C 2025

Avant-garde Aspects of Czech Interwar Music

ZAPLETAL, Miloš

Basic information

Original name

Avant-garde Aspects of Czech Interwar Music

Edition

Cambridge – New York, A History of Music in the Czech Lands, p. 281-293, 13 pp. 2025

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Chapter(s) of a specialized book

Field of Study

60400 6.4 Arts

Country of publisher

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

Publication form

printed version "print"

Organization unit

Faculty of Philosophy and Science in Opava

ISBN

978-1-009-16865-6

Keywords in English

avant-garde; Czech music; 20th-century music; music history;

Tags

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Changed: 5/1/2026 09:04, Mgr. Bc. Miloš Zapletal, Ph.D.

Abstract

In the original language

Civilism, neofolklorism, and neoclassicism represent the dominant tendencies in Czech interwar avant-garde music. Although based on radically different sets of techniques and viewpoints, the three tendencies are also marked by internal similarities that are not immediately obvious. All three approaches to modern composition aim at abandoning romantic sensibilities and rejecting what Stefan Zweig termed “the world of yesterday” (“die Welt von Gestern”), the social and cultural order that dominated European civilization during the so-called belle époque prior to World War I and that came to be viewed as hypocritical and internally rotten after the cataclysms of the war. All three tendencies aimed at avoiding romanticism through different means: neoclassicism by a recourse to pre-Romantic music; neo- folklorism in an exploration of musical traditions of the common people from different ethnic groups; and civilism in a reliance on jazz.