Magnus Synnestvedt

Musical Tastes, Cultural Diplomacy, and the Parisian Avant-Garde, 1902-08

Authors

  • Jann Pasler

Keywords:

Paris avant-garde, Ravel, Magnus Synnestvedt, les Apaches, cultural diplomacy, Scandinavian-French, Norwegian-French connections, Parisian concerts

Abstract

During the Belle Epoque, the French public was increasingly drawn to Nordic music as well as art and theater. Magnus Synnestvedt (1879–1947), a young lawyer whose father served as the Norwegian vice-consul in Paris and who himself worked for the Swedish and Norwegian legations there, was ideal to serve as an ambassador between French and Scandinavian culture. He translated the poetry of the Swedish king and patronized many Swedish musicians. After Norway declared its independence, Magnus became a major advocate for Norwegian culture in Paris.

This article, based on the concerts Synnestvedt attended from 1902-1908 and the reviews of art and music he published in the French and Norwegian press, document both the presence of Nordic musgiven their needic in Paris and his diverse musical tastes. A man of paradox with a willingness to evolve in his musical tastes as well as his politics, Synnestvedt embraced not only the music of Schumann, Wagner, and Franck, but also, increasingly, that of the Russian Five and French avant-garde, especially Debussy and Ravel. In their music, he found what he also admired in certain Nordic art and music, that is, a love of freedom and independence as well as a fascination with indigenous folk songs as a source of artistic renewal. His passionate idealism helped bridge the cultural differences between Scandinavia and France.

Author Biography

Jann Pasler

Jann Pasler, professor of music at UC San Diego and editor of AMS Studies in Music for OUP, has recently published Writing through Music: Essays on Music, Culture, and Politics (Oxford University Press, 2007), Composing the Citizen: Music as Public Utility in Third Republic France, (University of California Press, 2009) – the latter winning an ASCAP Deems Taylor Award (2010), and Saint-Saëns and his World (Princeton University Press, 2012). In spring 2015, Editions Gallimard will publish a French version of Composing the Citizen. A new book, based on research since 1991 in France, Morocco, Tunisia, Senegal, and Vietnam, is in progress: Music, Race, and Colonialism in the French Empire, 1880s-1950s.

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Published

2014-12-01

How to Cite

Pasler, J. (2014). Magnus Synnestvedt: Musical Tastes, Cultural Diplomacy, and the Parisian Avant-Garde, 1902-08. Svensk Tidskrift för Musikforskning Swedish Journal of Music Research, 96, 71–103. Retrieved from https://publicera.kb.se/stm-sjm/article/view/33715

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Articles

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