Igor Stravinsky was born in Oranienbaum, Russia from June 1882 until April 1971. His father was the main base singer of the Empire Opera House and his mother was a pianist. His parents wanted him to depart from their way and learn the law, but Stravinsky studied music at St. Petersburg University. His fame began in 1909 when Serge Diaghilev invited him to write a Firebird score for Parisian ballet. The following year, he wrote the ballet "Petrushka". His next work, the Spring Festival, caused almost a riot on the first broadcast, but a year after it was announced, it was regarded as a masterpiece.
Igor Stravinsky, a Russian-born composer, pianist, conductor, wrote music in the first 20 years of the 20th century, celebrating non-Western culture like Pablo Picasso's primitiveistic paintings. And an unlimited expression. Stravinsky used a powerful rhythm harmonious with these works. In the 1920's Stravinsky turned to the neoclassical music, wrote it in a more traditional way, wrote Fuga and Symphony. Other neoclassicalists include Dmitri Shostakovich, Sergei Prokofiev and Aaron Copland.
These six simple words are often quoted. There is no proof that this mysterious artistic genius actually told them, but most people attribute them to Pablo Picasso. Others cited Igor Stravinsky or William Faulkner as a source. anything. This article is not about those who first said these two short sentences, but about their inner truth. We like to think that inspiration comes from ether, this is a gift to our God, as a reward for our patience in any creative field. But the facts are totally different. We are seeing, hearing and reading, inspired by all our life experiences and incorrect combinations of understanding and appreciation for the creative work of others. Creative behavior is the work of our unconscious thinking to form a new and amazing expression of everything we absorb, through observing the work of others or others through life.