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Published: Sunday, 25 August 2024 at 11:10 AM


Dubbed ‘The War to End All Wars’, the First World War proved anything but. Nonetheless, when, on 11 November 1918, Allied and German personnel gathered in a railway carriage in Compiègne, France, to sign the Armistice and end the four-year conflict, it was as if a firm line was being drawn through the timeline of history.

A new era had begun, with misty-eyed romanticism replaced by hard-edged realism and, right across the globe, old values and social orders ripped to shreds. Artistically, too, the world was looking in new directions – premiered in October 1919, Elgar’s ultra-Romantic Cello Concerto seemed to mourn not only times and friends past, but indeed the composer’s own musical world.

But to what degree has music from the last century reflected the course of history? Here are 20 works that, in one way or another, define their time and place, from symphonies written in the shadow of Stalinism to big-screen soundtracks and modern-day reflections on issues such as the nuclear threat and global pollution.

Yes folks: welcome to our 100-year history lesson, presented through the medium of music.

Contents

1918-27: brighter days in America, uncertainty in Europe

1928-37: totalitarianism: obey or defy?

1938-47: responses to war and terror

1948-57: time for reflection… and experimentation

1958-67: nuclear fears, and escapist fantasies

1968-77: music responds to a decade of paranoia

1978-87: Cold War panic and the rise of the video game

1988-97: breakthroughs in Europe, inequality in the US

1998-2007: gender struggles, and a major atrocity

2008-2018: the perils of fame… and a warming planet

1918-27: brighter days in America, uncertainty in Europe

George Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue (1924)

The Times: With the aftermath of World War I behind it and the Wall Street Crash and Great Depression yet to happen for another five years, 1920s America was full of optimism. The economy boomed with the advance of technology, Americans sought the good life and people flocked to the big cities – New York, Chicago, San Francisco – in their droves. This was the era of The Great Gatsby and, seemingly, nothing could derail it.

‘There were those who objected to jazz’s suave invasion’

The Music: Music in the US would reflect these good times, although jazz had, in fact, done so since before the end of the First World War. Now it was promising to give classical music an injection of energy and invention. There were those who objected to jazz’s suave invasion, including the composer Varèse, who claimed that, far from being ‘America’, jazz was ‘a negro product, exploited by the Jews’.

But the very point of George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue was that it was written by a Jewish composer and did make use of music of black origin. Rhapsody in Blue, premiered in New York in February 1924 by the composer alongside Paul Whiteman’s Palais Royal Orchestra (controversially made up entirely of white players) immediately threw open the question of exactly what American music was.

From the opening clarinet trill and upward slide (improvised in rehearsal and subsequently kept) to its overt jazz harmonies and rhythms, Gershwin’s music proved once and for all that American ‘art’ music and jazz could mix to staggering effect. Classical music would never be the same again. The audience reaction was extraordinary: Stokowski, Rachmaninov and Kreisler were there and declared themselves fans. As did, later, Ravel, Prokofiev, Schoenberg and one Alban Berg…