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Schenkerian analysis

Schenkerian analysis is a method of analyzing tonal music based on the theories of Heinrich Schenker (1868–1935). The goal is to demonstrate the organic coherence of the work by showing how the "foreground" (all notes in the score) relates to an abstracted deep structure, the Ursatz. This primal structure is roughly the same for any tonal work, but a Schenkerian analysis shows how, in each individual case, that structure develops into a unique work at the foreground. A key theoretical concept is "tonal space".[1] The intervals between the notes of the tonic triad in the background form a tonal space that is filled with passing and neighbour tones, producing new triads and new tonal spaces that are open for further elaborations until the "surface" of the work (the score) is reached.

The analysis uses a specialized symbolic form of musical notation. Although Schenker himself usually presents his analyses in the generative direction, starting from the Ursatz to reach the score and showing how the work is somehow generated from the Ursatz, the practice of Schenkerian analysis more often is reductive, starting from the score and showing how it can be reduced to its fundamental structure. The graph of the Ursatz is arrhythmic, as is a strict-counterpoint cantus firmus exercise.[2] Even at intermediate levels of reduction, rhythmic signs (open and closed noteheads, beams and flags) display not rhythm but the hierarchical relationships between the pitch-events.

Schenkerian analysis is an abstract, complex, and difficult method, not always clearly expressed by Schenker himself and not always clearly understood. It mainly aims to reveal the internal coherence of the work – a coherence that ultimately resides in its being tonal.[3] In some respects, a Schenkerian analysis can reflect the perceptions and intuitions of the analyst.[4]

Fundamentals

Goals

Schenker intended his theory as an exegesis of musical "genius" or the "masterwork", ideas that were closely tied to German nationalism and monarchism.[5] The canon represented in his analytical work therefore is almost entirely made up of German music of the common practice period (especially that of Johann Sebastian Bach, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Joseph Haydn, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven, Franz Schubert, and Johannes Brahms),[6] and he used his methods to oppose more modern styles of music such as that of Max Reger and Igor Stravinsky.[7] This led him to seek the key to an understanding of music in the traditional disciplines of counterpoint and figured bass, which was central to the compositional training of these composers. Schenker's project was to show that free composition (freier Satz) was an elaboration, a "prolongation", of strict composition (strenger Satz), by which he meant species counterpoint, particularly two-voice counterpoint. He did this by developing a theory of hierarchically organized levels of elaboration (Auskomponierung), called prolongational levels, voice-leading levels (Stimmführungsschichten), or transformations (Verwandlungen), the idea being that each of the successive levels represents a new freedom taken with respect to the rules of strict composition.[8]

Because the first principle of the elaboration is the filling in of the tonal space by passing notes, an essential goal of the analysis is to show linear connections between notes which, filling a single triad at a given level, remain closely related to each other but which, at subsequent levels, may become separated by many measures or many pages as new triads are embedded in the first one. The analyst is expected to develop a "distance hearing" (Fernhören),[9] a "structural hearing".[10]

Harmony

The tonic triad, that from which the work as a whole arises, takes its model in the harmonic series. However,

the mere duplication of nature cannot be the object of human endeavour. Therefore ... the overtone series ... is transformed into a succession, a horizontal arpeggiation, which has the added advantage of lying within the range of the human voice. Thus the harmonic series is condensed, abbreviated for the purposes of art".[11]

Linking the (major) triad to the harmonic series, Schenker merely pays lip service to an idea common in the early 20th century.[12] He confirms that the same derivation cannot be made for the minor triad:

Any attempt to derive even as much as the first foundation of this [minor] system, i.e., the minor triad itself, from Nature, i.e., from the overtone series, would be more than futile. ... The explanation becomes much easier if artistic intention rather than Nature herself is credited with the origin of the minor mode.".[13]

The basic component of Schenkerian harmony is the Stufe (scale degree, scale-step), i.e. a chord having gained structural significance. Chords arise from within chords, as the result of the combination of passing notes and arpeggiations: they are at first mere embellishments, mere voice-leading constructions, but they become tonal spaces open for further elaboration and, once elaborated, can be considered structurally significant: they become scale-steps properly speaking. Schenker recognizes that "there are no rules which could be laid down once and for all" for recognizing scale steps,[14] but from his examples one may deduce that a triad cannot be recognized as a scale-step as long as it can be explained by passing or neighboring voice-leading.

