Showing posts with label primitive rising line. Show all posts
Showing posts with label primitive rising line. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

Grieg, Larvikspolka, EG 101 (1858)

Presumably a collected piece of social dance music. Larvik is a city in southern Norway. The design of this polka is the very common ABACA of social dance music, beginning with contredanses in the late 1700s and then spreading to almost all other types. The ABACA can be almost indistinguishable from a small ternary form (ABA) with trio (C) and truncated reprise (A), though the "trio" is only one strain, not the two we usually find in the familiar Classical instrumental repertoire of sonatas, etc. The equally common case used here has A as a single principal strain, B a first "trio" in the subdominant key, and C a second trio in the relative minor. (In the contredanse repertoire C is almost always in the parallel or relative minor, which fact might suggest that Larvikspolka is a traditional tune, not a newly composed one from the 1850s). The modern notation is by "Sigerland" and is available on IMSLP: link.



I hear a primitive rising line in A:


In the first iteration of A, however, an inner voice is pushed above (F4 to F5) and the unfolded B4-F5 closes into C5-E5--see below. We can then trace the voices in the two trios. The C5-E5 interval remains stable in the first trio B, except that E5 moves up to F5. In the second trio C, G4 becomes A4/A5 and C5 remains stable.

A synoptic view, then, is as follows:


Note: I have "collapsed" two aspects into one, as the line ^5-^7-^8 is easily understood based on the proto-background ^5-^8.

Monday, July 30, 2018

Czerny, Album Elegant des Dames Pianistes, op. 804

Carl Czerny's Album Elegant des Dames Pianistes, Op. 804, is subtitled "24 Morceaux melodieux." Each of the pieces is assigned a woman's first name (these are character types, rather than actual individuals). I had volume 1 (nos. 1-12) available to me. Of those, two are of interest.

"Arabella," in Ab major, is a nocturne in the familiar Field/Chopin manner. The design fits the genre also: ternary where A is a 16-bar period with a sentence as the antecedent phase and with an embellished consequent, B is a 16-bar sentence, and the reprise of A is complete, but varied. A five-bar coda ends.


The structural cadence, ending the reprise, complicates the voice-leading in the right hand, but the motions are clear enough as outlined below. From IV6, an augmented sixth resolves outward to the octave—with Eb4 at the top—and then the parallel sixths that carry Eb4 up to G4 through the chromatic F#4 (which "might have been" ^6 otherwise), the octave doubling of C & Db (circled notes), and the traditional 6-8 close—the cantus-tenor formula—that amplifies ^7-^8 (as G4-Ab4).



Here is a slightly simplified version of the right hand tracing structural soprano and alto:


Here is the passage, simplified a bit more,  with scale degrees for a primitive ascending Urlinie and structural soprano and alto.

And here is a final simplification, to remove the register changes in the alto voice and also the chromatic note, suggesting that a simple rising line abstractly underlies the passage.


Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Kirnberger, Vivace (1763)

Kirnberger, Vivace (1763). This little keyboard piece is in the 8th installment of the Musikalisches Allerley von verschiedenen Tonkünstlern (Berlin, 1763). Its simple 16-bar small binary design is matched by an equally simple pitch design with a primitive Urlinie in the closing cadence.


Saturday, May 19, 2018

Strauss, Die Fledermaus n14, Act III, "Spiel' ich . . ."

In one of the subplots (if we can dignify them with that term), Rosalinde's maid Adele aspires to be a professional singer and actress. During the evening party, she comes to believe that Frank (the warden disguised as a marquis) can help her. The following morning (we are now in Act III), she and her sister show up at the jail. In n14, the couplets "Spiel' ich die Unschuld vom Lande," Adele presses her point. Musically, she shows off a variety of styles within a compact form. 
A1   8 bars        — for the naïf from the countryside, a 6/8 tune like a contredanse gigue, one of the types that had become identified as French folk song by the later 19th century.
A2   8 bars with 4-bar extension  (on V)
B1   8 bars closes on tonic -- the second from section
B2   12 bars coda, repeats 4 bar phrase of A1 
C    8 bars    meno mosso in 3/4   — leads to a bit of a waltz at the end. Adele makes the point of her varied skills.
2 bars transition 
D1  8 bars  Tempo di marcia    -- "Spiel' ich eine Königin"  (for the queen, a regal march)
1 bar intro
D2  8 bars
D2   repeat with Ida and Frank 
C   reprise
repeat 2 bars transition 
E1   10 bars 2/4 Allegretto grazioso.  "Spiel ich 'ne Dame von Paris" (for the lady of Paris, a 2/4 grazioso--these have their source in the 18th century contredanse-gavotte and remain a staple as late as film music underscore in the 1940s)
E2    8 bars
F      12 bars
E2’   9 bars; with cadence to tonic
The music of interest to us here is in sections D and E/F. The 8-bar consequent of D finishes with a descending but open cadence. The focal tone is ^5 (as D5); in the cadence this moves to ^4 (C5) and one then imagines ^3 (B4). (So, an unfolded third C5-A4 to the third G4-[B4]).


