NEOBAROCK ELEMENTE IN DAS KLAVIERWERK PAUL CONSTANTINESCUS

Paul Constantinescu started to design his musical composition system in his student years. He constantly and accurately observed this system during his entire lifetime. He resisted the avant-garde temptations of dodecaphony, serialism, Eastern music techniques, and so forth. He promoted originality...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sanda HÎRLAV MAISTOROVICI
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Babeș-Bolyai University 2015-06-01
Series:Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai. Musica
Subjects:
Online Access:http://193.231.18.162:80/index.php/subbmusica/article/view/5075
Description
Summary:Paul Constantinescu started to design his musical composition system in his student years. He constantly and accurately observed this system during his entire lifetime. He resisted the avant-garde temptations of dodecaphony, serialism, Eastern music techniques, and so forth. He promoted originality, but not one based on extreme experiences. He advocated the sui generis originality rooted in the typically Romanian wisdom that respects and borrows from the experience of the Western culture, but does not amalgamate with it. The originality of Paul Constantinescu’s work stems from his choice to embody the values of the Byzantine melos and of the Romanian folk music in Western forms, tailored to the needs of the former. As a result, his work is remarkable for its clearly-defined, durable, and proportional formal structure. He does not reject the values and ideas of his Western antecessors. He does accept any compromise about the organization and the structure of the Romanian modal themes that he uses, either. Paul Constantinescu’s piano work is quite short in terms of duration (only 37 minutes of music), but extremely varied in its unity. It is intended for piano players of various ages and levels, in a similar way to Bach’s works. Paul Constantinescu conceived piano works of gradual difficulty both in terms of technique and style. This research paper aims to highlight Paul Constantinescu’s constant efforts to assimilate and apply the neo-Baroque elements of the Western musical composition techniques to the equally strong and healthy core of the Byzantine melos and of the Romanian folk music. His highly original approach to composition is based on finding correspondences, intersections, and coincidences between the two musical thinking systems.
ISSN:1844-4369
2065-9628