Music Appreciation
Music Appreciation
Music Appreciation
Ellen T. Harris
Lecture I
A B C D A B C D A…
A B C D A B C D A…
Note that once all the voices enter, the vertical column becomes: A
B
C
D,
which repeats over and over again. This sound can be duplicated by having each of the
four sections sing only one phrase over and over again, such as AAAA, or BBBB. The
sound columns remain the same. The reason a round works is that each of the phrases
“works” with the others over a repeating harmonic pattern. In “Row, row, row your
boat,” the pattern essentially consists of the repetition of a single chord (with an upbeat
leading into it to provide rhythmic and harmonic impetus). That is, each phrase (giving
an Arabic number to each chord) is simply: 1 1 . Or, possibly 1 (2)-1 (2)- .
A longer pattern exists in the familiar “Heart and Soul,” based on four chords. This four-
chord pattern is frequently used: its four “vertical columns” also support such familiar
songs as “Blue Moon” and “Santa Catalina” (“Twenty-six miles across the sea”)
originally sung by the Four Preps in 1958. What does this shared bass mean? First, it
means that all these songs can be sung together (which is a lot of fun).
Heart and soul, I fell in love with you. Heart and soul, …
Twenty-six miles across the sea, Santa Catalina
Blue moon I saw you standing alone, …
1 2 3 4 1 2
Secondly, like “Row, row, row your boat,” it means that any of these songs can be sung
as a round over the repeating four chords—or, if you have enough people, all of the
songs can be sung as rounds together.
Notated music has five components that determine what is played: texture (how the
various parts intertwine); harmony (the vertical axis and its progression over time);
rhythm (duration and organization into strong and weak beat patterns); melody (the
horizontal tune or tunes); and form (large-scale organization in terms of repeated, varied
or contrasting units). These are all important things to notice about any piece of music.
In addition composers can add notations about how the notated music should be
performed: dynamics (volume), tempo (speed), timbre (by what instruments or voices),
articulation (for example, legato [smooth connections between notes] or staccato [short,
individual attacks] ). These are all things we will consider as we consider the history of
Western classical music.
Middle Ages
Chant (or, plainchant) is the starting point for the history of Western music because it is
the first music to be notated, collected, and preserved. Its liturgical function within the
Catholic church is, of course, responsible for its codification. However, chant was not
newly discovered by the Catholic church, but was and remains a function of many, if not
most, religious liturgies, Jewish, Muslim and Christian. The Catholic chant of the
Middle Ages derives from earlier Byzantine and Jewish chant through an oral, not written
tradition. Development of musical notation occurs in about the 9th c.
1) Preface: “Vere dignum”: introduction to the mass (the liturgical service of the
Catholic Church (Kerman/Tomlinson disk 1, track 1: henceforth K 1.1)
•reciting tone
•formulaic: ascending to the reciting tone, declaiming the text, descending at end of
phrase
•repetition of this formula
2) Antiphon: In paradisum: chant for the burial service , requiem (mass for the dead)
(K 1.2)
*Please note that Kerman/Tomlinson mistakes the Biblical reference to Lazarus in this
text, associating it with the raising of Lazarus from the dead by Jesus (John 11: 1-54).
Rather the text alludes to the parable of Lazarus the beggar who is raised to heaven in the
qualities:
"For Hildegard, music was an avenue of access to mystical experience. She composed
music as a way to make palpable God and divine beauty" (Karin Pendle, Women and
Music [Indiana University Press, 1991])
Although the church forbade the singing of women in church or in public, cloistered
women were encouraged to create and perform their own music. Through the
seventeenth century, the religious calling (or profession) offered women a creative outlet
that was not possible anywhere else in society.
Hildegard thought of the human soul as "symphonic," which expressed itself by tuning
itself to the celestial music of the spheres not only by responding to musical vibrations
but by creating harmony with the human body with singing.
harmony: modal
rhythm: free
context: cloister
Polyphony
chronological development is from simple to more and more elaborate, although a good
deal of overlapping between categories can also be assumed
parallel organum: accompanying voice moves along with the chant note for note in
parallel motion
melismatic organum: many notes in the upper, newly composed voices to one of the
original chant
harmony: modal
context: liturgical
performance: all male, all vocal
**expression: lowest voice (chant) = cantus firmus: a religious foundation supporting the
earthly intertwining of the upper voices, symbolic of the church as--
blending of sacred and secular; world view that has secular supported by the sacred;
architectonic
musical construction changes here from joining the flow of celestial harmony to
recreating the mathematical formulas found in the nature
from the bottom to the top, each line of music is increasingly active: the chant segments
move the most slowly, the middle voice moves at a moderate pace, the upper voice
moves very quickly; this is related to text: the bottom line is untexted, the middle line
sets about half as much text as the upper line
form: each stanza of the poem is set to music in the same rhythm but not the same
melody, which can be heard best in the hockets, where the two upper voices interact with
one another in quick succession with short motives; because the upper two voices have
different texts, the hockets provide the only moments when the text is clear—offering a
key to the meaning of the piece
Renaissance (1400-1600)
•growing role of the individual and lessening authority of the church (Renaissance
humanism)
•Reformation: Martin Luther (1483-1546); Church of England (1534)
•rise of city states and the era of princes: rule of the Medici (from 1430), Machiavelli
(1469-1527)
•age of exploration and scientific discovery: Copernicus (1473-1564), Columbus (first
voyage 1492), Da Gama (voyage to India 1497), Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1505)
•development of printing press and disbursement of knowledge: Gutenberg (1398-1468)
•great artists: Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528), Michelangelo (1475-1564), Shakespeare
(1564-1616)
***If the great discovery in music of the middle ages is the development of a musical
architecture, moving from a layering process to a more motivic (brick-like) construction,
in which rhythmic, metered, and secular melodies are supported by and constructed out
of sacred origins,
***then the great musical discovery of the renaissance was the development of points of
imitation, humanly-conceived and independent of chant, as the means of creating large-
scale and multi-voiced musical structures. Ideal of equality/balance among all the parts
(compare to organum or Machaut’s “Quant en moi”) and of a cappella singing. Text-
dominated composition vs. layers/patterns of construction.
Madrigal
With the development of texture-driven formal structures, came the idea of contrast.
(Josquin, Palestrina). Textural contrast, in connection with increased personal
expressiveness, led to an increased emphasis on the text. Although this is apparent in all
vocal music, sacred and secular, it is particularly obvious in the secular madrigal. This
form of secular a cappella part-song was established in Italy and then flowered separately
in England. The illustration of specific words in music is often called madrigalism as a
result. It is also called word-painting.
Please note that Kerman/Tomlinson gives the traditional reading of this text, saying that
Oriana represents Queen Elizabeth I. This older view has now been corrected in an
article published in the Journal of the American Musicological Society in January 2006.
The association with Elizabeth only arose in the late 18th century and has continued since
that time. In fact, Oriana represents Ann of Denmark, queen of King James VI of
Scotland, who became King of England (James II) after Elizabeth’s death. This madrigal
supports his succession during the lifetime of Elizabeth, which was treasonous. In this
madrigal, Vesta (the virgin goddess) represents Elizabeth descending; Oriana (the good
wife of the legendary Amadis) represents Queen Ann rising; Diana, who celebrates the
arrival of Oriana, represents the sister of Lord Essex who had just been executed for
treason.
The repetition of the last two lines then changes the grammatical structure and adds an
additional sexual charge to the madrigal—“O, then they fell a-kissing up and down …”
Recording: The King’s Singers’ Madrigal History Tour, Anthony Rooley, conductor
(EMI Records, 1989)
Instrumental Music
medieval: architectonic
renaissance: humanistic expression
early baroque: personal expression in solo song and opera
Motet
Ellen T. Harris
Lecture III
Science: Newton (mechanics, gravity), Leibniz, Harvey (circulation of the blood), Kepler
Art: Rubens, Bernini, Tiepolo, Velasquez; elaborate formal gardens indicating man’s
Literature, Drama and poetry: Milton, Racine, Dryden; birth of the novel: Fielding (Tom
Exploration and colonialism: Hudson explores the later-named Hudson River (1609);
Politics: absolutism (“divine right of kings”) supplanting the Church as power base
(Louis XIV [1638-1715]; Peter I, Tsar of Russia), Thirty Years War (1618-1648),
triple derivation: 1. dance and 2. virtuosity (e.g. Kemp’s Jig), and 3. vocal music (form
and texture)
Style features:
Harmony: 1) “functional harmony”: each chord has its own function in relation to the
home chord or tonic; 2) change from Renaissance: instead of 8 church modes, 2 modes
Rhythm: definite and regular; clear meter, repeating beat patterns (dance), energy
Melody: extended (spinning out “endlessly”), ornamented and ornate, embedded use of
sequence
Tone color/Timbre: vastly increased in variety and originality, but in many cases flexible;
Today’s genre:
Terms:
basso continuo/ continuo/ figured bass (harmonic support of Baroque music, a bass line
with numbers [figures] that indicate the specific chords; used in all but solo
keyboard music)
ground bass/basso ostinato (found in Frescobaldi, Passacaglia; Vivaldi, slow movement;
Purcell, aria; note: “ostinato” also used to depict repeated unit anywhere, not
just in bass)
walking bass (a bass that moves in absolutely even notes, i.e. that “walks”: Bach Suite,
Air)
(compare all three of the above to cantus firmus)
ritornello (return/refrain), theme, motive
solo, ripieno (full, ripe), tutti
suite, movement
cadence, cadenza
sequence (not to be confused with medieval sequence)
fugue, entry
3) Rit. 3: minor
2) Bach, Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 for flute, violin, harpsichord, and orchestra
(before 1721)
Performed by
Concertino:
Ole Nielsen, flute (G) Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Amanda Wang, violin (G) Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Mary Farbood, harpsichord (G) Media Arts and Sciences
Ripieno:
Jacqueline O’Connor, violin (06) Aeronautics and Astronautics
Marcus Thompson, viola (Faculty) Music and Theater Arts
Sunny Wicks, cello (07) Aeronautics and Astronautics
Paul Glenn, bass (guest) President of Bauer Associates
Kerman/Tomlinson provides the first movement only; we will study the entire work. The
recording we will use for these movements is Boston Baroque, Martin Pearlman, director,
Brandenburg concertos nos. 4, 5 & 6 (Telarc, 1993)
Genres: Terms:
opera (per musica) aria (air)
opera seria recitative
opera buffa secco (simple)
oratorio accompanied
church cantata word-painting
castrato
Opera
music as drama
musical characterization of individuals
RecitativeÆ aria
Recitative: more like recitation, less melody, moves very quickly (secco or simple
recitative) NOT INCLUDED with example
Aria: “La giustizia” (“Justice”) K 2.8
da capo form
unison violins and continuo
“revenge aria”: one of many types of affects depicted by da capo arias
singularity of the accompaniment
rushing scales and forward motion
especially long coloratura (melismas) on “vendetta,” “traditor” (=arrow
ready for vengeance)
high notes on “punire”
ornamentation on da capo makes it less a repetition and more of a heightening
(racheting up) of intensity
4. other examples of Handel arias, showing da capo form, manipulation of the formal
template, instrumentation
A: Vo’ far guerra, e vincer voglio I shall wage war, and will defeat
collo sdegno chi m’offende with disdain the man who has insulted me
vendicar i torti miei. to avenge my wrongs.
