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Atonality

Atonality in its broadest sense is music that lacks a tonal center, or key. Atonality, in this sense, usually describes compositions written from about the early 20th-century to the present day, where a hierarchy of harmonies focusing on a single, central triad is not used, and the notes of the chromatic scale function independently of one another.[2] More narrowly, the term atonality describes music that does not conform to the system of tonal hierarchies that characterized European classical music between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries.[3] "The repertory of atonal music is characterized by the occurrence of pitches in novel combinations, as well as by the occurrence of familiar pitch combinations in unfamiliar environments".[1]

Ending of Schoenberg's "George Lieder" Op. 15/1 presents what would be an "extraordinary" chord in tonal music, without the harmonic-contrapuntal constraints of tonal music.[1]

The term is also occasionally used to describe music that is neither tonal nor serial, especially the pre-twelve-tone music of the Second Viennese School, principally Alban Berg, Arnold Schoenberg, and Anton Webern.[3] However, "as a categorical label, 'atonal' generally means only that the piece is in the Western tradition and is not 'tonal'",[4] although there are longer periods, e.g., medieval, renaissance, and modern modal music to which this definition does not apply. "Serialism arose partly as a means of organizing more coherently the relations used in the pre-serial 'free atonal' music. ... Thus, many useful and crucial insights about even strictly serial music depend only on such basic atonal theory".[5]

Late 19th- and early 20th-century composers such as Alexander Scriabin, Claude Debussy, Béla Bartók, Paul Hindemith, Sergei Prokofiev, Igor Stravinsky, and Edgard Varèse have written music that has been described, in full or in part, as atonal.[6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17]

History

While music without a tonal center had been previously written, for example Franz Liszt's Bagatelle sans tonalité of 1885, it is with the coming of the twentieth century that the term atonality began to be applied to pieces, particularly those written by Arnold Schoenberg and The Second Viennese School. The term "atonality" was coined in 1907 by Joseph Marx in a scholarly study of tonality, which was later expanded into his doctoral thesis.[18]

Their music arose from what was described as the "crisis of tonality" between the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century in classical music. This situation had arisen over the course of the nineteenth century due to the increasing use of

ambiguous chords, improbable harmonic inflections, and more unusual melodic and rhythmic inflections than what was possible within the styles of tonal music. The distinction between the exceptional and the normal became more and more blurred. As a result, there was a "concomitant loosening" of the synthetic bonds through which tones and harmonies had been related to one another. The connections between harmonies were uncertain even on the lowest chord-to-chord level. On higher levels, long-range harmonic relationships and implications became so tenuous, that they hardly functioned at all. At best, the felt probabilities of the style system had become obscure. At worst, they were approaching a uniformity, which provided few guides for either composition or listening. [19]

The first phase, known as "free atonality" or "free chromaticism", involved a conscious attempt to avoid traditional diatonic harmony. Works of this period include the opera Wozzeck (1917–1922) by Alban Berg and Pierrot lunaire (1912) by Schoenberg.

The second phase, begun after World War I, was exemplified by attempts to create a systematic means of composing without tonality, most famously the method of composing with 12 tones or the twelve-tone technique. This period included Berg's Lulu and Lyric Suite, Schoenberg's Piano Concerto, his oratorio Die Jakobsleiter and numerous smaller pieces, as well as his last two string quartets. Schoenberg was the major innovator of the system. His student, Anton Webern, however, is anecdotally claimed to have begun linking dynamics and tone color to the primary row, making rows not only of pitches but of other aspects of music as well.[20] However, actual analysis of Webern's twelve-tone works has so far failed to demonstrate the truth of this assertion. One analyst concluded, following a minute examination of the Piano Variations, op. 27, that

while the texture of this music may superficially resemble that of some serial music ... its structure does not. None of the patterns within separate nonpitch characteristics makes audible (or even numerical) sense in itself. The point is that these characteristics are still playing their traditional role of differentiation.[21]

Twelve-tone technique, combined with the parametrization (separate organization of four aspects of music: pitch, attack character, intensity, and duration) of Olivier Messiaen, would be taken as the inspiration for serialism.[20]

Atonality emerged as a pejorative term to condemn music in which chords were organized seemingly with no apparent coherence. In Nazi Germany, atonal music was attacked as "Bolshevik" and labeled as degenerate (Entartete Musik) along with other music produced by enemies of the Nazi regime. Many composers had their works banned by the regime, not to be played until after its collapse at the end of World War II.