Schenkerian analyses label scale-steps with Roman numerals, a practice common in 19th- and 20th-century Vienna, developed by the theoretic work of Georg Joseph Vogler and his student Gottfried Weber, transmitted by Simon Sechter and his disciple Anton Bruckner, the classes of whom Schenker had followed in the Konservatorium in Vienna.[15]

Schenker's theory is monotonal: the Ursatz, as the diatonic unfolding of the tonic triad, by definition cannot include modulation. Local "tonicisation" may arise when a scale-step is elaborated to the point of becoming a local tonic, but the work as a whole projects a single key and ultimately a single Stufe (the tonic).[16]

Counterpoint, voice-leading

Two-voice counterpoint remains for Schenker the model of strict writing. Free composition is a freer usage of the laws of strict counterpoint. One of the aims of the analysis is to trace how the work remains subject to these laws at the deepest level, despite the freedom taken at subsequent levels.[17]

One aspect of strict, two-voice writing that appears to span Schenker's theory throughout the years of its elaboration is the rule of "fluent melody" (fließender Gesang), or "melodic fluency".[18] Schenker attributes the rule to Luigi Cherubini, who would have written that "fluent melody is always preferable in strict counterpoint."[19] Melodic fluency, the preference for conjunct (stepwise) motion, is one of the main rules of voice leading, even in free composition. It avoids successive leaps and produces "a kind of wave-like melodic line which as a whole represents an animated entity, and which, with its ascending and descending curves, appears balanced in all its individual component parts".[20] This idea is at the origin of that of linear progression (Zug) and, more specifically, of that of the Fundamental Line (Urlinie).

Ursatz

 
Minimal Ursatz: a line       supported by an arpeggiation of the bass

Ursatz (usually translated as "fundamental structure") is the name given by Schenker to the underlying structure in its simplest form, that from which the work as a whole originates. In the canonical form of the theory, it consists of the Urlinie, the "fundamental line", supported by the Bassbrechung, the "arpeggiation of the bass". The fundamental structure is a two-voice counterpoint and as such belongs to strict composition.[21] In conformity with the theory of the tonal space, the fundamental line is a line starting from any note of the triad and descending to the tonic itself. The arpeggiation is an arpeggiation through the fifth, ascending from I to V and descending back to I. The Urlinie unfolds the tonal space in a melodic dimension, while the Bassbrechung expresses its harmonic dimension.[22]

The theory of the fundamental structure is the most criticized aspect of Schenkerian theory: it has seemed unacceptable to reduce all tonal works to one of a few almost identical background structures. This is a misunderstanding: Schenkerian analysis is not about demonstrating that all compositions can be reduced to the same background, but about showing how each work elaborates the background in a unique, individual manner, determining both its identity and its "meaning". Schenker has made this his motto: Semper idem, sed non eodem modo, "always the same, but never in the same manner".[23]

Fundamental line

The idea of the fundamental line comes quite early in the development of Schenker's theory. Its first printed mention dates from 1920, in the edition of Beethoven's Sonata Op. 101, but the idea obviously links with that of "fluent melody", ten years earlier.[24] Schenker first conceived the Urlinie, the "fundamental line", as a kind of motivic line characterized by its fluency, repeated under different guises throughout the work and ensuring its homogeneity. He later imagined that a musical work should have only one fundamental line, unifying it from beginning to end. The realization that such fundamental lines usually were descending led him to formulate the canonical definition of the fundamental line as necessarily descending. It is not that he rejected ascending lines, but that he came to consider them hierarchically less important. "The fundamental line begins with  ,   or  , and moves to   via the descending leading tone  ".[25] The initial note of the fundamental line is called its "head tone" (Kopfton) or "primary tone". The head note may be elaborated by an upper neighbour note, but not a lower one.[26] In many cases, the head note is reached through an ascending line (Anstieg, "initial ascent") or an ascending arpeggiation, which do not belong to the fundamental structure properly speaking.[27]

Arpeggiation of the bass and the divider at the fifth

The arpeggiation through the fifth is an imitation of the overtone series, adapted to man [sic] "who within his own capacities can experience sound only in a succession".[28] The fifth of the arpeggiation coincides with the last passing note   of the fundamental line. This at first produces a mere "divider at the fifth", a complex filling in of the tonal space. However, as a consonant combination, it defines at a further level a new tonal space, that of the dominant chord, and so doing opens the path for further developments of the work. It would appear that the difference between the divider at the fifth and the dominant chord properly speaking really depends on the level at which the matter is considered: the notion of the divider at the fifth views it as an elaboration of the initial tonal space, while the notion of dominant chord conceives it as a new tonal space created within the first. But the opinions of modern Schenkerians diverge on this point.[29]

