Samenvatting
The purpose of this study is to examine the causes of the rise (1919-1927), climax (1927-1932), decline (1933-1936) and revival (1936-1939) of musical modernism as a genre during the interbellum period in Belgium. In the end of 1920s and the 1930s Brussels became an important centre of musical modernism. For example, the first performances of Strawinsky’s Psalm Symphony (1930), Prokofiev’s Le joueur (1929) and Alban Bergs Wozzeck in a French translation (1932) serve as testimonies of the city’s high status comparable to other major European centres of modern music. Brussels created a unique platform for French, German and Russian modernism. From 1933 onwards, interest in modernist music at the aforesaid concert organisations became sparse. This rise, climax and decline occurred in a commercially oriented music life that was financed by shareholders, donors and ticket sales. The revival occurred within the context of the National Radio Broadcasting Institute (known by the Dutch acronym NIR) in which the NIR Great Symphony Orchestra and its music director of the Flemish department, Paul Collaer, and principal conductor Franz André, played an important role. This orchestra was the first fully subsidised symphony orchestra in Belgium. The study will explore why musical modernism was initially successful as a genre and then declined in a commercial environment and how and why the NIR, as a fully subsidised institute, was successful by turning it into a unique platform of modernism.
This research on modernistic music in Brussels between 1919 and 1940, is based on a quantitative and qualitative analysis of historical data sources collected and centralized database with ca. 5.000 records relating to Belgian modernism, including ca. 1000 articles of ca. 30 Belgian Journals in Arts, ca. 2000 Brussels concerts and letters and documents of archives of composers, directors and former organizations in Brussels that promoted modernism form 1919 till 1940. In addition, the archives of the concert societies and the NIR, containing reports of the boards of directors and financial documents, were consulted.
This research on modernistic music in Brussels between 1919 and 1940, is based on a quantitative and qualitative analysis of historical data sources collected and centralized database with ca. 5.000 records relating to Belgian modernism, including ca. 1000 articles of ca. 30 Belgian Journals in Arts, ca. 2000 Brussels concerts and letters and documents of archives of composers, directors and former organizations in Brussels that promoted modernism form 1919 till 1940. In addition, the archives of the concert societies and the NIR, containing reports of the boards of directors and financial documents, were consulted.
Originele taal-2 | English |
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Status | Published - 6 jun 2018 |
Evenement | Inside, Outside, and in Between: Institutionalization in Music History - uniarts , Helsinki, Finland Duur: 6 jun 2018 → 8 jun 2018 https://sites.uniarts.fi/web/inst2018/home |
Conference
Conference | Inside, Outside, and in Between: Institutionalization in Music History |
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Land/Regio | Finland |
Stad | Helsinki |
Periode | 6/06/18 → 8/06/18 |
Internet adres |