Showing posts with label D924n9. Show all posts
Showing posts with label D924n9. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 6, 2017

Gallery of Simple Examples, volume 2

I have posted a sequel to the gallery of simple examples (link to volume 1). The title is A Gallery of Simple Examples of Extended Rising Melodic Shapes, Volume 2: link to volume 2.

Here is the abstract:
This second installment of direct, cleanly formed rising lines offers examples from a variety of sources, ranging from a short early seventeenth century choral piece to Prokofiev’s Classical Symphony, and from Scottish fiddle tunes to Victor Herbert operettas.
Here is a combined table of contents for the two volumes, arranged chronologically and with the volume number indicated:
Praetorius, three-voice motet "Preis sei Gott in der Höhe"       -- vol. 2
Johann Heinrich Schmelzer, Partita ex Vienna, Courante      -- vol. 2
Böhm, Suite in F minor, Courante       -- vol. 1
Anon., Chelsea Stage    -- vol. 2
Anon., The Duchess of Gordon     -- vol. 2
Anon., The Kerry Jig       -- vol. 2
Anon., The Nabob        -- vol. 2
Anon., The Runaway Bride   -- vol. 2
Anon., Shepherds Jigg   -- vol. 2
Anon., Yankey Doodle      -- vol. 2
Mozart, 12 Menuets, K176n1       -- vol. 1
Haydn, String Quartet in D Major, Op76n2, III       -- vol. 1
Haydn, Symphony no. 86, III      -- vol. 1
Beethoven, 12 German Dances, WoO8n1       -- vol. 1
Hummel, from 6 German Dances & 12 Trios, op. 16      -- vol. 2
Schubert, Wiener-Damen-Ländler, D734n15       -- vol. 1
Schubert, Valses sentimentales, D779n13       -- vol. 1
Schubert, Ländler, D814n4       -- vol. 1
Schubert, Deutscher Tanz, D769n1       -- vol. 1
Schubert, Grazer Walzer, D924n9       -- vol. 1
Johann Strauss, sr., “Champagner Galop,” Op. 8      -- vol. 2
Johann Strauss, sr., Das Leben ein Tanz, oder Der Tanz ein Leben!, Op.49       -- vol. 1
Johann Strauss, sr., Exotische Pflanzen, Op.109       -- vol. 1
Johann Strauss, jr., Künstlerleben, op. 316       -- vol. 1
Brahms, “Über die See”       -- vol. 1
Tchaikovsky, The Nutcracker, March       -- vol. 1
Herbert,  Sweethearts, n7: "Jeannette and Her Little Wooden Shoes"      -- vol. 2
Herbert, Naughty Marietta, n17: "The Sweet Bye and Bye"      -- vol. 2
Herbert, Babette, n23: Finale III      -- vol. 2
Prokofiev, Classical Symphony, Gavotte      -- vol. 2
Gershwin, Shall We Dance, "Slap That Bass"      -- vol. 2
Waxman, Rebecca, "Hotel Lobby Waltz”      -- vol. 2 

Friday, October 21, 2016

Minor key series, part 2a (Schubert)

In this post, I offer two examples in which Schubert avoids the problem of a minor-key ascent by shifting to the major mode for the closing cadence: "Wetterfahne," n2 in Winterreise, and the ninth number of the Grazer Walzer, D924. In a subsequent post, I will discuss the opposite case--change from major to minor--and Schubert's expressive treatment of the natural-^6 (in "Frühlingstraum," also from Winterreise).

We'll begin with the waltz. I've written about it before, in my Rising Lines essay, p. 72. Minor-key waltzes are very rare; in the few that Schubert did write, there is almost always a turn toward the major key to close, either in the parallel or the relative major. In D924n9, he does a bit of both. In the first strain, a second, quiet phrase in the major answers a first, louder phrase in the minor. The second strain, however, is firmly in the relative major. I can't make any broader claim about tonal design in the fluid contexts of a waltz set (the set is a collection, not a fixed composition; n9 is possibly a trio to n8; the first strain might well be repeated to make an ABA design), but it doesn't matter for my point: Schubert creates a very simple ascending Urlinie in the second strain and changes to the major mode to accomplish it.


 In the first song of Winterreise, the poet stands outside his beloved's house, ready to leave for good. The second song finds him looking at the weather vane (Wetterfahne) and contrasting his sorrows with the interior of a household that knows nothing about them. Here is the opening.


Here is the first version of the conclusion. For "meinen Schmerzen," VI and an augmented sixth chord, but then a harmonically ungrammatical turn to I6 and a cadence in A major, where the melodic frame is a variant of the ascending Urlinie, or ^5-^6-(^5)-^7-^8.


 In the second version of the close, Schubert adds a sequential repetition of the "Schmerzen" idea, thereby driving home a chromatic melodic ascent toward E4/E5, but the result is the same: the cadential formula and rising line are in A major, not minor.