Egberto Gismonti Sete Aneis Tese
Egberto Gismonti Sete Aneis Tese
Egberto Gismonti Sete Aneis Tese
DOCTORAL ESSAY
Submitted to the Graduate Professional Committee for Approval
By
Department of
Of the
University of Rochester
Endorsed by:
Advisor: ________________________________________
Reader: _________________________________________
2
3
Contents
1.3.1 Modinha……………………………………………
1.3.2 Polka………………………………………………
1.3.3 Habanera………………………………………….
1.3.4 Lundu………………………………………………
1.3.5 Maxixe……………………………………………..
1.6 Conclusion------------------------------------------
Bibliography………………………………………………
Abstract
The project traces the history of the Choro and analyzes Egberto
Gismonti’s 7 Anéis for piano solo. Since Gismonti’s composition is a
prime example of the Choro, the discussion begins with a brief survey
of the genre and its role in the development of Brazilian music. The
paper traces the origins of Brazilian music back to the country’s
discovery in 1500 through its expansion in the 19th and 20th centuries.
In the process, the essay describes various precursors of the Choro
and draws attention to the importance of the piano and the role of the
Portuguese language in the development of the genre. Having outlined
the historical background of the Choro, the paper surveys the main
characteristics of Choro and demonstrates ways in which Gismonti’s
7 Anéis is an example of the genre.
Choro is a musical genre from Brazil that arose in the late 19th
century in the city of Rio de Janeiro. The word choro literally means
“a cry, a weep” in Portuguese and, in musical contexts, it is
associated with works having very expressive melodies and played by
small instrumental groups. These works, which were based on the
European dances, were played in ballrooms and were popular
throughout Rio de Janeiro during the 19th century (Almeida, 1999:
22). Since it presents a unique blend of indigenous and European
sounds, Choro is one of the most significant genres of Brazilian music
and can only be understood as a byproduct of the country’s complex
history.
During the period from 1500, when the country was discovered
first by the Portuguese, until the 19th century, Brazil was a rural
colony that was largely inhabited by native Indians, African slaves,
and European emigrants. Each group contributed to the musical life
of the country in different ways. Whereas the contributions of the
Indians were very modest, that of the African slave was enormous.
As Mariz explains:
1
All translations are made by the author.
7
especially the flute, the guitar and the cavaquinho.2 These instruments
would later from the basis of the Choro.3
1.2 The Development of the Brazilian music
2
According to the Michaelis Moderno Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa, the
word Cavaquinho means: little guitar with four strings. Available at:
<http://michaelis.uol.com.br/moderno/portugues/index.php?lingua=portugues-
portugues&palavra=cavaquinho>. Accessed on May 15th, 2012.
3
According to Vasconcelos: “[…] they [the Portuguese] brought all the basic
musical instruments such as the flute, cavaquinho and the guitar – which will
have an important role in the formation of Choro and in all our instrumental
music played by small ensembles almost four centuries later - and also the
piano, the viola, the ophicleide, the clarinet, the violin, the double bass, the
violoncello, and the accordion. The Pandeiro – initially it did not have
leather […] also came from Portugal.” (Vasconcelos, 1984: 20 in Almeida,
1999: 15).
8
which would come to the fore in the early 20th century, was only
beginning to take shape. To quote Magaldi:
1.3.1 Modinha
4
Chorões is the name given to the musicians who played the Choro.
10
5
Serenata means a romantic musical/vocal performance that is held under
one’s windows.
6
Seresta refers to the music played at the Serenata, which can be instrumental
or with singers. Some Choros can be used in Serestas, but not all Seresta
music is Choro.
11
motion from the bass, which play counterpoint against the melody, so
common to guitar from the Choro and Seresta.”7
1.3.2 Polka
7
One example of Modinha – among the several examples available – is the
first movement of Heitor Villa-Lobos’s Bachianas Brasileiras No. 1.
8
The word carioca is the name given to those who are born in the city of Rio
de Janeiro.
12
2012).9 Although there are indeed connections between the polka and
the Choro, it is important to note that there are also some significant
differences. Example 1 shows that, like the march, the polka
emphasizes both beats of the measure.
The Choro, however, stressed the second beat more than the
first with the melody anticipating the harmony. Such rhythmic
transformations can be seen in Apanhei-te Cavaquinho, a polka
written by the great Brazilian Choro composer Ernesto Nazareth
( 1 8 6 3 - 1 9 3 4 ) . 10 A s s h o w n i n E x a m p l e 2 , t h e r h y t h m i c p a t t e r n s o f t h e
left hand clearly resemble those of a polka (Example 1). But the
melody in the right hand, with its three-note pickups, seem much more
l i k e t h a t o f a C h o r o t h a n t h a t o f a E u r o p e a n p o l k a . 11 I r o n i c a l l y , t h e
oldest known example of the Choro, Joaquim Antonio da Silva
Callado’s Flôr Amorosa (1877) was meant to be a polka (Almeida,
1999:21).