Schenkerian notation

Graphic representations form an important part of Schenkerian analyses: "the use of music notation to represent musical relationships is a unique feature of Schenker's work".[30] Schenkerian graphs are based on a "hierarchic" notation, where the size of the notes, their rhythmic values and/or other devices indicate their structural importance. Schenker himself, in the foreword to his Five Graphic Analyses, claimed that "the presentation in graphic form has now been developed to a point that makes an explanatory text unnecessary".[31] Even so, Schenkerian graphs represent a change of semiotic system, a shift from music itself to its graphical representation, akin to the more usual change from music to verbal (analytic) commentary; but this shift already exists in the score itself, and Schenker rightly noted the analogy between music notation and analysis.[32] One aspect of graphic analyses that may not have been enough stressed is the desire to abolish time, to represent the musical work as something that could be apprehended at a glance or, at least, in a way that would replace a "linear" reading by a "tabular" one.

 
Rhythmic reduction of the first measures of Chopin's Etude, Op. 10, no. 1. Simplified version of the analysis of the "ground-harmony" in Czerny's School of Practical Composition, 1848
Original
Reduction

The first step of the analytic rewriting often takes the form of a "rhythmic" reduction, that is one that preserves the score, but "normalizes" its rhythm and its voice-leading content.[33] This type of reduction has a long tradition, not only in counterpoint treatises or theory books,[34] but also in the simplified notation of some Baroque works, e.g. the Prelude to Händel's Suite in A major, HWV 426, or early versions of Bach's C major Prelude of Book I of the Well Tempered Keyboard. One indirect advantage of rhythmic reduction is that it helps reading the voice leading: Czerny's example hereby transforms Chopin's arpeggios into a composition in four (or five) voices. Edward Aldwell and Carl Schachter write that the first rewriting should "produce a setting that is reasonably close to note-against-note."[35] Allen Cadwallader and David Gagné suggest a special type of rhythmic reduction that they call "imaginary continuo",[36] stressing the link between the rhythmic reduction and a notation as a melody with figured bass. Basically, it consists in imagining a figured bass line for the work analyzed, and writing a chordal realization of it.

Schenker himself usually began his analyses with a rhythmic reduction that he termed Urlinietafel. From 1925 onwards, he complemented these with other levels of representation, corresponding to the successive steps leading to the fundamental structure. At first, he mainly relied on the size of the note shapes to denote their hierarchic level, but later abandoned this system as it proved too complex for contemporary techniques of musical engraving. Allen Cadwallader and David Gagné propose a description of Schenker's system of graphic notation which, they say, "is flexible, enabling musicians to express in subtle (and sometimes different) ways what they hear and how they interpret a composition". They discuss open noteheads, usually indicating the highest structural level, and filled-in noteheads for tones of lower levels; slurs, grouping tones in an arpeggio or in linear motions with passing or neighbor tones; beams, for linear motions of higher structural level or for the arpeggiation of the bass; broken ties, for repeated or sustained tones; diagonal lines to realign displaced notes; diagonal beams, connecting successive notes that belong to the same chord ("unfolding"); etc.[37]

Techniques of prolongation

The meat of a Schenkerian analysis is in showing how a background structure expands until it results in the succession of musical events on the surface of the composition itself. Schenker refers to this process under the term Auskomponierung, literally "composing out", but more often translated as "elaboration". Modern Schenkerians usually prefer the term "prolongation", stressing that elaborations develop the events along the time axis.

