1950
DOI: 10.2307/891590
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Igor Stravinsky; The Man and His Music

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“…The sonority 'constitutes a pole for the entire work', writes Alexandre Tansman; it 'gives birth to melodic patterns', he claims and, according to Robert Morgan, it provides 'a basic pitch reference' for the material that ensues. 109 Thus an external system is no longer required as a means of coherence because the work contains the genetic codes for its own cells, turning the ballet into a 'contextual' work that generates a purely musical logic relative to its own processes. 110 By authenticating itself, the Rite becomes as organic as the spring it venerates.…”
Section: IImentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sonority 'constitutes a pole for the entire work', writes Alexandre Tansman; it 'gives birth to melodic patterns', he claims and, according to Robert Morgan, it provides 'a basic pitch reference' for the material that ensues. 109 Thus an external system is no longer required as a means of coherence because the work contains the genetic codes for its own cells, turning the ballet into a 'contextual' work that generates a purely musical logic relative to its own processes. 110 By authenticating itself, the Rite becomes as organic as the spring it venerates.…”
Section: IImentioning
confidence: 99%