Brittanica Guide To Musicians
Brittanica Guide To Musicians
Brittanica Guide To Musicians
Rosen Educational Services materials copyright © 2010 Rosen Educational Services, LLC.
All rights reserved.
First Edition
The 100 most influential musicians of all time / edited by Gini Gorlinski.
p. cm.—(The Britannica guide to the world’s most influential people)
“In association with Britannica Educational Publishing, Rosen Educational Services.”
Includes index.
ISBN 978-1-61530-056-3 (eBook)
1. Musicians—Biography. I. Gorlinski, Gini. II. Title: One hundred most influential
musicians of all time.
ML385A15 2010
780.92'2—dc22
[B]
2009029076
336
INTRODUCTION
7 Introduction 7
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7 Introduction 7
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Guido d’Arezzo
(b. c. 990, Arezzo? [Italy]—d. 1050, Avellana?)
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with his name and widely used in the Middle Ages, had
any connection with Guido d’Arezzo.
Guido is also credited with the composition of a hymn
to St. John the Baptist, Ut queant laxis, in which the first
syllable of each line falls on a different tone of the hexa-
chord (the first six tones of the major scale); these syllables,
ut, re, mi, fa, sol, and la, are used in Latin countries as the
names of the notes from c to a (ut was eventually replaced
by do). His device was of immense practical value in teaching
sight-reading of music and in learning melodies. Singers
associated the syllables with certain intervals; mi to fa, in
particular, always represented a half step.
Before Guido an alphabetical notation using the letters
from a to p was used in France as early as 996. Guido’s system
used a series of capital letters, small letters, and double
small letters from a to g. Guido’s system also came to be
associated with the teaching of the gamut—the whole hexa-
chord range (the range of notes available to the singer).
In addition to his innovations Guido also described a
variety of organum (adding to a plainchant melody a second
voice singing different pitches) that moved largely, but not
completely, in parallel fourths. Guido’s work is known
through his treatise the Micrologus.
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Antonio Vivaldi
(b. March 4, 1678, Venice, Republic of Venice [Italy]—d. July 28, 1741,
Vienna, Austria)
Life
Vivaldi’s main teacher was probably his father, Giovanni
Battista, who in 1685 was admitted as a violinist to the
orchestra of the San Marco Basilica in Venice. Antonio,
the eldest child, trained for the priesthood and was ordained
in 1703. He made his first known public appearance playing
violin alongside his father in the basilica in 1696. He became
an excellent violinist, and in 1703 he was appointed violin
master at the Ospedale della Pietà, a home for abandoned
or orphaned children. The Pietà specialized in the musical
training of its female wards, and those with musical apti-
tude were assigned to its excellent choir and orchestra.
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Vivaldi had dealings with the Pietà for most of his career:
as violin master (1703–09; 1711–15), director of instrumental
music (1716–17; 1735–38), and paid external supplier of
compositions (1723–29; 1739–40).
Vivaldi’s earliest musical compositions date from his
first years at the Pietà. Printed collections of his trio
sonatas and violin sonatas respectively appeared in 1705
and 1709, and in 1711 his first and most influential set of
concerti for violin and string orchestra (Opus 3, L’estro
armonico) was published by the Amsterdam music-publishing
firm of Estienne Roger. In the years up to 1719, Roger pub-
lished three more collections of his concerti (opuses 4, 6,
and 7) and one collection of sonatas (Opus 5).
Vivaldi made his debut as a composer of sacred vocal
music in 1713, when the Pietà’s choirmaster left his post
and the institution had to turn to Vivaldi and other com-
posers for new compositions. He achieved great success
with his sacred vocal music, for which he later received
commissions from other institutions. Another new field
of endeavour for him opened in 1713 when his first opera,
Ottone in villa, was produced in Vicenza. Returning to Venice,
Vivaldi immediately plunged into operatic activity in the
twin roles of composer and impresario. From 1718 to 1720
he worked in Mantua as director of secular music for that
city’s governor, Prince Philip of Hesse-Darmstadt. This was
the only full-time post Vivaldi ever held; he seems to have
preferred life as a freelance composer for the flexibility
and entrepreneurial opportunities it offered. Vivaldi’s
major compositions in Mantua were operas, though he
also composed cantatas and instrumental works.
The 1720s were the zenith of Vivaldi’s career. Based
once more in Venice, but frequently traveling elsewhere,
he supplied instrumental music to patrons and customers
throughout Europe. Between 1725 and 1729 he published
five new collections of concerti (opuses 8–12). After
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Instrumental Music
Almost 500 concerti by Vivaldi survive. More than 300 are
concerti for a solo instrument with string orchestra and
continuo. Of these, approximately 230 are written for solo
violin, 40 for bassoon, 25 for cello, 15 for oboe, and 10 for
flute. There are also concerti for viola d’amore, recorder,
mandolin, and other instruments. Vivaldi’s remaining
concerti are either double concerti (including about 25
written for two violins), concerti grossi using three or
more soloists, concerti ripieni (string concerti without a
soloist), or chamber concerti for a group of instruments
without orchestra.
Vivaldi perfected the form of what would become the
Classical three-movement concerto. Indeed, he helped
establish the fast-slow-fast plan of the concerto’s three
movements. Perhaps more importantly, Vivaldi was the
first to employ regularly in his concerti the ritornello form,
in which recurrent restatements of a refrain alternate with
more episodic passages featuring a solo instrument.
Vivaldi’s bold juxtapositions of the refrains (ritornelli) and
the solo passages opened new possibilities for virtuosic
display by solo instrumentalists. The fast movements in
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his concerti are notable for their rhythmic drive and the
boldness of their themes, while the slow movements often
present the character of arias written for the solo
instrument.
Several of Vivaldi’s concerti have picturesque or allusive
titles. Four of them, the cycle of violin concerti entitled
The Four Seasons (Opus 8, no. 1–4), are programmatic in a
thoroughgoing fashion, with each concerto depicting a dif-
ferent season of the year, starting with spring. Vivaldi’s
effective representation of the sounds of nature inaugu-
rated a tradition to which works such as Ludwig van
Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony belong. Vivaldi also left more
than 90 sonatas, mainly for stringed instruments.
Vocal Music
More than 50 authentic sacred vocal compositions by
Vivaldi are extant. They range from short hymns for solo
voices to oratorios and elaborate psalm settings in several
movements for double choir and orchestra. He composed
some 50 operas (16 of which survived in their entirety) as
well as nearly 40 cantatas. Many of Vivaldi’s vocal works
exhibit a spiritual depth and a command of counterpoint
equal to the best of their time. Moreover, the mutual
independence of voices and instruments often anticipates
the later symphonic masses of Joseph Haydn and Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart.
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Life
The son of a barber-surgeon, Handel showed a marked gift
for music and became a pupil in Halle of the composer
Friedrich W. Zachow, from whom he learned the principles
of keyboard performance and composition. In 1702 Handel
enrolled as a law student at the University of Halle. He
also became organist of the Reformed (Calvinist) Cathedral
in Halle but served for only one year before going north to
Hamburg. In Hamburg he joined the violin section of the
opera orchestra and also took over some of the duties of
harpsichordist; early in 1705 he presided over the premiere
in Hamburg of his first opera, Almira.
Handel spent the years 1706–10 traveling in Italy, where
he met many of the greatest Italian musicians of the day.
He composed many works in Italy, including two operas,
numerous Italian solo cantatas (vocal compositions), Il
trionfo del tempo e del disinganno (1707) and another oratorio,
the serenata Aci, Galatea e Polifemo (1708), and some Latin (i.e.,
Roman Catholic) church music. His opera Agrippina enjoyed
a sensational success at its premiere in Venice in 1710.
Also in 1710 Handel was appointed Kapellmeister to
the elector of Hanover, the future King George I of
England, and later that year he journeyed to England.
Handel’s opera Rinaldo was performed in London in 1711
and was greeted with great enthusiasm. Over the next two
years his operas Il pastor fido (1712) and Teseo (1713) were also
staged in London. In 1713 he won his way into royal favour
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by his Ode for the Queen’s Birthday and the Utrecht Te Deum
and Jubilate in celebration of the Peace of Utrecht, and he
was granted an annual allowance of £200 by Queen Anne.
On the death of Queen Anne in 1714, the elector
George Louis became King George I of England, and
Handel subsequently made England his permanent home.
In 1718 he became director of music to the duke of
Chandos, for whom he composed the 11 Chandos Anthems
and the English masque Acis and Galatea, among other
works. Another masque, Haman and Mordecai, was to be
the effective starting point for the English oratorio. In
1726 Handel officially became a British subject, which
enabled him to be appointed a composer of the Chapel
Royal. In this capacity he wrote much music, including
the Coronation Anthems for George II in 1727 and the Funeral
Anthem for Queen Caroline 10 years later.
From 1720 until 1728 the operas at the King’s Theatre
in London were staged by the Royal Academy of Music,
and Handel composed the music for most of them. Among
those of the 1720s were Floridante (1721), Ottone (1723),
Giulio Cesare (1724), Rodelinda (1725), and Scipione (1726).
