronicles of My Life (1935, tr. 1936); his Memories and Commentaries (1960), Expositions and Developments (1962), and Dialogues and a Diary (1963), all three written with R. Craft. See also biographies by R. Siohan (1959, tr. 1966), A. Dobrin (1970), P. Horgan (1972), R. Craft (1972), L. Libman (1972), and S. Walsh (1999); studies by J. Pasler (1986), P. van den Toorn (1987), S. Walsh (1988), and C. M. Joseph (2001 and 2002).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Stravinsky Igor Fedorovich
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books on: Stravinsky Igor Fedorovich  - 13 results

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STRAVINSKY: CLASSIC HUMANIST IGOR FEDOROVICH STRAVINSky was born on June 17, 1882, in Oranienbaum, near St. Petersburg, the summer residence of his father. He hails from the conservative world of Russian aristocracy. His father Feodor was...
...mustache instead of, as when last seen, a beard, but the real reason, I.S. tells me later, was that he said "Igor Fedorovich" instead of Guima. "He always called my brother Guri, and me Guima." Vladimir lives in the same apartment house...
Igor Stravinsky Igor Fedorovich Stravinsky was born at Oranienbaum, Russia now Lomonosov in the Northwest Petersburg Region of Russia on 18 June 1882 and died in New York City on 6 April 1971. Stung by the Dadaists dislike of his most recent novel...
...Cambridge, Mass., 1955. Stravinsky, Igor Fedorovich b. 1882 , composer, pianist...music; vocal music, etc. Stravinsky is undoubtedly the most influential...harmony. A veritable chameleon, Stravinsky has attempted every kind of...
Igor Stravinsky Igor Fedorovich Stravinsky was born on 18 June 1882 in Oranienbaum, now Lomonosov in the Northwest Saint P? tersburg Region of the Russian Republic, and died in New York on 6 April 1971. The Wedding, Russian Choreographic Scenes...
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...of the greatest autographs of Stravinsky ever to be offered at auction...orchestras throughout the world. Igor Fedorovich Stravinsky was born in Russia in 1882...fathers musical connections young Igor met Nikolai Rimski-Korsakov...


 

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STRAVINSKY, IGOR FEDOROVICH e g r fyo d ro vyich str vin ske...versatile composer of the 20th cent., Stravinsky helped to revolutionize modern music...Music was only an avocation for Stravinsky until his meeting in 1902 with Rimsky...


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