Schenker writes:

In practical art the main problem is how to realize the concept of harmony in a live content. In Chopin's Prelude, Op. 28, No 6, thus, it is the motif

 

Chord
Arpeggio
that gives life to the abstract concept of the triad, B, D, F-sharp.[38]

The elaboration of the triad, here mainly in the form of an arpeggio, loads it with "live content", with meaning. Elaborations take the form of diminutions, replacing the total duration of the elaborated event by shorter events in larger number. By this, notes are displaced both in pitch and in rhythmic position. The analysis to some extent aims at restoring displaced notes to their "normal" position and explaining how and why they were displaced.[39]

 
Elaboration of the F major chord

One aspect of Schenkerian analysis is that it does not view the work as built from a succession of events, but as the growth of new events from within events of higher level, much as a tree develops twigs from its branches and branches from its trunk: it is in this sense that Schenkerian theory must be considered organicist. The example shown here may at first be considered a mere elaboration of an F major chord, an arpeggiation in three voices, with passing notes (shown here in black notes without stem) in the two higher voices: it is an exemplification of the tonal space of F major. The chord labelled (V) at first merely is a "divider at the fifth". However, the meeting of the fifth (C) in the bass arpeggiation with the passing notes may also be understood as producing a dominant chord, V, arising from within the tonic chord I. This is the situation found at the beginning of Haydn's Sonata in F major, Hob. XVI:29, where the (incomplete) dominant chord appears at the very end of bar 3, while the rest of the fragment consists of arpeggios (with neighbor notes) of the F chord:[40]

 

Arpeggiation, neighbour note, passing note

Arpeggiation is the simplest form of elaboration. It delimits a tonal space for elaboration, but lacks the melodic dimension that would allow further developments: it "remains a harmonic phenomenon".[41] From the very structure of triads (chords), it follows that arpeggiations remain disjunct and that any filling of their space involves conjunct motion. Schenker distinguishes two types of filling of the tonal space: 1) neighbor notes (Nebennoten), ornamenting one single note of the triad by being adjacent to it. These are sometimes referred to generically as "adjacencies"; 2) passing notes, which pass by means of stepwise motion from one note to another and fill the space in between, and are thus sometimes referred to as "connectives". Both neighbor notes and passing notes are dissonances. They may be made consonant by their coinciding with other notes (as in the Haydn example above) and, once consonant, may delimit further tonal spaces open to further elaborations. Insofar as chords consist of several voices, arpeggiations and passing notes always involve passing from one voice to another.

Linear progression

A linear progression (Zug) is the stepwise filling of some consonant interval. It usually is underlined in graphic analyses with a slur from the first note of the progression to the last. The most elementary linear progressions are determined by the tonal space that they elaborate: they span from the prime to the third, from the third to the fifth or from the fifth to the octave of the triad, in ascending or descending direction. Schenker writes: "there are no other tonal spaces than those of 1–3, 3–5, and 5–8. There is no origin for passing-tone- progressions, or for melody"[42] Linear progressions, in other words, may be either third progressions (Terzzüge) or fourth progressions (Quartzüge); larger progressions result from a combination of these. Linear progressions may be incomplete (deceptive) when one of their tones is replaced by another, but nevertheless suggested by the harmony. In the example below, the first bars of Beethoven's Sonata Op. 109, the bass line descends from E3 to E2. F2 is replaced by B1 in order to mark the cadence, but it remains implicit in the B chord. In addition, the top voice answers the bass line by a voice exchange, E4–F4–G4 above G2–(F2)–E2, in bar 3, after a descending arpeggio of the E major chord. The bass line is doubled in parallel tenths by the alto voice, descending from G4 to G3, and the tenor voice alternatively doubles the soprano and the bass, as indicated by the dotted slurs. It is the bass line that governs the passage as a whole: it is the "leading progression", on which all the other voices depend and which best expresses the elaboration of the E major chord.[43]

 

Reduction
Original

Schenker describes lines covering a seventh or a ninth as "illusory",[44] considering that they stand for a second (with a register transfer): they do not fill a tonal space, they pass from one chord to another.[45]

Lines between voices, reaching over

Passing tones filling the intervals of a chord may be considered forming lines between the voices of this chord. At the same time, if the chord tones themselves are involved in lines from one chord to another (as usually is the case), lines of lower level unfurl between lines of higher level. The most interesting case is when the lines link an inner voice to the upper voice. This may happen not only in ascending (a case usually described as a "line from an inner voice"), but also in descending, if the inner voice has been displaced above the upper line by a register transfer, a case known as "reaching over" (Übergreifen, also translated as superposition or overlapping).[46] In the example from Schubert's Wanderers Nachtlied below, the descending line G–F–E–D at the end of the first bar may be read as a reaching over.