From 1728, after the sensation caused by John Gay’s
Beggar’s Opera (which satirized serious opera), the Italian
style went into decline in England, largely because of the
impatience of the English with a form of entertainment
in an unintelligible language sung by artists of whose morals
they disapproved. But Handel went on composing operas
until 1741, by which time he had written more than 40
such works. As the popularity of opera declined in England,
oratorio became increasingly popular. The revivals in 1732
of Handel’s masques Acis and Galatea and Haman and
Mordecai (renamed Esther) led to the establishment of the
English oratorio—a large musical composition for solo
voices, chorus, and orchestra, without acting or scenery,
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Music
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Early Years
J.S. Bach was the youngest child of Johann Ambrosius
Bach and Elisabeth Lämmerhirt. Ambrosius was a string
player, employed by the town council and the ducal court
of Eisenach. Although Johann Sebastian started school in
1692 or 1693, nothing definite is known of his musical
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The prolific Baroque composer Johann Sebastian Bach, seen here, was also a
skilled organist and harpsichordist. Getty Images/Time & Life Pictures
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Years at Leipzig
As director of church music for the city of Leipzig, Bach
had to supply performers for four churches: Peterskirche,
Neue Kirche, Nikolaikirche, and Thomaskirche. His first
official performance was on May 30, 1723 with Cantata
No. 75, Die Elenden sollen essen. New works produced
during this year include many cantatas and the Magnificat
in its first version. The first half of 1724 saw the produc-
tion of the St. John Passion, which was subsequently revised.
The total number of cantatas produced during this
ecclesiastical year was about 62, of which about 39 were
new works.
On June 11, 1724, Bach began a fresh annual cycle of
cantatas, and within the year he wrote 52 of the so-called
chorale cantatas. Indeed, during his first two or three
years at Leipzig, Bach produced a large number of new
cantatas, sometimes at the rate of one a week. The hectic
pace of production required Bach (and other Baroque
composers) to invent or discover their ideas quickly; they
could not rely on the unpredictable arrival of “inspiration.”
Consequently, the typical Baroque composer had to be a
traditionalist who readily embraced the musical conven-
tions and techniques of the time.
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Symbolism
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Instrumental Works
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Last Years
Joseph Haydn
(b. March 31, 1732, Rohrau, Austria—d. May 31, 1809, Vienna)
Early Years
Haydn’s father was a wheelwright, his mother, before her
marriage, a cook for the lords of the village. Haydn early
revealed unusual musical gifts, and a cousin who was a
school principal and choirmaster in the nearby city of
Hainburg offered to take him into his home and train him.
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Haydn, not yet six years old, left home, never to return to
the parental cottage except for rare, brief visits.
The young Haydn sang in the church choir, learned to
play various instruments, and obtained a good basic
knowledge of music. His life changed decisively when he
was eight years old, when the musical director of St.
Stephen’s Cathedral in Vienna invited him to serve as
chorister at the Austrian capital’s most important church.
Thus, in 1740 Haydn moved to Vienna. He stayed at the
choir school for nine years, acquiring an enormous prac-
tical knowledge of music by constant performances but
receiving little instruction in music theory. When his
voice changed, he was expelled from both the cathedral
choir and the choir school.
With no money and few possessions, Haydn at 17 was
left to his own devices. He eventually was introduced to
the music-loving Austrian nobleman Karl Joseph von
Fürnberg, in whose home he played chamber music and for
whose instrumentalists he wrote his first string quartets.
Through the recommendation of Fürnberg, Haydn was
engaged in 1758 as musical director and chamber composer
for the Bohemian count Ferdinand Maximilian von Morzin
and was put in charge of an orchestra of about 16 musicians.
For this ensemble he wrote his first symphony as well as
numerous divertimenti for wind band or for wind instru-
ments and strings.
Esterházy Patronage
Haydn stayed only briefly with von Morzin, and soon he
was invited to enter the service of Prince Pál Antal
Esterházy. The Esterházys were one of the wealthiest
and most influential families of the Austrian empire and
boasted a distinguished record of supporting music. Prince
Pál Antal had an orchestra performing regularly in his
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English Period
When Prince Miklós died in 1790, he was succeeded by
his son, Prince Antal, who did not care for music and dis-
missed most of the court musicians. Haydn was retained,
however, and continued to receive his salary. At this point
a violinist and concert manager, Johann Peter Salomon,
arrived from England and commissioned from Haydn 6
new symphonies and 20 smaller compositions to be con-
ducted by the composer himself in a series of orchestral
concerts in London. Haydn gladly accepted this offer, and
the two men set off for London in December 1790.
On New Year’s Day 1791, Haydn arrived in England,
and the following 18 months proved extremely rewarding.
The 12 symphonies he wrote on his first and second visits to
London represent the climax of his orchestral output. Their
style and wit endeared the works to British audiences, and
their popularity is reflected in the various nicknames
bestowed on them—e.g., The Surprise (No. 94), Military
(No. 100), The Clock (No. 101), and Drumroll (No. 103).
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The Mozart family: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (seated at piano) with his
sister Maria Anna (left) and his parents, Leopold and Anna Maria (in
portrait); oil on canvas by Johann Nepomuk della Croce, c. 1780–81; Mozart
House, Salzburg, Austria. © Photos.com/Jupiterimages
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Early Maturity
Leopold took Mozart to Vienna in 1773, where the newest
Viennese music had a considerable effect on the young
composer; he produced a set of six string quartets showing
fuller textures and a more intellectual approach to the
medium. Soon after his return to Salzburg he wrote a
group of symphonies, including, most notably, the “Little”
G Minor (K 183) and the A Major (K 201).
The year 1774 saw the composition of more symphonies,
concertos for bassoon and for two violins, serenades, and
several sacred works. At the end of the year Mozart was
commissioned to write an opera buffa, La finta giardiniera
(“The Feigned Gardener Girl”), for the Munich carnival
season, where it was duly successful.
A period of two and a half years (from March 1775)
began in which Mozart worked steadily in his Salzburg
post, now as a salaried Konzertmeister. During this period
he wrote only one dramatic work, but he was productive in
sacred and lighter instrumental music. His most impressive
piece for the church was the Litaniae de venerabili altaris
sacramento (K 243), which embraces a wide range of styles
(fugues, choruses of considerable dramatic force, florid
arias, and a plainchant setting). The instrumental works
included divertimentos, concertos, and serenades, notably
the Haffner (K 250).
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Structural Innovations
Beethoven remains the supreme exponent of what may be
called the architectonic use of tonality. In his greatest
sonata movements, such as the first allegro of the Eroica,
the listener’s subconscious mind remains oriented to E-flat
major even in the most distant keys, so that when, long
before the recapitulation, the music touches on the domi-
nant (B-flat), this is immediately recognizable as being the
dominant. Of his innovations in the symphony and quar-
tet, the most notable is the replacement of the minuet by
the more dynamic scherzo; he enriched both the orchestra
and the quartet with a new range of sonority and variety of
texture, and their forms are often greatly expanded. The
same is true of the concerto, in which he introduced for-
mal innovations that, though relatively few in number,
would prove equally influential. In particular, the entry of
a solo instrument before an orchestral ritornello in the
Fourth and Fifth piano concerti (a device anticipated by
Mozart but to quite different effect) reinforces the sense
of the soloist as a protagonist, even a Romantic hero, an
effect later composers would struggle to reproduce.
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An Enduring Mystery
Beethoven remained a subject of interest long after his
death not only because of his music but also because of
unresolved questions concerning his troubled life. An
enduring topic of speculation was the cause of his debil-
itating illnesses and his erratic personality. In the
“Heiligenstadt Testament,” the composer recognized that
this subject would long be a perplexing one: “After my
death,” he wrote, “if Dr. Schmidt is still alive, ask him in
my name to discover my disease . . . so at least as much
as is possible the world may be reconciled to me after
my death.”
Nearly two centuries later, a scientific analysis of
strands of Beethoven’s hair suggested a possible answer to
this lingering question. Four years of study at Argonne
National Laboratory in Argonne, Ill., and the McCrone
Research Institute in Chicago led researchers to conclude
in 2000 that Beethoven had lead poisoning, which may
have caused his gastrointestinal distress, irritability, and
depression and possibly contributed to his death. The
cause of his deafness, however, remained more uncertain,
as causal relationships between lead poisoning and the
disability are rare.
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Franz Schubert
(b. Jan. 31, 1797, Himmelpfortgrund, near Vienna [Austria]—d. Nov.
19, 1828, Vienna)
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Maturity
On his return to Vienna he composed the operetta Die
Zwillingsbrüder (The Twin Brothers), but the production of
the work was postponed, and in June 1819 Schubert and
Vogl set off for a protracted holiday in the singer’s native
district of upper Austria. There he composed the first of
his widely known instrumental compositions, the Piano
Sonata in A Major, D. 664, and the celebrated Trout Quintet
for piano and strings. The close of 1819 saw him engrossed
in songs to poems by his friend Johann Mayrhofer and by
Goethe, who inspired “Prometheus.”
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Last Years
The resignation of Salieri as imperial Kapellmeister (musical
director) in 1824 had led to the promotion of his deputy,
Josef Eybler. In 1826 Schubert applied for the vacant post
of deputy Kapellmeister, but in spite of strong support by
several influential people he was unsuccessful. From then
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until his death two years later he seems to have let matters
drift. Neither by application for professional posts nor
submission of operatic work did he seek to establish
himself.
