Hummel's Opus 45 (1812) is a set of dances meant for performance in the Apollo Saal, one of the largest of such entertainment centers in Vienna, with multiple rooms in which one could dance, talk, eat, or gamble (link to German Wikipedia). As a published collection in piano arrangement, Op. 45 consists of a march introduction, six menuets with trios, six German dances with trios, and a lengthy coda.
The fourth German dance is easily heard with a simple rising line in the first strain and an extended ^8 with double neighbors in the second strain. Performance practice would dictate the likelihood that the first strain would be repeated after the second. An interesting point about the first strain is that the first phrase gives us half-note length Urlinie notes on the strong beat—D5 in bar 2, E5 in bar 4—where the second phrase does the reverse, giving us F#5 immediately in bar 5 and G5 in bar 7. The symmetry makes for an elegant theme.
Alternatively, one might decide to take the initial ^8—which I have called a cover tone above—and regard that as the focal tone, a reading that makes sense given the figures of the second strain, as described above. If so, the result is an ^8-^7-^8 Urlinie with a middleground ascent connecting to ^7 in the second phrase (see ^5 and ^6 in parentheses in the first phrase).
Still another alternative would be to wait till the middle of the second strain to reach ^3, as B5. An initial ascent is easy enough to hear, as is a descent in the cadence. Whether such an expressive toppling of the formal design is justified, whether it makes much musical or artistic sense, is a matter of opinion. Such late placements of the initial focal tone are not uncommon in traditional Schenkerian analysis but are rarely very convincing. Here, of course, if we take performance practice for dance music into account, this reading could only be sustained in the case of AB or ABAB, not if the first strain is repeated to end, ABA or ABABA.
Showing posts with label Hummel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hummel. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 9, 2019
Wednesday, September 13, 2017
JMT series, part 6b-1 (note 31, the waltz ninth)
In the 1987 JMT article, I introduced the term "waltz ninth," which refers to ^6 treated either as a passing tone between ^5 and ^7 over V7 or as an element of a V9 chord that, despite older rules, moves upward to ^7 rather than resolving down to ^5. Here are two additional examples from Schubert: Valses nobles, D969n1, and Valses sentimentales, D779n13 (first strain only; second strain ends the same way).
In note 31, I mention the scherzos for the first two Beethoven symphonies. Until recently I thought the scherzo in Symphony no. 2 was the simpler of the two cases, and therefore decided to talk about it first here. The problem -- which nevertheless provokes some interesting opportunities for interpretation -- arises from orchestration, register, and arrangements.
Symphony no. 2, Scherzo. Comment in the note: "a very clear case." Here it is (below) as I analyzed it in the 1980s. I didn't specify a focal tone (aka first note of the fundamental line), though obviously I was assuming ^5; the shape of the cadence, however, is unmistakable. Note that ^6 rises to ^7 over the dominant.
My source was the piano reduction made by Otto Singer and published by Peters in 1906. Below is another version published a few years earlier by Ernst Pauer (London: Augener). [These are dates given on IMSLP; whether they represent time of the original publication, I don't know.]
The full orchestral version, however, has the following at the critical moment:
Curiously enough, Franz Liszt follows the original in his pianistically enhanced reduction:
And, more tellingly, so does Beethoven himself in the trio arrangement published in 1805 (the orchestral original appeared in 1804).
Two other contemporary sources, however, treat the ending in the same way as Singer and Pauer. Hummel made some of the first published piano solo versions of symphonies by Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven. Joel Sachs and Mark Kroll say of them that "[Hummel's] extraordinary ability to respond to the needs of the musical market place without sacrificing high musical standards is illustrated by his numerous arrangements. . . . For England [in the 1820s] he arranged symphonies by Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven, seven piano concertos by Mozart and 24 opera overtures. . . . All proved to be successful and profitable for both publisher and composer" (Oxford Music Online). Hummel's trio version is accurately described on the title page as for piano solo with accompaniment of violin and violoncello. Here is the piano's ending of the scherzo aligned with the violin part.
I've also aligned the two parts in an unattributed manuscript arrangement for piano four-hands from 1820.
