Resonating Reflections: A Critical Review of Ethnosymbolic Dynamics in Les Six’s Music Nationalism Movement
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Traditions and Musical Trends in Early Twentieth-Century French
Ignoring its form, folk songs often rise to the level of the purest art in emotion and expression, if not in form1.
3. French Nationalism: Les Six Movement
3.1. The Formation of Les Six
3.2. The Members of Les Six
4. Attitudes, Relations, and Contradictions
4.1. In Relation to Their Mentors
From an aesthetic point of view, the six belong to the new spirit, but limited to some members, not all… For me, the new spirit is, first and foremost, a return to classical forms—with modern sensitivity. Among the six, you will find this modern sensibility in George Auric, Francis Poulenc, Darius Milhaud. As for the other three of the six: Louis Durey, Arthur Honegger, Germaine Tailleferre, they are purely impressionist (Brevignon 2020, p. 92).
It is 30 years out of date; it is damned Wagnerism, very Kraut-Swiss, a ridiculous type of polytonality4.
4.2. In Relation to Claude Debussy
Wagner, if I may be permitted to express myself with the pomposity befitting him, was a beautiful sunset that was mistaken for a dawn (Trezise 2003, p. 46).
Having grown up in the middle of the Wagnerian debacle and having begun to write among the ruins of Debussyism, imitating Debussy seems to me today to be nothing more than the worst form of necrophagy (Kelly 2017, p. 24).
No doubt, nothing could have been strong enough to resist it if the deeply human genius of our Debussy had not come, assimilating without danger this foreign food. Indeed, it was thanks to it that Debussy was drawn away from Wagner and that he was able to realize his work, entirely built upon sensibility, tenderness, and love (Milhaud 1923).
But the Russian trap was set some years after when the Debussy school became fascinated by the orchestral technique of Rimsky-Korsakoff. The adorable subtlety of Debussy’s writing (perfect in his case, because he possessed a wonderful sense of criticism and a sensitive nature) became the source of the movement called “Impressionism” which, combined with Rimsky’s influence, led French music into a blind alley, where useless complications, the search for rare and delicate sonority instead of pure melody, caused a reaction which, too, was Russian in the Le Sacre du printemps, by Igor Stravinsky (Milhaud 1923).
Ravel refuses the Legion of Honor, but his music accepts it (Kelly 2013, p. 56).
In an era when one cries loudly for French music, in my opinion, no composer is more qualified to embody this than Maurice Ravel. Reserve, clarity, and simplicity are its main qualities (Brevignon 2020, p. 97).
4.3. In Relation to the Second Viennese School
5. Discussion: Neo-Nationalism or Modernism
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | This text comes from the booklet nots written by Keith Anderson for the album Joseph Canteloube: Chants d’Auvergne. Original text: “Les chants paysans s’élèvent bien souvent au niveau de l’art le plus pur, par le sentiment et l’expression, sinon par la forme” (K. Anderson 2004). |
2 | Original text: “Wagner, Stravin sky et même Debussy, sont de belles pieuvres. Qui s’approche d’eux a du mal à se dépêtrer de leurs tentacules” (Cocteau and Auric 2009, p. 28). |
3 | Original text: “Debussy a joué en Français, mais il a mis la pédale russe” (Cocteau and Auric 2009, p. 38). |
4 | Original text: “c’est vieux de 30 ans, c’est wagnérien en diable, très boche-suisse, ridicule comme polytonie” (Collaer 1996; Kelly 2017, p. 19). |
5 | Original text: “c’est Le Roi David qui établira définitivement la gloire d’Arthur parce que, l’œuvre étant faite de clichés et d’exercices de classe de fugue et de thèmes développés et de chorals et de formules toutes faites, les gens s’y reconnaissent et crient au sublime” (Collaer 1996; Kelly 2017, p. 19). |
6 | When Collet posed a question about the musical aesthetics of Les Six, Cocteau responded: “They take the complexities of polytonality as a point of departure eventually to arrive at simplicity”. He superficially addressed Collet’s inquiry with polytonality, ultimately leaving the intricacies to the members of Les Six: “At last, melody may escape its psalmodic past without sacrificing pure French prosody. Les Six know their language.” (Roy 1994, p. 201; de Médicis 2005). |
7 | Diatonism and Chromaticism are the two poles of musical expression. One can say that the Latins are diatonic and the Teutons chromatic. Here are to be found two different points; they are entirely opposed, and their consequences are verified by history (Milhaud 1923). |
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Chang, X.; Salleh, M.B.; Sun, J. Resonating Reflections: A Critical Review of Ethnosymbolic Dynamics in Les Six’s Music Nationalism Movement. Arts 2024, 13, 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13020075
Chang X, Salleh MB, Sun J. Resonating Reflections: A Critical Review of Ethnosymbolic Dynamics in Les Six’s Music Nationalism Movement. Arts. 2024; 13(2):75. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13020075
Chicago/Turabian StyleChang, Xuewei, Marzelan Bin Salleh, and Jifang Sun. 2024. "Resonating Reflections: A Critical Review of Ethnosymbolic Dynamics in Les Six’s Music Nationalism Movement" Arts 13, no. 2: 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13020075
APA StyleChang, X., Salleh, M. B., & Sun, J. (2024). Resonating Reflections: A Critical Review of Ethnosymbolic Dynamics in Les Six’s Music Nationalism Movement. Arts, 13(2), 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13020075