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Igor Stravinsky was one of music's truly epochal innovators; no other
composer of the twentieth century exerted such a pervasive influence or
dominated his art in the way that Stravinsky did during his five-decade
musical career. Aside from purely technical considerations such as rhythm
and harmony, the most important hallmark of Stravinsky's style is, indeed,
its changing face. Emerging from the spirit of late Russian nationalism
and ending his career with a thorny, individual language steeped in
12-tone principles, Stravinsky assumed a number of aesthetic guises
throughout the course of his development while always retaining a
distinctive, essential identity. Although he was the son of one of the
Mariinsky Theater's principal basses and a talented amateur pianist,
Stravinsky had no more musical training than that of any other Russian
upper-class child. He entered law school, but also began private
composition and orchestration studies with Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov. By
1909, the orchestral works Scherzo fantastique and Fireworks had impressed
Sergei Diaghilev enough for him to ask Stravinsky to orchestrate, and
subsequently compose, ballets for his company. Stravinsky's triad of early
ballets -- The Firebird (1909-10), Petrushka (1910-11), and most
importantly, The Rite of Spring (1911-13) -- did more to establish his
reputation than any of his other works; indeed, the riot which followed
the premiere of The Rite is one of the most notorious events in music
history. Stravinsky and his family spent the war years in Switzerland,
returning to France in 1920. His jazz-inflected essays of the 1910s and
1920s -- notably, Ragtime (1918) and The Soldier's Tale (1918) -- gave way
to one of the composer's most influential aesthetic turns. The
neoclassical tautness of works as diverse as the ballet Pulcinella
(1919-20), the Symphony of Psalms (1930) and, decades later, the opera The
Rake's Progress (1948-51) made a widespread impact and had an especial
influence upon the fledgling school of American composers that looked to
Stravinsky as its primary model. He had begun touring as a conductor and
pianist, generally performing his own works. In the 1930s, he toured the
Americas and wrote several pieces fulfilling American commissions,
including the Concerto in E flat, "Dumbarton Oaks". After the deaths of
his daughter, his wife, and his mother within a period of less than a
year, Stravinsky immigrated to America, settling in California with his
second wife in 1940. His works between 1940 and 1950 are a mixture of
styles, but still seem centered on Russian or French traditions.
Stravinsky's cultural perspective was changed after Robert Craft became
his musical assistant, handling rehearsals for Stravinsky, traveling with
him, and later, co-authoring his memoirs. Craft is credited with helping
Stravinsky accept 12-tone composition as one of the tools of his trade.
Characteristically, though, he made novel use of such principles in his
own music, producing works in a highly original vein: Movements (1958-59)
for piano and orchestra, Variations: Aldous Huxley in Memoriam (1963), and
the Requiem Canticles (1965-66) are among the most striking. Craft
prepared the musicians for the exemplary series of Columbia Records LPs
Stravinsky conducted through the stereo era, covering virtually all his
significant works. Despite declining health in his last years, Stravinsky
continued to compose until just before his death in April 1971. ~ AMG, All
Music Guide