After Schoenberg's death, Igor Stravinsky used the twelve-tone technique.[22] Iannis Xenakis generated pitch sets from mathematical formulae, and also saw the expansion of tonal possibilities as part of a synthesis between the hierarchical principle and the theory of numbers, principles which have dominated music since at least the time of Parmenides.[23]

Free atonality

The twelve-tone technique was preceded by Schoenberg's freely atonal pieces of 1908 to 1923, which, though free, often have as an "integrative element...a minute intervallic cell" that in addition to expansion may be transformed as with a tone row, and in which individual notes may "function as pivotal elements, to permit overlapping statements of a basic cell or the linking of two or more basic cells".[24]

The twelve-tone technique was also preceded by nondodecaphonic serial composition used independently in the works of Alexander Scriabin, Igor Stravinsky, Béla Bartók, Carl Ruggles, and others.[25] "Essentially, Schoenberg and Hauer systematized and defined for their own dodecaphonic purposes a pervasive technical feature of 'modern' musical practice, the ostinato."[25]

Composing atonal music

Setting out to compose atonal music may seem complicated because of both the vagueness and generality of the term. Additionally George Perle explains that, "the 'free' atonality that preceded dodecaphony precludes by definition the possibility of self-consistent, generally applicable compositional procedures".[26] However, he provides one example as a way to compose atonal pieces, a pre-twelve-tone technique piece by Anton Webern, which rigorously avoids anything that suggests tonality, to choose pitches that do not imply tonality. In other words, reverse the rules of the common practice period so that what was not allowed is required and what was required is not allowed. This is what was done by Charles Seeger in his explanation of dissonant counterpoint, which is a way to write atonal counterpoint.[27]

 
Opening of Schoenberg's Klavierstück, Op. 11, No. 1, exemplifying his four procedures as listed by Kostka & Payne 1995

Kostka and Payne list four procedures as operational in the atonal music of Schoenberg, all of which may be taken as negative rules. Avoidance of melodic or harmonic octaves, avoidance of traditional pitch collections such as major or minor triads, avoidance of more than three successive pitches from the same diatonic scale, and use of disjunct melodies (avoidance of conjunct melodies).[28]

Further, Perle agrees with Oster[29] and Katz[30] that, "the abandonment of the concept of a root-generator of the individual chord is a radical development that renders futile any attempt at a systematic formulation of chord structure and progression in atonal music along the lines of traditional harmonic theory".[31] Atonal compositional techniques and results "are not reducible to a set of foundational assumptions in terms of which the compositions that are collectively designated by the expression 'atonal music' can be said to represent 'a system' of composition".[32] Equal-interval chords are often of indeterminate root, mixed-interval chords are often best characterized by their interval content, while both lend themselves to atonal contexts.[33]

Perle also points out that structural coherence is most often achieved through operations on intervallic cells. A cell "may operate as a kind of microcosmic set of fixed intervallic content, statable either as a chord or as a melodic figure or as a combination of both. Its components may be fixed with regard to order, in which event it may be employed, like the twelve-tone set, in its literal transformations. … Individual tones may function as pivotal elements, to permit overlapping statements of a basic cell or the linking of two or more basic cells".[34]

Regarding the post-tonal music of Perle, one theorist wrote: "While ... montages of discrete-seeming elements tend to accumulate global rhythms other than those of tonal progressions and their rhythms, there is a similarity between the two sorts of accumulates spatial and temporal relationships: a similarity consisting of generalized arching tone-centers linked together by shared background referential materials".[35]

Another approach of composition techniques for atonal music is given by Allen Forte who developed the theory behind atonal music.[36] Forte describes two main operations: transposition and inversion. Transposition can be seen as a rotation of t either clockwise or anti-clockwise on a circle, where each note of the chord is rotated equally. For example, if t = 2 and the chord is [0 3 6], transposition (clockwise) will be [2 5 8]. Inversion can be seen as a symmetry with respect to the axis formed by 0 and 6. If we carry on with our example [0 3 6] becomes [0 9 6].

An important characteristic are the invariants, which are the notes which stay identical after a transformation. No difference is made between the octave in which the note is played so that, for example, all Cs are equivalent, no matter the octave in which they actually occur. This is why the 12-note scale is represented by a circle. This leads us to the definition of the similarity between two chords which considers the subsets and the interval content of each chord.[36]

Reception

Controversy over the term itself

The term "atonality" itself has been controversial. Arnold Schoenberg, whose music is generally used to define the term, was vehemently opposed to it, arguing that "The word 'atonal' could only signify something entirely inconsistent with the nature of tone... to call any relation of tones atonal is just as farfetched as it would be to designate a relation of colors aspectral or acomplementary. There is no such antithesis".[37]

Composer and theorist Milton Babbitt also disparaged the term, saying "The works that followed, many of them now familiar, include the Five Pieces for Orchestra, Erwartung, Pierrot Lunaire, and they and a few yet to follow soon were termed 'atonal,' by I know not whom, and I prefer not to know, for in no sense does the term make sense. Not only does the music employ 'tones,' but it employs precisely the same 'tones,' the same physical materials, that music had employed for some two centuries. In all generosity, 'atonal' may have been intended as a mildly analytically derived term to suggest 'atonic' or to signify 'a-triadic tonality', but, even so there were infinitely many things the music was not".[38]

"Atonal" developed a certain vagueness in meaning as a result of its use to describe a wide variety of compositional approaches that deviated from traditional chords and chord progressions. Attempts to solve these problems by using terms such as "pan-tonal", "non-tonal", "multi-tonal", "free-tonal" and "without tonal center" instead of "atonal" have not gained broad acceptance.