The songs of 1826 include the settings of Shakespeare’s
“Hark! Hark! the Lark!” and “Who is Silvia?” Three fine
instrumental works of this summer and autumn are the
last: String Quartet in G Major, the Piano Sonata in G Major,
and the beginning of the Piano Trio in B Flat Major. In 1827
he composed the first 12 songs of the cycle Winterreise
(Winter Journey). Beethoven’s death in 1827 undoubtedly
had a profound effect on Schubert, for there is no denying
that a more profound, more intellectual quality akin to that
in Beethoven’s music appears in his last instrumental works,
especially the Piano Trio in E-flat Major (1827) and the Piano
Sonata in C Minor (1828). In September 1827 Schubert spent
a short holiday in Graz. On his return he composed the
Piano Trio in E-flat Major and resumed work on Part II of
the Winterreise. This is the period of his piano solos, the
Impromptus and Moments musicaux.
A succession of masterpieces marks the last year of
his life. Early in the year he composed the greatest of his
piano duets, the Fantasy in F Minor. The Great Symphony
was concluded in March, as was also the cantata Miriams
Siegesgesang (Miriam’s Victory Song). In June he worked at
his sixth mass—in E-flat Major. A return to songwriting in
August produced the series published together as the
Schwanengesang (Swan Song). In September and early
October the succession was concluded by the last three
piano sonatas, in C Minor, A Major, and B-flat Major, and
the great String Quintet in C Major—the swan song of the
Classical era in music.
The only public concert Schubert gave took place on
March 26, 1828. It was both artistically and financially a
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Felix Mendelssohn
(b. Feb. 3, 1809, Hamburg [Germany]—d. Nov. 4, 1847, Leipzig)
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The German composer, conductor, and musician Felix Mendelssohn, celebrated dur-
ing the Romantic period for his accomplished works. Getty Images/Redferns
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Frédéric Chopin
(b. March 1, 1810, Żelazow, near Warsaw, duchy of Warsaw [now in
Poland]—d. Oct. 17, 1849, Paris, France)
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Years in Paris
In March and October 1830 he presented his new works
to the Warsaw public and then left Poland with the inten-
tion of visiting Germany and Italy for further study. He
had gone no farther than Vienna when news reached him
of the Polish revolt against Russian rule; this event, added
to the disturbed state of Europe, caused him to remain
profitlessly in Vienna until the following July, when he
decided to make his way to Paris. Soon after his arrival in
what was then the centre of European culture and in the
midst of its own late-flowering Romantic movement,
Chopin realized that he had found the milieu in which his
genius could flourish. He quickly established ties with
many Polish émigrés and with a younger generation of
composers, including Franz Liszt and Hector Berlioz.
Chopin decided to settle in Paris to pursue teaching and
composing.
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Franz Liszt
(b. Oct. 22, 1811, Raiding, Hung.—d. July 31, 1886, Bayreuth, Ger.)
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Compositions at Weimar
In February 1847 Liszt met the princess Carolyne Sayn-
Wittgenstein at Kiev and later spent some time at her
estate in Poland. She quickly persuaded him to give up his
career as a virtuoso and to concentrate on composition.
He gave his final concert at Yelizavetgrad (Kirovograd) in
September of that year. Having been director of music
extraordinary to the Weimar court in Germany since 1843,
and having conducted concerts there since 1844, Liszt
decided to settle there permanently in 1848. He was later
joined by the princess, who had unsuccessfully tried to
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Last Years
In 1869 Liszt was invited to return to Weimar by the grand
duke to give master classes in piano playing, and two years
later he was asked to do the same in Budapest. From then
until the end of his life he divided his time between Rome,
Weimar, and Budapest. His music began to lose some of
its brilliant quality and became starker, more introverted,
and more experimental in style. His later works anticipate
the styles of Claude Debussy, Béla Bartók, and even Arnold
Schoenberg.
In 1886 Liszt left Rome for the last time. He attended
concerts of his works in Budapest, Liège, and Paris and
then went to London, where several concerts of his works
were given. He then went on to Antwerp, Paris, and Weimar,
and he played for the last time at a concert in Luxembourg
on July 19. Two days later he arrived in Bayreuth for the
annual Bayreuth festival. His health had not been good for
some months, and he went to bed with a high fever, though
he still managed to attend two performances. His final ill-
ness developed into pneumonia, and he died on July 31.
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Richard Wagner
(b. May 22, 1813, Leipzig [Germany]—d. Feb. 13, 1883, Venice, Italy)
Early Life
The artistic and theatrical background of Wagner’s early
years was a main formative influence. Impulsive and self-
willed, he was a negligent scholar at the Kreuzschule,
Dresden, and the Nicholaischule, Leipzig. He frequented
concerts, however, taught himself the piano and composi-
tion, and read the plays of Shakespeare, Goethe, and
Schiller.
Wagner enrolled at Leipzig University, where he applied
himself earnestly to composition. His Symphony in C Major
was performed at the Leipzig Gewandhaus concerts in 1833.
On leaving the university that year, he spent the summer
as operatic coach at Würzburg, where he composed his
first opera, Die Feen (The Fairies), based on a fantastic tale
by Carlo Gozzi. He failed to get the opera produced at
Leipzig and became conductor to a provincial theatrical
troupe from Magdeburg, having fallen in love with one of
the actresses of the troupe, Wilhelmine (Minna) Planer,
whom he married in 1836. The single performance of his
second opera, Das Liebesverbot (The Ban on Love), after
Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure, was a disaster.
In 1839, fleeing from his creditors, he decided to put into
operation his long-cherished plan to win renown in Paris,
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Exile
For the next 15 years Wagner was not to present any further
new works. Until 1858 he lived in Zürich, composing, writ-
ing treatises, and conducting. Having already studied the
Siegfried legend and the Norse myths as a possible basis
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Giuseppe Verdi
(b. Oct. 9/10, 1813, Roncole, near Busseto, duchy of Parma [Italy]—d.
Jan. 27, 1901, Milan, Italy)
Early Years
Born to a poor family, Verdi showed unusual musical talent
at an early age. A local amateur musician named Antonio
Barezzi helped him with his education. At Barezzi’s
expense Verdi was sent to Milan when he was 18. He stayed
there for three years, then served as musical director in
Busseto for two years before returning to Milan. By 1840,
just as he had established a reputation and begun to
make money, he was discouraged by personal tragedies.
Within a three-year period his wife and both of his
children died.
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Early Career
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Late Years
In 1873, while waiting in a Naples hotel for a production of
Aida, Verdi wrote a string quartet, the only instrumental
composition of his maturity. In the same year, he was
moved by the death of the Italian patriot and poet
Alessandro Manzoni to compose a requiem mass in his
honour. One of the masterpieces in the oratorio tradition,
the Manzoni Requiem is an impressive testimony to what
Verdi could do outside the field of opera.
After 1873 the maestro considered himself retired, at
long last, from that world of opera to which he had been
bound for so many years. He settled in at Sant’Agata,
where he became a major landholder and a very wealthy
man. His unintended and unimagined return to the stage,
many years after Aida, was entirely due to the initiative of
his publisher, Giulio Ricordi, who proposed that Arrigo
Boito should write a libretto based on Shakespeare’s
Othello. The Othello project then took shape, very slowly,
on and off, until the opera finally opened at La Scala in
1887. In his 74th year, Verdi, stimulated by a libretto far
superior to anything he had previously set, had produced
his tragic masterpiece.
After a rapturous tour with Otello throughout Europe,
Verdi once more retreated to Sant’Agata, declaring that
he had composed his last opera. Yet Ricordi and Boito
managed to intervene one more time. With infinite skill,
Boito converted Shakespeare’s The Merry Wives of Windsor,
strengthened with passages adapted from the Henry IV
plays, into the perfect comic libretto, Falstaff, which Verdi
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Johannes Brahms
(b. May 7, 1833, Hamburg [Germany]—d. April 3, 1897, Vienna,
Austria-Hungary [now in Austria])
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Final Years
In 1891 Brahms was inspired to write chamber music for
the clarinet. He consequently composed the Trio for
Clarinet, Cello, and Piano (1891); the great Quintet for Clarinet
and Strings (1891); and two Sonatas for Clarinet and Piano
(1894). These works are beautifully adapted to the poten-
tialities of the wind instrument.
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Early Years
Tchaikovsky was the second of six surviving children of
Ilya Tchaikovsky, a manager of the Kamsko-Votkinsk
metal works, and Alexandra Assier, a descendant of
French émigrés. He manifested a clear interest in music
from childhood, and his earliest musical impressions
came from an orchestrina in the family home. At age four
he made his first recorded attempt at composition, a song
written with his younger sister Alexandra. In 1845 he began
taking piano lessons with a local tutor, through which he
became familiar with Frédéric Chopin’s mazurkas and the
piano pieces of Friedrich Kalkbrenner.
In 1850 Tchaikovsky entered the prestigious Imperial
School of Jurisprudence in St. Petersburg, a boarding
institution for young boys, where he spent nine years. He
proved a diligent and successful student who was popular
among his peers. At the same time Tchaikovsky formed
in this all-male environment intense emotional ties with
several of his schoolmates.
In 1854 his mother fell victim to cholera and died.
During the boy’s last years at the school, Tchaikovsky’s
father invited the professional teacher Rudolph Kündinger
to give him piano lessons. At age 17 Tchaikovsky came
under the influence of the Italian singing instructor Luigi
Piccioli, and thereafter Tchaikovsky developed a lifelong
passion for Italian music. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Don
Giovanni proved another revelation that deeply affected
his musical taste. In the summer of 1861 he traveled outside
Russia for the first time, visiting Germany, France, and
England, and in October of that year he began attending
music classes offered by the recently founded Russian
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Middle Years
After graduating in December 1865, Tchaikovsky moved
to Moscow to teach music theory at the Russian Musical
Society, soon thereafter renamed the Moscow Conserva
tory. He found teaching difficult, but his friendship with
the director, Nikolay Rubinstein, helped make it bearable.