A: da capo
2. Armida: accompanied recitative and da capo aria
(accompanied recitative: strings reflect her shifting mood—longing and agitated)
(longing bassoon-oboe duet in A section moving into 2-note motive: “crudel” and
“pietà”; in B section raging runs in orchestra and voice)
recitative
Dunque i lacci d’un volto, So the snare of a face,
forza n’avran per arrestar quel crudo? are not strong enough to hold that cruel
man?
E tu il segui, o mio core! My heart, you go with him!
Fatto trofeo d’un infelice amore!
You are the trophy of an unhappy love!
si raggiunga l’ingrato,
and find the ungrateful man,
aria
A: Ah, crudel! Ah! Cruel man,
il pianto mio, for pity’s sake,
deh! Ti mova per pietà. be moved by my tears.
B: O infedel Unfaithful
al mio desio to my desire
proverai la crudeltà. you will feel my cruelty.
A: da capo
3. Semele (1744) after the manner of an Oratorio, complete recording: Samuel Ramey
with John Nelson , conductor (Deutsche Grammophon, 1990)
Somnus (the god of Sleep):
(rich four-part strings; Somnus becomes increasingly tired and falls asleep at the end of
the B section; listen to how incomplete the aria sounds—not only have you become
accustomed to hearing the return of text and music, but listen for the ending in the
“wrong” key that is not the key of the beginning)
The Enlightenment can be defined in part by its interest in rational methods of analysis
and classification; it was the era of the encyclopedists; we find this outlook in Bach’s
exploration of all 24 keys in the Well-Tempered Clavier or in his close examination and
explication of contrapuntal methods in the Art of the Fugue; similarly, Handel, in his
lifetime (in opera, oratorio, cantata), wrote over 2000 arias, resulting in an encyclopedic
investigation of human emotion.
See next page for comparison of da capo, ritornello, and fugue form.
Da Capo form (typical “five-part” pattern of late Baroque era):
A R1 S1 (=A1) R2 S2 (=A2) R3 ||
home key new key(s)Æ home key
(these 5 parts=A section)
B S3 (=B section)
new keyÆ
A da capo (“from the head” or “from the top”: from R1 to R3)
Ritornello form:
A (=A1) (=A2)
R1 E1 R2 E2 R3 E3 R4 E4 R5
medium tutti solo/t t s(t) t s(t) t s(t) t
motives abc xy/a a b b free(a) b x-by b
keys homeÆ newÆ home
track/time (1) (2)
measure/bar 1 9 19 21 29 32 40 42 58
B E5 R6 E6
s(t) t s/t
b/c--a free a xy/a
new (encompassing what (like E1)
Kerman calls the “central solo”)
(2/0:06) (3)
61 110 111
A R7 E7 R8 E8 R9
t s(t) t s(t)--solo t
ab b b zw--cadenza abc
I I I I-x-V I
homeÆ
(3/1:30) (4) (5)
121 126 137 140 219 (-227)
Brandenburg #5, mvt 3: is actually in Da Capo form (that is, the return is not written out)
and, further, the ritornellos are fugal, so that Bach is combining three forms in this
movement
Oratorio
SeccoÆAccompaniedÆSeccoÆAccompaniedÆChorus
b. “Hallelujah” K 2.10
Church Cantata
chorale cantata: a sacred cantata based on a Lutheran chorale (hymn); use of the chorale
as a sacred, pre-existent foundation (similar to the earlier use of Gregorian chant
as a cantus firmus or paraphrased); typically each stanza of the chorale is given a
different compositional presentation
gapped chorale: a movement in which the chorale melody is heard in long notes phrase
by phrase against a continuously moving melody or texture in counterpoint to it
(see pattern in Kerman/Tomlinson, p. 160, right margin)
a. stanza 3:
•solo tenor against a continuous solo violin part (=death?)
•note how the music stops after the word “nichts” (nothing) and starts up again slowly
without the continuous violin part at first
b. stanza 4:
•the altos, doubled by organ, sing the chorale in long notes
•the continuous music consists of imitative entries of the other voices, like points of
imitation, phrase by phrase
•the imitative entries use paraphrase, while the alto uses quotation
c. stanza 7:
•a straightforward and richly harmonized version of the chorale
Great thinkers of the age include: Immanuel Kant, Rousseau, Voltaire, Adam Smith,
Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson
Literature: continued expansion of the novel, examining social forces, women writers:
Frances Burney (1752-1840); Jane Austen (1775-1817)
2. “Classical” refers to the parallel “neo-classical” period in the visual arts and
architecture that was hugely influenced by Classical Greek and Roman models
Classical revival: a reaction against the extravagance and exuberance of the Baroque
(which term was first used as a derogatory description meaning misshapen black pearl)
toward order and symmetry
Art: Sir Joshua Reynolds (1723-1792) studied classical literature, went to Rome to study
Graeco-Roman sculpture; famous for his portraits, “formal rhetoric”; Thomas
Gainsborough (1727-1788); Jean-Honoré Fragonard (domestic “hedonism”; Jacques
Louis David (1748-1825) a painter of classical images, firm supporter of the revolution
Music influenced by both the “enlightenment” and “classical” traditions of this period
tension or increase forward flow, treated with great clarity of structure (more transparent)
dissonances
Rhythm: a marked change from earlier periods, where the rhythmic flow tends to set up a
pulse or rhythmic pattern and maintain it; classical rhythms are varied, flexible,
distinctive
Form: rather than formal patterns that expand by multiplication (ritornello, ground bass);
classical forms tend to expand hierarchically from within; expansion of rounded binary to
sonata form
addition of middle range woodwinds (clarinets) and brass (horns) that complete the
Today’s genre: Symphony (from the Greek: united in sound); sym-biosis (united in life);
Variation form
[recall “Kemp’s Jig”: aab form in improvised variations, where the repeated ‘a’ is also
varied: aab a1a1′b1, a2a2′b2 a3a3′b3……
Classical music grows out of similar binary forms; but rather than expanding solely by
multiplication, the classical binary form (or rounded binary) is expanded through internal
and hierarchical elaboration
section in minor; added winds for tone color; alteration of underlying formal template)
Minuet-trio form
rounded binary
1. variation form
2. ternary forms
A B A
I X I
b. rondo
A B A C A . . . [coda]
I X1 I X2 I
or
ABACABA
ABCA
etc.
3. binary forms
I X modulation I ----------------
(tonic/ (second
home key) key)
Symphonic form
1. 1st movement/ sonata allegro
2. slow movement
a. binary
b. ternary
c. variation
3. minuet/trio; or scherzo/trio
||: a :||: b a :|| ||: c :||: d c :|| a || b a (note: no sectional repetitions on
A ÆI B ÆX A ÆI the return of the minuet/scherzo)
minuet trio minuet
Concerto form (and also the movement scheme for most sonatas)
2. slow movement
3. rondo
repertory
Bartok, Music for Strings, Percussion, and Celesta (2nd movt: sonata form)
A prodigy: first public performances on keyboard at the age of 6; early compositions for
keyboard and orchestra date from around the same time (but heavily indebted to his
father Leopold)
His earliest symphonies (definitely attributable) dating from before 1767 are in the
“concerto” 3-movement form without minuet-trio; symphonies from 1768 (dating from
his trip to Vienna) take on the four-movement form
Don Giovanni
“a dramatic testimony to powerful class and gender oppositions fuming in Enlightenment
Europe”
As opposed to Baroque opera that depicts emotion; Mozart’s late operas depict character.