Criticism of the concept of atonality

Composer Anton Webern held that "new laws asserted themselves that made it impossible to designate a piece as being in one key or another".[39] Composer Walter Piston, on the other hand, said that, out of long habit, whenever performers "play any little phrase they will hear it in some key—it may not be the right one, but the point is they will play it with a tonal sense. ... [T]he more I feel I know Schoenberg's music the more I believe he thought that way himself. ... And it isn't only the players; it's also the listeners. They will hear tonality in everything".[40]

Donald Jay Grout similarly doubted whether atonality is really possible, because "any combination of sounds can be referred to a fundamental root". He defined it as a fundamentally subjective category: "atonal music is music in which the person who is using the word cannot hear tonal centers".[41]

One difficulty is that even an otherwise "atonal" work, tonality "by assertion" is normally heard on the thematic or linear level. That is, centricity may be established through the repetition of a central pitch or from emphasis by means of instrumentation, register, rhythmic elongation, or metric accent.[42]

Criticism of atonal music

Swiss conductor, composer, and musical philosopher Ernest Ansermet, a critic of atonal music, wrote extensively on this in the book Les fondements de la musique dans la conscience humaine (The Foundations of Music in Human Consciousness),[43] where he argued that the classical musical language was a precondition for musical expression with its clear, harmonious structures. Ansermet argued that a tone system can only lead to a uniform perception of music if it is deduced from just a single interval. For Ansermet this interval is the fifth.[44]

See also

References

Cited sources

  • Ansermet, Ernest. 1961. Les fondements de la musique dans la conscience humaine. 2 vols. Neuchâtel: La Baconnière.
  • Babbitt, Milton. 1991. "A Life of Learning: Charles Homer Haskins Lecture for 1991". ACLS Occasional Paper 17. New York: American Council of Learned Societies.
  • Baker, James M. 1980. "Scriabin's Implicit Tonality". "Music Theory Spectrum" 2:1–18.
  • Baker, James M. 1986. The Music of Alexander Scriabin. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Bertram, Daniel Cole. 2000. "Prokofiev as a Modernist, 1907–1915". PhD diss. New Haven: Yale University.
  • DeLone, Peter, and Gary Wittlich (eds.). 1975. Aspects of Twentieth-Century Music. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0-13-049346-5.
  • Du Noyer, Paul (ed.). 2003. "Contemporary", in The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Music: From Rock, Jazz, Blues and Hip Hop to Classical, Folk, World and More, pp. 271–272. London: Flame Tree Publishing. ISBN 1-904041-70-1.
  • Forte, Allen. 1977. The Structure of Atonal Music. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-02120-2.
  • Griffiths, Paul. 2001. "Varèse, Edgard [Edgar] (Victor Achille Charles)". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan.
  • Grout, Donald Jay. 1960. A History of Western Music. New York: W. W. Norton.
  • Haydin, Berkat, and Stefan Esser. 2009 (Joseph Marx Society). Chandos, liner notes to Joseph Marx: Orchestral Songs and Choral Works (accessed 23 October 2014.
  • Katz, Adele T. 1945. Challenge to Musical Traditions: A New Concept of Tonality. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, reprint edition, New York: Da Capo, 1972.
  • Kennedy, Michael. 1994. "Atonal". The Oxford Dictionary of Music. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-869162-9.
  • Kohlhase, Hans. 1983. "Außermusikalische Tendenzen im Frühschaffen Paul Hindemiths. Versuch über die Kammermusik Nr. 1 mit Finale 1921". Hamburger Jahrbuch für Musikwissenschaft 6:183–223.
  • Kostka, Stefan and Payne, Dorothy (1995). Tonal Harmony. Third Edition. ISBN 0-07-300056-6.
  • Lansky, Paul, and George Perle. 2001. "Atonality §2: Differences between Tonality and Atonality". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan.
  • Lansky, Paul, George Perle, and Dave Headlam. 2001. "Atonality". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan.
  • Meyer, Leonard B. 1967. Music, the Arts, and Ideas: Patterns and Predictions in Twentieth-Century Culture. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press. (Second edition 1994.)
  • Mosch, Ulrich. 2004. Musikalisches Hören serieller Musik: Untersuchungen am Beispiel von Pierre Boulez' «Le Marteau sans maître». Saarbrücken: Pfau-Verag.
  • Obert, Simon. 2004. "Zum Begriff Atonalität: Ein Vergleich von Anton Weberns 'Sechs Bagatellen für Streichquartett' op. 9 und Igor Stravinskijs 'Trois pièces pour quatuor à cordes'". In Das Streichquartett in der ersten Hälfte des 20. Jahrhunderts: Bericht über das Dritte Internationale Symposium Othmar Schoeck in Zürich, 19. und 20. Oktober 2001. Schriftenreihe der Othmar Schoeck-Gesellschaft 4, edited by Beat A. Föllmi [de] and Michael Baumgartner. Tutzing: Schneider.
  • Orvis, Joan. 1974. "Technical and stylistic features of the piano etudes of Stravinsky, Bartók, and Prokofiev". DMus Piano pedagogy: Indiana University.
  • Oster, Ernst. 1960. "Re: A New Concept of Tonality (?)", Journal of Music Theory 4:96.
  • Parks, Richard S. 1985. "Tonal Analogues as Atonal Resources and Their Relation to form in Debussy's Chromatic Etude". Journal of Music Theory 29, no. 1 (Spring): 33–60.
  • Perle, George. 1962. Serial Composition and Atonality: An Introduction to the Music of Schoenberg, Berg, and Webern. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-07430-0.
  • Perle, George. 1977. Serial Composition and Atonality: An Introduction to the Music of Schoenberg, Berg, and Webern. Fourth Edition. Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-03395-7.
  • Rahn, John. 1980. Basic Atonal Theory. New York: Longman. ISBN 0-582-28117-2.
  • Rülke, Volker. 2000. "Bartóks Wende zur Atonalität: Die "Études" op. 18". Archiv für Musikwissenschaft 57, no. 3:240–263.
  • Schoenberg, Arnold. 1978. Theory of Harmony, translated by Roy Carter. Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  • Seeger, Charles. 1930. "On Dissonant Counterpoint." Modern Music 7, no. 4:25–31.
  • Simms, Bryan R. 1986. Music of the Twentieth Century: Style and Structure. New York: Schirmer. ISBN 0-02-872580-8.
  • Swift, Richard. 1982–83. "A Tonal Analog: The Tone-Centered Music of George Perle". Perspectives of New Music 21, nos. 1/2 (Fall–Winter/Spring–Summer): 257–284. (Subscription access.)
  • Teboul, Jean-Claude. 1995–96. "Comment analyser le neuvième interlude en si du "Ludus tonalis" de Paul Hindemith? (Hindemith ou Schenker?) ". Ostinato Rigore: Revue Internationale d'Études Musicales, nos. 6–7:215–232.
  • Webern, Anton. 1963. The Path to the New Music, translated by Leo Black. Bryn Mawr. Pennsylvania: Theodore Presser; London: Universal Edition.
  • Westergaard, Peter. 1963. "Webern and 'Total Organization': An Analysis of the Second Movement of Piano Variations, Op. 27." Perspectives of New Music 1, no. 2 (Spring): 107–20.
  • Westergaard, Peter. 1968. "Conversation with Walter Piston". Perspectives of New Music 7, no. 1 (Fall–Winter) 3–17.
  • Xenakis, Iannis. 1971. Formalized Music: Thought and Mathematics in Composition. Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press. Revised edition, 1992. Harmonologia Series No. 6. Stuyvesant, New York: Pendragon Press. ISBN 0-945193-24-6.
  • Zimmerman, Daniel J. 2002. "Families without Clusters in the Early Works of Sergei Prokofiev". PhD diss. Chicago: University of Chicago.