Within five years Tchaikovsky had produced his first sym-
phony, Symphony No. 1 in G Minor (composed 1866; Winter
Daydreams), and his first opera, The Voyevoda (1868).
In 1868 Tchaikovsky met a Belgian mezzo-soprano
named Désirée Artôt, with whom he fleetingly contem-
plated a marriage, but their engagement ended in failure.
The opera The Voyevoda was well received, even by the The
Five, an influential group of nationalistic Russian compos-
ers who never appreciated the cosmopolitanism of
Tchaikovsky’s music. In 1869 Tchaikovsky completed
Romeo and Juliet, an overture in which he subtly adapted
sonata form to mirror the dramatic structure of
Shakespeare’s play. Nikolay Rubinstein conducted a success-
ful performance of this work the following year, and it
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Years of Fame
At the very end of 1875, Tchaikovsky left Russia to travel
in Europe. He was powerfully impressed by a performance
of Georges Bizet’s Carmen at the Opéra-Comique in Paris;
in contrast, the production of Richard Wagner’s Ring
cycle, which he attended in Bayreuth, Germany, during
the summer of 1876, left him cold. In November 1876 he
put the final touches on his symphonic fantasia Francesca
da Rimini, a work with which he felt particularly pleased.
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Final Years
At the beginning of 1885, tired of his peregrinations,
Tchaikovsky settled down in a rented country house near
Klin, outside of Moscow. There he adopted a regular
daily routine that included reading, walking in the forest,
composing in the mornings and the afternoons, and
playing piano duets with friends in the evenings. At the
January 1887 premiere of his opera Cherevichki, he finally
overcame his longstanding fear of conducting. Moreover,
at the end of December he embarked upon his first
European concert tour as a conductor, which included
Leipzig, Berlin, Prague, Hamburg, Paris, and London. He
met with great success and made a second tour in 1889.
Between October 1888 and August 1889 he composed his
second ballet, The Sleeping Beauty. During the winter of
1890, while staying in Florence, he concentrated on his
third Pushkin opera, The Queen of Spades, which was
written in just 44 days and is considered one of his finest.
Later that year Tchaikovsky was informed by Nadezhda
von Meck that she was close to ruin and could not continue
his allowance. This was followed by the cessation of their
correspondence, a circumstance that caused Tchaikovsky
considerable anguish.
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Giacomo Puccini
(b. Dec. 22, 1858, Lucca, Tuscany [Italy]—d. Nov. 29, 1924, Brussels, Belg.)
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del west (1910; The Girl of the Golden West). These four mature
works also tell a moving love story, one that centres entirely
on the feminine protagonist and ends in a tragic resolution.
All four speak the same refined and limpid musical language
of the orchestra that creates the subtle play of thematic
reminiscences. The music always emerges from the words,
indissolubly bound to their meaning and to the images
they evoke. In Bohème, Tosca, and Butterfly, he collaborated
enthusiastically with the writers Giuseppe Giacosa and
Luigi Illica. The first performance (Feb. 17, 1904) of Madama
Butterfly was a fiasco, probably because the audience found
the work too much like Puccini’s preceding operas.
In 1908, having spent the summer in Cairo, the Puccinis
returned to Torre del Lago, and Giacomo devoted himself
to Fanciulla. Elvira unexpectedly became jealous of Doria
Manfredi, a young servant from the village who had been
employed for several years by the Puccinis. She drove
Doria from the house threatening to kill her. Subsequently,
the servant girl poisoned herself, and the Manfredis
brought charges against Elvira Puccini for persecution
and calumny, creating one of the most famous scandals of
the time. Elvira was found guilty but was not sentenced,
and Puccini paid damages to the Manfredis, who withdrew
their accusations.
The premiere of La fanciulla del west took place at the
Metropolitan in New York City on Dec. 10, 1910, with
Arturo Toscanini conducting. It was a great triumph, and
with it Puccini reached the end of his mature period.
Puccini felt the new century advancing with problems no
longer his own. He did not understand contemporary
events, such as World War I. In 1917 at Monte-Carlo in
Monaco, Puccini’s opera La rondine was first performed
and was quickly forgotten.
Always interested in contemporary operatic composi-
tions, Puccini studied the works of Claude Debussy,
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Gustav Mahler
(b. July 7, 1860, Kaliště, Bohemia, Austrian Empire [Austria]—d. May
18, 1911, Vienna, Austria)
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Early Life
Mahler was the second of 12 children of an Austrian-Jewish
tavern keeper living in the Bohemian village of Kaliště
(German: Kalischt), in the southwestern corner of the
modern Czech Republic. Shortly after his birth the family
moved to the nearby town of Jihlava (German: Iglau),
where Mahler spent his childhood and youth. Mahler was
afflicted by the tensions of being an “other” from the
beginning of his life. As part of a German-speaking
Austrian minority, he was an outsider among the indigenous
Czech population and, as a Jew, an outsider among that
Austrian minority; later, in Germany, he was an outsider
as both an Austrian from Bohemia and a Jew.
Mahler’s life was also complicated by the tension
between his parents. His father had married a delicate
woman from a cultured family, and, coming to resent her
social superiority, he resorted to physically maltreating her.
In consequence Mahler was alienated from his father and
had a strong mother fixation. Furthermore, he inherited
his mother’s weak heart, which was to cause his death at
the age of 50. This unsettling early background may explain
the nervous tension, the irony and skepticism, the obses-
sion with death, and the unremitting quest to discover some
meaning in life that was to pervade Mahler’s life and music.
Mahler’s musical talent revealed itself early and signifi-
cantly; around the age of four he began to reproduce
military music and Czech folk music on the accordion and
on the piano and began composing pieces of his own. The
military and popular styles, together with the sounds of
nature, became main sources of his mature inspiration. At
10 he made his debut as a pianist in Jihlava and at 15 was
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Career as a Conductor
The next 17 years saw his ascent to the very top of his
chosen profession. From conducting musical farces in
Austria, he rose through various provincial opera houses
to become artistic director of the Vienna Court Opera in
1897, at the age of 37. As a conductor he had won general
acclaim, but as a composer, during this first creative period,
he encountered the public’s lack of comprehension that
was to confront him for most of his career.
Since Mahler’s conducting life centred in the traditional
manner on the opera house, it is at first surprising that his
whole mature output was entirely symphonic (his 40 songs
are not true lieder but embryonic symphonic movements,
some of which, in fact, provided a partial basis for the
symphonies). But Mahler’s unique aim, partially influenced
by the school of Richard Wagner and Franz Liszt, was
essentially autobiographical—the musical expression of a
personal view of the world, particularly through song and
symphony.
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Claude Debussy
(b. Aug. 22, 1862, Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France—d. March 25,
1918, Paris)
Early Period
Debussy showed a gift as a pianist by the age of nine. He
was encouraged by Madame Mauté de Fleurville, who was
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Middle Period
As a holder of the Grand Prix de Rome, Debussy was given
a three-year stay at the Villa Medici, in Rome, where,
under what were supposed to be ideal conditions, he was
to pursue his creative work. Debussy eventually fled from
the Villa Medici after two years and returned to Blanche
Vasnier in Paris. At this time Debussy lived a life of extreme
indulgence. Once one of his mistresses, Gabrielle (“Gaby”)
Dupont, threatened suicide. His first wife, Rosalie (“Lily”)
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Late Period
In 1905 Debussy’s illegitimate daughter, Claude-Emma, was
born. He had divorced Lily Texier in 1904 and subsequently
married his daughter’s mother, Emma Bardac. For his
daughter he wrote the piano suite Children’s Corner (1908).
Debussy’s spontaneity and the sensitive nature of his
perception facilitated his acute insight into the child mind,
an insight noticeable particularly in Children’s Corner; in the
Douze Préludes, two books (1910, 1913; “Twelve Preludes”),
for piano; and in the ballet La Boîte à joujoux (1st perf. 1919;
The Box of Toys). In his later years, it is the pursuit of illusion
that marks Debussy’s instrumental writing, especially the
strange, otherworldly Cello Sonata. This noble bass instru-
ment takes on, in chameleon fashion, the character of a
violin, a flute, and even a mandolin.
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Sergey Rachmaninoff
(b. March 20 [April 1, New Style], 1873, Oneg, near Semyonovo,
Russia—d. March 28, 1943, Beverly Hills, Calif., U.S.)
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Early Life
Rachmaninoff was born on an estate belonging to his
grandparents, situated near Lake Ilmen in the Novgorod
district. His father was a retired army officer and his
mother the daughter of a general. The boy was destined
to become an army officer until his father lost the entire
family fortune through risky financial ventures and then
deserted the family. Young Sergey’s cousin Aleksandr
Siloti, a well-known concert pianist and conductor, sensed
the boy’s abilities and suggested sending him to the noted
teacher and pianist Nikolay Zverev in Moscow for his
piano studies. It is to Zverev’s strict disciplinarian treat-
ment of the boy that musical history owes one of the
great piano virtuosos of the 20th century. For his general
education and theoretical subjects in music, Sergey became
a pupil at the Moscow Conservatory.