What do we glean from all this? That any one of three backgrounds is plausible. Version (a) reads from ^3, with the upper octave as expressive doubling. Version (b) goes further, regarding the upper octave as consequential enough to warrant coupling [the Urlinie descends simultaneously in both octaves]. Version (c) shows my original reading, with ^5 as the focal tone and the simple ascent we have already seen above in several arrangements of the score.
Since (a) & (b) are marginally different in notation, I show only the details of (a) below.
Version (c) is below. I admit that I still prefer this one, despite its weaker claim on a firmly established focal tone at the beginning. In the graph below, note the expression of a neighbor note figure A5-B5 -- at (a) and subsequent places marked.
In note 31, I mention the scherzos for the first two Beethoven symphonies. Until recently I thought the scherzo in Symphony no. 2 was the simpler of the two cases, and therefore decided to talk about it first here. The problem -- which nevertheless provokes some interesting opportunities for interpretation -- arises from orchestration, register, and arrangements.
Symphony no. 2, Scherzo. Comment in the note: "a very clear case." Here it is (below) as I analyzed it in the 1980s. I didn't specify a focal tone (aka first note of the fundamental line), though obviously I was assuming ^5; the shape of the cadence, however, is unmistakable. Note that ^6 rises to ^7 over the dominant.
My source was the piano reduction made by Otto Singer and published by Peters in 1906. Below is another version published a few years earlier by Ernst Pauer (London: Augener). [These are dates given on IMSLP; whether they represent time of the original publication, I don't know.]
The full orchestral version, however, has the following at the critical moment:
Curiously enough, Franz Liszt follows the original in his pianistically enhanced reduction:
And, more tellingly, so does Beethoven himself in the trio arrangement published in 1805 (the orchestral original appeared in 1804).
Two other contemporary sources, however, treat the ending in the same way as Singer and Pauer. Hummel made some of the first published piano solo versions of symphonies by Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven. Joel Sachs and Mark Kroll say of them that "[Hummel's] extraordinary ability to respond to the needs of the musical market place without sacrificing high musical standards is illustrated by his numerous arrangements. . . . For England [in the 1820s] he arranged symphonies by Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven, seven piano concertos by Mozart and 24 opera overtures. . . . All proved to be successful and profitable for both publisher and composer" (Oxford Music Online). Hummel's trio version is accurately described on the title page as for piano solo with accompaniment of violin and violoncello. Here is the piano's ending of the scherzo aligned with the violin part.
I've also aligned the two parts in an unattributed manuscript arrangement for piano four-hands from 1820.
What do we glean from all this? That any one of three backgrounds is plausible. Version (a) reads from ^3, with the upper octave as expressive doubling. Version (b) goes further, regarding the upper octave as consequential enough to warrant coupling [the Urlinie descends simultaneously in both octaves]. Version (c) shows my original reading, with ^5 as the focal tone and the simple ascent we have already seen above in several arrangements of the score.
Since (a) & (b) are marginally different in notation, I show only the details of (a) below.
Version (c) is below. I admit that I still prefer this one, despite its weaker claim on a firmly established focal tone at the beginning. In the graph below, note the expression of a neighbor note figure A5-B5 -- at (a) and subsequent places marked.
The weakness of ^5 at the beginning is that it's much easier to hear it as a one-too-far gesture. I've variously called it "one leap too far," "one note too far,"or just "one too far." Note how A5, as one-note-too-far, helps confirm ^3 (F#5), before the latter is undercut by another one-leap-too-far in the fortissimo D6. It's not hard to write off D6 as the emphatic expression of a cover tone, but it's now "two leaps," not one, which suggests a potentially different role for A5.
In the modulating consequent of this 16-bar period, the role of A5 as just described is confirmed: the figure of bar 2 continues upward in bar 4 and that register is maintained in the final phrase. The possibility of E6 as the interrupting ^2 for a focal tone ^3 is undercut by the fact that E6 is now where the undoubted cover tone was in the antecedent. The observation that things can get turned upside down in scherzos is not much of a defense.