Further reading

  • Beach, David (ed.). 1983. "Schenkerian Analysis and Post-Tonal Music", Aspects of Schenkerian Theory. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Dahlhaus, Carl. 1966. "Ansermets Polemik gegen Schönberg." Neue Zeitschrift für Musik 127, no. 5:179–183.
  • Forte, Allen. 1963. "Context and Continuity in an Atonal Work: A Set-Theoretic Approach". Perspectives of New Music 1, no. 2 (Spring): 72–82.
  • Forte, Allen. 1964. "A Theory of Set-Complexes for Music". Journal of Music Theory 8, no. 2 (Winter): 136–183.
  • Forte, Allen. 1965. "The Domain and Relations of Set-Complex Theory". Journal of Music Theory 9, no. 1 (Spring): 173–180.
  • Forte, Allen. 1972. Sets and Nonsets in Schoenberg's Atonal Music. Perspectives of New Music 11, no. 1 (Fall–Winter): 43–64.
  • Forte, Allen. 1978a. The Harmonic Organization of The Rite of Spring. New Haven : Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-02201-8.
  • Forte, Allen. 1978b. "Schoenberg's Creative Evolution: The Path to Atonality". The Musical Quarterly 64, no. 2 (April): 133–176.
  • Forte, Allen. 1980. "Aspects of Rhythm in Webern's Atonal Music". Music Theory Spectrum 2:90–109.
  • Forte, Allen. 1998. The Atonal Music of Anton Webern. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-07352-2.
  • Forte, Allen, and Roy Travis. 1974. "Analysis Symposium: Webern, Orchestral Pieces (1913): Movement I ('Bewegt')". Journal of Music Theory 18, no. 1 (Spring, pp. 2–43.
  • Krausz, Michael. 1984. "The Tonal and the Foundational: Ansermet on Stravinsky". The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 42:383–386.
  • Krenek, Ernst. 1953. "Is the Twelve-Tone Technique on the Decline?" The Musical Quarterly 39, no. 4 (October): 513–527.
  • Philippot, Michel. 1964. "Ansermet's Phenomenological Metamorphoses." Translated by Edward Messinger. Perspectives of New Music 2, no. 2 (Spring–Summer): 129–140. Originally published as Critique. Revue Générale des Publications Françaises et Etrangères, no. 186 (November 1962).
  • Radano, Ronald M. 1993. New Musical Figurations: Anthony Braxton's Cultural Critique Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Stegemann, Benedikt. 2013. Theory of Tonality. Theoretical Studies. Wilhelmshaven: Noetzel. ISBN 978-3-7959-0963-5.