At age 19 he graduated from the Conservatory, winning
a gold medal for his one-act opera Aleko (after Aleksandr
Pushkin’s poem Tsygany [“The Gypsies”]). His fame and
popularity, both as composer and concert pianist, were
launched by two compositions: the Prelude in C-sharp
Minor, played for the first time in public on Sept. 26, 1892,
and his Piano Concerto No. 2 in C Minor, which had its first
performance in Moscow on Oct. 27, 1901. The former
piece, although it first brought Rachmaninoff to public
attention, was to haunt him throughout his life—the pre-
lude was constantly requested by his concert audiences.
The concerto, his first major success, revived his hopes
after a trying period of inactivity.
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Later Years
After the Russian Revolution of 1917, Rachmaninoff went
into his second self-imposed exile, dividing his time
between residences in Switzerland and the United States.
Although for the next 25 years he spent most of his time
in an English-speaking country, he never mastered its
language or thoroughly acclimatized himself. With his
family and a small circle of friends, he lived a rather iso-
lated life. He missed Russia and the Russian people—the
sounding board for his music, as he said. And this alien-
ation had a devastating effect on his formerly prolific
creative ability. He produced little of real originality but
rewrote some of his earlier work. Indeed, he devoted
himself almost entirely to concertizing in the United
States and Europe, a field in which he had few peers. His
only substantial works from this period are the Symphony
No. 3 in A Minor (1936), another expression of sombre,
Slavic melancholy, and the Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini
for piano and orchestra, a set of variations on a violin
caprice by Niccolò Paganini. Rachmaninoff ’s last major
work, the Symphonic Dances for orchestra, was composed
in 1940, about two years before his death.
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W. C. Handy
(b. Nov. 16, 1873, Florence, Ala., U.S.—d. March 28, 1958, New
York, N.Y.)
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Arnold Schoenberg
(b. Sept. 13, 1874, Vienna, Austrian Empire [Austria]—d. July 13, 1951,
Los Angeles, Calif., U.S.)
Early Life
Schoenberg’s father, Samuel, owned a small shoe shop in
the Second, then predominantly Jewish, district, of Vienna.
Neither Samuel nor his wife, Pauline (née Nachod), was
particularly musical. There were, however, two profes-
sional singers in the family—Heinrich Schoenberg, the
composer’s brother, and Hans Nachod, his cousin.
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Charles Ives
(b. Oct. 20, 1874, Danbury, Conn., U.S.—d. May 19, 1954, New
York, N.Y.)
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Béla Bartók
(b. March 25, 1881, Nagyszentmiklós, Hung., Austria-Hungary—d.
Sept. 26, 1945, New York, N.Y., U.S.)
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Career in Hungary
Bartók spent his childhood and youth in various provincial
towns, studying the piano with his mother and later with a
succession of teachers. He began to compose small dance
pieces at age nine, and two years later he played in public
for the first time, including a composition of his own in his
program.
Bartók undertook his professional studies in Budapest,
at the Royal Hungarian Academy of Music. He developed
rapidly as a pianist but less so as a composer. His discovery in
1902 of the music of Richard Strauss stimulated his enthu-
siasm for composition. At the same time, a spirit of optimistic
nationalism was sweeping Hungary, and the 22-year-old
composer wrote a symphonic poem, Kossuth (1903); in a style
reminiscent of Strauss, though with a Hungarian flavour, the
work portrays the life of the great patriot Lajos Kossuth, who
had led the revolution of 1848–49. Despite a scandal at the
first performance, the work was received enthusiastically.
Shortly after Bartók completed his studies in 1903,
he and the Hungarian composer Zoltán Kodály, who
collaborated with Bartók, discovered that what they had
considered Hungarian folk music and drawn upon for
their compositions was instead the music of city-dwelling
Roma (Gypsies). A vast reservoir of authentic Hungarian
peasant music was subsequently made known by the
research of the two composers. The initial collection was
begun with the intention of revitalizing Hungarian music.
Both composers not only transcribed many folk tunes for
the piano and other media but also incorporated into their
original music elements of rural music.
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U.S. Career
As Nazi Germany extended its sphere of influence in the
late 1930s and Hungary appeared in imminent danger of
capitulation, Bartók found it impossible to remain in his
homeland. After a second concert tour of the United States
in 1940, he immigrated there the same year. An appoint-
ment as research assistant in music at Columbia University,
New York City, enabled him to continue working with folk
music, transcribing and editing for publication a collection
of Serbo-Croatian women’s songs, a part of a much larger
recorded collection of Yugoslav folk music. With his
wife, the pianist Ditta Pásztory, he was able to give a few
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Igor Stravinsky
(b. June 5 [June 17, New Style], 1882, Oranienbaum [now Lomonosov],
near St. Petersburg, Russia—d. April 6, 1971, New York, N.Y., U.S.)
Early Years
Stravinsky’s father was one of the leading Russian operatic
basses of his day, and the mixture of the musical, theatrical,
and literary spheres in the Stravinsky family household
exerted a lasting influence on the composer. Nevertheless
his own musical ability emerged quite slowly. As a boy he
was given lessons in piano and music theory. But then
he studied law and philosophy at St. Petersburg University
(graduating in 1905), and only gradually did he become
aware of his aptitude for musical composition. In 1902 he
showed some of his early pieces to the composer Nikolay
Rimsky-Korsakov, who was sufficiently impressed to take
Stravinsky as a private pupil, while at the same time
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Russian Period
The premiere of The Firebird at the Paris Opéra on June 25,
1910, was a dazzling success that made Stravinsky known
overnight as one of the most gifted of the younger genera-
tion of composers. The Firebird was the first of a series of
spectacular collaborations between Stravinsky and
Diaghilev’s company. The following year saw the Ballets
Russes’ premiere on June 13, 1911, of the ballet Petrushka,
with Vaslav Nijinsky dancing the title role to Stravinsky’s
musical score. Meanwhile, Stravinsky had conceived the
idea of writing a kind of symphonic pagan ritual to be
called Great Sacrifice. The result was The Rite of Spring (Le
Sacre du printemps), the composition of which was spread
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Shift to Neoclassicism
The compositions of Stravinsky’s first maturity—from
The Rite of Spring in 1913 to the Symphonies of Wind
Instruments in 1920—make use of a modal idiom based
on Russian sources and are characterized by a highly
sophisticated feeling for irregular metres and syncopation
and by brilliant orchestral mastery. But his voluntary exile
from Russia prompted him to reconsider his aesthetic
stance, and the result was an important change in his
music—he abandoned the Russian features of his early
style and instead adopted a Neoclassical idiom. Stravinsky’s
Neoclassical works of the next 30 years usually take some
point of reference in past European music—a particular
composer’s work or the Baroque or some other historical
style—as a starting point for a highly personal and unorth-
odox treatment that nevertheless seems to depend for its
full effect on the listener’s experience of the historical
model from which Stravinsky borrowed.
The Stravinskys left Switzerland in 1920 and lived in
France until 1939, and Stravinsky spent much of this time
in Paris. (He took French citizenship in 1934.) Having lost
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Leadbelly
(b. Jan. 21, 1885?, Jeter Plantation, near Mooringsport, La., U.S.—d.
Dec. 6, 1949, New York, N.Y.)
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Carter Family
The group consisted of Alvin Pleasant Carter, known as A.P. Carter
(b. April 15, 1891, Maces Spring, Va., U.S.—d. Nov. 7, 1960, Kentucky),
his wife, Sara, née Sara Dougherty (b. July 21, 1898, Flatwoods, Va.,
U.S.—d. Jan. 8, 1979, Lodi, Calif.), and his sister-in-law Maybelle
Carter, née Maybelle Addington (b. May 10, 1909, Nickelsville, Va.,
U.S.—d. Oct. 23, 1978, Nashville, Tenn.).
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Here the singing group, the Carter Family, poses with their instruments in
Nashville, Tennessee, in the mid-1950s. Pictured from left to right are June,
Maybelle, Anita, and Helen (sitting). Michael Ochs Archives/Getty
Images
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Sergey Prokofiev
(b. April 23 [April 11, Old Style], 1891, Sontsovka, Ukraine, Russian
Empire—d. March 5, 1953, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R.)
Prerevolutionary Period
Prokofiev was born into a family of agriculturalists. Village
life, with its peasant songs, left a permanent imprint on
him. His mother, a good pianist, became the child’s first
mentor in music and arranged trips to the opera in Moscow.
Meanwhile, the Russian composer Reinhold Glière twice
went to Sontsovka in the summer months to train and
prepare young Sergey for entrance into the conservatory
at St. Petersburg. Prokofiev’s years at the conservatory—
1904 to 1914—were a period of swift creative growth, and
when he graduated he was awarded the Anton Rubinstein
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Foreign Period
The next decade and a half are commonly called the foreign
period of Prokofiev’s work. For a number of reasons,
chiefly the continued blockade of the Soviet Union, he
could not return at once to his homeland. The first five
years of Prokofiev’s life abroad are usually characterized as
the “years of wandering.” In the summer of 1918, he gave
several concerts in Japan, and in the United States his
piano recitals in New York City evoked both delight and
denunciation. In Chicago he was given a commission for a
comic opera; The Love for Three Oranges was completed in
1919, though it was not produced until 1921.
