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Impressionism in France

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Presentation on theme: "Impressionism in France"— Presentation transcript:

1 Impressionism in France
Debussy: Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun

2 Debussy, from Preludes Book One:
Voiles (Sails)

3 Debussy: Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun (excerpt)

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6 Debussy’s “Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun”
inspired by Mallarmé’s symbolist poem.

7 I would perpetuate these nymphs
So clear Their skin’s light bloom, it eddies in the air Heavy with tufts of sleep Did I love a dream?

8 Narrative/Progress/Plot
Debussy’s “Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun” Sheer Sound Evokes Atmosphere Narrative/Progress/Plot inspired by Mallarmé’s symbolist poem.

9 I. Impressionism: The Basics
A. Where? B. When? C. Who?

10 II. Debussy’s Aesthetic Goals

11 II. Debussy’s Aesthetic Goals
A. The Goal = Immediacy B. The Obstacle = Nature of Music not immediate, unfolds in/over time

12 III. Immediacy, Musical Realization (Pt. 1): What you don’t get
Don’t get: Clear, articulated, periodic phrases instead fragments, short motives

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14 What you don’t get III. Immediacy, Musical Realization (Pt. 1)
Don’t get: Clear, articulated, periodic phrases instead fragments, short motives B. Don’t get: Long-range goals or climaxes instead phrases that avoid clear peak or closure

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16 What you don’t get III. Immediacy, Musical Realization (Pt. 1)
Don’t get: Clear, articulated, periodic phrases instead fragments, short motives B. Don’t get: Long-range goals or climaxes instead phrases that avoid clear peak or closure C. Don’t get: clear meter and often don’t get clear pulse D. Don’t get: traditional or predictable forms E. Don’t get: music that has long-range progress/process

17 IV. Immediacy, Musical Realization (Pt. 2): What you DO get
A. Debussy’s Interest in Tone Color or Timbre

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19 IV. The Musical Realization (Pt. 2): What you DO get
A. Debussy’s Ear for Tone Color or Timbre Dymanics: often in soft or very soft regions

20 IV. The Musical Realization (Pt. 2): What you DO get
A. Debussy’s Ear for Tone Color or Timbre Dymanics: often in soft or very soft regions Orchestration = solo instruments in unusual combinations muted brass/soft percussion/harp Human voice used purely for color B.Debussy’s Unique Harmony Chords chosen not for function, but beauty/effect Chords in parallel motion

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22 IV. The Musical Realization (Pt. 2): What you DO get
A. Debussy’s Ear for Tone Color or Timbre Dymanics: often in soft or very soft regions Orchestration = solo instruments/unusual combinations/muted brass/soft percussion Human voice used as another color in the instrumental palette B.Debussy’s Unique Harmony Chords chosen not for function, but beauty/effect Chords in parallel motion Use of whole-tone scale

23 Whole-tone Scale

24 IV. The Musical Realization (Pt. 2): What you DO get
A. Debussy’s Ear for Tone Color or Timbre Dymanics: often in soft or very soft regions Orchestration Human voice used as another color in the instrumental palette B.Debussy’s Unique Harmony Chords chosen not for function, but beauty/effect Chords in parallel motion Use of whole-tone scale 1. Six (6) notes per octave 2. Symmetrical Scale 3. Lack of Leading-Tone Effect 4. Lack of strong dissonance Pentatonic Scale

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26 Format of Exam #4: 5 Listening IDs from listening list (composer, title, movement as appropriate) 1 Listening question on Berlioz, Symphonie Fantastique, “Witches Sabbath,” based on Wright Listening Guide 2 additional listening Objective questions on reading, listening, lecture Choice of 2-3 essay questions

27 Debussy, from Preludes Book One:
Voiles (Sails)

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