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5 Lessons from Igor Stravinsky

Metadata

title
5 Lessons from Igor Stravinsky
description
Five lessons from Igor Stravinsky's early career — riots at The Rite of Spring, mentorship under Rimsky-Korsakov, and why being ahead of the curve felt like failure from the inside.
status
complete
date
2022-08-15
kind
solo
guestSlugs
listenUrl
https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lovemusicmore/episodes/5-Lessons-from-Igor-Stravinsky-e1mhrse
appleUrl
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/5-lessons-from-igor-stravinsky/id1567355195?i=1000576162676&uo=4
spotifyUrl
https://open.spotify.com/episode/1MLnxxghKYM47LTfu9cBx2
topicsDiscussed
  • Classical and orchestral music
  • Mixing
  • Singing and vocals
  • Dr. Robert Greenberg's Great Music of the 20th Century course
  • The Rite of Spring premiere riots (1913)
  • Stravinsky's mentorship under Rimsky-Korsakov
  • Contemporary critics vs. Beethoven (being ahead of the curve)
  • Petrushka and blurring performer vs. audience
  • Absorbing folk and classical influences without losing your voice
  • Stravinsky's opera-singer father and early musical exposure
hostNote
Stravinsky's music caused an actual riot. Most people who heard it hated it, and that's not the cautionary tale, it's the proof of concept. Being genuinely ahead of the curve has always felt like failure from the inside. I trace five things his career still has to teach: why relationships and mentorship matter more than raw talent, how he absorbed influences from everything around him without losing his own voice, and the underrated marketing move of blurring performer and audience until the performance itself became the spectacle. Some things require mentorship, mixing is one of them, and Stravinsky understood that from the start. The throughline is "look at what's around you, take the things that are around you, put them into your art." That's not a shortcut. It's the whole practice.
selectedMoments
  • label
    Five lessons for pop writers
    startSec
    0
    note
    Open on Stravinsky as a turn-of-the-century composer with a ton to teach modern pop musicians.
  • label
    Being ahead of the curve hurts
    startSec
    93
    note
    Most listeners hated his work; Dr. Greenberg's critic clips show even Beethoven was savaged in his day.
  • label
    Relationships and mentorship
    startSec
    181
    note
    Stravinsky's path through Rimsky-Korsakov and the musical community around St. Petersburg.
  • label
    Commitment to craft
    startSec
    321
    note
    Piano study wasn't extraordinary, but mentorship and deliberate craft were.
  • label
    Riots at the premiere
    startSec
    410
    note
    The Rite of Spring was so intense it spilled into the streets — divisiveness as a signal.
  • label
    Combining old and new
    startSec
    632
    note
    Folk melodies, classical forms, and contemporary chaos woven into one voice.
  • label
    Audience vs. performer war
    startSec
    684
    note
    Petrushka performances where the crowd and the stage blurred into one spectacle.
excerptQuotes
  • text
    Igor Stravinsky is a revolutionary. He was somebody that was incredibly divisive. Somebody that you either loved or you hated, mostly hated. Most people hated it.
    startSec
    88
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    It's always been about relationships, even back then.
    startSec
    187
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    Some things require mentorship. In my world, I think mixing is something that requires mentorship.
    startSec
    327
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    The music is so intense and is so divisive that it actually causes a riot in the streets.
    startSec
    414
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    Look at what's around you, take the things that are around you, put them into your art.
    startSec
    640
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    They started to have this like audience war, where it kind of blurred the sense of who's audience and who's performer.
    startSec
    693
    reviewed
    true
faq
  • question
    What five lessons does Luke draw from Igor Stravinsky?
    answer
    Being ahead of the curve hurts but can signal you're onto something; relationships and mentorship (Rimsky-Korsakov) mattered as much as talent; riots at The Rite of Spring show how divisive innovation can be; absorb what's around you without losing your voice; and blurring performer and audience (Petrushka) can be its own kind of marketing.
  • question
    Why did Stravinsky's music cause riots?
    answer
    The premiere of The Rite of Spring was so rhythmically and harmonically intense that contemporary audiences reacted violently — critics at the time trashed it the way they had trashed Beethoven decades earlier. Luke uses Dr. Greenberg's course clips to show that 'most people hated it' is often what ahead-of-the-curve work looks like from inside the moment.
  • question
    What does Stravinsky have to do with modern mixing?
    answer
    Luke ties Stravinsky's reliance on mentors to his own craft: some skills, mixing among them, still require a teacher and a community, not just solitary trial and error.
transcriptPublished
false
draft
false

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