Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Analysis (2)
- Form (2)
- Atonal music (1)
- Breakout Chorus (1)
- Common-practice tonal music (1)
-
- Concerto (1)
- Contemporary Music (1)
- Contour theory (1)
- Developing Variation (1)
- Dyads (1)
- Guitar (1)
- Harmony (1)
- Hexachord (1)
- Kate Bush (1)
- Krenek (1)
- Morton Gould (1)
- Motown (1)
- Multimodal experience (1)
- Music Composition (1)
- Orchestra (1)
- Orchestration (1)
- Pedagogy (1)
- Pivot chords (1)
- Pop/Rock (1)
- Prechorus (1)
- R.E.M. (1)
- Reinterpretation (1)
- Rock Tonality (1)
- Rotation (1)
- Schoenberg (1)
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Musicology
The “Rebuff Chorus” In 1960–2000 Pop Music, David Heetderks
The “Rebuff Chorus” In 1960–2000 Pop Music, David Heetderks
Gamut: Online Journal of the Music Theory Society of the Mid-Atlantic
In some verse–prechorus–chorus (VPC) songs from 1960–1990, the prechorus sets up an expectation for tonic arrival, only to have the subsequent chorus reject this tonal implication and either withhold tonic resolution, abruptly change to a new key, or contain a passage whose relation to the previous one is tonally ambiguous. I call this event a “rebuff” chorus. Formal analysis and intertextual comparison show how rebuff choruses use absent-tonic passages or modulatory “breakout” passages in order to swerve away from the implications of the previous section. The formal device often transforms the expressive effect of the chorus from arrival and sincerity …
Music As A Representational Medium: Representation In Arnold Schoenberg's "A Survivor From Warsaw", Lucy S. Terrell
Music As A Representational Medium: Representation In Arnold Schoenberg's "A Survivor From Warsaw", Lucy S. Terrell
Masters Theses
In 1976, Roger Scruton, and English conservative philosopher and writer, dubbed music a non-representation medium. This assertion has resulted in debate among many prominent scholars, and, despite numerous dissenting opinions, Scruton’s premise has persisted as an accepted premise for some scholars in Western music study. In this paper, I survey and analyze prominent writings debating the topic of music as a representational medium, compiling arguments for and against his five criteria for representational art. I then discuss Arnold Schoenberg’s A Survivor from Warsaw in its context as a piece of representational music. In Schoenberg’s work, I use twelve-tone theory, contour …
Review Of Coherence In New Music: Experience, Aesthetics, Analysis, By Mark Hutchinson. (New York, Ny: Routledge, 2016)., Orit Hilewicz
Review Of Coherence In New Music: Experience, Aesthetics, Analysis, By Mark Hutchinson. (New York, Ny: Routledge, 2016)., Orit Hilewicz
Gamut: Online Journal of the Music Theory Society of the Mid-Atlantic
A review of Mark Hutchinson's book from 2016, Coherence in New Music: Experience, Aesthetics, Analysis.
Developing Variation In The Late Work Of Morton Gould And Why It Matters, J. Wesley Flinn
Developing Variation In The Late Work Of Morton Gould And Why It Matters, J. Wesley Flinn
Gamut: Online Journal of the Music Theory Society of the Mid-Atlantic
American composer Morton Gould (1913-1996) was remarkably consistent stylistically over the course of his compositional career; this project examines certain motivic transformational techniques used in two of his last works, Stringmusic (1993, winner of the Pulitzer Prize) and Remembrance Day (Soliloquy for a Passing Century) (1995). These techniques, which can generally be filed under the principle of developing variation, are: 1. Mirroring and reversal; 2. Rotation; 3. Motivic expansion and contraction; 4. Additive sets; and 5. Asymmetric injection. After an overview of each technique, I give a full analysis of the fourth movement of Stringmusic using the approaches described …
Intriguing Interpretation Of Dyads In Common-Practice Tonal Music, Yosef Goldenberg
Intriguing Interpretation Of Dyads In Common-Practice Tonal Music, Yosef Goldenberg
Gamut: Online Journal of the Music Theory Society of the Mid-Atlantic
The study offers a systematic exploration of situations in which dyads in common-practice tonal music change their meaning, when repeated or as pivots. The most common such situation is thirds that serve as either the upper or the lower pair of consonant triad members, most often with the tonic as one of the options. Sometimes, however, an implied harmony turns out to be dissonant. Occasionally, dyads other than thirds are also subject to reinterpretation. In exceptional circumstances, dyads do not imply complete harmonies.
Les Vosges A Suite For Orchestra, Glenn Robert Kahler
Les Vosges A Suite For Orchestra, Glenn Robert Kahler
Masters Theses
Les Vosges, a programmatic suite for orchestra in three movements, features dance-like rhythms, folksong-influenced melodies, and formal characteristics and stylistic qualities that combine elements of modern composition with those reminiscent of Baroque dance. Les Vosges was composed in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree Master of Music with a concentration in Composition from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
This paper offers a supplementary analysis of the Les Vosges while referencing influential compositions and composers of the last century (Milhaud, Grofe, Kodaly, and Holst) regarding musical parameters of form, melody, harmony, rhythm and meter, and genre.
Exodus Concerto For Guitar And Chamber Orchestra, Spencer Joel Kappelman
Exodus Concerto For Guitar And Chamber Orchestra, Spencer Joel Kappelman
Masters Theses
Exodus is a four-movement composition for solo guitar accompanied by a chamber orchestra. This piece is composed in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree Master of Music with a concentration in Music Composition from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Exodus was composed during the 2010-2012 academic years.
This paper provides a narrative analysis of Exodus in terms of its musical content, and relationships to other composers of the last century. Similarities to these composers refer to form, orchestration, melody, harmony, rhythm, and meter.
An Explanation Of Anomalous Hexachords In Four Serial Works By Igor Stravinsky, Robert Sivy
An Explanation Of Anomalous Hexachords In Four Serial Works By Igor Stravinsky, Robert Sivy
Masters Theses
Igor Stravinsky's precompositional process was so methodical that his move to serialism is no surprise. After becoming acquainted with the music of Schoenberg and Webern, Stravinsky was moved to experiment with serial techniques. He rejected many of the conventional approaches developed by the serial architects, only to adopt the technique at its basic form—the use of a series of pitches—and cultivate it into his own compositional style. Stravinsky continued to refine his style throughout his serial period (1951–1966) as each composition grew increasingly more serial than the last. For each work composed after 1960, Stravinsky constructed rotation arrays, a serial …