Dramatic action of movements discussed:
Leporello: “Notte e giorno faticar”
pacing back and forth; syllabic; no ornamentation; 8-bar phrase that extends rather than
ends (depicting the waiting); accompaniment picks up when he expresses his wish to be a
“gentleman”; use of “patter”
Donna Anna and Don Giovanni: “Non sperar, se non m’uccidi”
Don Giovanni running out of Donna Anna’s bedroom with Donna Anna struggling to
determine his identity; she sings the first line; the stage direction says that “Don Giovanni
tries to conceal his features”; musically, therefore, he mimics her line rather than taking
on any musical characteristics of his own; this continues throughout the scene until
Donna Anna’s exit; after Don Giovanni kills her father, he still continues with “her”
music, even though it is now in minor—throughout the opera Don Giovanni is a musical
chameleon
(Throughout this scene, Leporello mutters and comments from his hiding place)
Donna Elvira: “Ah, chi mi dice mai”
“out of bounds”; huge dynamic contrasts; rhythmic discontinuities; extended phrase
structure; huge leaps; Elvira is often described as having “Baroque” music; depicting her
as unstable
(throughout this scene Don Giovanni and Leporello comment on this “poor woman,”
only realizing who she is at the very end, dissolving the aria into recitative)
Zerlina and Masetto: “Giovinette che fatte all’amore”
Like a peasant dance; sustained drone (supposedly like a bagpipe); 6/8 meter; Zerlina
starts and Masetto follows with the same tune
Masetto: “Ho capito, signor sì” K 2:39
Sings alternately to Giovanni, to Leporello (who is trying to drag him away) and to
Zerlina (whom he rebukes for being shameless by sarcastically referring to her as a
“lady”) See Kerman/Tomlinson
Zerlina and Don Giovanni: “Là chi darem la mano” K 2:41
Performed by Pamela Wood (Music faculty) soprano, Michael Ouellette (Theater
faculty), baritone, Charles Shadle (Music faculty) piano
Don Giovanni begins in a simple tune accompanied with simple chords in a clear 8-
measure phrase; Zerlina responds by saying she is hesitant, but with his tune (indicating
that he’s “calling the tune”); they then alternate phrases with Giovanni asking on the
dominant (the chord that calls out for resolution to the tonic), which Zerlina avoids
giving; then their phrases overlap, bringing them closer and closer; note the difference in
Zerlina’s repetition of “presto non son più forte” (“already I’m not strong enough”)
where the ending of the phrase droops rather than rises, indicating further weakening;
finally she consents and they reach the tonic together in a little dance in 6/8 with drone.
Its relation to the “wedding song” of Zerlina and Masetto (“Giovinette”) shows how
completely Giovanni has stepped into Masetto’s shoes (as this section is so close in style
to the wedding song “Giovenette” above). See Kerman/Tomlinson
21M011 (spring, 2006)
Ellen T. Harris
Lecture VII
Like Monteverdi, who bridges the Renaissance and the Baroque, Beethoven stands
between two eras, not fully encompassed by either. He inherited the Classical style
through Mozart and Haydn, and this is represented in works from what is typically called
his “first period” (to about 1800), during which time Beethoven performed actively as a
virtuoso pianist. The “middle period” (about 1800 to 1818) saw Beethoven break
through the classical templates as he wrestled with his increasing deafness, the growing
inability to perform or conduct, and his disillusion with Napoleon, whom he had
considered a hero of the French Revolution until Napoleon declared himself Emperor in
1804.
From Beethoven’s middle period come the works most often associated with Beethoven
and with what is known of his personality: forceful, uncompromising, angry, willful,
suffering, but overcoming extraordinary personal hardship, all of which traits are read
into his music. The Romantic cult of the individual who represents himself in his music
and of the genius who suffers for his art begins here with Beethoven.
Beethoven’s “late period” (1818 to his death [1827]) becomes more introspective and
abstract, as Beethoven’s deafness increasingly forces him to retreat into himself.
Although the 9th Symphony dates from these years, it is the only symphony to do so, and,
in many respects, is a throwback to the middle period. The late period is typified more
by smaller, more complex chamber works, among which the “late quartets” are the most
abstract in style.
1826: String Quartet in F, Op. 135, 2nd movement K 3:21
**
It becomes clear pretty quickly, however, that the little, four-note motive is going to
dominate the movement. It forms the four-bar “introduction,” first theme, transition
material and the bridge to the new key; it harps away under the more lyrical (major)
second theme, and forms the closing (or cadence theme) as well. In the development the
bridge theme of four notes is reduced to three, to two and then to one (!) note, but the
theme is so dominant that even the one note is recognizable as thematic. The
recapitulation begins with the motivic announcement again, suggesting maybe that this IS
a part of the 1st theme; slow introductions do not normally return at this point. Then over
the fermata at the end of the 8-bar theme, an oboe cadenza unexpectedly appears, a hint
perhaps, in the maelstrom of this relentless movement, of a different kind of time, of
beauty and of peace. The coda explodes out of the recapitulation, again referring to the
main motive, and develops into what Kerman/Tomlinson calls a “grim minor-mode
march.”
In the second movement (K 3:15-16): double variations in A-flat major; 1st theme
(cellos), 2nd theme (clarinets and bassoons)Ægrabbed by trumpets who blare it in C
major. The trumpet “snatch” emphasizes an unexpected relationship between this second
theme and the rhythmic motive of the first movement, which is emphasized by the
hushed (frightened) section where the motive sounds more clearly. The repeated ff
interruptions of the trumpets during the second theme (in the midst of what otherwise
would seem to be a straight-forward set of double variations) give this movement an
increasingly disturbing and ominous feel.
Third movement (K 3:17-18): again starts off with cellos, now with a mysterious, hushed
sound. Again the brass, now the French horns, interrupt with a loud, insistent version of
the 1st movement motive, now hammered on a single note. An alternation of these two
ideas fails to coalesce into the typical rounded binary form, but works almost like a small
double variation of its own through three hearings (aab | a′a′b′| a′′b′′). The next section
more traditionally plays the role of trio and does just about fall into rounded binary form
(c:||:dc), but the repetition of the second part is reorchestrated and runs without pause into
the return of the “scherzo” (c:||dc′| d′c′′), and the scherzo itself is shortened and
reorchestrated, and it disintegrates into a transition where the timpani play the 1st
movement rhythmic motive (the whole trio to scherzo looking like: c:||dc′| d′c′′a′′′---).
Finally, the tension and uncertainty is overcome (conquered?) with the entrance of the
triumphant C major march theme of the final movement. The second theme of this
sonata form movement then takes the 4-note rhythmic motive and transforms it into joy.
However, the return of the C minor scherzo at the end of the development (just before the
recapitulation) seems to imply that while one can overcome fate, one cannot eradicate it.
This sonata was written in 1802, the year of the Heiligenstadt Testament. Beethoven is
said to have claimed that it was based on Shakespeare’s The Tempest, but this cannot be
taken to mean that it depicts the story through individual characterizations. Rather, if
there is a relationship, it would appear to be to the figure of Prospero, who overcomes all
the difficulties and obstacles that have been placed in his path. Beethoven, with the
increased onset of his deafness, may (MAY) have related to this story. At any event, the
sonata is certainly tempestuous. A recording of the sonata with Russell Sherman, pianist,
is available on Stellar. The following listening guide gives some of the important
structural moments. It is based on the recording by Russell Sherman: Ludwig van
Beethoven, Piano Sonatas (10 cds: GM Recordings, 1995-2000).
Beethoven wrote this work for the violinist George Augustus Polgreen Bridgetower, who
played it with Beethoven in 1803 (Lewis Lockwood, Beethoven: The Music and the Life
[New York, 2003] , p. 143). Only later was the dedication offered to Rodolphe Kreutzer,
a famous French violinist who taught at the Paris Conservatoire, but who never
performed the work. Beethoven himself described the piece as “Sonata scritta in un stilo
molto concertante quasi come d’un concerto” (“written in a highly concerto-like style,
almost in the manner of a concerto”). This was never a work intended for amateurs; it is
truly virtuosic throughout, showing Beethoven’s stretching of technique for both violin
and piano.
You will hear a “real” slow introduction, which vacillates between major and minor, an
important attribute of the following sonata form movement. The introduction starts off in
virtuoso style with the violin solo playing from 2 to 4 notes at a time (double-stopping);
this is in major, but the piano immediately responds in minor. This section increasingly
fragments as it progresses. The sonata movement in minor follows the typical plan of 1st
theme, transition, 2nd theme group (with two clear themes: I will call them theme 2 and 3)
plus closing. The development emphasizes the third theme. There are fermatas and
pauses throughout, which disrupt the forward motion. There is a mini, false
recapitulation for the piano in the wrong key before the “real” recapitulation enters in the
violin. The coda brings back the 1st theme and a long Adagio (slow) pause in the midst of
turbulent activity. In short, the movement contains most of the features you would expect
in this period from heroic Beethoven breaking through the bonds of tradition. Timings
follow the recording by Isaac Stern, violin, and Eugene Istomin, piano (Sony Classical,
1996, p1986).
