Silver Age Aesthetics versus New Conceptions of Soviet Time in Music: Continuity or Discontinuity with the Past

Artamonova, Elena orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-2221-1955 (2023) Silver Age Aesthetics versus New Conceptions of Soviet Time in Music: Continuity or Discontinuity with the Past. In: A Culture of Discontinuity? Russian Cultural Debates in Historical Perspective. Cultural History and Literary Imagination, 34 . Peter Lang, Oxford, United Kingdom, pp. 299-316. ISBN 978- 1- 78997- 937- 4

[thumbnail of Chapter 12 in the book] PDF (Chapter 12 in the book) - Published Version
Restricted to Repository staff only until 1 September 2024.
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

8MB

Official URL: https://www.peterlang.com/

Abstract

The new-born world of Socialism in 1917 wanted to break with tradition and find complete freedom of expression for artistic personality. It sought to revolutionize the world and discover new horizons. In order to achieve these goals, the new Socialist state needed new music, literature and art created by faithful citizens. Did composers really break with tradition or skilfully adjusted and modified their language according to the requirements of the new musical era? The ideas of spiritual and artistic unity, creativity in music as a method of cognition and as a synthesis of all mortal beauty and inventiveness in the world, traditionally associated with the Silver Age aesthetic, were also expressed by the Avant-garde composers, including Arseny Avraamov, Nikolai Roslavets and others. The aim of this chapter is to analyse how far and why these concepts found their continuation and modification in Soviet times. The under researched prose of Aleksei Losev on music is also going to be discussed. The analysis in this paper relies heavily on the unpublished and little researched materials from the archives in Moscow.


Repository Staff Only: item control page