In America, Prokofiev met a young singer of Spanish
descent. Born Carlina Codina in Madrid and raised in
New York, Lina Llubera eventually became his wife and the
mother of two of his sons, Svyatoslav and Oleg. Not finding
continuing support in the United States, the composer set
out in the spring of 1920 for Paris for meetings with
Diaghilev and the conductor Serge Koussevitzky. They
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Soviet Period
Although he enjoyed many aspects of life in the West,
Prokofiev increasingly missed his homeland. Visits to the
Soviet Union in 1927, 1929, and 1932 led him to return to
Moscow permanently. From 1933 to 1935 the composer
became a leading figure of Soviet culture. In the two
decades constituting the Soviet period of Prokofiev’s
work—1933 to 1953—the realistic and epic traits of his art
became more clearly defined. The synthesis of traditional
tonal and melodic means with the stylistic innovations of
20th-century music was more fully realized.
In the years preceding World War II, Prokofiev created
a number of classical masterpieces, including his Violin
Concerto No. 2 in G Minor (1935) and the ballet Romeo and
Juliet (1935–36). His work in theatre and the cinema gave
rise to a number of programmatic suites, such as the
Lieutenant Kije suite (1934), the Egyptian Nights suite (1934),
and the symphonic children’s tale Peter and the Wolf (1936).
Turning to opera, he cast in the form of a contemporary
drama of folk life his Semyon Kotko, depicting events of the
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civil war in the Ukraine (1939). The basis of the opéra bouffe
Betrothal in a Monastery (composed in 1940, produced in
1946) was the play The Duenna, by the 18th-century British
dramatist Richard Brinsley Sheridan. Testing his powers
in other genres, he composed the monumental Cantata for
the 20th Anniversary of the October Revolution (1937), on texts
by Karl Marx, V.I. Lenin, and Joseph Stalin, and the cantata
The Toast (1939), composed for Stalin’s 60th birthday.
On his last trip abroad, in 1938, Prokofiev visited
Hollywood, where he studied the technical problems of
the sound film; he applied what he learned to the music
for Sergey Eisenstein’s film Alexander Nevsky, depicting
the 13th-century heroic Russian struggle against the
Teutonic Knights. The cantata Alexander Nevsky was based
on the music of the film.
On the eve of World War II, he left his wife and sons
for poet Mira Mendelssohn, who became his second
(common-law) wife. Regardless of the difficulties of the
war years, he composed with remarkable assiduity, even
when the evacuation of Moscow in 1941 prevented him
from returning to the city until 1944. From the first days
of the war, his attention was centred on a very large-scale
operatic project: an opera based on Leo Tolstoy’s novel
War and Peace. He was fascinated by the parallels between
1812, when Russia crushed Napoleon’s invasion, and the
then-current situation. Those who heard the work were
struck both by its immensity of scale (13 scenes, more than
60 characters) and by its unique blend of epic narrative
with lyrical scenes depicting the personal destinies of the
major characters. His increasing predilection for national-
epical imagery is manifested in the heroic majesty of the
Symphony No. 5 in B-flat Major (1944) and in the music
(composed 1942–45) for Eisenstein’s two-part film Ivan the
Terrible (Part I, 1944; Part II, 1948). Living in the Caucasus,
in Central Asia, and in the Urals, the composer was
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Cole Porter
(b. June 9, 1891, Peru, Ind., U.S.—d. Oct. 15, 1964, Santa Monica, Calif.)
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This photo of the great American songwriter and composer Cole Porter was
taken in October of 1933, around the time he was working on his classic musi-
cal Anything Goes. Getty Images/Sasha
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Jimmie Rodgers
(b. Sept. 8, 1897, Pine Springs Community, near Meridian, Miss.,
U.S.—d. May 26, 1933, New York City, N.Y.)
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Fletcher Henderson
(b. Dec. 18, 1897, Cuthbert, Ga., U.S.—d. Dec. 29, 1952, New York, N.Y.)
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Bessie Smith
(b. April 15, 1898?, Chattanooga, Tenn., U.S.—d. Sept. 26, 1937,
Clarksdale, Miss.)
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George Gershwin
(b. Sept. 26, 1898, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.—d. July 11, 1937,
Hollywood, Calif.)
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Rhapsody in Blue
During the next few years, Gershwin contributed songs to
various Broadway shows and revues. From 1920 to 1924 he
composed scores for the annual productions of George
White’s Scandals, the popular variety revue. For the Scandals
production of 1922, Gershwin convinced producer White
to incorporate a one-act jazz opera. This work, Blue Monday
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In this photo, circa 1925, the popular American composer George Gershwin,
sits at a piano ready to play. Getty Images/Hulton Archive.
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was poorly received and was removed from the show after
one performance. Bandleader Paul Whiteman, who had
conducted the pit orchestra for the show, was neverthe-
less impressed by the piece. He and Gershwin shared
the common goal of bringing respectability to jazz music.
To this end, in late 1923 Whiteman asked Gershwin to
compose a piece for an upcoming concert. Legend has it
that Gershwin forgot about the request until early January
1924, when he read a newspaper article announcing that
the Whiteman concert on February 12 would feature a
major new Gershwin composition. Writing at a furious
pace in order to meet the deadline, Gershwin composed
Rhapsody in Blue, perhaps his best-known work, in three
weeks’ time.
Owing to the haste in which it was written, Rhapsody in
Blue was somewhat unfinished at its premiere. Gershwin
improvised much of the piano solo during the performance,
and conductor Whiteman had to rely on a nod from
Gershwin to cue the orchestra at the end of the solo.
Nevertheless, the piece was a resounding success and
brought Gershwin worldwide fame. The revolutionary
work incorporated trademarks of the jazz idiom (blue
notes, syncopated rhythms, onomatopoeic instrumental
effects) into a symphonic context. Arranged by Ferde
Grofé (composer of the Grand Canyon Suite) for either
symphony orchestra or jazz band, the work is perhaps
the most-performed and most-recorded orchestral com-
position of the 20th century.
Popular Songs
For the remainder of his career, Gershwin devoted himself
to both popular songs and orchestral compositions. His
Broadway shows from the 1920s and ’30s featured numer-
ous songs that became standards, including: “Fascinating
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Aftermath
Gershwin was known as a gregarious man whose huge ego
was tempered by a genuinely magnetic personality. He
loved his work and approached every assignment with
enthusiasm, never suffering from “composer’s block.”
Throughout the first half of 1937, Gershwin began experi-
encing severe headaches and brief memory blackouts,
although medical tests showed him to be in good health.
By July, Gershwin exhibited impaired motor skills and
drastic weight loss, and he required assistance in walking.
He lapsed into a coma on July 9, and a spinal tap revealed
the presence of a brain tumour. Gershwin never regained
consciousness and died during surgery two days later.
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Duke Ellington
(b. April 29, 1899, Washington, D.C., U.S.—d. May 24, 1974, New
York, N.Y.)
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This 1958 photo catches the legendary big band leader and jazz pianist, Duke
Ellington, adjusting his bow tie, probably before a show. Getty Images/
Evening Standard
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Kurt Weill
(b. March 2, 1900, Dessau, Ger.—d. April 3, 1950, New York, N.Y., U.S.)
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Aaron Copland
(b. Nov. 14, 1900, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.—d. Dec. 2, 1990, North
Tarrytown [now Sleepy Hollow], N.Y.)
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Louis Armstrong
(b. Aug. 4, 1901, New Orleans, La., U.S.—d. July 6, 1971, New York, N.Y.)
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Umm Kulthum
(b. May 4, 1904?, Tummāy al-Zahāyrah, Egypt—d. Feb. 3, 1975, Cairo)
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Count Basie
(b. Aug. 21, 1904, Red Bank, N.J., U.S.—d. April 26, 1984,
Hollywood, Fla.)
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Dmitry Shostakovich
(b. Sept. 12 [Sept. 25, New Style], 1906, St. Petersburg, Russia—d.
Aug. 9, 1975, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R.)
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Bill Monroe
(b. Sept. 13, 1911, Rosine, Ky., U.S.—d. Sept. 9, 1996, Springfield, near
Nashville, Tenn.)
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Mahalia Jackson
(b. Oct. 26, 1911, New Orleans, La., U.S.—d. Jan. 27, 1972, Evergreen
Park, near Chicago, Ill.)
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The great American gospel singer Mahalia Jackson is seen here in 1971
singing at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo for the Emperor Hirohito’s 70th
birthday. Getty Images/Keystone
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Robert Johnson
(b. c. 1911, Hazlehurst, Miss., U.S.—d. Aug. 16, 1938, near
Greenwood, Miss.)
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Woody Guthrie
(b. July 14, 1912, Okemah, Okla., U.S.—d. Oct. 3, 1967, New York, N.Y.)
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John Cage
(b. Sept. 5, 1912, Los Angeles, Calif., U.S.—d. Aug. 12, 1992,
New York, N.Y.)
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Muddy Waters
(b. April 4, 1915, Rolling Fork, Miss., U.S.—d. April 30, 1983,
Westmont, Ill.)
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Billie Holiday
(b. April 7, 1915, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.—d. July 17, 1959, New York, N.Y.),
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Frank Sinatra
(b. Dec. 12, 1915, Hoboken, N.J., U.S.—d. May 14, 1998, Los
Angeles, Calif.)
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The Actor
Sinatra appeared in several films throughout the 1940s,
the best among them being the musicals in which he
costarred with dancer Gene Kelly. Of these, Anchors
Aweigh (1945) and Take Me Out to the Ballgame (1949) are
pleasant diversions, whereas On the Town (1949) ranks
among the greatest of film musicals. It was acting, rather
than music, that precipitated Sinatra’s comeback in 1953.