Literature: Gothic novels (Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, 1818), Grimm brothers Fairy
Tales, Thoreau’s Walden, Dickens
Poetry: Goethe, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Shelley, Keats, Byron, Whitman, Blake, Edgar
Allan Poe
Visual Arts: Constable, Turner, Cezanne, Rodin, Renoir, Monet, Seurat, Van Gogh
Science, engineering and industrialization: Pasteur; McCormick’s mechanical reaper;
Morse’s telegraph; Daguerre’s photographs; first electric light; ether used for first time as
anesthetic (1846); Darwin Origin of Species (1859); first Atlantic cable (1864); first
transcontinental railway in U.S. (1869); Suez Canal (1869); Bell’s telephone (1876);
Edison’s phonograph; automobile patented by Daimler; Roentgen’s X-ray
Exploration: Lewis and Clark reach the Pacific (1806); first steamship crosses the
Atlantic (1818); Japan opened to the West (1853)
Politics: 1804: Napoleon crowns self Emperor; 1805: Battle of Trafalgar; War of 1812
between England and U.S.; Napoleon invades Russia (1812); Battle of Waterloo (1815);
Greek War of Independence (1822); July Revolution in France (1830); Polish revolt
(1830); Revolutions in France, Prussia, Austria-Hungary and Italian states (1848); Marx
and Engels, Communist Manifesto (1848); Italian risorgimento (1859-1861); Anti-slavery
movement in U.S.; Abraham Lincoln, United States Civil War (1861-1865); Spanish-
American War starts (1898)
Kerman/Tomlinson provides a good introduction to this century (pp. 235-242). The
following builds on that, emphasizing certain aspects.
1. The Romantic Era is closely tied to literature; the very name comes from the
literary world, whose authors themselves adopted the name “Romantics.” For
music, the close tie with literature is a dominant feature of the period. Composers
chose to set the words of their contemporaries, not just in opera and song, but text
became increasingly important in symphonies and piano music. Rather than
following some abstract form: ritornello, sonata form, composers molded their
music more freely to the sung text; examples include Beethoven’s Ninth
Symphony, Berlioz’s “Dramatic Symphony” Romeo and Juliet. Even without
text, music frequently used a narrative or literary idea as an organizing idea or
affective basis. Thus, symphonies and overtures (frequently overtures to nothing)
were written that tell a specific story; sometimes these (loosely) followed
traditional forms; these are called “program music” or, later, particularly in the
music of Richard Strauss, “symphonic poems.” Examples include Beethoven’s
Pastoral Symphony; and, from your listening, Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique;
Chaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet Overture-Fantasy. A lot of piano music depicted
specific images or characters rather than falling into the typical movement plan of
the sonata: from your listening, examples include Schumann’s Carnaval and
Chopin’s Nocturne. The tie to literature affects all aspects of music, but may be
most important in terms of loosening form.
2. The Romantic Era is closely tied to the individual: poetry, art and music strove in
the nineteenth century to represent individual feeling and emotion. This had
many effects on music of this century, one of which is the importance of the
composer’s life to his music, This is apparent in large-scale works, such as
Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5, Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique, and Wagner’s
Tristan. It also played an important part in the rise of the miniature. This
repertoire includes principally songs and piano pieces, frequently lasting only a
few minutes, depicting sometimes intense, sometimes fleeting emotions.
Sometimes composers grouped a lot of these into a larger set; in the case of songs,
these sets combined the miniatures into a longer narrative. The song was
dominated in the nineteenth century by German composers; examples from your
listening include Schubert, and Robert and Clara Schumann. As a result, the song
is often known by its German name: Lied or, plural, Lieder. Piano miniatures are
frequently called character pieces, since they depict a single character or mood;
more often than songs, these are grouped into sets. Examples include
Mendelssohn’s Songs Without Words; Chopin’s Etudes and Preludes (like many
of the symphonic overtures, these preludes preceded nothing); and, from your
listening, Chopin’s Nocturnes, Schumann’s Carnaval and Mussorgsky’s Pictures
at an Exhibition (first written for piano and then orchestrated). [This aspect of the
Romantic also tied to Revolution: Chopin, Wagner, Verdi]
3. The Romantic Era is closely tied to the supernatural and macabre: as
Kerman/Tomlinson puts it, this fits in with the effort to transcend the ordinary and
the conventional. Goethe’s Faust and Shelley’s Frankenstein mark the beginning
of the Romantic fascination with the supernatural, which also finds strong voice
in such disparate authors as the Grimm brothers (fairy tales), Blake, and Edgar
Allan Poe. Music reacted strongly to such literature, ranging from Mendelssohn’s
inimitable depiction of the fairies in his “Overture to Midsummer Night’s Dream”
to Saint-Saëns Danse Macabre. Operas frequently used supernatural stories, like
Verdi’s setting of Macbeth or Wagner’s Flying Dutchman about a ghost ship
whose crew need the redemption of love to find eternal rest. Examples from your
listening include Schubert’s setting of Goethe’s Erlkönig, Schumann’s Die alten,
bösen Lieder, and Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique, which conjures up a
nightmare of witches. Related to the attraction to the supernatural is a fascination
with boundless nature, which, as Kerman/Tomlinson states, is sometimes
menacing. This sense of the overwhelming and the desolate in nature is depicted,
on the one hand, by the artist Turner and, on the other, by the poet Sir Walter
Scott, who dramatized old Scottish tales and ballads set in the Scottish lowlands
and highlands; Turner began his career painting scenes for opera, and Scott’s
works formed the basis of operas by Donizetti (Lucia da Lammermoor),
symphonic poems by Berlioz (Waverly and Rob-Roy) and some extraordinary
songs by Schubert (Lady of the Lake).
Style characteristics:
Texture: melody with accompaniment dominates; frequently very thick as opposed to the
clarity of the Classical era
Timbre: piano a dominant instrument (Lied, character piece, concerto); individual tone
color of single instrument; unique combinations of instruments (less focus on orchestral
sections: strings, woodwinds, brass)
Harmony: tonal, but with a weaker sense of key center due to chromaticism, fusion of
major and minor modes, deceptive cadences, modal harmonies of folk song; use of
harmony and specific sonorities to create mood
Rhythm: less regular: complex and rhapsodic (Chopin using groups of 5 or 11 notes to a
beat, for example); rubato (flexible tempo)
Melody: less regular: fragmentary or very extended (use of chromaticism, dynamic
climaxes)
Form: less regular: less dependence on standard forms, freer shapes of ballade or fantasy,
overlapping with vague boundaries, BUT use of motivic repetition or thematic
transformation to create cyclic forms (Schubert, Erlkönig; Berlioz, Symphonie
fantastique)
Romantic miniatures
Terms
lied, lieder character pieces
accompaniment nocturne
through-composed rubato
strophic strain
modified strophic
song cycle
Piano repertoire: Character pieces for piano: short piano works that convey a certain
mood or character, frequently given generic titles: preludes, ballades, nocturnes, etudes,
etc.
other readings:
|: a :| |: b :|: cb :| a (coda) (“minuet/trio”)
A B A Æ coda (ternary)
Schumann, Carnaval
A collection of miniatures representing masked revelers at Carnival (festival in advance
of the period of penitence before Easter called Lent—e.g. Mardi gras = last day of Lent)
“On 8 June (his 21st birthday) Schumann wrote in his diary: ‘It sometimes seems … as if
stood between my appearance and my actual being, between form and shadow’ ” (John
The full title of this collection is Carnaval: scènes mignonnes sur quatre notes: these
notes are A, E flat, C, B natural or A[E]s C H in German (see #10 of the set, below).
ASCH = name of town where Schumann’s fiancée, Ernestine von Fricken, lived or
SCHA = SCHumAnn
Kerman/Tomlinson implies by its wording that the abrupt, non-ending of the Florestan
movement leads directly to Chiarina (representing Clara Wieck, who would become
Schumann’s wife), but at this time Clara was only 13, and Schumann was engaged to
Ernestine. But beyond all of these facts, as the list of movements indicates, the
implication.
“Eusebius” K 4:2
like Schubert’s Moment Musical, Eusebius has multiple formal implications; note
moreover, that a and b are not distinctively different. Motive a blurs the beat by using 7
equal notes per measure; motive b enlarges the upward intervallic leap and breaks the
measure into two parts, the first divided into 5 equal notes, the second 3 equal notes.
Motive a is accompanied by a rising chromatic line in the bass; motive b by a
descending chromatic line. If the movement were simply |: a :|: ba :| it would, obviously,
be in rounded binary form, but the interruption of the extra ba with thicker chords creates
a disruption in that formal scheme similar to the disruption in Schubert’s Moment
Musical No. 2 in A-flat that also expands what seems a conventional form.
a a b(=a′) a b a b a
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
0:00 0:23 0:52 1:19
fuller,
thicker chords
|: a :| ba BA ba (rounded binary with loud
disruption)
A B A′ (ternary with only texture and
dynamic contrast)
“Florestan” K 4:3
an impetuous single theme movement with “nostalgic” interruptions (indicated by a ‘p’ in
the chart below) from an earlier collection of piano pieces by Schumann, Papillons
(1831), based on a scene of a masked ball in a novel (Flegeljahre by Jean Paul);
“papillons” = butterflies, which relates to the theme of transformation inherent in the
masking.