9
Available at: <http://www.dicionariompb.com.br/polca/dados-artisticos>.
Accessed on May 21, 2012.
10
The piece was published and probably composed in 1914. Available at:
<http://www.dicionariompb.com.br/ernesto-nazareth/dados-artisticos>.
Accessed on May 22, 2012.
11
A full detailed explanation about the characteristics of Choro is
discussed in the following section of this chapter.
13
1.3.3 Habanera
The following example shows the way the original rhythm could
be changed with the addition of a tie, thereby implying harmonic
anticipation. Example 4 is a variation of the “Habanera rhythm”
12
Available at:
<http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com.ezp.lib.rochester.edu/subscriber/article/g
rove/music/12116?q=habanera&hbutton_search.x=0&hbutton_search.y=0&hbut
ton_search=search&source=omo_epm&source=omo_t237&source=omo_gmo&so
urce=omo_t114&search=quick&pos=1&_start=1#firsthit>. Accessed on May
23, 2012.
15
Example 4: The addition of a tie from the first to the second beat.
1.3.4 Lundu
Vassberg (1976: 46), was transformed from a Black folk dance into
an urban popular song. The syncopated character of the Lundu, which
was already noted in Example 5 can be heard very easily in the first
movement of the Sinfonia do Rio de Janeiro de São Sebastião, by
F r a n c i s H i m e . 13
1.3.5 Maxixe
13
Francis Hime, Sinfonia do Rio de Janeiro de São Sebastião. Biscoito Fino:
Rio de Janeiro, 2000.
14
According to Tinhorão (1998 in Carvalho, 2006: 41): “It would be from the
way these bands played, mainly the Polkas with influences of the Lundu, that
it would shape the sound so unique for the dancers of the poor ballrooms –
that seems to be called Maxixe.”
17
Example 6b: Extract from Brejeiro (1893), also classified by Nazareth as Tango.
15
Available at: http://ernestonazareth150anos.com.br/Texts/listCategory/17.
Accessed on December 17th, 2014.
18
16
According to Appleby (1983), Lambert is French. However, according to the
website <http://www.ernestonazareth.com.br/>, he is from New Orleans.
17
As stated by Milhaud: “The rhythms of this popular music intrigued and
fascinated me. There was an imperceptible suspension in the syncopation, a
languorous breath, a subtle pause, which seemed to me very difficult to
capture. […] One of the best composers of music of this kind, Nazareth,
played the piano in the lobby of a movie theater on Avenida Rio Branco. His
way of playing – fluent, indefinable and sad - helped me to better understand
the Brazilian soul” (Appleby, 1983: 83).
19
18
He was a priest and a sacred composer. During the time of Dom João in
Rio, he was appointed as the Royal Chapel’s Capela Meister. His work was
greatly influenced by Haydn. Also, in 1819 he performed the Mozart requiem
for the first time in Brazil, which was accounted by Sigismund Neukomm as a
great musician who deserved the attention of the “European cultural world”
(Appleby, 1983).
20
19
Refer to Example 2.
21
in the upper part of the chords of the left hand) adds a chromatic
countermelody C3-B2-B♭2-A2 in mm. 48-50 and the descending
arpeggio in m. 51.
In the third case, the bass often sustains a simple pedal tone in
introductions or transitions. In the case of Example 9,
E x a m p l e 9 : M a r c e l o Magalhães P i n t o C h o r o L á e m C a s a ( 2 0 0 7 ) .
22
Sometimes the melody can actually appear in the bass with the
accompaniment assigned to the flute and cavaquinho (see Example
10).
In other words: “The chorão does not commit himself with the
improvisation, because the melody is rich enough, hence the spots
that will be improvised are subjected to his own will” (SA, 2000: 67
in Lima, 2011:78).
Whereas the improvisatory aspects of the Choro were originally
far more limited that those of jazz and relied less on the melody
instruments and more on the accompaniment, the situation changed
during the course of the 20th century when Chorões came into contact
with jazz. Performers such as Pixinguinha, Patápio Silva and others
begun to include improvised sections into their music. To quote
Roschel (2012):
20
Boogalusa Strut is available at:
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJ1EMW18hk8>. Accessed on July 23,
2012; and Recordando is available at: <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B-
uqjO9Xrlw>. Accessed on July 23, 2012.