The reprise is one of those -- common enough in Beethoven but found in others of his generation also -- that muddles the ending by introducing figures from the "development" (the B-section here). Unlike the scherzo in the first symphony, there is no possibility of hearing a structural cadence before the very end. Thus, the rising figure of the final bars attains considerable significance: not the falling resolutions in the seventh bars of antecedent and consequent above but the emphatically affirming fortissimo that follows.
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:
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
Thursday, January 12, 2017
Hummel, from 6 German Dances & 12 Trios, op. 16
Hummel's Opus 16 was published in 1804, the first in a substantial list of music for both social and professional dancers. (Items drawn from a works list on IMSLP.)
The first trio to n3 is the only piece I know, with the exception of "Do, a Deer" from The Sound of Music, that presents an entire octave's worth of rising line. The progress is in parallel sixths with the bass, along with octaves at either end. Note that Hummel goes out of his way to harmonize the scale in a very different way in the reprise, a signal to musicians, I would guess, that he knows he is waltzing to the "rule of the octave."
Op.16 - 6 German Dances (1804)
Op.22 - Piano Trio No.3 in F Major (1807)
Op.23 - 7 Hungarian Dances (1806)
Op.24 - 12 Minuets (1806)
Op.25 - 12 German Dances & Coda (1807)
Op.26 - Ballet Music, Helene & Paris (1807)
Op.27 - Dance for Apollosaal No.1 (12 Minuets) (1808)
Op.28 - Dance for Apollosaal No.2 (12 German Dances) (1808)
Op.29 - 12 German Dances for Redout-Deutsche (1808)
Op.31 - Dance for Apollosaal No.3 (6 Waltzes) (1809)
Op.33 - Ballet Music, Das Belebte Gemählde (1809)
S.80 - Contredanses in Bb major for Orchestra (1810)
S.81 - 5 Ecossaisen for Orchestra (1810)
S.82 - 7 Landler for Orchestra (1810)
S.84 - 3 Pieces for Ballet or Pantomime (1810)
Op.39 - Dance for Apollosaal No.4 (4 German Dances & Coda) (1811)
Op.40 - 12 German Dances for the Roman Emperor (1811)
Op.41 - Ballet Music, Quintuor des Negares du Ballet Paul et Virginie (1809)
Op.44 - 12 German Dances & Coda for Redout-Deutsche (1811)
Op.45 - Dance for Apollosaal No.5 (March, 6 Minuets, 6 German Dances, & Coda) (1811)
Op.46 - The Magic Ring or Harlequin as a Spider (Pantomime Music) (1811)
S.92 - Der Zauberkampf, Pantomime Music (1812, WoO.34)
S.88 - Das Zaubershloss, Ballet Music (1814, WoO.32)
Op.70 - 6 Polonaises for Piano (1814)
S.104 - 12 Waltzes & Coda for Orchestra (1817)
Op.91 - Six Waltzes with Coda (for orchestra; Dance for Apollosaal No.6) (1820)
Op.103 - 3 Waltzes for Piano (1824) [concert pieces?]
Op.112 - 12 Waltzes for Piano (1828) [concert pieces?]
As the title suggests, each of the six German dances in op. 16 has two trios. Those pieces of interest to us are the second trio to n1 and the first trio to n3. The score was digitized by the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, which holds a copyright to the digitization. I am reproducing short excerpts with added annotations and commentary.
Of the eighteen pieces total, 11 are in small binary form, 7 in small ternary form. Oddly, only one of the German dances is in small ternary form; the other six using that design are all trios, including both of those to n1. In the second trio to n1, the definition of ^5 and the run up to ^8 above V7 are primary.
The first trio to n3 is the only piece I know, with the exception of "Do, a Deer" from The Sound of Music, that presents an entire octave's worth of rising line. The progress is in parallel sixths with the bass, along with octaves at either end. Note that Hummel goes out of his way to harmonize the scale in a very different way in the reprise, a signal to musicians, I would guess, that he knows he is waltzing to the "rule of the octave."
Sunday, July 17, 2016
Hummel, Bagatelles, op107n6
Hummel's op107 consists of six bagatelles, the last of them a spirited Hungarian rondo. Its theme sits clearly on ^3 in the first strain, which descends abruptly to ^1 in the cadence. The second strain starts by doing the same with ^5 but each of its two phrases takes ^5 upward to ^8 instead. I've isolated these motions in the second strain in the figures below the score.