Form: a [p] a [p] a |: b :| b’ a’
Timings: 0:00 0:11 0:26 0:51
# of measures: 8 2 8 4 8 |: 8 :| 8 12
section form: aaba aaba aaba caca ccc′c′ a a ASCH-ASCH
224 4
Chopin, Nocturne in F-sharp, Op. 15, No. 2 K 4:4
Nocturne = night piece (serenade? lament?); the blurring of the beat that occurs in
Schumann’s “Eusebius” is an inherent part of Chopin’s style and enhanced by extensive
use of rubato, a flexible adherence to tempo that allows for slowing down and speeding
up. Chopin’s use of groups of 3, 5, 6, 7 (and at one point 30!) notes over the space of 1 to
four measured notes creates a completely liquid sound on the surface. The underlying
structure, however, is amazingly regular and based on 8-bar phrases.
a a′ b c a′′ coda
0:00 0:26 0:57 1:27 2:13 2:54
A B A
1. the “ballade” partakes of the piano miniature in its freedom of form, but is
2. the term “ballade” derives from song and refers to a narrative that typically takes
strophic form (Der Erlkönig is a ballade)
3. Chopin wrote four ballades
A a legato (smooth) theme moving largely by step; it takes the shape of a ternary
statement: aba
B a more lively theme off the beat (syncopated); it also takes a ternary shape: cdc
A fortissimo return with much thicker texture (think of the similarly “thickened”
passage in Schumann’s Eusebius)
Recording: Great Pianists of the 20th Century, vol. 85, Artur Rubinstein, piano (Philips
Classics, 1998)
Song Repertoire: read Kerman/Tomlinson; some emphases and additional points below
Performed by faculty members Ellen Harris (soprano) and Charles Shade (piano)
The key elements of the nineteenth century emphasized last week for the “miniature”
repertoire, apply equally well to the “grandiose”:
1. tie to literature
2. tie to individual
3. tie to the supernatural and macabre
Comic opera continued following Mozart in both its Italian through-composed form
with recitative (like Don Giovanni) and in the dialogue style common to France,
Germany and England. Giacomo Rossini (1792-1868) and Gaetano Donizetti (1797
1848) were two composers whose comic operas sparkled in the early nineteenth century
and continue to hold a major place in operatic repertoire today. Dialogue style comic
opera evolved into what is now called operetta (or little opera), which rose in the second
half of the century as Italian opera buffa declined. Three composers stand out: in France,
Jacques Offenbach (1819-1880: Orpheus in the Underworld, 1874)), in Germany,
Johann Strauss, the younger (1825-1899: Der Fledermaus, 1874), and in England, Arthur
Sullivan (1842-1900), especially in his collaborations with W. S. Gilbert (1836-1911).
Serious opera (opera seria) also followed divergent paths based on national traditions,
although the influence of literary works by Shakespeare, Goethe and Sir Walter Scott
crossed all boundaries. Opera seria continued in Italy with Rossini (Guglielmo Tell,
1829), Donizetti (Lucia da Lammermoor, 1835, based on Sir Walter Scott) and Vincenzo
Bellini (1801-1835: I Capuleti e i Montecchi, 1830). In France, grand opera flourished
in the hands of Hector Berlioz (1803-1869: Les Troyens, 1863), Georges Bizet (1838
1875: Carmen, 1875) and Charles Gounod (1818-1893: Faust, 1859; Roméo et Juliette,
1867). In Germany, a national opera based on folk tales and legends grew up through
the efforts of Carl Maria von Weber (1786-1826: Der Freischütz, 1821) and Jakob (later
Giacomo) Meyerbeer (1791-1864), who was largely responsible for the fusion of the
three national, European operatic styles: his first three operas were written for
Germany (1812-1814), then from 1817 to 1824 he composed Italian opera for Milan and
Venice, and from 1831 to 1865 he wrote French grand opera for Paris. The two titans of
serious opera by the second half of the century, Richard Wagner (1813-1883) and
Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901), were indebted to Meyerbeer’s work and followed his
lead in their own unique ways.
2
Wagner (1813-1883)
Early influences:
1828 (aet: 15) wrote a tragedy based on King Lear and Hamlet
Musical:
backed the revolutionaries and was forced to flee to Switzerland with the help of Liszt
3rd period (1849-1863) Zurich exile; patronage of Otto Wesendonk, whose wife Mathilde
became a love interest; lull in composition; theoretical works (The Artwork of the Future,
1849; Opera and Drama, 1851); beginning of Ring of the Niebelung (libretto published
1853); interruption of composition of Ring to compose Tristan und Isolde (begun 1854;
(1876)
second: to Cosima, the daughter of Liszt and Countess Marie d’Agoult (see image in
Kerman/Tomlinson, p. 236; and discussion, p. 263); Cosima had been previously the wife
of Hans von Bülow, conductor and supporter of Wagner, who conducted the first staged
performance of Tristan in 1865. Cosima bore Wagner two children out of wedlock; after
receiving a divorce from von Bülow, Wagner and Cosima married in 1870.
Wagner was demanding and difficult in his professional life; he placed his own needs and
desires above friendship and patronage (as seen in his love life); and he remains
Meyerbeer, and Halevy, each of whom had been an important musical influence and two
of whom, Meyerbeer and Halevy, had personally assisted Wagner in his career. His
writings were taken up by the Nazis in the 20th century, and his music was made a
musical symbol for their political party. Wagner, more than any other composer perhaps,
raises the issue of whether a person can be separated from his or her work. Nevertheless,
Wagner’s importance can be gauged by the fact that almost everyone holds an opinion
about his music, whether they like it or not and even whether they know it or not.
Wagner’s music is without question among the most important in the history of Western
composition. Happily, Tristan und Isolde raises fewer of these questions than some of
Wagner’s other operas.
substitutes the love potion, which Tristan and Isolde drink just as the ship arrives in
Cornwall and King Mark appears to claim his bride.
Act II depicts the lovers’ nighttime tryst. Heedless of Brangäne’s sung warning and of
the growing dawn, they are interrupted by the arrival of King Mark and his retinue.
Tristan is wounded by one of Mark’s courtiers, Melot.
Act III takes place at Tristan’s castle in Brittany where he lies dying and delirious. Isolde
arrives by ship just in time to have him die in her arms. King Mark’s ship, closely
following, arrives immediately after and despite his intention to allow the lovers the
freedom to be together and his pleas for calm, there is fighting in which both Melot and
Kurwenal, Tristan’s devoted servant, are killed. The opera ends with Isolde’s
transfiguration during which she sinks onto Tristan’s body and is mystically united with
him in death.
Prelude K 4:16-20
Philter Scene K 4:21-23
DVD: National Theater Munich during the Münchner Opernfestspiele, 1998: Waltraud
Meier (Isolde), Marjana Lipovsek (Brangäne), Han Wilbrink (Helmsman), Zubin Mehta,
conductor
Wagner’s use of
1. small motives, as in the miniature character pieces, spread over a huge canvas,
and with specific meaning (Leitmotiv); that is, an opera should not divide into
recitative and aria “as if it were a concert featuring self-contained musical pieces”
(Jon T. Finson, Nineteenth-Century Music: The Western Classical Tradition
[Prentice-Hall, 2002] p. 165)
2. chromaticism
3. deceptive cadences
4. rich orchestral tapestry, with “the artistic position and status equal to that of the
greatest symphonic music” (Rey M. Longyear, Nineteenth-Century Romanticism
in Music [Prentice-Hall, 1973] p. 170); “the orchestral accompaniment [should]
play an active role in the drama, [avoiding] periodic phrasing…[and containing]
its own melody composed of motivic presentiments [Leitmotiv]” (Finson, p. 166)
5. vocal sprech-gesang: “Wagner’s vocal melody [is] often just another strand in the
orchestral texture and chiefly devoted to expressing the text” (Longyear, p. 175);
“vocal lines [should] avoid virtuosic display, bel canto, and regular, repeated
phrases” (Finson, p. 166),
6. Gesamtkunstwerk (integrated unity of plot, poetry, music, scenery, costume and
action); “focus on dramatic interactions between characters rather than scenes
inserted merely to produce spectacle” (Finson, 166).
5
Verdi (1813-1901)
1st period (1839-1849) mainly in Milan: 14 operas, many associated with the movement
toward Italian independence from Austria, France and the papacy through their political
subjects; e.g. Macbeth (1847) based on Shakespeare and dealing with political unrest in
Scotland
2nd period (1849-1857) spent a lot of time in Paris; revised I Lombardi for performance in
Paris; operas of this period (for Italy) more typically about “personal relationships
between characters (rather than on grand political conflict)” (Finson, p. 146); e.g.
Rigoletto (1851) and La traviata (1854)
3rd period (1857-1874) experimentation with French grand opera culminating in Don
Carlos (Paris, 1867); in 1860s Verdi closely associated with the movement toward
independence and unification of Italy (“Risorgimento”), for which he “served as both
champion and symbol” (Finson, p. 152); last name taken as acronym for the cry to have
their chosen monarch unite Italy under secular rule: “Vittore Emanuele, Re D’Italia”
(Victor Emmanuel, King of Italy); Victor Emmanuel became king in 1861; unification
complete in 1871; in 1874 Verdi “elected to an honorary position in the Italian senate”; in
1871, Verdi “finally succeeded in combining elements of French grand opera and
traditional Italian opera in a completely way” in Aida, “commissioned for the Cairo opera
house in celebration of the new Suez Canal” (Finson, p. 152)
4th period: (1875-1879) retirement to his farm; in 1875 his publisher Ricordi suggested an
opera based on Shakespeare’s Othello with a libretto by Arrigo Boito; Otello (1885); then
Falstaff based on Shakespeare’s Merry Wives of Windsor (1893).
Aida
1870 commissioned on basis of written scenario by the Egyptologist Auguste Mariette;
librettist commissioned to write the full libretto (Ghislanzoni);
Verdi and Ghislanzoni worked closely; Verdi pressuring Ghislanzoni
1871 premiere delayed by Franco-Prussian War, “the siege of Paris having trapped the
sets and costumes in the French capital” (Roger Parker, “Aida,” Grove Music
Online, ed. L. Macy); further problems with casting; premiere 24 December
Set “at the time of the Pharoahs,” the opera takes place during hostilities between Egypt
and Ethiopia. Young “Radames is appointed to command the Egyptian armies.
