[MUSIC] Let's take a trip to Paris, and who wouldn't like that? Paris, New York, Vienna, what's not to like? So here we are in Paris with an overview thanks to Google Earth. We see the river Seine and on the right bank, the area leading to the Champs-Elysee. And at A on the Avenue Montaigne, the Theatre des Champs-Elysees. In Stravinsky's day and still today, this was a very fashionable area, tres chic, with lots of expensive shops, Hermes and Louis Vuitton for example. And on this Avenue Montaigne, as mentioned, was and is the Theatre de Champs-Elysees, with its art deco exterior and its art deco interior. And it was here, on this stage, still one of he major concert halls of Paris today, that Stravinsky's Rite of Spring premiered on an unseasonably hot night, 29 May, 1913. Stravinsky had actually written the score not in Russia, or in Paris, but in Switzerland, working away at a small piano in a small apartment. As he tells us in some remarkable footage shot, I would guess, about 1955. I can't trace the origins of this so I can't give the copyright information here, but let's watch it. >> Room where I composed the Le Sacre du Pritemps. >> The composition of the Le Sacre was completed by the beginning of 1912. >> When I composed the first part of the Le Sacre, Djagilev invited me to Venice and I started to play him these chords. 59 times the same chord. Diagilev was a little bit surprised. He asked me only one thing, which was [INAUDIBLE], he asked me, will it last a very long time this way? And I said to the end my dear. And he was silent because he understood that the answer was serious. [MUSIC] After the big, incredible scandal of the first performance of Le Sacre du Pritemps, he was delighted. >> So, there we heard Stravinsky's reaction to Diagilev's reaction to Stravinsky's score. Indeed, this was going to be a modernist statement from beginning to end, so radical in fact that it caused a riot and the police had to be called in. Stravinsky, as we'll see here, had to go backstage and help the choreographer Nijinsky keep the dancers going over the noise of the yelling and screaming of the audience. >> Petrujka was the first thing I wrote after the Firebird. And that was written In France and then Rome. And then to Rome was a Russian ballet. Diagliev asked me to come and to assist him. Petrusjka was a immense advance after [INAUDIBLE]. Third advance was of course the Le Sacre du Pritemps, that was a scandal. A big scandal of [INAUDIBLE], it was a historical scandal. The public, they shouted, this event, and son. Just from the beginning and then they sold [INAUDIBLE]. [LAUGH] The scandal doubled. Then the curtain opened on a group of knock-kneed and long [INAUDIBLE] lolitas, jumping up and down. [FOREIGN], the storm broke. It's a spoof, a very noisy [INAUDIBLE]. I went up and said, go to Hell. Excuse me [INAUDIBLE]. They came for Sheherazade or for Cleopatra, and they saw the Le Sacre du Pritemps they were very shocked. >> As Stravinsky says here in the video, the public was expecting one kind of Russian ballet, Rimsky-Korsakov, or perhaps the style of Tchaikovsky. [MUSIC] But instead, they got this. [MUSIC] Now if there's one moment that constitutes the beginning of modernism, the opening salvo, opening cannon shot of modernism, it's this beginning section of Stravinsky's, the Rite of Spring. The story isn't so radical, it's a bit of nationalistic Russian primitivism. Pagan tribes express traditional rituals through dance and sacrifice at the arrival of spring. Again, the modern take on Russian primitivism. We can see it here in Henri Matisse's interpretation of such primitive dance in the Hermitage in St. Petersburg. But Stravinsky's musical score as you see and as you heard, is a massive one with lots of percussion and brasses and divided strings. Here are the divided strings down at this part of the score. And the percussion and brasses in the center of the score here. And look at the size of it. I count vertically 28 parts in all. The revolutionary aspect of this, as we first heard, is the rhythm. It's complex because different parts are playing rhythms simultaneously, hence the term polyrhythms. And you can see on the screen there, and I'll tap maybe on my trusty table. [MUSIC] That's one rhythm, and then. [MUSIC] That's another, and. [MUSIC] That's the third. And then the trumpets are playing. [MUSIC] The violins. [MUSIC] And the cellos at the bottom have the syncopation. [MUSIC] We saw this sort of thing with Stravinsky's Petrushka, and in addition, here we have different meters simultaneously. Different meters, and we can see on the screen here again, 6/8 against 7/8. Against, what's that down there? 