In the repeat of the consequent--with added sound effects from Ida (Adele's sister) and Frank--Adele takes the focal tone ^5 up to ^7 and ^8 (F#5-G5) in the cadence:


In the analogous place in the E theme (specifically, the repeat of it that closes the aria), the focal tone is again ^5 (D5), the singer takes it up through D#5 to E5 over the cadential ii6, then substitutes ^5 for ^7, while the orchestra provides the ^7:

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Pecháček, 12 Laendler (1801)

František Martin Pecháček (1763-1816) was a Bohemian violinist, conductor, and composer who spent his professional career in Vienna, mainly as a conductor in the theaters. He was the father of the violin virtuoso Franz Xaver Pecháček.

A prolific composer, Pecháček senior wrote in all contemporary genres, including music for social dance. His 12 Ländler, written for an ensemble unusual in the waltz repertoire—2 clarinets, 2 horns, and bassoon—were published in 1801.

Like Beethoven's Ländler in WoO11 and WoO15, written about the same time, this set provides an excellent example of the Ländler in its traditional form—as distinct from the later keyboard Ländler of Schubert and many other composers in the 1820s, who strove to make the Ländler congenial and specific to the piano, using less common keys with chromatic twists and pianistic registral play, thus blurring the distinction between music for dance and music for recital. A characteristic that Pecháček's 12 Ländler do share with later Ländler is their repetitiousness, a marker of their primary role as music for dance, not for performance.

The texture is uniform throughout all twelve pieces, with the first clarinet leading, the second clarinet playing a parallel melodic part below, the horns providing consistent quarter-note motion with simple figures (though not often in the familiar oompah-oompah version), and the bassoon playing the bass line. I have gathered the parts for the first strain of number 5 into score as an example. Published parts were downloaded from IMSLP.


Though written for clarinet, the melodies are highly violinistic, another reflection of the historical traditions of the Ländler. As a result, the play of register and the marking out of fifth spaces are prominent features. Here is the first strain of n1:


The fifth C5-G5 is defined as the frame of the basic idea (bars 1-2), and a line descends from G5 in the varied basic idea (bars 3-4). In the consequent phrase, the line again descends toward ^3, which is not sounded but easily imagined (and in all likelihood was sometimes improvised). I have written about such "complex lines" here: link. The same third-line and its repetition with the "imagined" E4 occur in the same places in the second strain. This time, however, the upper voice confirms the highest register of bar 1—that is, C6—with what I call the "primitive" ascending Urlinie ^5-^7-^8. (I am not terribly proud of that label, btw, as it privileges line over interval frame, but I have used it for so long now that I may as well continue to do so.)

In n5, G5 dominates (so to speak) and the first strain expresses two complete rising lines in its two phrases. The second strain reuses the figure of n1, but the final bars are a little more complicated in that *three* lines are expressed: the incomplete ascending line, the third-line from G5 (as in n1), and a secondary third-line E4-D4-C4. The last pitch is imagined in the clarinet -- the complete third-line is played by the first horn.


n10: The basic linear figure in the second strain is that of n5, second strain, with the difference that the descent from ^5 is complete (albeit with an imagined ^1). The first strain, however, exaggerates the registral play to open a 13th from E4 to C6, then continue with the more compact B5-D5. In the consequent phrase we hear the final C5 and imagine (easily) the upper C6.


n9: The uppermost registral figure in n10, first strain, is anticipated in n9, where a simple neighbor figure, C6-B5-C6, dominates the first strain. The contrast is substantial with the second strain, which plods along in repeated short descending lines, and not surprisingly then puts out a ^3-^2-^1 frame overall.

In the context of this set, n12 is an anomaly: its first strain is in the relative minor (the second clarinet even plays G#, the only accidental in the entire set), but the second strain is equally firmly in C major. In the repertoire of Ländler and Deutscher Tanz, however, such pairings are not unusual, if also not common. Examples in Schubert include D145ns 5, 8; D365n22; and D779ns7, 22, 31. Here, as in some instances in Schubert, the second strain is essentially a transposed version of the first, with the important exception that the lower ^1 is missing in the final bar, replaced by the upper C6, so that the framing figure is the primitive Urlinie ^5-^7-^8.