Unfolding

Unfolding (Ausfaltung) is an elaboration by which several voices of a chord or of a succession of chords are combined in one single line "in such a manner that a tone of the upper voice is connected to a tone of the inner voice and then moves back, or the reverse".[47] At the end of Schubert's Wanderers Nachtlied op. 4 no. 3, the vocal melody unfolds two voices of the succession I–V–I; the lower voice, B–A–G, is the main one, expressing the tonality of G major; the upper voice, D–C–B, is doubled one octave lower in the right hand of the accompaniment:

 
Reduction
Original

In his later writings (from 1930 onwards), Schenker sometimes used a special sign to denote the unfolding, an oblique beam connecting notes of the different voices that are conceptually simultaneous, even if they are presented in succession in the single line performing the unfolding.[48]

Register transfer, coupling

"Register transfer" is the motion of one or several voices into a different octave (i.e. into a different register). Schenker considers that music normally unfolds in one register, the "obligatory register" (Ger. Obligate Lage), but at times is displaced to higher or lower registers. These are called, respectively, "ascending register transfer" (Ger. Höherlegung) and "descending register transfer" (Ger. Tieferlegung).[49] Register transfers are particularly striking in piano music (and that for other keyboard instruments), where contrasts of register (and the distance between the two hands) may have a striking, quasi orchestral effect.[50] "Coupling" is when the transferred parts retain a link with their original register. The work, in this case, appears to unfold in two registers in parallel.

Voice exchange

Voice exchange is a common device in counterpoint theory. Schenkerians view it as a means of elaborating a chord by modifying its position. Two voices exchange their notes, often with passing notes in between. At the end of the example of Beethoven's Op. 109 above, the bass and soprano exchange their notes: G is transferred from bass to soprano, while E is transferred from soprano to bass. The exchange is marked by crossed lines between these notes.[51]

Elaboration of the fundamental structure

The elaborations of the fundamental structure deserve a specific discussion because they may determine the form of the work in which they occur.

Initial ascent, initial arpeggiation

The starting point of the fundamental line, its "head note" (Kopfton), may be reached only after an ascending motion, either an initial ascending line (Anstieg) or an initial arpeggiation, which may take more extension than the descending fundamental line itself. This results in melodies in arch form. Schenker decided only in 1930 that the fundamental line should be descending: in his earlier analyses, initial ascending lines often are described as being part of the Urlinie itself.[27]

First-order neighbor note

Schenker stresses that the head note of the fundamental line often is decorated by a neighbor note "of the first order", which must be an upper neighbor because "the lower neighboring note would give the impression of the interruption". The neighbor note of the first order is     or    : the harmony supporting it often is the IVth or VIth degree, which may give rise to a section of the work at the subdominant.[52]

Articulation of the span from I to V in the bass arpeggiation

The canonic form of the bass arpeggiation is I–V–I. The second interval, V–I, forms under    the perfect authentic cadence and is not susceptible of elaboration at the background level. The first span, I–V, on the other hand, usually is elaborated. The main cases include:[53]

I–III–V

This is the complete arpeggiation of the triad. Once elaborated, it may consist in a succession of three tonalities, especially in pieces in minor. In these cases, III stands for a tonicisation of the major relative. This often occurs in Sonata forms in minor, where the first thematic group elaborates degree I, the second thematic group is in the major relative, degree III, and the development leads to V before the recapitulation in the tonic key.

I–IV–V or I–II–V

 
Bass elaboration I–IV–V–I

Even though he never discussed them at length, these elaborations occupy a very special place in Schenker's theory. One might even argue that no description of an Ursatz properly speaking is complete if it does not include IV or II at the background level. Schenker uses a special sign to denote this situation, the double curve shown in the example hereby, crossing the slur that links IV (or II) to V. That IV (here, F) is written as a quarter note indicates that it is of lower rank than I and V, notated as half notes. Here there is an unexpected link between Schenkerian theory and Riemann's theory of tonal functions, a fact that might explain Schenker's reluctance to be more explicit about it. In modern Schenkerian analysis, the chord of IV or II is often dubbed the "predominant" chord, as the chord that prepares the dominant one, and the progression may be labelled "T–P–D–T", for tonic–predominant–dominant–tonic.

I–II–III–IV–V

The dominant chord may be linked to the tonic by a stepwise linear progression. In such case, one of the chords in the progression, II, III or IV, usually takes preeminence, reducing the case to one or the other described above.