24
Nowadays, the Choro has evolved into a rich and vibrant genre,
one that is open to the inclusion of new sounds, altered scales,
modulations to distant keys, and elements from countless other
genres.
1.6 Conclusion
The genre Choro emerged at the end of the 19th century, through
of mixture of African and European cultures in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Musically, it fuses elements of the Luso-Brazilian Modinha, the
European Polka, the Cuban habanera, the African Lundu, and the
Maxixe. The Choro became an autonomous genre when those elements
interacted with local variations in the Portugese language. In contrast
to jazz, the Choro relies on improvisation in very limited ways:
instead of focusing on the improvisatory nature of the melodic lines,
it allows the bass line (baixaria), to improvise counterpoints against
the melody. During the course of the 20th century, however, the Choro
has evolved considerably, migrating from the street to the theater.
Composers such as Heitor Villa-Lobos raised Choro to a new level by
combining it with other genres. Furthermore, with the advent of jazz,
the genre expanded its harmonic and melodic vocabulary, while
21
Available at: <http://almanaque.folha.uol.com.br/choro.htm>. Accessed
on June 28, 2012.
25
The piece 7 Anéis begins with motive a in G♭. The first phrase
(mm. 1-5) is subdivided into two groups of two-measure each and is
immediately repeated with characteristic ornamentation in mm. 5-8.
The supporting harmonies are mainly diatonic and the rhythm projects
two half notes per measure.
The bass part is typical of a Choro group and, as shown in
Examples 12a-12b, uses motive c with rests on the strong beats.
Example 12b: Left-hand line in mm. 1-4: use of half step motion in the bass
from the third of Gb, while the upper part delineates the harmony.
22
Please, consult the score (mm. 1 and 2).
29
The first four measures are then repeated in mm. 5-8 (see
Examples 14a-14b). In mm. 5-8, the left hand continues with motive
c using the rearranged pitch collection from mm. 1-4. The melody is
displaced by an 8th-note rest in m. 5, and highlights motive b with
every other note transposed up a third. The comparison of m. 3 and
m.7 shows the use of the same structural pitches embellished with an
assortment of lower neighbors and passing notes.
Example 14a: Rhythmic and Pitch comparison between mm.1-4 and 5-8.
23
This should be done in case the reader wishes to play like the composer
played in the recording. The composer explained during a live concert that the
displacement of the hands represents the way his former teacher used to play.
31
Example 16: Half step and thirds as a way to connect chords in mm. 9-12.
Example 17: Melody based on a two-note group filled with chord tones.
Example 18: Continuous motion from the third beat of m. 19 until the end of m.
20.
Example 22: Comparison of the use of the same melodic material in two
different places, with different set ups.
Example 23: Melody from mm. 38-41 with a note-by-note analysis showing
passing notes and anticipation.
36
Variation 5 is the one that has the least rhythmic and melodic
anticipations. This variation is much more melodic than rhythmic in
character is spite of the presence of motive C in the left hand. The
melody is entirely diatonic and clearly outlines the underlying
harmony. The B section enhances the harmonies with few notes, which
creates a stark contrast with the previous variations. In this variation,
Gismonti rhythmically develops motive c. The harmonic structure of
mm. 65-66 is quite challenging: beat 1 of m. 65 we see an Am chord.
From beat 2 on, Gismonti moves downward either by step or half step
38
Example 25: Notes circled belong to the Gb scale, thus implying a return to the
tonality or announcing a future texture in the piece.
mixes the modal elements from the previous section with the main
tonality, creating a polymodal structure.
Pitches G# E A Bb C# B F# E
# th rd th th
Key 9 Minor 9 3 5 4 Root Minor
(Gb) 7th 7th
b th th # th # th rd
Key 9th 13 4 9 11 3 Major 6th.
(G) 7th
Example 26b: Functional Analysis of m. 72
40
1 (just like in m. 51) on beat one on the left hand (please, refer to
Example 12), and on beats 2 to 4 it changes to motive c. On the right
hand on beats 3 and 4 we have the motive 1, which relates originally
with motive d (like m. 74), and prepares the return of motive d in its
original form. Indeed, in mm. 79-80, the left hand plays motive d,
which is shifted to the right hand in m. 81 while the left hand plays
a phrase outlining E Dorian. This phrase is constructed in the
following way: Gismonti plays three-sixteenths notes that arpeggiates
Em7. After that, it moves to the motive c pattern, which is
characterized by a motion down to the root from the seventh.