Thursday, September 21, 2017

JMT series, part 8 (note 33)

In note 33 for the 1987 JMT article, I mention the incomplete line ^5-^7-^8. A "textbook" example of this "primitive Urlinie" in tandem with a proto-background ^3/^5 may be found in the ninth number of Schubert's Ecossaisen, D781. See the circled notes in bar 1 -- the pairing is obvious through the first strain; I have traced the voices in the score as they trade positions in the second strain.


The “verlorener Bruder” Trio, D610 (a trio without a menuet), neatly frames ^5 in its basic idea and transposed repetition (bars 1-4), then focuses on movement upward to ^8 in the continuation. In the shortened reprise (the final four bars), there is a bit of a "lost soul" sort of posthorn touch, and the voices are firmly set against one another at the last -- see the boxed notes.


In note 33, I mentioned Schubert, Ländler, D. 681, nos. 1 & 2 (perhaps as ^5-(^8)-^7-^8). Unfortunately, I don't have easy access to these at present. It is perhaps worth noting that these pieces would be nos. 5 & 6 in the complete 12 Ländler, D. 681 (from 1815), but the first four have been lost.

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

JMT series, part 5b (notes 29 & 30)

The second post on notes 29 & 30:

n30: ^5-^6-(^5)^7-^8: Winterreise, no. 2, “Die Wetterfahne.” No comment in the note.  The piano opens a large space of a compound fifth in the introduction ("geschwind, unruhig"), but the voice constrains its opening phrase by sequence, so that a line rises from ^3 to ^5 (beamed).


The sudden turn to the parallel major in the verse cadence is sarcastic, as his former lover "ist eine reiche Braut" ["a rich bride'].


The final cadence of the song amps up the cry of despair with a strong sequence but odd chord progression -- first system below -- then drops back into the "reiche Braut" figure to end. In the 1987 article I enclosed the second ^5 in parentheses, and have repeated that below, but nowadays I am more inclined to accept the "primitive rising line" and so would probably read the ending as ^5  (^#6 ^5)  ^#7  ^8.



Monday, April 17, 2017

Music in 17th century Vienna, part 4

Here is the sarabande from what is either a ballet or other stage piece: Fechtschule (Fencing School). The numbers are Aria I, Aria 2, Sarabande, Courente, Fechtschule, Bader Aria.

Typical features are the well-defined initial tonal space ^5-^8 (circled), and the continuation from ^5. The second strain is unusual, not only for Schmelzer but for the repertoire of music with ascending cadence gestures, in the expansion of ^7. Note the unfoldings that help justify this reading. Whether an Urlinie would be a primitive ^5-^7-^8 or ^8-^7-^8 depends on which note in the initial tonal space you take as the focal note for the whole dance.



Friday, April 14, 2017

Music in 17th century Vienna

Johann Heinrich Schmelzer was one of the leading musicians in the Viennese court in the seventeenth century. His career is closely associated with Leopold I, the Holy Roman Emperor from 1658 to 1705 (Schmelzer died in 1680).

Particularly known throughout his life as a violin virtuoso, Schmelzer joined the court musicians as a young teen, though the first record of an official appointment is in 1649, when he would have been in his mid to late twenties. He was director of instrumental music no later than 1658, and three volumes of his own music were published between then and 1664. It is possible that Antonio Bartoli was influential in Schmelzer's training as a violinist. The senior musician came to the court in 1624 (at the age of 19) and became widely known as an excellent violinist. He was appointed Kapellmeister in 1649, after which time he focused on the introduction of Italian opera to court performances.

The music readily available to me is instrumental: sonatas for one or more violins, and orchestral music for ballets incorporated into operas or meant for other staged performances. Dances from suites discussed in this series of posts come from DTÖ volume 56, Wiener Tanzmusik in der Zweiten Hälfte des Siebzehnten Jahrhunderts, edited by Paul Nettl (1960).

This courante is typical in its treatment of tonal spaces in the principal melodic part. A clear definition of the fifth A4-E5 is reinforced at the beginning of the second strain. A fairly complex treatment of the upper register ensues. The primitive Urlinie, ^5-^7-^8, that I have traced is probably the best abstraction for bars 19-28, but the reader will note that I have not attempted to "finish" the analysis by incorporating the several unfoldings.