External links

  • An Introduction to Atonal Music Analysis by Robert T. Kelly.
  • Atonality, Information, and the Politics of Perception by Lee Humphries

atonality, atonal, redirects, here, ruler, mixtec, kingdom, coixtlahuaca, atonal, broadest, sense, music, that, lacks, tonal, center, this, sense, usually, describes, compositions, written, from, about, early, 20th, century, present, where, hierarchy, harmonie. Atonal redirects here For the ruler of the Mixtec kingdom of Coixtlahuaca see Atonal II Atonality in its broadest sense is music that lacks a tonal center or key Atonality in this sense usually describes compositions written from about the early 20th century to the present day where a hierarchy of harmonies focusing on a single central triad is not used and the notes of the chromatic scale function independently of one another 2 More narrowly the term atonality describes music that does not conform to the system of tonal hierarchies that characterized European classical music between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries 3 The repertory of atonal music is characterized by the occurrence of pitches in novel combinations as well as by the occurrence of familiar pitch combinations in unfamiliar environments 1 Ending of Schoenberg s George Lieder Op 15 1 presents what would be an extraordinary chord in tonal music without the harmonic contrapuntal constraints of tonal music 1 source source source The term is also occasionally used to describe music that is neither tonal nor serial especially the pre twelve tone music of the Second Viennese School principally Alban Berg Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern 3 However as a categorical label atonal generally means only that the piece is in the Western tradition and is not tonal 4 although there are longer periods e g medieval renaissance and modern modal music to which this definition does not apply Serialism arose partly as a means of organizing more coherently the relations used in the pre serial free atonal music Thus many useful and crucial insights about even strictly serial music depend only on such basic atonal theory 5 Late 19th and early 20th century composers such as Alexander Scriabin Claude Debussy Bela Bartok Paul Hindemith Sergei Prokofiev Igor Stravinsky and Edgard Varese have written music that has been described in full or in part as atonal 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Contents 1 History 1 1 Free atonality 2 Composing atonal music 3 Reception 3 1 Controversy over the term itself 3 2 Criticism of the concept of atonality 3 3 Criticism of atonal music 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Cited sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory EditWhile music without a tonal center had been previously written for example Franz Liszt s Bagatelle sans tonalite of 1885 it is with the coming of the twentieth century that the term atonality began to be applied to pieces particularly those written by Arnold Schoenberg and The Second Viennese School The term atonality was coined in 1907 by Joseph Marx in a scholarly study of tonality which was later expanded into his doctoral thesis 18 Their music arose from what was described as the crisis of tonality between the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century in classical music This situation had arisen over the course of the nineteenth century due to the increasing use ofambiguous chords improbable harmonic inflections and more unusual melodic and rhythmic inflections than what was possible within the styles of tonal music The distinction between the exceptional and the normal became more and more blurred As a result there was a concomitant loosening of the synthetic bonds through which tones and harmonies had been related to one another The connections between harmonies were uncertain even on the lowest chord to chord level On higher levels long range harmonic relationships and implications became so tenuous that they hardly functioned at all At best the felt probabilities of the style system had become obscure At worst they were approaching a uniformity which provided few guides for either composition or listening 19 The first phase known as free atonality or free chromaticism involved a conscious attempt to avoid traditional diatonic harmony Works of this period include the opera Wozzeck 1917 1922 by Alban Berg and Pierrot lunaire 1912 by Schoenberg The second phase begun after World War I was exemplified by attempts to create a systematic means of composing without tonality most famously the method of composing with 12 tones or the twelve tone technique This period included Berg s Lulu and Lyric Suite Schoenberg s Piano Concerto his oratorio Die Jakobsleiter and numerous smaller pieces as well as his last two string quartets Schoenberg was the major innovator of the system His student Anton Webern however is anecdotally claimed to have begun linking dynamics and tone color to the primary row making rows not only of pitches but of other aspects of music as well 20 However actual analysis of Webern s twelve tone works has so far failed to demonstrate the truth of this assertion One analyst concluded following a minute examination of the Piano Variations op 27 thatwhile the texture of this music may superficially resemble that of some serial music its structure does not None of the patterns within separate nonpitch characteristics makes audible or even numerical sense in itself The point is that these characteristics are still playing their traditional role of differentiation 21 Twelve tone technique combined with the parametrization separate organization of four aspects of music pitch attack character intensity and duration of Olivier Messiaen would be taken as the inspiration for serialism 20 Atonality emerged as