Transition of Greek art song from the national school to modernism

Authors

  • Sofia Kontossi University of Arts George Enescu; National Conservatory of Greece

Keywords:

Leonidas Zoras, Jani Christou, greek national school of music, greek art song

Abstract

This study presents the different ways in which two Greek composers, Leonidas Zoras and Jani Christou, viewed modernism. The songs of Zoras are typical example of the gradual withdrawal from the aesthetic framework of the National School which dominated during the first decades of the twentieth century. In contrast, Jani Christou, who spent his childhood in Alexandria and received an exclusively Western-type education, remained untouched by Greek traditional music or the Greek National School. His work was moulded by the ancient Greek philosophical belief in the elation of the listener through the transcendental power of Art. By his Six T. S. Eliot Songs Christou offered some of the best examples of twentieth-century expressionistic vocal music.

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Published

20.12.2024

How to Cite

“Transition of Greek Art Song from the National School to Modernism”. 2024. MUZIKOLOGIJA-MUSICOLOGY, no. 8 (December): 27-44. https://muzikologija-musicology.com/index.php/MM/article/view/373.

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