Loved by the Pharoah’s daughter Amneris, he himself is in love with Aida,
Amneris’s Ethiopian slave, captured during a previous campaign.” It is unknown
that Aida is daughter to the King of Ethiopia, who himself is captured by
Radames in the current campaign. Meeting with his daughter, the king “bullies
her into persuading Radames to betray an important military secret.” Learning of
this Amneris betrays Radames, with the intent of saving him if he will pledge his
love to her. Only after he refuses to be false to Aida and is condemned to die by
entombment, does Amneris realize too late what she has done. All her efforts at
this point to have him pardoned fail. In the last scene, a spectacular, specified
6
vertically split stage shows Radames entombed below with the priests intoning
above; Aida has crept into the tomb unobserved; Radames is at first horrified, but
Aida envisions the angel of death approaching in “radiance.” Aida sings her
farewell to earthly sorrows, seeing the heavens open to eternal day; Radames
repeats this with interjections by Aida; finally they sing it together as above them
Amneris in a monotone prays for their souls to rest in peace. The duet melody,
taken over by the violins, implies their death and ascendance (compare to the end
of Dido’s “When I am laid in earth,” where the repeating bass ascends to the
highest register in the violins and descends the full scale after Dido’s death)
Throughout the 19th century, composers continued to write orchestral music in two
different tracks. In the first, the music evolved exclusively out of its own musical
components following the example of most symphonies by Haydn, Mozart and
Beethoven. Schubert, Schumann and Brahms are major composers in this form, referred
to as “absolute” music. This was opposed to the second track of program music, or music
composed to depict some extra-musical storyline, as exemplified by Berlioz’s Fantastic
Symphony. Of course, this is not to say that program music lacked internal musical
organization, but rather that it was harnessed to an extra-musical topic. There is, needless
to say, some blurring of these categories.
Pyotr Ilyich Chaikovsky (1840-1893), like Wagner, was strongly influenced by Mozart’s
Don Giovanni, Italian opera, Berlioz (orchestration and narrative form), Chopin (freedom
of form), and Liszt (power of the large-scale, less specific narration)
Romeo (Montague)
Juliet (Capulet)
secret wedding
Mercutio killed by Tybalt (Romeo tries to prevent)
Romeo kills Tybalt
Romeo exiled
wedding night
Juliet told to marry Paris
Friar provides a sleeping potion to Juliet that mimics death
in the tombs, Romeo kills Paris, takes poison
Juliet, waking to find Romeo dead, kills herself with his knife
Kerman/Tomlinson states that “Chaikovsky followed the outlines of the original play
only in a very general way,” but I would suggest that the connection is stronger than that.
The overture-fantasy, in sonata form, opens with a slow introduction based on a modal
hymn theme representing Friar Lawrence and giving the whole story a more magical,
mystical cast (much like Tristan und Isolde).
The exposition opens with the “vendetta theme” depicting the fighting between the young
Montagues and Capulets by the use of contrapuntal (fugal) techniques (compare Berlioz,
Symphonie fantastique last movement). The “sighing” theme (at 7:16) with its
alternating notes comprising a dissonant and unresolved interval represents Juliet, and
depicts her tremulous excitement at this point in the balcony scene (“Romeo, Romeo,
wherefore art thou Romeo?”). The love theme represents Romeo (compare with the idée
fixe theme of Berlioz in its yearning intervals and use of sequence).
The development plays the fighting theme against the hymn of the introduction—the
hymn here representing the wedding of Romeo and Juliet by Friar Lawrence in the face
of the opposition of their families.
The recapitulation explodes with the fighting theme, representing the deaths of Mercutio
and Tybalt, with the immediately following “sighing theme” (12:24) indicating Juliet’s
reaction to the Duke’s decision to exile Romeo as she anticipates his arrival, signaled by
the return of the love theme. The combination of these themes represents their wedding
night together, with the love theme fragmenting at Romeo’s departure (14:04). The
reintroduction of the “vendetta” theme and of conflict portrays her family’s insistence
that Juliet marry Paris; the return of the hymn theme depicts Juliet’s plea for help from
Friar Lawrence, who gives her the sleeping potion.
In the coda, Romeo arrives in Juliet’s tomb (love theme with muffled funeral drums); he
drinks poison (the theme fragments further); Juliet awakens (transformation of the
sighing theme [16:40]). In most nineteenth-century productions of the play, Juliet
awakens just before Romeo dies so that they have a moment together: this may be
represented by the “transcendent” version of the love theme (17:46).
The drum roll and final cadences may depict Juliet’s desperate suicide following
Romeo’s death, the final scene of death illustrating the ghastly result of the feud between
the families. It is striking that Chaikovsky chooses to end the movement not with the
love theme dying away, but with this sense of violence and loss, which is more
Shakespearean than Romantic.
Nationalism
Western music from its origins had a shifting geographical center. In the Middle Ages
and Renaissance, the dominant group of composers were Franco-Flemish (Perotin,
Ventadorn, Machaut, Dufay, Josquin). Toward the end of the 16th century, the center
shifted to Italian cities and courts (Palestrina, Gabrieli, Monteverdi, Frescobaldi,
Vivaldi). Over the course of the eighteenth century, the center (with the exception of
opera) shifted to German-speaking lands (Bach, Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven,
Schubert, Schumann, Wagner, Brahms). Increasingly, however, with the rise of nation
states (Italian risorgimento; see Verdi), the overthrow of absolute monarchy through
revolution (France, Russia) and the rise of constitutional monarchy in England following
the American Revolution, the arts began to take on specifically national characteristics,
using folk music (song and dance) as a basic for composition. In countries that lost
independence, such as Poland, nationalism took on perhaps even more importance than in
countries that gained it. In part, of course, this musical trend was political, and political
messages have always been important in music. For example, Mozart in his operas
depicted the strength and morality of the lower classes against the weakness and
immorality of the upper classes and Beethoven originally intended his 3rd Symphony to
honor Napoleon. Later, Verdi’s operas became important political vehicles. In part,
however, the trend by the end of the 19th century was as much (or more) toward the
portrayal a distinctive national sound through the incorporation of “characteristic” folk
idioms than the depiction of political or revolutionary subject matter. In a way,
nationalism in music blends early 19th-century politicism with the development of
“character” pieces, the “character” in this case being a national identity. Both kinds of
nationalism continued well into the 20th century. When composers adopt a national
idiom other than their own, the term “exoticism” is used (Verdi’s imitation of Egyptian
music for the hymn of the priests; another example not in your text is Ravel’s “Boléro”).
Perhaps the greatest national school was the Russian: Rimsky-Korsakov, Musorgsky,
Borodin, Chaikovsky, Stravinsky, Prokofiev, Shostakovich
Modest Musorgsky (1839-1881) was not a trained musician. Because of his social class
(he came from a wealthy land-owning family of north central Russia), he was trained as
an officer in the Russian Imperial Guard (the Tsar’s bodyguards), but after revolutionary
changes in Russia that “caused the liquidation of his family estate,” he made his living in
a clerical job. His continuing interest in composition admitted him to a loose-knit group
(Kucha) of nationalist Russian composers organized by Balakirev that included Glinka,
Borodin, Rimsky-Korsakov and, briefly, Chaikovsky, among others.
As a child, his mother taught him piano. While in the guards he sought composition
lessons in musical form from Balakirev based on a study of Beethoven symphonies. In
1858, he resigned from the guards to pursue music as a gentleman. However, the
emancipation of the serfs in 1861 forced him to take civil service jobs to keep body and
soul together. He shared a room with the composer Rimsky-Korsakov.
Hartmann believed that Russian architecture should draw its inspiration from folk
designs; Musorgsky’s Pictures follows this nationalistic goal.
1. Promenade (groupings of five and six with a pentatonic melody, based on Russian
pentasyllabic verse and folk melody)
2. Gnomus (nutcracker: lurching rhythms, dissonant harmony)
3. Promenade
16. The Great Gate of Kiev (chorale-like setting, including Promenade theme and Russian
folk song)
[In a recent semester the piano version was played in class by Joey Zhou ’07 (EECS).]
Kerman/Tomlinson describe this piece in ternary form. In doing so, the English horn
motive is given no identity, although it is this theme that returns the most often and ends
the piece. I think it is difficult to hear this work in simple ternary form. Like clouds
themselves, it is more amorphous, moving in and out of familiar material and
fragmenting at the end. I have compared the two analyses below.
Kerman: A(a b a) B A′
Harris: a b c b a d b a d b
fragmenting
Themes a-d (Harris analysis) have distinctive characteristics: a (cloud theme; chromatic);
b (English horn; octatonic); c (rising section); d (flute; pentatonic). The use of non-tonal
scales and amorphous form give this piece its “impressionistic” quality.
Summary of Romantic era: Schubert to Debussy
Chronology
Schumann(s) Chaikovsky
Chopin
Brahms (concerto)
Self-depiction
Mahler (symphony)
Berlioz
Debussy (symphonic poem)
Robert Schumann
(Wagner)
“Absolute” music
(Chopin Ballade) Opera
Brahms Wagner
Verdi
Nationalistic
Mahler Exotic
(Schubert) Verdi
Mussorgsky Brahms
21M011 (spring, 2006)
Ellen T. Harris
Lecture XI
Twentieth Century
Literature and poetry: freed from rigid structure: James Joyce, T. S. Eliot, e. e.
cubism, etc.; Kandinsky, Picasso, Braque, Mondrian, Matisse, Munch, Brancusi, Klee,
Dali,
Sculpture at MIT includes: Alexander Calder (The Big Sail by the Green Building),
Henry Moore (Three piece reclining figure, draped in Killian Court) and many others
Architecture: Louis Sullivan, Antonio Gaudi, Mies van der Rohe, Frank Lloyd Wright,
Alvar Aalto (Baker Dormitory), Eliel Saarinen (MIT Chapel), Eero Saarinen (Kresge), I.