a pejorative term to condemn music in which chords were organized seemingly with no apparent coherence In Nazi Germany atonal music was attacked as Bolshevik and labeled as degenerate Entartete Musik along with other music produced by enemies of the Nazi regime Many composers had their works banned by the regime not to be played until after its collapse at the end of World War II After Schoenberg s death Igor Stravinsky used the twelve tone technique 22 Iannis Xenakis generated pitch sets from mathematical formulae and also saw the expansion of tonal possibilities as part of a synthesis between the hierarchical principle and the theory of numbers principles which have dominated music since at least the time of Parmenides 23 Free atonality Edit The twelve tone technique was preceded by Schoenberg s freely atonal pieces of 1908 to 1923 which though free often have as an integrative element a minute intervallic cell that in addition to expansion may be transformed as with a tone row and in which individual notes may function as pivotal elements to permit overlapping statements of a basic cell or the linking of two or more basic cells 24 The twelve tone technique was also preceded by nondodecaphonic serial composition used independently in the works of Alexander Scriabin Igor Stravinsky Bela Bartok Carl Ruggles and others 25 Essentially Schoenberg and Hauer systematized and defined for their own dodecaphonic purposes a pervasive technical feature of modern musical practice the ostinato 25 Composing atonal music EditSetting out to compose atonal music may seem complicated because of both the vagueness and generality of the term Additionally George Perle explains that the free atonality that preceded dodecaphony precludes by definition the possibility of self consistent generally applicable compositional procedures 26 However he provides one example as a way to compose atonal pieces a pre twelve tone technique piece by Anton Webern which rigorously avoids anything that suggests tonality to choose pitches that do not imply tonality In other words reverse the rules of the common practice period so that what was not allowed is required and what was required is not allowed This is what was done by Charles Seeger in his explanation of dissonant counterpoint which is a way to write atonal counterpoint 27 Opening of Schoenberg s Klavierstuck Op 11 No 1 exemplifying his four procedures as listed by Kostka amp Payne 1995 source source source Kostka and Payne list four procedures as operational in the atonal music of Schoenberg all of which may be taken as negative rules Avoidance of melodic or harmonic octaves avoidance of traditional pitch collections such as major or minor triads avoidance of more than three successive pitches from the same diatonic scale and use of disjunct melodies avoidance of conjunct melodies 28 Further Perle agrees with Oster 29 and Katz 30 that the abandonment of the concept of a root generator of the individual chord is a radical development that renders futile any attempt at a systematic formulation of chord structure and progression in atonal music along the lines of traditional harmonic theory 31 Atonal compositional techniques and results are not reducible to a set of foundational assumptions in terms of which the compositions that are collectively designated by the expression atonal music can be said to represent a system of composition 32 Equal interval chords are often of indeterminate root mixed interval chords are often best characterized by their interval content while both lend themselves to atonal contexts 33 Perle also points out that structural coherence is most often achieved through operations on intervallic cells A cell may operate as a kind of microcosmic set of fixed intervallic content statable either as a chord or as a melodic figure or as a combination of both Its components may be fixed with regard to order in which event it may be employed like the twelve tone set in its literal transformations Individual tones may function as pivotal elements to permit overlapping statements of a basic cell or the linking of two or more basic cells 34 Regarding the post tonal music of Perle one theorist wrote While montages of discrete seeming elements tend to accumulate global rhythms other than those of tonal progressions and their rhythms there is a similarity between the two sorts of accumulates spatial and temporal relationships a similarity consisting of generalized arching tone centers linked together by shared background referential materials 35 Another approach of composition techniques for atonal music is given by Allen Forte who developed the theory behind atonal music 36 Forte describes two main operations transposition and inversion Transposition can be seen as a rotation of t either clockwise or anti clockwise on a circle where each note of the chord is rotated equally For example if t 2 and the chord is 0 3 6 transposition clockwise will be 2 5 8 Inversion can be seen as a symmetry with respect to the axis formed by 0 and 6 If we carry on with our example 0 3 6 becomes 0 9 6 An important characteristic are the invariants which are the notes which stay identical after a transformation No difference is made between the octave in which the note is played so that for example all C s are equivalent no matter the octave in which they actually occur This is why the 12 note scale is represented by a circle This leads us to the definition of the similarity between two chords which considers the subsets and the interval content of each chord 36 Reception EditControversy over the term itself Edit The term atonality itself has been controversial Arnold Schoenberg whose music is generally used to define the term was vehemently opposed to it arguing that The word atonal could only signify something