×
13 Apr 2014

What Is Exoticism In Music?

by Luke Howard

(Updated March 2023)

Enlightenment Europe in the 18th century was captivated by Eastern cultures. , This fascination was expressed through exoticism in music, literature, art, and design  As the Christian church began to lose its monopoly on the minds of intellectuals and artists, the cultures of non-Western lands became a new source of inspiration by introducing alternate ways of thought.  Fostering knowledge of far-flung traditions was another way of bringing Western Europe out of darkness and into the light of understanding that the Enlightenment promoted.  

This fascination with non-European cultures was in some respects generalized: China, Egypt, India, and so on, were all ripe topics. But for the Viennese, whose city was almost taken by the Ottomans in 1683, Turkey represented one of the most formidable, dangerous, yet simultaneously alluring of all the exotic “others.”

Mozart and Exoticism in Music

The music of Turkey had already flavored numerous mid-century operas, ballets, and theatrical works.  One of Gluck’s French opéra-comiques, La rencontre imprévue (or Die Pilger von Mekka) includes Turkish elements in its story, as well as a character named Osmin.  First performed in 1766, this opera was then given new music by Haydn and performed in Vienna in 1775.  Gluck’s original version was revived in Vienna in 1780 and likely influenced Stephanie’s and Mozart’s decision to write their own “Turkish” opera.

In Voltaire’s Candide, the protagonist, and his friends settle down to a very civilized, simple life in Turkey, after accepting the wisdom of the Old Turk to “cultivate their garden.”  Even though the Turkish threat was still very real in Mozart’s time—Turkish pirates were reportedly still prowling the Mediterranean and taking European slaves as cargo—the theme of capture by Turkish Muslims was common in stage comedies and dramas throughout the late 18th century.

Janissary band

The easiest way of culturally invoking Turkey in music was through imitating what has become known as Janissary music.  The Janissaries were an elite military unit in the Turkish army, with an accompanying band that included many unpitched percussion instruments, especially bells, and drums.  (Significantly, in the context of Abduction, the Janissaries were historically chosen from among Christian slaves.) 

Influence of Traditional Turkish Music

It was these instruments that contributed to traditional Turkish music’s unique sound.  Through the 18th century, as Western musicians attempted to invoke the exotic colors of Turkish Janissary music, they started to incorporate instruments like the triangle, bells, bass drum, and cymbals into the ensembles. 

The bright jangling and thumping of these percussion instruments were novel sounds in the standard Viennese orchestra and easily connoted the Near East to Western audiences.  (Previous to this, the only percussion used in an 18th-century orchestra would have been timpani, which was tuned, and usually considered part of the brass family in military-themed music.)  Turkey was very much in fashion at the time.  

The delightful movie Amadeus includes a scene in which a leading opera diva, Caterina Cavalieri, confides to Antonio Salieri, “My hairdresser tells me everything’s going to be Turkish this year!”  (The real Cavalieri premiered the role of Konstanze in Abduction.)  But Mozart had already been dabbling with Turkey in his earlier music, as well.  His Zaide, the unfinished Singpspiel that had impressed Stephanie, is a rescue opera set in Turkey.

Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5, K. 219, was composed in 1775 with a Turkish passage in the Trio section of the last movement.  This passage is based on earlier ballet music he had written for his 1772 opera seria Lucio Silla in Milan in which the ballet section was titled “Le gelosie del seraglio” or ‘Jealousy in the Harem.”  This concerto is sometimes, therefore, referred to as Mozart’s “Turkish” Concerto.

Although the melodic material is more likely Balkan or Hungarian here, the effect was intended to be Turkish. Mozart, like many of his contemporaries, tended to conflate non-Western exotic influences at will. And not too many years after finishing Abduction, Mozart composed his famous Rondo “Alla Turca” from the Piano Sonata No. 11 in A major.

In Mozart’s day, some pianos were fitted with a “percussion stop” that would play cymbals along with the piano part, making it even more “Turkish”-sounding!

Exoticism and Turkish influence continued to crop up in Mozart’s music after that, as well.  In the famous “Catalog” aria from Don Giovanni, Leporello informs the audience that The Don has been accumulating conquests in Turkey as well as in Western Europe.  The Don’s catalog might be considered a Western counterpart to the “harem’ or seraglio of the Near East—he simply collects his women consecutively rather than simultaneously.  Even Don Giovanni’s aria “Fin ch’han dal vino” has overt Turkish elements.

And although the character of Monostatos in The Magic Flute is not explicitly Turkish, he is intended to appear exotic, and his aria “Alles fühlt der Liebe Freuden” also includes traditional Turkish elements.

The flavor of Turkish music suffuses much more of Mozart’s repertory than merely his “Turkish” opera and the overtly “alla turca” pieces.

You can explore the music of other cultures at the Utah Opera! View our schedule here to see what productions are coming up.

Dr. Howard began his formal music studies in Sydney, Australia, where he received the Bachelor of Music Education degree with an emphasis in piano.  He then earned a Master of Arts in Musicology from BYU in 1994, and a Ph.D. in Musicology from the University of Michigan in 1997.  Dr. Howard has previously served on the music faculties at Minnesota State University Moorhead and the University of Missouri Kansas City.  In 2002, he joined the faculty of the School of Music at Brigham Young University where he teaches music history and Western cultural history.