He played the role of the scrappy, tragic soldier, Maggio,
in From Here to Eternity (1953), and his performance
earned him an Oscar for best supporting actor. Sinatra
went on to become one of the top film stars of the 1950s
and ’60s. The political thriller The Manchurian Candidate
(1962) is perhaps Sinatra’s greatest film and features his
best performance. In later years, he was memorable in The
Detective (1968) and in his final starring role in The First
Deadly Sin (1980).
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Frank Sinatra, sometimes called “Ol’ Blue Eyes,” is photographed here in 1945
in front of a CBS radio microphone. Hulton Archive/Getty Images
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Edith Piaf
(b. Dec. 19, 1915, Paris, France—d. Oct. 11, 1963, Paris)
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Ella Fitzgerald
(b. April 25, 1917, Newport News, Va., U.S.—d. June 15, 1996, Beverly
Hills, Calif.)
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Leonard Bernstein
(b. Aug. 25, 1918, Lawrence, Mass., U.S.—d. Oct. 14, 1990,
New York, N.Y.)
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Pete Seeger
(b. May 3, 1919, New York, N.Y., U.S.)
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the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996, and the following
year he received his first Grammy Award, for Pete (1996).
In 2009 he won a second Grammy, for a collection that
found the artist approaching his 90th birthday with undi-
minished spirit and hope. Seeger’s “musical autobiography”
Where Have All the Flowers Gone was published in 1996.
Ravi Shankar
(b. April 7, 1920, Benares [now Varanasi], India)
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Charlie Parker
(b. Aug. 29, 1920, Kansas City, Kan., U.S.—d. March 12, 1955, New
York, N.Y.)
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tito Puente
(b. April 20, 1923, New York, N.Y., U.S.—d. May 31, 2000,
New York, N.Y.)
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Hank Williams
(b. Sept. 17, 1923, Georgiana, Ala., U.S.—d. Jan. 1, 1953, Oak Hill, W.Va.)
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Maria Callas
(b. Dec. 2, 1923, New York, N.Y., U.S.—d. Sept. 16, 1977, Paris, France)
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Clifton Chenier
(b. June 25, 1925, Opelousas, La., U.S.—d. Dec. 12, 1987, Lafayette, La.)
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B.B. King
(b. Sept. 16, 1925, Itta Bena, near Indianola, Miss., U.S.)
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Miles Davis
(b. May 26, 1926, Alton, Ill., U.S.—d. Sept. 28, 1991, Santa Monica, Calif.)
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Starting Out
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Legacy
Chuck Berry
(b. Oct. 18, 1926, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.)
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7 Antonio Carlos Jobim 7
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Ray Charles
(b. Sept. 23, 1930, Albany, Ga., U.S.—d. June 10, 2004, Beverly
Hills, Calif.)
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Patsy Cline
(b. Sept. 8, 1932, Winchester, Va., U.S.—d. March 5, 1963, near
Camden, Tenn.)
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James Brown
(b. May 3, 1933, Barnwell, S.C., U.S.—d. Dec. 25, 2006, Atlanta, Ga.)
250
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Elvis Presley
(b. Jan. 8, 1935, Tupelo, Miss., U.S.—d. Aug. 16, 1977, Memphis, Tenn.)
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records for the size of the audiences. Even his films, a few
slight vehicles, were box office smashes.
Presley became the teen idol of his decade, greeted
everywhere by screaming hordes of young women, and,
when it was announced in early 1958 that he had been
drafted and would enter the U.S. Army, there was that
rarest of all pop culture events, a moment of true grief.
More important, he served as the great cultural catalyst of
his period. Elvis projected a mixed vision of humility
and self-confidence, of intense commitment and comic
disbelief in his ability to create frenzy. He inspired literally
thousands of musicians—initially those more or less like-
minded Southerners, from Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins
on down, who were the first generation of rockabillies,
and, later, people who had far different combinations of
musical and cultural influences and ambitions. From John
Lennon to Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan to Prince, it was
impossible to think of a rock star of any importance who
did not owe an explicit debt to Presley.
Beyond even that, Presley inspired his audience. “It
was like he whispered his dream in all our ears and then
we dreamed it,” said Springsteen at the time of Presley’s
death. You did not have to want to be a rock and roll star
or even a musician to want to be like Elvis—which meant,
ultimately, to be free and uninhibited and yet still a part
of the everyday. Literally millions of people—an entire
generation or two—defined their sense of personal style
and ambition in terms that Elvis first personified.
As a result, he was anything but universally adored.
Those who did not worship him found him despicable (no
one found him ignorable). Preachers and pundits declared
him an anathema, his Pentecostally derived hip-swinging
stage style and breathy vocal asides obscene. Racists
denounced him for mingling black music with white (and
Presley was always scrupulous in crediting his black
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Ann-Margret and Elvis Presley in Viva Las Vegas (1964). © 1964 Metro-
Goldwyn-Mayer Inc.; photograph from a private collection
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Luciano Pavarotti
(b. Oct. 12, 1935, Modena, Italy—d. Sept. 6, 2007, Modena)
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Buddy Holly
(b. Sept. 7, 1936, Lubbock, Texas, U.S.—d. Feb. 3, 1959, near Clear
Lake, Iowa)
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records tapered off, and Holly was living in New York with
his new bride. Estranged from the Crickets and broke, he
was also contemplating legal action against Petty. This left
him little choice but to participate in the doomed “Winter
Dance Party of 1959” tour through the frozen Midwest,
during which he and coheadliners Ritchie Valens and the
Big Bopper (J.P. Richardson) were killed in a plane crash.
The music of Holly and the Crickets, their innovative
use of the studio, and the fact that they wrote most of their
songs themselves made them the single most important
influence on the Beatles, who knew every Holly record
backward and forward. In 1986 Holly was inducted into
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and in 1996 he was hon-
oured by the National Academy of Recording Arts and
Sciences with a lifetime achievement award.
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The British rock group the Rolling Stones in 1967. From left to right: Brian
Jones, Keith Richards, Bill Wyman, Charlie Watts, and Mick Jagger. Getty
Images/Keystone
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Philip Glass
(b. Jan. 31, 1937, Baltimore, Md., U.S.)
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Smokey Robinson
and the Miracles
In addition to Smokey Robinson (b. Feb. 19, 1940, Detroit, Mich.,
U.S.), the principal members of the group were Warren Moore (b.
Nov. 19, 1939, Detroit, Mich., U.S.), Bobby Rogers (b. Feb. 19, 1940,
Detroit, Mich., U.S.), Ronnie White (b. April 5, 1939, Detroit, Mich.,
U.S.), and Claudette Rogers (b. 1942)
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Parliament-Funkadelic
The original members were George Clinton (b. July 22, 1941,
Kannapolis, N.C., U.S.), Raymond Davis (b. March 29, 1940,
Sumter, S.C., U.S.), Calvin Simon (b. May 22, 1942, Beckley, W.Va.,
U.S.), Fuzzy Haskins (b. June 8, 1941, Elkhorn, W.Va., U.S.), and
Grady Thomas (b. Jan. 5, 1941, Newark, N.J., U.S.). Later members
included Michael Hampton (b. Nov. 15, 1956, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.),
Bernie Worrell (b. April 19, 1944, Long Beach, N.J., U.S.), Billy Bass
Nelson (b. Jan. 28, 1951, Plainfield, N.J., U.S.), Eddie Hazel (b. April 10,
1950, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.—d. Dec. 23, 1992), Tiki Fulwood (b.
May 23, 1944, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.—d. Oct. 29, 1979), Bootsy
Collins (b. Oct. 26, 1951, Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.), Fred Wesley (b.
July 4, 1943, Columbus, Ga., U.S.), Maceo Parker (b. Feb. 14, 1943,
Kinston, N.C., U.S.), Jerome Brailey (b. Aug. 20, 1950, Richmond,
Va., U.S.), Garry Shider (b. July 24, 1953, Plainfield, N.J., U.S.), Glen
Goins (b. Jan. 2, 1954, Plainfield, N.J., U.S.—d. July 29, 1978,
Plainfield), and Gary (“Mudbone”) Cooper (b. Nov. 24, 1953,
Washington, D.C., U.S.)
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The Beatles
The principal members were Paul McCartney (b. June 18, 1942,
Liverpool, Merseyside, Eng.), John Lennon (b. Oct. 9, 1940, Liverpool,
Merseyside, Eng.—d. Dec. 8, 1980, New York, N.Y., U.S.), George
Harrison (b. Feb. 25, 1943, Liverpool, Merseyside, Eng.—d. Nov. 29,
2001, Los Angeles, Calif., U.S.), and Ringo Starr (b. July 7, 1940,
Liverpool, Merseyside, Eng.). Other early members included Stuart
Sutcliffe (b. June 23, 1940, Edinburgh, Scot.—d. April 10, 1962,
Hamburg, W. Ger.) and Pete Best (b. Nov. 24, 1941, Madras [now
Chennai], India).
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The Beatles celebrate the completion of their album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely
Hearts Club Band in May of 1967. Getty Images/John Pratt
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JoAn bAez
(b. Jan. 9, 1941, Staten Island, N.Y., U.S.)
