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Twentieth-Century and Contemporary Music

The shattering of common-practice tonality and the proliferation of new musical languages from 1900 to today.

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Definition

The diverse art music of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, marked by the dissolution of common-practice tonality and the multiplication of competing compositional languages and technologies.

Scope

Covers Western art music from roughly 1900 to the present: the breakdown of tonality, atonality and serialism, neoclassicism, the experimental and indeterminacy movements, electronic and computer music, minimalism, and the pluralism of contemporary practice. Notes interaction with popular and non-Western musics; excludes the technical apparatus of post-tonal analysis, treated under form and analysis.

Core questions

  • How and why did common-practice tonality break down around 1900?
  • What were atonality, serialism, and neoclassicism?
  • How did experimentalism, indeterminacy, and electronic music expand the field?
  • What is minimalism, and how did it react against modernist complexity?
  • How is contemporary music characterized by stylistic pluralism?

Key concepts

  • Atonality and free atonality
  • Twelve-tone serialism
  • Neoclassicism
  • Indeterminacy and chance music
  • Electronic and computer music
  • Minimalism
  • Spectralism
  • Postmodern pluralism

History

The early twentieth century saw Stravinsky's rhythmic primitivism and Schoenberg's move to atonality and then serialism shatter common-practice norms; the postwar decades brought total serialism, Cage's indeterminacy, electronic studios, and then a minimalist and postmodern reaction, leaving contemporary practice radically pluralistic.

Debates

Modernist progress versus accessibility
Postwar music was split between an avant-garde that pursued ever greater complexity as historical necessity and critics and composers who argued such music had lost its audience, a tension that minimalism and postmodern eclecticism later answered.

Key figures

  • Igor Stravinsky
  • Arnold Schoenberg
  • John Cage
  • Steve Reich
  • Pierre Boulez

Related topics

Seminal works

  • burkholder2019
  • morgan1991
  • ross2007

Frequently asked questions

Why did tonality break down in the twentieth century?
Ever-increasing chromaticism in the late nineteenth century weakened the sense of a single key center, and composers such as Schoenberg eventually abandoned functional tonality altogether in favor of new organizing principles.
Is there a single style of contemporary classical music?
No. Since the late twentieth century the field has been radically pluralistic, encompassing minimalism, spectralism, neo-Romanticism, electronic music, and many hybrids without a dominant common practice.

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