entirely inconsistent with the nature of tone to call any relation of tones atonal is just as farfetched as it would be to designate a relation of colors aspectral or acomplementary There is no such antithesis 37 Composer and theorist Milton Babbitt also disparaged the term saying The works that followed many of them now familiar include the Five Pieces for Orchestra Erwartung Pierrot Lunaire and they and a few yet to follow soon were termed atonal by I know not whom and I prefer not to know for in no sense does the term make sense Not only does the music employ tones but it employs precisely the same tones the same physical materials that music had employed for some two centuries In all generosity atonal may have been intended as a mildly analytically derived term to suggest atonic or to signify a triadic tonality but even so there were infinitely many things the music was not 38 Atonal developed a certain vagueness in meaning as a result of its use to describe a wide variety of compositional approaches that deviated from traditional chords and chord progressions Attempts to solve these problems by using terms such as pan tonal non tonal multi tonal free tonal and without tonal center instead of atonal have not gained broad acceptance Criticism of the concept of atonality Edit Composer Anton Webern held that new laws asserted themselves that made it impossible to designate a piece as being in one key or another 39 Composer Walter Piston on the other hand said that out of long habit whenever performers play any little phrase they will hear it in some key it may not be the right one but the point is they will play it with a tonal sense T he more I feel I know Schoenberg s music the more I believe he thought that way himself And it isn t only the players it s also the listeners They will hear tonality in everything 40 Donald Jay Grout similarly doubted whether atonality is really possible because any combination of sounds can be referred to a fundamental root He defined it as a fundamentally subjective category atonal music is music in which the person who is using the word cannot hear tonal centers 41 One difficulty is that even an otherwise atonal work tonality by assertion is normally heard on the thematic or linear level That is centricity may be established through the repetition of a central pitch or from emphasis by means of instrumentation register rhythmic elongation or metric accent 42 Criticism of atonal music Edit Swiss conductor composer and musical philosopher Ernest Ansermet a critic of atonal music wrote extensively on this in the book Les fondements de la musique dans la conscience humaine The Foundations of Music in Human Consciousness 43 where he argued that the classical musical language was a precondition for musical expression with its clear harmonious structures Ansermet argued that a tone system can only lead to a uniform perception of music if it is deduced from just a single interval For Ansermet this interval is the fifth 44 See also EditEmancipation of the dissonance Jazz improvisation Klangfarbenmelodie Neue Musik Noise music List of atonal compositionsReferences Edit a b Forte 1977 p 1 Kennedy 1994 a b Lansky Perle and Headlam 2001 Rahn 1980 p 1 Rahn 1980 p 2 Baker 1980 Baker 1986 Bertram 2000 Griffiths 2001 Kohlhase 1983 Lansky and Perle 2001 Obert 2004 Orvis 1974 Parks 1985 Rulke 2000 Teboul 1995 96 Zimmerman 2002 Haydin and Esser 2009 Meyer 1967 241 a b Du Noyer 2003 p 272 Westergaard 1963 p 109 Du Noyer 2003 p 271 Xenakis 1971 204 Perle 1977 p 2 a b Perle 1977 p 37 Perle 1962 p 9 Seeger 1930 Kostka amp Payne 1995 p 513 Oster 1960 Katz 1945 Perle 1962 p 31 Perle 1962 p 1 DeLone and Wittlich 1975 pp 362 372 Perle 1962 pp 9 10 Swift 1982 83 p 272 a b Forte 1977 Schoenberg 1978 p 432 Babbitt 1991 pp 4 5 Webern 1963 p 51 Westergaard 1968 p 15 Grout 1960 p 647 Simms 1986 p 65 Ansermet 1961 Mosch 2004 p 96 Cited sources Edit Ansermet Ernest 1961 Les fondements de la musique dans la conscience humaine 2 vols Neuchatel La Baconniere Babbitt Milton 1991 A Life of Learning Charles Homer Haskins Lecture for 1991 ACLS Occasional Paper 17 New York American Council of Learned Societies Baker James M 1980 Scriabin s Implicit Tonality Music Theory Spectrum 2 1 18 Baker James M 1986 The Music of Alexander Scriabin New Haven Yale University Press Bertram Daniel Cole 2000 Prokofiev as a Modernist 1907 1915 PhD diss New Haven Yale University DeLone Peter and Gary Wittlich eds 1975 Aspects of Twentieth Century Music Englewood Cliffs New Jersey Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 049346 5 Du Noyer Paul ed 2003 Contemporary in The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Music From Rock Jazz Blues and Hip Hop to Classical Folk World and More pp 271 272 London Flame Tree Publishing ISBN 1 904041 70 1 Forte Allen 1977 The Structure of Atonal Music New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 02120 2 Griffiths Paul 2001 Varese Edgard Edgar Victor Achille Charles The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Grout Donald Jay 1960 A History of Western Music New York W W Norton Haydin Berkat and Stefan Esser 2009 Joseph Marx Society Chandos liner notes to Joseph Marx Orchestral Songs and Choral Works accessed 23 October 2014 Katz Adele T 1945 Challenge to Musical Traditions A New Concept of Tonality New York Alfred A Knopf reprint edition New York Da Capo 1972 Kennedy Michael 1994 Atonal The Oxford Dictionary of Music Oxford amp New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 869162 9 Kohlhase Hans 1983 Aussermusikalische Tendenzen im Fruhschaffen Paul Hindemiths Versuch uber die Kammermusik Nr 1 mit Finale 1921 Hamburger Jahrbuch fur Musikwissenschaft 6 183 223 Kostka Stefan and Payne Dorothy 1995 Tonal Harmony Third Edition ISBN 0 07 300056 6 Lansky Paul and George