5/8 6/8 against 7/8 against 5/8. And again, as with Patruska, we have irregular meters. Here you can see the following groups, let me count them for you. 1 2 3 4, 1 2 3 4 5, 1 2, 1, 2 3 4 5 6, 1 2 3, 1 2 3 4, 1 2 3 4 5. But what makes this almost a brutal brutalist passage is the fact that although the strings are played much of this, they're not using bravado. Instead, they're striking each pitch with a down bow, which creates a percussive effect. Down bow down down, down down down down, down down. And so on. The violin is no longer a warm, melodic instrument. But it's become a percussive instrument. And this is also true of the piano in this period as well. It's more of a percussive instrument than a lyrical one. Let's review how this sounds now, with an audio clip using a real orchestra. [MUSIC] Having reviewed this iconic moment from the point of view of rhythm, let's do so now with regard to pitch. Not only is this passage disrupted rhythmically, the harmony, the chords are distinctive as well. And actually, there's only one chord here, one harmony at this point. And Stravinsky has created it in an interesting way. He took a major triad, which you see on the right here. Here's our major triad over here. And put it with a seventh chord over here. And note that this major triad is actually only a half step built on a half step, on a degree that is only a half step away from the basis of this chord here. So it's slightly off the triad, and then sounded together, they produce this sound. So here's the basic triad. [MUSIC] Here's the triad, here's the seventh chord. [MUSIC] Here, but once you put them together, you get this kind of sound. [MUSIC] A very dissonant sound [LAUGH] to say the least. Oddly, this slightly disjointed sound, it was being created between 1910 and 1920, also had an exact analogue in the visual arts at the time in cubism. Let me show you three paintings by three great cubist painters of the period, Juan Gris, George Braque and Pablo Picasso. As we look at these, notice that all three have music and musical instruments as the subject matter. First, Three Musicians of Picasso at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Next, Woman with Guitar in the Pompidou Center in Paris. And third and last, The Violin of Juan Gris at the Kunstmuseum in Basel. Now, about this time another cubist painter, Albert Gleizes, wrote a book, Le Cubism. That tells, and also graphically shows, how the cubist artists did it. They would take an object, and then repeat it slightly off center, and then repeat it slightly off center again. And then maybe take a section of it, and then put that section at right angles to that section. And by the end, voila. A cubist construction with a disjunctive effect. Well, as we saw, Stravinsky was creating a similarly disruptive sound in music by putting triads slightly off center, slightly against themselves. All right, let's take a moment now to review what we've seen thus far. Style elements of modern music as exemplified in the Rite of Spring. Well, first of all, we've heard both in the Rite of Spring, and in earlier in Petrushka, a great number of percussion instruments and percussive sound. Secondly the use of strings as percussion instruments and not lush sounds here but harsh sounds, harsh playing. Third, more woodwinds to create this bright brittle orchestration. Fourth, irregular meters and polymeters. Well, they contribute as well. And finally, heavy dissonances created by polychords, chords slightly off center. As Stravinsky said, this all causes a sensation. Here's the report of one eyewitness observer, a reporter who worked for the New York paper, the New York Press. Now, defunked New York Press. The critic is Carl van Vechten. I was sitting in a box in which I had rented one seat. Three ladies sat in front of me and a young man occupied the place behind me. He stood up during the course of the ballet to enable himself to see more clearly. The intense excitement under which he was laboring, thanks to the potent force of the music, betrayed itself presently when he began to beat rhythmically on the top of my head with his fists. Well, a potent rhythmic force indeed. But in truth, it was the choreography, as much as the music that provoked the outrage. The novelty of irregular dance steps was equally disruptive, as we'll see in the next video. This is Millicent Hodson's and Robert Joffrey's recreation of Stravinsky's ballet. With the costumes and choreography as close as possible to the original. [MUSIC] Well, maybe we'll stop there. But of course, you can watch the rest on YouTube. As Stravinsky said, it was a scandal but a huge success, the kind of [LAUGH] scandal we should all hope for. The classic [FOREIGN], the [FOREIGN]. What happened to the Rite of Spring? This radical statement of modernism that had caused such a scandal? Well in 1930s, the music had caught the ear of Walt Disney, who as you know, used the Rite of Spring as the centerpiece for the worlds first full length animated film, Fantasia. [MUSIC] Stravinsky's wild music had become becalmed through this cartoon film. Radical modernism had become mainstream.