Style characteristics:
Kerman/Tomlinson calls this piece “tough, precise, barbaric,” “abstract,” and “utterly
unemotional. ”As opposed to the opulent Russian ballets of Chaikovsky which preceded
it, or even Stravinsky’s own Firebird, written only three years previous and depicting a
romantic fairy tale about a magical firebird, The Rite of Spring “boldly and brutally
depicted the fertility cults of prehistoric Slavic tribes.” At its premiere riots broke out
due to the brutality of the story, the violence of the music, and the modern choreography
which eschewed traditional ballet (en pointe) for tribal circle dancing and stomping. The
Timbre: huge orchestra, lots of percussion; extreme use of solo instruments for color (and
intensity): opening bassoon solo in impossibly high register, use of E-flat clarinet
(compare Berlioz), folksong #1 for bassoons and contrabassoons, #2 for French horn,
flutes, #3 for trumpets, #4 for piccolos (compare Debussy who also identifies his themes
with instruments: a = clarinets and bassoons, b = English horn, d = flute and harp)
impressario: Sergei Diaghilev (Ballets Russe in Paris), who commissioned and produced
choreographers: Stravinsky first worked with the choreographer Mikhail Fokine, who
said of traditional ballet that it “lacked its most essential element: presentation to the
Wagner’s Gesamtkunstwerk argued that all aspects of a ballet (its scenario, mime,
dancing, lighting, costume, stage design, and music—should be integrated into a unified
dramatic image) a “total work of art” (Craig Wright and Bryan Simms, Music in Western
Civilization, p. 604). When Fokine dropped out of the Rite of Spring project, he was
replaced as choreographer by the dancer Vaslav Nijinsky.
costumes and scenery: Nicholas Roerich
The play tells “the tragic story of Wozzeck, a downtrodden German soldier, imposed
upon by all and respected by few, the object of contempt of his captain, [an experimental
subject of the regimental doctor], scorned by his mistress as she has an affair with a
handsome drum major, Wozzeck seeks vengeance and stabs Marie to death near a pond
into which his weapon falls. In trying to retrieve it, he is drowned” (summary from the
MIT Barton catalogue!)
“Büchner’s play was inspired by the real life story of Johann Christian Woyzeck, who
was beheaded in Leipzig in 1824 for the murder of his mistress. Prior to his execution,
Woyzeck was interviewed by a doctor to determine whether he could be held responsible
for his actions. In his writings, the doctor concluded that Woyzeck was ‘of sound mind
and that any aberrations were due to his physical constitution and moral degeneration’.”
(Program book, Woyzeck, The Gate Theatre, London, 2004)
Comparison to Berlioz Symphonie fantastique is instructive: both are brutal, but where
the Berlioz is based on fantasy, Wozzeck is based in fact; Berlioz is heavily invested in,
and softened by, emotion, whereas Berg presents a realistic, brutal depiction. Like
Mahler, Berg makes use of “ambient music” (Richard Taruskin, The Oxford History of
Western Music, vol 4 [New York, 2005], p. 508): folksongs, marches, waltzes; like Ives
(to be studied next week), these are reflected through a dissonant and, in Berg’s case,
atonal mirror. But what can be difficult or impossible to accept in the concert hall (for
some people, Ives) becomes immensely powerful when tied to a dramatic presentation
(think Stravinsky or, in general, film music).
Unlike the narrative structures that are dependent on the dramatic flow for their form
(Berlioz, Schubert’s Erlking, Stravinsky, even Debussy to a point), Wozzeck is tightly
organized by formal structures, communicating a sense of constriction and paralleling the
absolute rigidity experienced by Wozzeck. “Thus the five scenes of Act 1, an exposition
that introduces the five main characters in turn and delineates Wozzeck’s relationship to
them, are designated as a series of five character-pieces; Act 2, the opera’s dramatic
development, is a symphony in five movements, while the five scenes and final orchestral
interlude of Act 3 (‘catastrophe and epilogue’) are a sequence of six inventions on single
musical ideas” (Andrew Clements, “Wozzeck,” Grove Music Online, ed. Laura Macy).
The use of such traditional structures is a form of neo-classicism.
Act I:
i. Captain: suite (prelude, pavane, gigue, gavotte, air, prelude [backwards])
ii. Wozzeck: rhapsody
iii. Marie: military march and lullaby
iv. Doctor: passacaglia
v. Drum Major: rondo
Act II: 5-movement symphony, in Berg’s words:
i. “sonata,” in which Marie, preening herself after her night with the Drum
Major, nevertheless accepts money from Wozzeck to care for their child, and
experiences a moment of bad conscience
ii. “fantasia and fugue,” in which the Captain and the Doctor, taunting Wozzeck,
plant the first inkling in his mind that Marie has been unfaithful
iii. “largo,” in which Wozzeck confronts Marie, who is cold and defiant
iv. “scherzo,” in which Wozzeck sees Marie dancing in the arms of the Drum
Major
v. “introduction and rondo,” in which the Drum Major beats Wozzeck and gloats
over him
Act III (Kerman excerpt in box; in class we watched to the end of the opera):
i. invention on a theme=six variations and a fugue (Marie reads from the Bible
and repents)
ii. invention on a note=the murder (the note B held out on a bass pedal, sung by
Wozzeck to the word “nothing” in response to Marie asking what is bothering
him, screamed by Marie as Wozzeck plunges the knife into her throat, a final
set of unison B’s played by the orchestra in a deafening crescendo)
iii. invention on a rhythm=Wozzeck’s mounting fear and guilt (after killing
Marie, Wozzeck has returned to the tavern where he had seen her dancing
with the Drum Major. The rhythm is first heard in the bass drum at the outset
of the scene and serves as the rhythmic ostinato of the scene. This rhythm
underlies the disjointed barroom piano rag played on “an out-of-tune upright
piano on stage,” Margaret’s song, and the dialogue itself, but it appears in
many different tempos and meters. Like all the forms in Berg’s opera, it is not
necessarily meant to be “heard” but rather experienced as a kind of
claustrophobic oppression or inexorable fate.
iv. Two related inventions
a. invention on a chord=Wozzeck’s drowning (Wozzeck returns to the pond
where he killed Marie to find the knife; he thinks himself covered in blood
and senses everything turning blood red: the moon, the pond water. He
sings in Sprechstimme, which you have already heard in Schoenberg’s
Pierrot lunaire songs, and which is undoubtedly related, especially
because of the monologue on the moon; like Pierrot, Wozzeck is
hallucinating and mad at this point. His primary enemies, the doctor and
the captain, scurry by without helping; it is striking that they speak and do
not sing.
b. invention on a key=orchestral elegy on Wozzeck’s death (the most
romantic and emotional moment in the opera, as the six-note chord
resolves unambiguously into D minor, implying that Wozzeck only finds
resolution in death)
v. invention on an eighth-note motion=coda during which Wozzeck and Marie’s
uncomprehending, young son is cruelly taunted by older children who have
found Marie’s body.
Bartok, Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta (6’ 59”) 1936, first movement
K 6:1-7
A symphony in four movements; Kerman/Tomlinson gives the second movement, which
is in sonata form. Like Stravinsky and Berg, Bartok, in reaction to the time, wrote music
that was brutal and dissonant: Kerman/Tomlinson mentions the Allegro barbaro (1911);
also the opera Bluebeard’s Castle, composed in 1911 and first performed in 1918, where
Bluebeard’s new bride demands the keys to the seven doors in his castle, which
symbolically represents his mind; sequentially she finds in the first six a torture chamber,
armory, jewel house, gardens, Bluebeard’s domain, and a lake of tears, all of which is
seeped in blood. When she opens the eighth, she sees Bluebeard’s previous wives, who
have been murdered, step out, and she ultimately, having opened the door, must go with
them back into that chamber. As Bartok wrote in 1919 to his wife about his balletic
pantomime, The Miraculous Mandarin: “I've also been thinking about the Mandarin; if it
works out, then it will be a fiendish piece of music. At the beginning - just as a short
introduction before the curtain rises - there will be a frightful noise, strident clashes,
horns hooting: I shall lead the gentle listener down to the apache den from the bustling
streets of a city,’ where the city is “a symbol of the modern world and its destruction of
However, Bartok was always fascinated by the folk music of his homeland of Hungary,
and this nationalism often takes the edge off of even his most dissonant and
worked with his compatriot Kodály to create an encyclopedia of Hungarian folk song.
Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta (1936), like Berg’s Wozzeck, is infused with
neo-classicism in its use of classical forms. Although the unusual timbre, complicated
rhythms and dissonant harmonies are clearly 20th century, the form of the work follows a
fourth, rondo.
The clarity of the sonata form in the second movement is most similar to that of the first
movement of Mozart’s 40th Symphony, but with strikingly different content, most closely
the melodic and modal aspects (as well as the rhythms) relate strongly to Hungarian folk
music, just as these same aspects of the Rite of Spring relate to Russian folk music.
Each era we have studied has focused on specific elements of music: the Middle Ages on
melody; the Renaissance on polyphonic textures; the Baroque and Classical eras on the
development of independent formal structures; the Romantic era on extended harmony.