The clear use of E Dorian represents the definitive
establishment in this section of the G major tonality of the Section 1
(mm. 57-68). Therefore, we have elements of Gb in the right hand and
G n a t u r a l i n t h e l e f t h a n d . 24 I n m . 8 2 t h e m e l o d y i n t h e l e f t h a n d b e g i n s
arppeggiating Em7, just like in m. 81. Yet, instead of move down on
the seventh, it moves up by step up to the fifth, where it leaps to the
seventh and returns to the fifth by step. This phrase ends by
arppeggiating Em7 downwards, beginning on its fifth. From mm. 85-
89, while the right hand keeps playing motive d, Gismonti plays
cluster over the motive c, which in comparison with the melody in
mm. 81-84, shifts from E Dorian to E Lydian. It could also be viewed
as Gb7.
Motive d is kept unchanged in the right hand until m. 100. In m.
89, Gismonti returns to the same material used in mm. 81-84 (E
Dorian mode), with a downward scale in the left hand constructed
using the motive c (beats 1, 2, and 3) and the inversion of motive 1
(beat 4), which moves in m. 89 from the tonic (E) down to the ninth
24
Of course we could say that the right hand can be analyzed in G major,
however, Gismonti already gave us a clue in mm.65 when he mixed these two
tonalities.
42
(F#). Also, there is a motion by fourths in the lower part of the melody
(left hand): on every last note of every beat we see in m. 89 the pitch
E2, which moves to the pitch A1 in the next measure, which moves to
pitch D1 in the following one.
In m. 92, the pattern of clusters - which outlines E Lydian or
Gb7 on the left hand over motive c - is back on the fourth beat and is
kept until m. 94. Once more, Gismonti reuses in m. 95 the material
used in mm. 81-84 (E Dorian mode), beginning in the left hand, a
phrase from the fifth down to the root in m. 100, which is constructed
following the pattern of a third down and a second up, always using
the rhythmic pattern of motive c.
In m. 101 we have a change in texture in the right hand: instead
of presenting motive d as a four 16th-note pattern, Gismonti condenses
it into a single chord. This chord has a different rhythmic pattern, as
seen in mm. 101-103. In the same way the left hand follows the texture
change of the right hand, playing in m. 101 a melody that reuses the
material from mm. 81-84 (E Dorian) but pending towards A
Mixolydian. The rhythm of the melody is composed mainly by doted
eighth notes plus a sixteenth note per beat, which is a cell of the
r h y t h m p a t t e r n c a l l e d B a i ã o . 25 T h i s p a t t e r n c h a n g e s o n l y o n t h e t h i r d
beat of m. 102 where he uses motive c followed by motive 1 (as shown
in Example 27) and back to motive c in m. 103.
In mm. 104-130 the motive d is kept constant in the right hand
without changes. From mm. 104-108, Gismonti begins a melodic
pattern in the left hand that consists of an alternation between the
pitches G1 natural and A1 natural, which reinforces the A Mixolydian
sonority in the left hand and is played always on the upbeat. The seed
of this new pattern was launched in m. 74, where there was an
alternation between pitches E4 and F#4. This alternation finishes in
25
As explained in Example 24.
43
m. 108 where the pitches C#3 and D#3 are introduced in the left hand,
while keeping in the right hand motive d, which refers to Gb key, thus
shifting from A Mixolydian to A Lydian. This mode is confirmed
when Gismonti plays in mm. 109-110 the motive c, in which he
alternates between E3 natural with C#3, and D#3 with C#3, which
confirms the A Lydian mode (considering A as the root on beat 1 of
m. 108).
In m. 111, he continues to outline A Lydian, playing the third
with the sharp eleventh in the left hand under motive d in the right
hand, with the rhythmic pattern of a sixteenth note followed by a
dotted eighth note on each beats of the measure, which is a very
similar rhythmic pattern to the one used in m. 101. In m. 111, motive
c on beat 1 is followed by a quarter note cluster formed by the third
and the fourth of A – which brings the melody in the left hand back
to E Dorian. On beat three, Gismonti returns to A Lydian and moves
to E Lydian on the last beat of this measure.