Interruption

The interruption (Unterbrechung) is an elaboration of the fundamental line, which is interrupted at its last passing note,  , before it reaches its goal. As a result, the bass arpeggiation itself is also interrupted at the divider at the fifth (V). Both the fundamental line and the bass arpeggiation are bound to return to their starting point and the fundamental structure repeats itself, eventually reaching its goal. The interruption is the main form-generating elaboration: it often is used in binary forms (when the first part ends on the dominant) or, if the elaboration of the "dividing dominant",   above V, takes some importance, it may produce ternary form, typically sonata form.[54]

Mixture

Schenker calls "mixture" (Mischung) the change of mode of the tonic, i.e. the replacement of its major third by the minor one, or of its minor third by the major one. The elaboration of the resulting chord may give rise to a section in minor within a work in major, or the reverse.[55]

Transference of the fundamental structure

The forms of the fundamental structure may be repeated at any level of the work. "Every transferred form [of the fundamental structure] has the effect of a self-contained structure within which the upper and lower voices delimit a single tonal space".[56] That is to say that any phrase in a work could take the form of a complete fundamental structure. Many classical themes (e.g. the theme to the set of variations in Mozart's K. 331 piano sonata) form self-contained structure of this type. This resemblance of local middleground structures to background structures is part of the beauty and appeal of Schenkerian analysis, giving it the appearance of a recursive construction.[57]

Legacy and responses

Europe before World War II

Schenker himself mentioned in a letter of 1927 to his student Felix-Eberhard von Cube that his ideas continued "to be felt more widely: Edinburgh [with John Petrie Dunn], (also New York [probably with George Wedge]), Leipzig [with Reinhard Oppel], Stuttgart [with Herman Roth], Vienna (myself and [Hans] Weisse), [Otto] Vrieslander in Munich […], yourself [von Cube] in Duisburg, and [August] Halm [in Wickersdorf, Thuringia]."[58] Von Cube, with Moritz Violin, another of Schenker's students, founded the Schenker Institut in Hamburg in 1931.[59] Oswald Jonas published Das Wesen des musikalischen Kunstwerkes in 1932, and Felix Salzer Sinn und Wesen des Abendländischen Mehrstimmigkeits in 1935, both based on Schenkerian concepts. Oswald Jonas and Felix Salzer founded and edited together the short-lived Schenkerian journal Der Dreiklang (Vienna, 1937–1938).[60]

World War II brought European studies to a halt. Schenker's publications were placed under Nazi ban and some were confiscated by the Gestapo. It is in the United States that Schenkerian analysis knew its first important developments. This history has been contextualized by comments on both sides of the Atlantic, notably by Martin Eybl[61] and Philip A. Ewell.[62]

Early reception in the US

George Wedge taught some of Schenker's ideas as early as 1925 in the Institute of Musical Arts, New York.[63] Victor Vaughn Lytle, who had studied with Hans Weisse in Vienna, wrote what may be the earliest English-language essay dealing with Schenkerian concepts, "Music Composition of the Present" (The American Organist, 1931), without however really crediting Schenker for them.[64] Weisse himself, who had studied with Schenker at least from 1912, immigrated to the United States and began teaching Schenkerian analysis at the Mannes School of Music in New York in 1931. One of his students, Adele T. Katz, devoted an article to "Heinrich Schenker's Method of Analysis" in 1935,[65] then an important book, Challenge to Musical Tradition, in 1945, in which she applied Schenkerian analytical concepts not only to some of Schenker's favorite composers, Johann Sebastian and Philipp Emmanuel Bach, Haydn and Beethoven, but also to Wagner, Debussy, Stravinsky and Schoenberg: this certainly represents one of the earliest attempts to widen the corpus of Schenkerian analysis.[66]

The opinions of the critics were not always positive, however. Roger Sessions published in Modern Music 12 (May–June 1935) an obituary article under the title "Heinrich Schenker's Contribution"[67] where, after having recognized some of Schenker's achievements, he criticizes the development of the last years, until Der freie Satz (which he admits is not yet available in the US) and concludes that "It is precisely when Schenker's teachings leave the domain of exact description and enter that of dogmatic and speculative analysis that they become essentially sterile".[68] The most raging attack against Schenker came in the "Editorial" that Paul Henry Lang devoted in The Musical Quarterly 32/2 (April 1946) to the recently published book by Adele Katz, Challenge to Musical Tradition, which he opposed to Donald Tovey's Beethoven, also published in 1945; his attacks also target Schenker's followers, probably the American ones. He writes:

