„Tote Aber Leben Länger“. The Second Viennese school and its place in the reflections of selected composers from the second half of the twentieth century (Lutosławski, Ligeti, Lachenmann, Harvey)
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Published:2020
Issue:28
Volume:
Page:173-204
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ISSN:1450-9814
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Container-title:Muzikologija
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Muzikologija
Affiliation:
1. Adam Mickiewicz University, Institute of Musicology, Poznań, Poland
Abstract
The juxtaposition of classicism and actuality is a good description of the
ambiguous position occupied by the Second Viennese School not only in the
eyes of the scholars who research it, but also of composers who can be
regarded as its successors. However, in the works and writings originating
from the Second Viennese School we find a concentration of problems
encountered by contemporary composers, especially the modernist ones. The
aim of this article is to examine the role played by the representatives of
the Second Viennese School in the reflections of selected twentieth-century
composers, concerning their place in music history, the expressive
categories present in their work, and their ambiguous attitude to tonality.
A separate subject to be explored is the discourse used by contemporary
composers to describe the music of their predecessors, full of both
analytical categories and vivid metaphors. The quoted composers (Witold
Lutos?awski, Gy?rgy Ligeti, Helmut Lachenmann and Jonathan Harvey) may be
identified with more-or-less radical modernist views. This article is guided
by the thinking of Gianmario Borio and the idea of ?historical
appropriation?, according to which analysis of the works of the past helps
composers to create their own artistic identities and to define their own
place in the history of music.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
General Engineering