How can we imagine all of the horror that the WWII left behind. The level of physical destruction that the war shows was extensive, the world and its inhabitants seemed literally to have been torn to pieces. Music after war suffer perhaps, it biggest change in its aesthetics. The general statement was to rebuild a new musical world out of the ashes and horror of WWII. The task was taken by young composers whose own experience with the war made this change possible.
It seems that this generation of post-war composers were at the same time, living the duality of have all the freedom to make musical discoveries but at the same time, the darkness mood that the war left was dangerously faced them with the crude reality of finding “nothing”.
The wartime devastation and the beginning of the atomic age after the 1945 treaties exacerbated the pessimistic and subdued tone. The new tendency in arts was looking for a total distrust with the past. The physical and cultural ruin that the war caused could be only reconstructed with a radical break and make possible a new start.
Composers like Messiaen, Stockhausen and Xenaquis was leading these radical changes in post-war aesthetics. Their own experience with war makes them fearless and their stylistic search reach large scales. The new aesthetics were leaving completely behind the old classical traditions. New laws were being writing. Music started to become more violent, direct and crude. New tools and stylistics recourses was being used to change for completely music structures. Fierce rhythms, total serialism, indeterminism, futurism, silence as a unitary musical motif, complexity, density, all of this new musical forms were reflecting the darkness of the post-war mood but at the same time was opening the gates to a new whole world of musical experimentation.
It was in these extraordinary circumstances that one of the most emblematic compositions of the war times took place. During 1940, Messiaen was captured by the German army and imprisoned in a prisoner-of-war camp. Since he was with three other professional musicians, a violinist, a cellist and a clarinetist, he decides to use this peculiar ensemble to create his, Quatuor pur la fin du Temps . The quartet was premiered in Stalag VIII-A in Gorlitz, Germany, outdoors in the rain on January 15 of 1941 with an audience of about four hundred fellow prisoners of was and prison guards. Although the piece according to some scholars could remain peripheral by comparison to other Messiaen’s works like the Turangalila Symphony, its major importance remains on the historical context that give birth to it and in its special significance for the composers that belong to the war generation.
The piece is inspired by a text from the Book of Revelation (Rev 10:1-2, 5-7, King James Version). The piece is divided in eight movements and each of them has a special quotation made by Messiaen. The piece reflects Messian stylistic mélange and it is build base in his own ideas in theory and harmony. The first harmonies in the piece certainly have a crystal quality and although it has some frenetic moments in general the mood in the piece remains very reflexive and obscure. It is a perfect representation of what must have seemed like the end of times.
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