Agon, ballet for 12 dancers & orchestra

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AMG AllMusic Guide to Classical Music :

Agon, ballet for 12 dancers & orchestra

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When Igor Stravinsky's opera The Rake's Progress premiered in 1951, it was greeted in certain progressive musical circles as old-fashioned, proof that its composer was out of step with the times. Not surprisingly, Stravinsky was taken aback by the reaction, but quickly concluded that one way to avoid becoming irrelevant was to incorporate more modern techniques into his style. "More modern" was at that time practically synonymous with serialism, which had its roots in the twelve-tone music of Arnold Schoenberg. The first major work in which Stravinsky essayed twelve-tone techniques was a cantata, Canticum Sacrum (1955). Already, though, in the earlier Cantata (1951-52), Stravinsky had begun to assimilate the influence of one of Schoenberg's disciples, Anton Webern.

Stravinsky began his final ballet, Agon, in 1953 on a commission from Lincoln Kirstein and George Balanchine for the New York City Ballet. Because he interrupted work on Agon -- first to compose In Memoriam Dylan Thomas (1954) and then the aforementioned Canticum Sacrum -- each time he returned to the ballet, he found he had to rewrite certain parts as a result of the evolution of his style, particularly his increasing attraction to serial techniques. Thus, for example, the opening fanfare evolved over the course of three distinct versions.

The increasingly advanced nature of Stravinsky's music is matched by the plotless scenario he chose for Agon, which features eight female and four male dancers. As in Canticum Sacrum, Agon commences in a diatonic and fairly accessible vein, but progresses toward atonality. So, for example, as the fanfare that opens the work reappears throughout, it grows increasingly chromatic. With the tenth section, Pas-de-deux, Stravinsky makes overt use of post-Webern serial techniques. By the close of the ballet the music returns to the less complex language of its beginning, again in the manner of Canticum Sacrum. Even a cursory comparison with the music of Stravinsky's Russian and neo-Classic periods strikingly demonstrates just how far the composer's musical language had evolved by the time of Agon.

The ballet's 12 movements are divided into four groups of three each. The first section contains Pas-de-quatre, Double pas-de-quatre, and Triple Pas-de-quatre; the second, First pas-de-trois, Saraband-Step, Gailliarde, and Coda; the third, Second pas-de-trois, Bransle simple, Bransle gay, and Bransle de Poitou; and the fourth, Pas-de-deux, Four Duos, and Four Trios. The second group is announced by a Prelude; brief Interludes precede the third and fourth groups.

There are a number of relationships between the various sections of the ballet. For instance, the music in the first set is reprised in the last number of the fourth, and the Interludes contain the same music as the Prelude. Some have contended that Stravinsky's pattern of "threes" is broken by the inclusion of the Prelude and Interludes; however, because they themselves constitute a collection of three and serve a prefatory role for the main sections, their role in the overall scheme is clearly integral rather than anomalous. Agon was first performed in a concert version led by Robert Craft in Los Angeles on June 17, 1957. It was first performed on the stage by the New York City Ballet on December 1, 1957. ~ Robert Cummings, Rovi

Albums with Complete Performances of the Work

Title Date
A Balanchine Album 1992
American Stravinsky, The Composer, Vol. 4 1993
Bartók: Concerto for Orchestra; The Miraculous Mandarin; Stravinsky: Petrushka; Agon; Fireworks 2000
Hans Rosbaud dirige Strawinsky, Berg, Webern
Hans Rosbaud: The Complete Recordings on Deutsche Grammophon [Box Set] 2004
Igor Stravinsky: The Firebird; Jeu de Cartes; Agon
Igor Stravinsky: The Recorded Legacy 1991
Stravinsky Conducts Stravinsky: Concert Performances 1951-1957 2008
Stravinsky in America 1997
Stravinsky: Agon; Concerto
Stravinsky: Agon; Shostakovich: Symphony No. 15 1995
Stravinsky: Agon; Symphony in Three Movements; Apollo 2009
Stravinsky: Ballets, Vol. 2 1991
Stravinsky: Canticum Sacrum; Agon; Requiem Canticles 2007
Stravinsky: Orpheus; Jeu de cartes; Agon 2009
Stravinsky: The Ballets [Box Set] 2009
Stravinsky: The Complete Ballets & Symphonies 2011
Stravinsky: Three Greek Ballets (Apollo, Agon, Orpheus) 2005
The Mravinsky Legacy, Vol. 5
Works of Igor Stravinsky 2007
Yevgeny Mravinsky Vols. 1-10 1995

Albums with Excerpt Performances of the Work

Title Date
Igor Stravinsky: A Portrait 2008
Stravinsky [Box Set] 2009
The Music of Stravinsky 2000
Very Best of Stravinsky 2008
Webern: Pieces Op6; Stravinsky: Agon

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