Biographical information from "Johann Heinrich Schmelzer" and "Antonio Bartoli," by Rudolf Schnitzler and Charles E. Brewer, articles in Oxford Music Online. Brewer has also published a book on the topic: The Instrumental Music of Schmeltzer, Biber, Muffat and their Contemporaries (New York: Routledge, 2016).


Sunday, April 9, 2017

Celtic series, part 4

This is the final entry in the Celtic series, which offers a preview of a documentation essay I am preparing now and hope to publish by the end of April.    [17 May 2017: see this entry--link--for an abstract and a link to the published essay.]

Of the four categories, the third is represented here with one more tune: "long" cadences where the lower and upper registers are connected by a stepwise sequence. The others are in category 4: modal tunes, or tunes showing a modal heritage.

"The Ruins of Killmallock" differs from the tunes discussed yesterday in that its B-section is concerned throughout with scaling the octave, down and up, rather than keeping the upper and lower registers separate until the run to the cadence. The result is a clear unfolding of the 6-8 clausula vera figure (see the final two bars).



Modal tunes are difficult to assess on a number of counts, not least being reliability of the transcriptions. If the tunes are as old as their modal turns suggest, then there is also the likelihood of multiple regional or individual variants, only one of which would have been captured in the particular published version. In the two dozen sources I am using for the documentary essay, only a small number of modal tunes appear, almost all of them in two volumes of Irish melodies.

The "Kerry Jig"--in two versions from different sources--is the easiest to read. Beginning in A minor, it closes in C major with a simple rising line, C: ^5-^6-^7-^8.



"The Oyster Wives Rant" is a reel, a Dorian melody (on A) assuming the i-VII-i harmony one associates with Celtic music nowadays. The boxes block out the fifths frame: A4-E5, G4-D5, E5-A4. I haven't marked the possible lines involved, but A4-G4-(A4)-B4-A4 is possible in the lower voices, and a modal primitive line E5-(D5)-E5-G5-(A5) in the upper.


"Thou fair pulse of my heart" is a slow ballad, not a dance tune. Although it is a song, it makes interesting use of lower and upper registers in a manner similar to the fiddle tunes. At the beginning G4-D5 is unfolded, then D5 is extended with a neighbor note Eb5. In the continuation phrase a scale (boxed) moves directly up to F4 and the close is on ^8. In section B, the registral order is reversed—as we've seen several times already in the fiddle tunes—with the upper one first (see directional arrows beginning in bar 9). The slow-moving cadence in the lowest register (boxed at the end) is a surprise.


Friday, April 7, 2017

Celtic series, part 2

Recently I began a series based on a small sampling of items from a documentary essay I am now preparing and hope to publish by end of the month.

The four categories for this series are: (1) simple examples of rising lines, with appropriate focal tones; (2) play of registers common in—and congenial to—the violin; (3) "long" cadences where the lower and upper registers are connected by a stepwise sequence; (4) modal tunes, or tunes showing a modal heritage.

Here I continue with tunes that mix categories (1) and (2).

"The Runaway Bride." A jig. This may be a good moment to note that, as with the many old English and French country dances, titles usually have little if any obvious relation to their music (unless texted, of course). At (a) a simple line creates focus on B4 (^3) but the register jumps upward at (b) in the violinistic pattern I describe in the first post. In the consequent phrase (a) is repeated but (b) is transformed at (c) into a simple rising cadence. The same registral pattern is repeated at (d) and (e).


"Donald Dow." Here I can thank the Highland Music Trust (link) for making available a number of collections transcribed via music notation programs (link to free downloads page). "Donald Dow" is a strathspey that could be nothing other than a violin tune. I have parsed the registers in this initial example (thicker rectangles with downward or upward pointing arrows).


As in "The Runaway Bride," the upper register follows and enables a rising cadence gesture. The strong "violin fifth"—though F4-C5 here, not open strings—with its repeated neighbor D5 (at (a) below) creates a focal tone C5 and so what I call a "primitive rising line" ^5-^7-^8, as C5-E5-F5 (beamed).

As in "David Grady's Reel" (see the first post in the series), every phrase ends with this cadence. Phrases 3 & 4, however, alter the earlier part of the phrase to make a space of the triad—at (b) and (c)—or A4-C5-F5, and by this means F5 becomes the focal note. An interesting moment at (d) brings a bit more emphasis to the bottom of the triad, so that one can hear—and in some variation a player might very well literally generate—a subsidiary line A4-G4-F4. See my small added notes in parentheses at (e).