Stravinsky · The Rite of Spring
Jeu de Rapt
Table of contents
Introduction
- Jeu de Rapt is a ballet, characterized by ritualistic energy, relentless quaver movement, and extreme orchestral nuance.
- Features rapid melodic gestures, complex texture changes, and modal, polytonal, and octatonic harmonies.
- Constantly shifts instrumentation, texture, and rhythmic focus, reflecting a dark, ritualistic narrative.
Sonority
- Bar 255: Violin I detached, nuanced.
- Tremolo in woodwinds and strings; timpani playing secco throughout.
- Figure 40: French horn bouché.
- Strings: fast pizzicato.
- Bar 292: Horns playing pavillons en l’air.
- Glissando effect: achieved through extremely rapid patterns; many “glissandi” are perceptual illusions, not literal.
- Overall sonority: sinister, loud, energetic; occasional one-bar quiet passages (Figure 42) for contrast.
Texture
- Predominantly homophonic, with contrary motion and accented chords for dramatic effect.
- Texture varies figure by figure, corresponding to melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic changes.
- Tremolo quavers contrasted with long held notes increase tension.
- Occasional layering produces subtle polyphonic effects, though overall the texture emphasizes ritualistic momentum.
Rhythm / Tempo / Meter
- Constant quaver movement, extremely rapid and relentless.
- Frequent time signature changes (local to instruments, not polymetric across ensemble):
- 9/8 → 4/8, 3/4 (timpani) → 5/8 → 6/8 → 7/8 → 3/4
- Figure 41: 4/8 to 5/8
- Figure 43: alternating 6/8 to 7/8 every bar
- Presto, relentless energy with offbeat displaced accents.
- Subtle orchestration allows performers to maintain clarity despite irregular meter.
Dynamics
- Loud throughout (f–ff), with occasional one-bar quiet for contrast (Figure 42).
- Reinforces sinister tone and ritualistic tension.
Melody
- Melodies I, J, K: fragmentary, folk/ritual-inspired, modal.
- Bar 250 – Melody I: flute, clarinet, piccolo; Lithuanian folk influence; A Dorian.
- Figure 40 – Melody J: horns, hunting call (D to A), played over Eb7.
- Figure 40: Melody I transposed up a semitone in Bb Dorian, following Melody J.
- Figure 44: Melody J returns, A to D.
- Figure 46: Melody I returns in F Dorian.
- Figure 43 – Melody K: derived from Melody I.
- Melody treatment: repetitive, fragmented, often displaced; integrated with ostinato and layered textures.
Structure
- Block structure: each figure presents a different melody.
- Figures 37–39: modal, polytonal, octatonic.
- Figures 40–41: modal + bitonal; Melody J hunting call over Eb7.
- Figure 42: polytonal and octatonic.
- Figure 43: tonally ambiguous F#; oscillates between F and G.
- Figures 44–45: F7.
- Figure 46: modal.
- Figure 47: F major/minor mixture; ends on Eb trills.
- Overall: ritualistic, folk-inspired progression, moving through bitonal, polytonal, modal, and octatonic structures.
Tonality
- Dorian mode (A → Bb → F), reflecting ritualistic, folk, pagan character.
- Polytonality is frequent: Cmaj, Eb7, Cm, F# major, producing octatonic scale effect.
- Pandiatonicism: tonal-sounding but lacking resolution; common across movement.
- Figure 45: circle of fifths employed within harmonic context.
- Tonality reinforces ritualistic tension and modal ambiguity.
Harmony
- Polytonal: 20th-century fusion of old (modal/folk) and new (bitonal/polytonal) techniques.
- Octatonic-scale relationships emerge from simultaneous tonalities (Eb, E, F#, G, A, Bb, C, C#).
- Harmony emphasizes fragmentary, ritualistic, and modal character, rather than traditional functional progressions.