This photo, taken at a Washington D.C. civil rights rally in 1963, shows folk
singers Joan Baez and Bob Dylan performing. Getty Images/National
Archive
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Plácido Domingo
(b. Jan. 21, 1941, Madrid, Spain)
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7 The Beach Boys 7
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Bob Dylan
(b. May 24, 1941, Duluth, Minn., U.S.)
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Aretha Franklin
(b. March 25, 1942, Memphis, Tenn., U.S.)
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Jimi Hendrix
(b. Nov. 27, 1942, Seattle, Wash., U.S.—d. Sept. 18, 1970, London, Eng.)
293
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Rock guitar legend Jimi Hendrix is seen here in the middle of his performance
at the Isle of Wight Festival in August of 1970. Getty Images/Evening
Standard
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Joni Mitchell
(b. Nov. 7, 1943, Fort McLeod, Alta., Can.)
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Led Zeppelin
The members were Jimmy Page (b. Jan. 9, 1944, Heston, Middlesex,
Eng.), Robert Plant (b. Aug. 20, 1948, West Bromwich, West Midlands,
Eng.), John Paul Jones (original name John Baldwin; b. Jan. 3, 1946,
Sidcup, Kent, Eng.), and John Bonham (b. May 31, 1948, Redditch,
Hereford and Worcester, Eng.—d. Sept. 25, 1980, Windsor, Berkshire).
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The Who
The principal members were Pete Townshend (b. May 19, 1945,
London, Eng.), Roger Daltrey (b. March 1, 1944, London, Eng.),
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John Entwistle (b. Oct. 9, 1944, London, Eng.—d. June 27, 2002,
Las Vegas, Nev., U.S.), and Keith Moon (b. Aug. 23, 1946, London.
Eng.—d. Sept. 7, 1978, London). Moon was replaced by Kenny Jones
(b. Sept. 16, 1948, London, Eng.).
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Bob Marley
(b. Feb. 6, 1945, Nine Miles, St. Ann, Jam.—d. May 11, 1981, Miami,
Fla., U.S.)
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Eric Clapton
(b. March 30, 1945, Ripley, Surrey, Eng.)
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7 King Sunny Ade 7
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This photo
Caption TK.from
Thearound 1960 shows
quick brown Nigerian
fox jumps popular
over the musician
lazy dog. King
Caption Sunny
TK. The
Ade performing with a band onstage. Jon Sievert/Michael
quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. Caption TK. Ochs Archives/
Getty Images
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David Bowie
(b. Jan. 8, 1947, London, Eng.)
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Here David Bowie performs onstage during the final day of the Isle of Wight
rock festival in England, 2004. Getty Images/Dave Hogan
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Bruce Springsteen
(b. Sept. 23, 1949, Freehold, N.J., U.S.)
318
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7 Bruce Springsteen 7
Bruce Springsteen (left) and Steven Van Zandt (right) performing with the
E Street Band at the Super Bowl halftime show in 2009. Getty Images/
Streeter Lecka
321
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322
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Stevie Wonder
(b. May 13, 1950, Saginaw, Mich., U.S.)
323
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324
7 Stevie Wonder 7
325
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326
7 The Sex Pistols 7
time their album Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex
Pistols reached number one in early November, Rotten,
Vicious, Jones, and Cook had recorded together for the
last time.
A short, disastrous U.S. tour precipitated the group’s
split in January 1978 following their biggest show to date, in
San Francisco. Attempting to keep the Sex Pistols going
with the film project that became The Great Rock ’n’ Roll
Swindle (1980), McLaren issued records with an increasingly
uncontrollable Vicious as the vocalist. A cover version of
Eddie Cochran’s “C’mon Everybody” became the group’s
best-selling single following Vicious’s fatal heroin overdose
in New York City in February 1979 while out on bail (charged
with the murder of his girlfriend, Nancy Spungen). That
same month McLaren was sued by Rotten, and the Sex
Pistols disappeared into receivership, only to be revived
some years after the 1986 court case that restored control
of their affairs to the group. A reunion tour in 1996 finally
allowed the original quartet to play their hit songs in front
of supportive audiences. This anticlimactic postscript,
however, did not lessen the impact of their first four singles
and debut album, which shook the foundations of rock
music and sent tremors through British society. In 2006
the Sex Pistols were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame.
Prince
(b. June 7, 1958, Minneapolis, Minn., U.S.)
327
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328
7 Prince 7
Madonna
(b. Aug. 16, 1958, Bay City, Mich., U.S.)
329
7 The 100 Most Influential Musicians of All Time 7
330
7 Madonna 7
331
7 The 100 Most Influential Musicians of All Time 7
Michael Jackson
(b. Aug. 29, 1958, Gary, Ind., U.S.—d. June 25, 2009, Los Angeles,
Calif., U.S.)
332
7 Michael Jackson 7
Michael Jackson’s singles-studded solo album, Off the Wall, was released
August 10, 1979, weeks before the singer’s 21st birthday. GAB Archive/
Redferns/Getty Images
333
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334
7 Michael Jackson 7
Public Enemy
The original members were Chuck D (original name Carlton Ridenhour;
b. Aug. 1, 1960, New York, N.Y., U.S.), Flavor Flav (original name William
Drayton; b. March 16, 1959, New York, N.Y., U.S.), Terminator X
(original name Norman Lee Rogers; b. Aug. 25, 1966, New York, N.Y.,
U.S.), and Professor Griff (original name Richard Griffin).
335
7 The 100 Most Influential Musicians of All Time 7
U2
The members are Bono (byname of Paul Hewson; b. May 10, 1960,
Dublin, Ire.), the Edge (byname of David Evans; b. Aug. 8, 1961,
Barking, Essex [now in Greater London], Eng.), Adam Clayton (b.
March 13, 1960, Oxford, Oxfordshire, Eng.), and Larry Mullen, Jr.
(b. Oct. 31, 1961, Dublin, Ire.).
336
7 U2 7
337
7 The 100 Most Influential Musicians of All Time 7
Nirvana
The members were Kurt Cobain (b. Feb. 20, 1967, Aberdeen, Wash.,
U.S.—d. April 5, 1994, Seattle, Wash.), Krist Novoselic (b. May 16,
1965, Compton, Calif., U.S.), and Dave Grohl (b. Jan. 14, 1969,
Warren, Ohio, U.S.).
338
7 Nirvana 7
Nirvana singer Kurt Cobain performing with the band at a taping of the
MTV show Unplugged in 1993. Getty Images/Frank Micelotta
339
7 The 100 Most Influential Musicians of All Time 7
Radiohead
Formed in the mid-1980s at Abingdon School in Oxfordshire,
Radiohead comprised singer-guitarist Thom Yorke (b. Oct. 7, 1968,
Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, Eng.), bassist Colin Greenwood
(b. June 26, 1969, Oxford, Oxfordshire, Eng.), guitarist Ed O’Brien (b.
April 15, 1968, Oxford, Oxfordshire, Eng.), drummer Phil Selway (b.
May 23, 1967, Hemingford Grey, Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, Eng.),
and guitarist-keyboardist Jonny Greenwood (b. Nov. 5, 1971, Oxford,
Oxfordshire, Eng.).
340
7 Radiohead 7
Singer Thom Yorke of Radiohead performs “15 Step” during the Grammy
Awards in February of 2009. Getty Images/Kevin Winter
341
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342
7 Radiohead 7
Jay-Z
(b. Dec. 4, 1970, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.)
343
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344
GLOSSARY
345
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346
7 Glossary 7
347
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348
FOR FURTHER READING
349
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350
INDEX
A B
Abbey Road, 277 “Babarabatiri,” 231
Academic Festival Overture, 94 Bach, Johann Sebastian, 10–11,
Ade, King Sunny, 9, 311–313 29–38, 66, 79, 93
Aftermath, 265 “Bad Girl,” 270
Agrippina, 24 Baez, Joan, 279–280, 289
Aida, 85, 89, 107 Ballade in G Minor (Chopin), 72
Ala and Lolli, 150 Barcarolle (Chopin), 69
Aleko, 122 Baroque period, 23, 29, 35, 36,
Alexander Nevsky, 154 49, 141
“All or Nothing at All,” 209 Bartók, Béla, 79, 134–138
“All Shook Up,” 254 Basie, Count, 185–188, 207
Amazing Grace, 293 Beach Boys, the, 282–285
American in Paris, An, 10, 168 “Beale Street Blues,” 126
Amore, 259 “Beat It,” 334
“Anarchy in the U.K.,” 326 Beatles, the, 243, 256, 263–265,
Années de pelerinage, 76 273–278, 284, 295, 301–302
Anything Goes, 156 Beethoven, Ludwig van, 11, 23,
“Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere,” 303 43, 52–57, 67, 74, 77, 90,
Apollon musagète, 142–143 95–96, 113
Appalachian Spring, 177 Beggars Banquet, 266
Are You Experienced?, 295 “Begin the Beguine,” 156
“Are You Lonesome Tonight?,” 256 Bells, The, 124
Armstrong, Louis, 162, 179–182, Berceuse, 69
218, 226 Bernstein, Leonard, 219–221
“A-Tisket, A-Tasket,” 218 Berry, Chuck, 242–245, 276, 283
“Atomic Dog,” 272 “Billie Jean,” 334
“Ay-Tete-Fee,” 236 “Billie’s Blues,” 207
351
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352
7 Index 7
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354
7 Index 7
355
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356
7 Index 7
357
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358
7 Index 7
359
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360
7 Index 7
361