The Impressionist movement in music is a movement in music loosely set between the late nineteenth century, up to the middle of the twentieth century. Like its precursor in the visual arts, musical impressionism was based in France, and the French composers Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel are generally considered to be the two "great" impressionists (although Debussy renounced the term, and Ravel composed many other pieces that aren't identified as "Impressionist"). Other impressionists include Polish composer Karol Szymanowski and American composer Charles Tomlinson Griffes.
Philosophically, impressionism aimed to convey the atmospheric impact of an event, place, or thing, rather than an accurate portrayal of the subject itself. For instance, Debussy's setting of the Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune is not a literal portrayal of the events of the already vague poem, but a depiction of the feeling of the poem.
Technically, the impressionists invented or began using a great number of new compositional techniques: bitonality, planing (the use of voices moving in parallel motion; Debussy's prelude La cathédrale engloutie provides an example), extended tertian harmonies, and intentionally ambiguous musical forms.
Impressionist composers also made extensive use of whole tone scales to create a dreamy, "hazy" effect in their works, much like the blurred paintings of Renoir and Monet. They deliberately abandoned the major-minor scales which had been in use since the seventeenth century. Also, a sharp focus on tone color led to many new possibilities.
See also List of impressionistic pieces.
Musical movements | Impressionism
מוזיקה אימפרסיוניסטית | Impresjonizm (styl muzyczny) | Glasbeni impresionizem
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