Thursday, September 19, 2019
20th century music :: essays research papers
 By the turn of the century and for the next few decades, artists of all nationalities were     searching for exciting and different modes of expression. Composers such as Arnold     Schoenberg explored unusual and unorthodox harmonies and tonal schemes. French     composer Claude Debussy was fascinated by Eastern music and the whole-tone scale,     and created a style of music named after the movement in French painting called     Impressionism. Hungarian composer Bà ©la Bartà ³k continued in the traditions of the still     strong Nationalist movement and fused the music of Hungarian peasants with twentieth     century forms. Avant-garde composers such as Edgard Varà ¨se explored the manipulation     of rhythms rather than the usual melodic/harmonic schemes. The tried and true genre of     the symphony, albeit somewhat modified by this time, attracted such masters as Gustav     Mahler and Dmitri Shostakovich, while Igor Stravinsky gave full rein to his manipulation     of kaleidoscopic rhythms and instrumental colors throughout his extremely long and     varied career.    While many composers throughout the twentieth-century experimented in new ways     With traditional instruments such as the "prepared piano" used by American composer     John Cage, many of the twentieth-century's greatest composers, such as Italian opera     composer Giacomo Puccini and the Russian pianist/composer Sergei Rachmaninoff,     remained true to the traditional forms of music history. In addition to new and eclectic     styles of musical trends, the twentieth century boasts numerous composers whose     harmonic and melodic styles an average listener can still easily appreciate and enjoy.    The advance of technology has also had an enormous impact on the evolution of     music in this century, with some composers using, for instance, the cassette player as a     compositional tool or electronically generated sounds alongside classical instruments,     the use of computers to compose music, and so on.  					    
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