Movements for Piano and Orchestra
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Movements'' is a sequence of five pieces for piano and orchestra by
Igor Stravinsky Igor Fyodorovich Stravinsky (6 April 1971) was a Russian composer, pianist and conductor, later of French (from 1934) and American (from 1945) citizenship. He is widely considered one of the most important and influential composers of the ...
lasting under ten minutes altogether. It was written during his Serial period and shows his dedication to that idiom as well as the influence of Anton Webern.


Commission

Stravinsky wrote ''Movements'' on a $15,000-commission from a Swiss industrialist for his pianist-wife Margrit Weber, who premiered it at a Stravinsky Festival in New York's
Town Hall In local government, a city hall, town hall, civic centre (in the UK or Australia), guildhall, or a municipal building (in the Philippines), is the chief administrative building of a city, town, or other municipality. It usually houses ...
on January 10, 1960, with the composer conducting. The industrialist had asked for a work of between 15 and 20 minutes in length, but Stravinsky provided a refined and compressed piece lasting barely half as long.


Analysis

''(orchestration: 2 flutes (2nd = piccolo), oboe, English horn, clarinet, bass clarinet, bassoon, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, harp, celesta, strings and solo piano)'' Stravinsky breaks the orchestra down into chamber-sized sections with the piano acting as a pivot between these, creating the type of subtle and gestural textures favored by Webern in his Concerto for Nine Instruments (Op. 24) and Variations for Orchestra (Op. 30), the latter a work much admired by Stravinsky. The highly constructed nature of the twelve-tone idiom he uses draws all its thematic material from one tone-row, which the piano gives in one non-linear gesture right at the opening: E F B A A D C B C F G and F. As it turns out, this tone-row will be presented complete only a couple of times. Mostly it is broken into small bits and served in slightly varied orderings. The technique of Klangfarbenmelodie can thus clearly be heard, particularly in the opening of the piece, whose gestural phrase mimics that of Webern's Op. 24. Stravinsky himself described the harmonic structure of ''Movements'' as "anti-tonal". Traditional references to triadic harmonic structures are banished in favor of a near-total line-based idiom, and conventional
ostinati In music, an ostinato (; derived from Italian word for ''stubborn'', compare English ''obstinate'') is a motif or phrase that persistently repeats in the same musical voice, frequently in the same pitch. Well-known ostinato-based pieces include ...
and harmonic considerations are replaced by an atonal contrapuntal texture characterized by gestures, inner unity, and adherence to serial forms more pervasive than before in Stravinsky's career.


References


Further reading

* Babbitt, Milton. 1986. "Order, Symmetry, and Centricity in Late Stravinsky". In ''Confronting Stravinsky: Man, Musician, and Modernist'', edited by Jann Pasler, 247–61. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press. . * Babbitt, Milton. 1987. "Stravinsky's Verticals and Schoenberg's Diagonals: A Twist of Fate". In ''Stravinsky Retrospectives'', edited by Ethan Haimo and Paul Johnson, 15–35. Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press. . * Cone, Edward T. 1962. "The Uses of Convention: Stravinsky and His Models". ''The Musical Quarterly'' 48, no. 3, Special Issue for Igor Stravinsky on His 80th Anniversary (July): 287–99. * Keller, Hans. 1961. No Bridge to Nowhere: An Introduction to Stravinsky's Movements and Schoenberg's Violin Concerto . ''The Musical Times'' 102, no. 1417 (March): 156–58. * Locanto, Massimiliano. 2009. "'Composing with Intervals': Intervallic Syntax and Serial Technique in Late Stravinsky", translated by Chadwick Jenkins. ''Music Analysis'' 28, nos. 2–3 (July–October): 221–66. * Straus, Joseph N. 2001. ''Stravinsky's Late Music''. Cambridge Studies in Music and Analysis. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. . * White, Eric Walter. 1979. ''Stravinsky: The Composer and His Works'', second edition. Berkeley and Los Angeles: The University of California Press. . {{Authority control Compositions by Igor Stravinsky