Affiliation:
1. Teaching Fellow, Royal Holloway, University of London, United Kingdom
Abstract
The theories of Boris Asafiev, including musical process, symphonism, and
intonatsiya, proved to be hugely influential in the Soviet Union and beyond.
While Asafiev?s ideas were widely adopted by theorists and audiences alike,
they were also appropriated by a generation of music critics. As composers
struggled to come to terms with what might constitute socialist-realist
music, critics built a discourse of projecting meaning onto works via
Asafiev?s theories. At the same time, multiple theorists developed and
expanded his ideas. The picture that emerges is of a multitude of
applications and responses to a multivalent body of work that became a vital
part of musical discourse in the latter half of the Soviet Union. In this
article, I survey the main theories from Boris Asafiev?s writings on music,
and their significance after his death. I begin by defining key terms such
as symphonism, musical process, and especially intonatsiya. I then discuss
the 1948 Zhdanovshchina and Asafiev?s involvement, and the less well-known
1949 discussions on Musicology. For the remainder of the article, I provide
examples of key studies from Soviet music theorists using Asafiev?s terms to
illustrate how their usage expanded and, in some cases, moved away from
Asafiev?s myriad intentions.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Cited by
1 articles.
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