(second strain, first phrase)
(second strain, second phrase)
The second strain in the theme's final statement, which includes the rondo's structural cadence, is shown below. The strain is repeated in its original form at a & b, then embellished at a1 & b1. Note the considerably more emphatic rising line in b1: ^5 in the first bar, ^6-^8 in the second, ^7 in the third), and ^8 in the last, after a direct motion from ^7. The arrow points to a ^6-dropping-to-^7 figure, which could just as easily have been a continuation up, that is A6-B6-C7, rather than A6-B5-C6.
(second strain, first phrase)
(second strain, second phrase)
The second strain in the theme's final statement, which includes the rondo's structural cadence, is shown below. The strain is repeated in its original form at a & b, then embellished at a1 & b1. Note the considerably more emphatic rising line in b1: ^5 in the first bar, ^6-^8 in the second, ^7 in the third), and ^8 in the last, after a direct motion from ^7. The arrow points to a ^6-dropping-to-^7 figure, which could just as easily have been a continuation up, that is A6-B6-C7, rather than A6-B5-C6.
Hummel, Ecossaise, op52n6
Hummel published 6 Pièces très faciles, Op.52, in 1815. The set is structured in such a way that one could assemble a three or four movement sonatina out of its members, complete with a short opening cadenza (n1), a sonata-form Allegro (n2), a Romance (con dolcezza) (n4, the only piece in the set not in C major), and a Rondo (n7).
The Menuet (n3) might substitute for the Romance, or be added to make a four-movement piece, but the ecossaise (n5) is a mystery -- tucked in between the Romance and the Rondo, it is only 24 bars long, hardly weighty enough to count as a movement, but perhaps in the context of informal performance, such departures from form were common enough in Hummel's generation -- or perhaps the young woman playing it would be expected to improvise some variations to augment it.
An opening upward-reaching arpeggio -- at "a" -- is mirrored at "b" and the cadence is clear in its linear contrast, at "c" but is undercut by repetition of "a." In the consequent, that repetition is deleted and the cadence simple and direct. As often happens in dance music, the second strain contrasts sharply with the first: a strong descent from the start -- boxed -- comes down through the octave C6 to C5, and in the continuation phrase there are lines but they go stolidly up from C5 to E5, then down again.
The Menuet (n3) might substitute for the Romance, or be added to make a four-movement piece, but the ecossaise (n5) is a mystery -- tucked in between the Romance and the Rondo, it is only 24 bars long, hardly weighty enough to count as a movement, but perhaps in the context of informal performance, such departures from form were common enough in Hummel's generation -- or perhaps the young woman playing it would be expected to improvise some variations to augment it.
An opening upward-reaching arpeggio -- at "a" -- is mirrored at "b" and the cadence is clear in its linear contrast, at "c" but is undercut by repetition of "a." In the consequent, that repetition is deleted and the cadence simple and direct. As often happens in dance music, the second strain contrasts sharply with the first: a strong descent from the start -- boxed -- comes down through the octave C6 to C5, and in the continuation phrase there are lines but they go stolidly up from C5 to E5, then down again.
Hummel, Hungarian Dances, op23n7
Hummel published a set of seven Hungarian Dances as his opus 23. The last of them is shown below.
In the first strain, transposition of the basic idea up a fourth to begin the consequent phrase generates overall a scalewise ascent through the octave D5-D6 before a sudden, very direct descent in the cadence. In the "cut-out" below the score, see the underlying pattern of parallel 10ths that propel the figure.
In the first strain, transposition of the basic idea up a fourth to begin the consequent phrase generates overall a scalewise ascent through the octave D5-D6 before a sudden, very direct descent in the cadence. In the "cut-out" below the score, see the underlying pattern of parallel 10ths that propel the figure.
The second strain uses a different motive and by no means so clear a melodic frame but it does succeed in ending with a steadily rising cadence gesture that covers the second phrase.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)


