Perle 2001 Atonality 2 Differences between Tonality and Atonality The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Lansky Paul George Perle and Dave Headlam 2001 Atonality The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Meyer Leonard B 1967 Music the Arts and Ideas Patterns and Predictions in Twentieth Century Culture Chicago and London University of Chicago Press Second edition 1994 Mosch Ulrich 2004 Musikalisches Horen serieller Musik Untersuchungen am Beispiel von Pierre Boulez Le Marteau sans maitre Saarbrucken Pfau Verag Obert Simon 2004 Zum Begriff Atonalitat Ein Vergleich von Anton Weberns Sechs Bagatellen fur Streichquartett op 9 und Igor Stravinskijs Trois pieces pour quatuor a cordes In Das Streichquartett in der ersten Halfte des 20 Jahrhunderts Bericht uber das Dritte Internationale Symposium Othmar Schoeck in Zurich 19 und 20 Oktober 2001 Schriftenreihe der Othmar Schoeck Gesellschaft 4 edited by Beat A Follmi de and Michael Baumgartner Tutzing Schneider Orvis Joan 1974 Technical and stylistic features of the piano etudes of Stravinsky Bartok and Prokofiev DMus Piano pedagogy Indiana University Oster Ernst 1960 Re A New Concept of Tonality Journal of Music Theory 4 96 Parks Richard S 1985 Tonal Analogues as Atonal Resources and Their Relation to form in Debussy s Chromatic Etude Journal of Music Theory 29 no 1 Spring 33 60 Perle George 1962 Serial Composition and Atonality An Introduction to the Music of Schoenberg Berg and Webern University of California Press ISBN 0 520 07430 0 Perle George 1977 Serial Composition and Atonality An Introduction to the Music of Schoenberg Berg and Webern Fourth Edition Berkeley Los Angeles and London University of California Press ISBN 0 520 03395 7 Rahn John 1980 Basic Atonal Theory New York Longman ISBN 0 582 28117 2 Rulke Volker 2000 Bartoks Wende zur Atonalitat Die Etudes op 18 Archiv fur Musikwissenschaft 57 no 3 240 263 Schoenberg Arnold 1978 Theory of Harmony translated by Roy Carter Berkeley amp Los Angeles University of California Press Seeger Charles 1930 On Dissonant Counterpoint Modern Music 7 no 4 25 31 Simms Bryan R 1986 Music of the Twentieth Century Style and Structure New York Schirmer ISBN 0 02 872580 8 Swift Richard 1982 83 A Tonal Analog The Tone Centered Music of George Perle Perspectives of New Music 21 nos 1 2 Fall Winter Spring Summer 257 284 Subscription access Teboul Jean Claude 1995 96 Comment analyser le neuvieme interlude en si du Ludus tonalis de Paul Hindemith Hindemith ou Schenker Ostinato Rigore Revue Internationale d Etudes Musicales nos 6 7 215 232 Webern Anton 1963 The Path to the New Music translated by Leo Black Bryn Mawr Pennsylvania Theodore Presser London Universal Edition Westergaard Peter 1963 Webern and Total Organization An Analysis of the Second Movement of Piano Variations Op 27 Perspectives of New Music 1 no 2 Spring 107 20 Westergaard Peter 1968 Conversation with Walter Piston Perspectives of New Music 7 no 1 Fall Winter 3 17 Xenakis Iannis 1971 Formalized Music Thought and Mathematics in Composition Bloomington and London Indiana University Press Revised edition 1992 Harmonologia Series No 6 Stuyvesant New York Pendragon Press ISBN 0 945193 24 6 Zimmerman Daniel J 2002 Families without Clusters in the Early Works of Sergei Prokofiev PhD diss Chicago University of Chicago Further reading EditBeach David ed 1983 Schenkerian Analysis and Post Tonal Music Aspects of Schenkerian Theory New Haven Yale University Press Dahlhaus Carl 1966 Ansermets Polemik gegen Schonberg Neue Zeitschrift fur Musik 127 no 5 179 183 Forte Allen 1963 Context and Continuity in an Atonal Work A Set Theoretic Approach Perspectives of New Music 1 no 2 Spring 72 82 Forte Allen 1964 A Theory of Set Complexes for Music Journal of Music Theory 8 no 2 Winter 136 183 Forte Allen 1965 The Domain and Relations of Set Complex Theory Journal of Music Theory 9 no 1 Spring 173 180 Forte Allen 1972 Sets and Nonsets in Schoenberg s Atonal Music Perspectives of New Music 11 no 1 Fall Winter 43 64 Forte Allen 1978a The Harmonic Organization of The Rite of Spring New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 02201 8 Forte Allen 1978b Schoenberg s Creative Evolution The Path to Atonality The Musical Quarterly 64 no 2 April 133 176 Forte Allen 1980 Aspects of Rhythm in Webern s Atonal Music Music Theory Spectrum 2 90 109 Forte Allen 1998 The Atonal Music of Anton Webern New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 07352 2 Forte Allen and Roy Travis 1974 Analysis Symposium Webern Orchestral Pieces 1913 Movement I Bewegt Journal of Music Theory 18 no 1 Spring pp 2 43 Krausz Michael 1984 The Tonal and the Foundational Ansermet on Stravinsky The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 42 383 386 Krenek Ernst 1953 Is the Twelve Tone Technique on the Decline The Musical Quarterly 39 no 4 October 513 527 Philippot Michel 1964 Ansermet s Phenomenological Metamorphoses Translated by Edward Messinger Perspectives of New Music 2 no 2 Spring Summer 129 140 Originally published as Metamorphoses Phenomenologiques Critique Revue Generale des Publications Francaises et Etrangeres no 186 November 1962 Radano Ronald M 1993 New Musical Figurations Anthony Braxton s Cultural Critique Chicago University of Chicago Press Stegemann Benedikt 2013 Theory of Tonality Theoretical Studies Wilhelmshaven Noetzel ISBN 978 3 7959 0963 5 External links Edit Look up atonality in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Atonality An Introduction to Atonal Music Analysis by Robert T Kelly Atonality Information and the Politics of Perception by Lee Humphries Portal Classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Atonality amp oldid 1129320506, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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