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Rosenfeld, Paul, 1890-1946

"Musical Portraits Interpretations of Twenty Modern Composers"

But Strawinsky, on the
other hand, is in the very midst of the thing so distant from the other
man. For him, the material world is very real, sharp, immediate. He
loves it, enjoys it, is excited by its many forms. He is vividly
responsive to its traffic. Things make an immediate and biting
impression on him, stimulate in him pleasure and pain. He feels their
edge and knows it hard, feels their weight and knows it heavy, feels
their motion in all its violence. There is in Strawinsky an almost
frenetic delight in the processes that go on about him. He goes through
the crowded thoroughfares, through cluttered places, through factories,
hotels, wharves, sits in railway trains, and the glare and tumult and
pulsation, the engines and locomotives and cranes, the whole mad
phantasmagoria of the modern city, evoke images in him, inflame him to
reproduce them in all their weight and gianthood and mass, their
blackness and luridness and power. The most vulgar things and events
excite him. The traffic, the restlessness of crowds, the noise of
vehicles, of the clatter of horses on the asphalt, of human cries and
calls sounding above the street-bass, a couple of organ grinders trying
to outplay each other, a brass band coming down the avenue, the thunder
of a railway train hurling itself over leagues of steel, the sirens of
steamboats and locomotives, the overtones of factory whistles, the roar
of cities and harbors, become music to him.


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