In m. 113, for the first time we have a G#1 (enharmonically Ab),
which in combination with the right hand, confirms the E Lydian
mode. This pitch is introduced in the left hand on beat one. Yet, on
beat two we have a cluster of pitches, A2 natural with B2 natural
followed by the third and the sharp eleventh, which brings the melody
back to A Lydian. On the fourth beat of m. 113, Gismonti develops in
the left hand a cell of motive 1 (2 sixteenth notes) through a chromatic
motion upwards by means of broken octaves, from the pitch G1 up a
half step to A1 and back to G1 by step. This motion occurs on beats
1 and 2 of m. 114. On the fourth beat of this same bar (m. 114),
Gismonti continues with the sixteenth note pattern, playing the
melodic material of m. 112, which brings the melody back to E Lydian
(considering A2 natural as a dissonance). The alternation between A2
and Bb2, and C#3 and Eb3 continues in mm. 115-116, always using the
motive c as a rhythmic pattern.
44
26
Please refer to mm. 51 and 101.
45
measure and the first half of the second measure, whereas in the other
half, it has the motive c pattern. The fourth group (mm. 154-155) is
like the second. Melodically, we have on the right hand the A7(#11),
which is supported on the left hand by the root and seventh, as shown
in Example 29:
chord from the fourth down to the root, which, in combination with
the left hand that plays over the motive c pattern, outlines the A7sus4
moving to A7. As in mm. 148-149, the music projects two-measure
groups: m. 167 has the same structure of m. 166, though it adds a
rising scale on beats 3 and 4 that outlines A Mixolydian.
The material of mm. 166-167 is repeated in mm. 168-169.
Measures 170-171 transpose mm. 166 and 168 up a minor third and
thus outline C7sus4 moving to C7. Just like mm. 166-167, the first half
of m. 170 is repeated in m. 171 with a rising scale motion that outlines
C Mixolydian. This is point at which Gismonti returns to the global
tonic Gb. As shown in Example 30, he uses Bb triad as a bridge to Gb
triad, which shares the pitch Bb as a common tone, as shown in
Example 30:
following way: m. 175 the root is in the right hand and in the left
hand there is a rest on every down beat of all four beats, which is
followed by a group of three sixteenth notes outlining Db7(b9); in mm.
176 and 177 this same chord with the same rhythmic structure shifts
to the right hand, while the left hand plays a cell of the Baião pattern
in octaves, on a descending motion outlining the E Mixolydian scale
or the Dbalt7. In the last four measures of this section we have a Db
pedal (C# enharmonically), over which the 4th and the flat 9th are
always present. There is a inner motion in the left hand in m. 178
departing from the 7th, moving to 13th in m. 179, moving to the 5th in
m. 181.
2.3 Section 2
The piece’s last variation is very similar to its first and second
variations. The main differences appear in mm. 184 and 186: whereas
the melody in m. 184, the melody begins on the downbeat forming a
cluster with the ninth (which is repeated on the up beat of the third
50
3 Conclusion
Gismonti’s work. Yet, it is very clear that the further he is from the
theme, the more complex the texture gets.
Actually, that is precisely the most difficult procedure in jazz:
being able to construct over a predetermined material a discourse that
unfolds naturally to somewhere, using the minimum amount of
motives to accomplish it. And that is what he does in Section 1: he
uses that theme as his basis for increasing the tension, which leads to
the Middle Section.
The Middle Section is particularly interesting because it begins
by summing up Section 1, by using at the same time, elements taken
from the Gb tonality (Theme and Variations 1 through 4) with new
modal elements that were taken from the G major tonality of Variation
5. These elements continue to use a few motives (either melodic or
rhythmic) that are transformed in such a way that it is impossible to
divide this Middle Section into sub-sections, which happens due to
its “transformational” approach in which each event naturally unfold
to the next one, always using the same motives.
Thus, we see that Gismonti does not use the traditional form of
Choro with a recurrent theme that is intercalated with other materials.
Rather, he expands the traditional form by developing the theme and
inserting into it the Middle Section, which deals with elements that
are foreign to the genre: polymodality, “through composed” section,
and spots without any melody.
Texturally, the piece develops only two textures, which are:
melodical- in which there are compound melodies; and percussive, in
which the rhythmic patterns become the “melody”. This kind of
approach is not new to the Brazilian music. Heitor Villa-Lobos has
several examples that are very similar to the approach given by
Gismonti in his piece. For instance, the piece Prole do Bêbe No.1 has
several examples of motivic transformation, polyphony, use of
rhythmic pattern as a unifying element.
53
For those who whish to learn how to play Choro, this piece is
one of best examples of what can be achieved in the genre. Inside it
we can trace the seeds of the early composers - which grounds the
music in history – as well as the influences of modern jazz. Also, for
someone who had never been in contact with the genre, the pieces
given as examples of Choro in this work are very useful tools for
learning the genre as well.
Bibliography:
54
APPENDIX 1
58
TRANSCRIPTION OF 7 ANÉIS
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
APPENDIX 2