The focus of the Twentieth century was on sound and rhythm as independent attributes of
music and as organizing principles.
sonority rhythm
(instrumental timbre) (ostinato)
Debussy Stravinsky
Stravinsky Schoenberg
Bartok Bartok
Webern Berg
Crumb Reich
Varése
Schoenberg
(folk melodies)
Berg
Stravinsky
Bartok
(use of chant)
Ives
Ligeti
Copland
Crumb (compare Berlioz)
Reich
American Modernism
A truly distinctive American voice in classical music only began to arise at the end of the
nineteenth century in conjunction with the movement toward nationalism. Charles Ives
(b. 1874) is as avant-garde, if not more so, as any composer we have studied. His
experimental and anti-traditional tendencies were furthered in the work of Varèse (b.
1883) and Cage (b. 1912). At the same time, his attachment to the incorporation of
American folk tunes, dances and hymns found resonance in the music of Copland (b.
1900). American jazz began to develop around the same time as nationalism (beginning
with ragtime [Scott Joplin (b. 1868)] and continuing with contributions from some of the
greats represented in Kerman: Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker and Miles
Davis). Jazz had a huge impact on classical music in Europe and America. Gershwin (b.
1898) and Bernstein (b. 1918) were both strongly influenced by jazz. Bernstein also wrote
music that carried political and social critiques (West Side Story is an example). Crumb
(b. 1929) expands the sound structures of music to create sound images, some of which
(like Black Angels) are highly politicized. Reich (b. 1936) deliberately reduces his
musical materials, using simple melodic material and repeated rhythmic motives
(minimalism), creating a kind of hypnotic sensation. (Minimalistic operas by Philip Glass
and John Adams have continued to explore political themes.)
Copland, Appalachian Spring (concert suite [1945] based on the ballet) K6:8-11
Appalachian Spring tells the story of a pioneer wedding. The characters/dancers include
the bride (danced by Graham), her mother, the groom, the preacher, and four young
women of the congregation. The ballet depicts the intricate relations of the bride to her
mother, peers and husband-to-be before, during and after the wedding. At the end the
preacher directs the mother and young women to leave and he follows them out, as the
bride timorously but expectantly joins her husband. Copland’s music represents a young,
optimistic America. It is imbued with qualities of openness (coupled with geographical
spaciousness), energy, simplicity and spirituality.
The concert suite based on the ballet Appalachian Spring follows a similar narrative
progression. (1) An amorphous, tentative opening leads to (2) a love song (with the same
opening phrase as the popular song “When I fall in love, it will be forever”) with square
dance, to (3) hoedown, and (4) a revivalist sermon. The climax of the suite is (5) the set
of variations on the Shaker hymn (“Simple Gifts”) (in the ballet the beginning variations
occur in the middle of the drama and represent the wedding itself; the culminating
variation comes back at the end). The instrumentation is also different. The ballet is
scored for 13 instruments and has a chamber quality. The suite is for full orchestra, and
the set of variations is based on instrumental changes of timbre with the theme played in
its entirety in different keys and different tempos. The theme is first stated in the clarinet.
Variation 1 is played by oboe. Variation 2 begins with the cellos, but ultimately all the
strings enter in a fugal texture. Variation 3 is for trumpet. Variation 4 culminates the set
with full orchestra. The suite ends by fading back into (6) the love song and opening
music.
The ballet was choreographed and danced by Martha Graham in “modern dance.” Like
Stravinsky’s ballets for the Ballet Russes (Russian Ballet), Graham’s choreography was
unconventional. The choreography for the Rite was created to imitate native (and naïve)
circle dancing; with its knock-kneed, pigeon-toed jumping, it was the antithesis of
classical ballet. However, like classical ballet, the choreography mimed the action.
Graham’s choreography was less determinedly anti-traditional in its movements, but much
more so in its significant rejection of mime. Rather than depicting the narrative outlines
of the story, Graham’s choreography depicts the emotion and inner turmoil of the events.
Graham stated of her work, "I wanted to begin not with characters or ideas, but with
movements . . .I wanted significant movement. I did not want it to be beautiful or fluid. I
wanted it to be fraught with inner meaning, with excitement and surge."
As a teacher, Graham trained and inspired generations of fine dancers and choreographers.
Her pupils included such greats as Alvin Ailey, Twyla Tharp, Paul Taylor, Merce
Cunningham, and countless other performers, actors, and dancers.
The story takes place in New York City. Competing street gangs, the lower West Side
Jets and the Puerto Rican Sharks, replace the warring families (the Capulets and
Montagues) of Shakespeare’s play, thus changing the story from the effects of an older
generation’s bitter enmity on their children to the horrible results of gang warfare.
One important aspect of the orchestral score is its motivic continuity. The gangs and their
girlfriends come together at the “dance at the gym.” After a hapless social worker tries
unsuccessfully to get the groups to mix by initiating a circle dance (based on a
cakewalk—see Ives), the kids break into a hot mambo. When Tony (a Jet) and Maria
(sister of a leader of the Sharks) see one another, everything else fades and a quiet (but
very controlled) cha-cha (a Cuban dance popularized at that time) begins. The melody
uses a sequence of intervals (a tritone—“the devil in music”—resolving up a half step and
returning to the first note) that becomes the basis of a series of movements within the
musical. The same intervals are used for Tony’s song of love, “Maria,” which is logically
based on the music of their meeting, which leads into their duet “Tonight.” In the
Broadway show, the dance number “Cool,” where Riff (the leader of the Jets) tries to get
the gang to cool down and act “cool” before a planned rumble (gang fight), follows
immediately (in the movie it is moved to the second act, after Riff is killed, which
damages the dramatic and motivic connections). It, too, is based on the “cha-cha” and
“Maria” motive, entwining the hatred between the gangs with the love of Tony and Maria.
(The hatred and love are also interwoven when Tony and Maria’s “Tonight” is sung
simultaneously with the gangs singing “We’re gonna rumble tonight.”)
Note: Kerman/Tomlinson state that the recording they provide is from the soundtrack of
the 1961 movie (p. 407); however, their recording is the original Broadway cast, which is
preferable in any event, for the reasons given above.
The fugue that follows “Cool” is then based on a theme that relates to the intervals that
begin the duet “There’s a place for us” for Tony and Maria. The duet uses a large and
yearning dissonant interval (minor seventh) on the words “there’s a” and resolves it
appropriately on “place.” In the fugue the “resolution” is instead “ominous snap” (as
Kerman/Tomlinson puts it).
The motive relationships in West Side Story can be compared to Berg’s Wozzeck, where
there are sets of variations on various kinds of material (inventions on a note, rhythm,
chord, theme). It is also possible to see the succession of dances (cakewalk, mambo, cha
cha) leading to a set of variations (cha-cha, Maria, Cool) as similar to Copland in its
narrative structure. The fugue is accompanied by a jazz beat and big band sound
(Bernstein was very influenced by jazz); the use of fugue to depict the anger and
emotional turmoil of the Jets can be related to the use of fugue in Chaikovsky (also based
on Romeo and Juliet) and Berlioz’s Symphonie fantastique, V “Dream of a Witches
Sabbath.”
DVD: West Side Story (MGM Home Entertainment, [2003], 1961)—video of the movie
George Crumb, Black Angels, for Electric String Quartet (1970) K 6:19-22
“a strikingly dramatic, surreal allegory of the Vietnam War” (Richard Steinitz, “Crumb,
George” Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy)
1. “new sounds”:
1. electric (amplified) instruments, use of gongs, speaking…
2. playing techniques: col legno, playing on the bridge, above the bridge, harmonics,
playing on the fingerboard below the left hand, using thimbles for trilling
2. exoticism: imagery of Asian music through
1. pentatonic melodies,
2. evocation of bells and wood flute
3. neoclassicism
1. suite-like construction
2. borrowing from “Dies Irae” chant (compare Berlioz) and Saint-Saens’s Danse
macabre
4. social/political statement (compare Berg--not to mention Mozart, who aims at class
structure, or Beethoven, who praises individual liberty)
5. “night music” like Bartok, Strings, Percussion and Celesta, mvt. 3, or opening of
Stravinsky, Rite of Spring
Reich’s music developed out of his manipulation of taped music and speech where
identical or similar material is made to move in and out of synchrony, what Reich called
“phasing.” He describes his musical mentors as including Perotin, Bach and Stravinsky.
Typically, Reich’s music consists of “a repeating figure, to which other figures are added
one by one, each figure, including the first, subject to gradual alteration, so that within a
context of constant recycling there is constant change” (Paul Griffiths, “Reich, Steve,”
Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy).
“Reich's work with Ghanaian and Balinese musicians had caused him to think about what
tradition he belonged to, and the result was a period of study in 1976–7 of Hebrew, of the
Torah and of cantillation, for which he went to Israel to hear singers from different eastern
Sephardic communities. Out of this finally came Tehillim (1981), a setting of psalm verses
– his first work since the early tape pieces to incorporate words. What he had heard in
Israel went into the background, against which he wrote melodies that give his
characteristic regular pulses, ambivalent meters and repetitions a quite original freshness
and bounce. Generally the three rhythmic layers comprise a quick one of percussive
pulsation and a slow one of wind-string harmony, with an intermediate level of vocal
activity, sprung against the pulse and the harmony” (Paul Griffiths, “Reich, Steve,” Grove
Music Online, ed. L. Macy).
The excerpt in Kerman consists of the fourth and final section of a longer piece. It is
shaped as a free theme and variation movement. The theme falls into the pattern abcc′. It
is then heard (1) in 2-part canon, (2) 4-part canon, (3) 2 voices with clarinets and drums
(not imitative), (4) climatic high note.
21M.011
Chronology of twentieth-century
20th-century compositions in Kerman
composers studied in Kerman:
Bernstein (1918-1990)
1948 Parker, Out of Nowhere
Parker (1920-1955)
Davis (1926-1991)
1957 Bernstein, West Side Story