Schenker's and his disciples' musical theory and philosophy is not art, its whole outlook – at least as expressed in their writings – lacks feeling. There was seldom a colder spirit than theirs; the only warmth one feels is the warmth of dogmatism. Music interests them only insofar as it fits into their system ... In reality music serves only to furnish grist for the mill of their insatiable theoretical mind, not for their heart or imagination. There is no art, no poetry, in this remarkable system which deals with the raw materials of music with a virtuoso hand. Schenker and his disciples play with music as others play chess, not even suspecting what fantasy, what sentimental whirlpools lie at the bottom of every composition. They see lines only, no colors, and their ideas are cold and orderly. But music is color and warmth, which are the values of a concrete art.[69]

After World War II

Translations

Schenker left about 4000 pages of printed text, of which the translations at first were astonishingly slow. Nearly all have been translated into English, and the project Schenker Documents Online is busy with the edition and translation of more than 100 000 manuscript pages. Translations in other languages remain slow.

  • 1904 Ein Beitrag zur Ornamentik.
    • 1976 Transl. by H. Siegel, Music Forum 4, pp. 1–139.
    • 1979 Japanese translation by A. Noro and A. Tamemoto.
  • 1906 Harmonielehre.
    • 1954 Harmony, transl. by Elisabeth Mann Borgese, edited and annotated by Oswald Jonas ISBN 9780226737348 (with editorial cuts in text and music examples)
    • 1990 Spanish transl. by R. Barce.
  • 1910 Kontrapunkt I.
    • 1987 Counterpoint I, transl. by J. Rothgeb and J. Thym.
  • 1912 Beethovens neunte Sinfonie, 1912
    • 1992 Beethoven's Ninth Symphony: a Portrayal of its Musical Content, with Running Commentary on Performance and Literature as well, transl. by J. Rothgeb, 1992.
    • 2010 Japanese transl. by H. Nishida and T. Numaguchi.
  • 1913 Beethoven, Sonate E dur op. 109 (Erläuterungsausgabe).
    • 2012 Japanese transl. by M. Yamada, H. Nishida and T. Numaguchi.
    • 2015 English transl. by J. Rothgeb.
  • 1914 Beethoven, Sonate As dur op. 110 (Erläuterungsausgabe).
    • 2013 Japanese transl. by M. Yamada, H. Nishida and T. Numaguchi.
    • 2015 English transl. by J. Rothgeb.
  • 1915 Beethoven, Sonate C moll op. 111 (Erläuterungsausgabe).
    • 2015 English transl. by J. Rothgeb.
  • 1920 Beethoven, Sonate A dur op. 101 (Erläuterungsausgabe).
    • 2015 English transl. by J. Rothgeb.
  • 1921–1924 Der Tonwille (10 vols.)
    • 2004–2005 Der Tonwille, transl. under the direction of William Drabkin.
  • 1922 Kontrapunkt II.
    • 1987 Counterpoint II, transl. by J. Rothgeb and J. Thym.
  • 1922 "Haydn: Sonate Es-Dur", Der Tonwille III, pp. 3–21.
    • 1988 Transl. by W. Petty, Theoria 3, pp. 105–160.
  • 1923 "J. S. Bach: Zwölf kleine Präludien Nr. 2 [BWV 939]", Der Tonwille IV, 1923, p. 7.
    • [2007] French transl. by N. Meeùs.
  • 1923 "J. S. Bach: Zwölf kleine Präludien Nr. 5 [BWV 926]", Der Tonwille V, pp. 8–9.
    • [2006] French transl. by N. Meeùs.
  • 1924 "Mendelssohn: Venetianisches Gondellied, op. 30, Nr. 6", Der Tonwille X, pp. 25–29.
    • [2011] French transl. by N. Meeùs.
  • 1924 "Schumann: Kinderszenen Nr. 1, Von fremden Ländern und Menschen", Der Tonwille X, pp. 34–35.
    • [2011] French transl. by N. Meeùs.
  • 1924 "Schumann: Kinderszenen op. 15, Nr. 9, Träumerei", Der Tonwille X, pp. 36–39.
    • [2011] French transl. by N. Meeùs.
  • 1925 Beethovens V. Sinfonie. Darstellung des musikalischen Inhaltes nach der Handschrift unter fortlaufender Berücksichtigung des Vortrages und der Literatur, Vienne, Tonwille Verlag and Universal Edition. Reprint 1970.
    • 1971 Ludwig van Beethoven: Symphony N. 5 in C minor, partial transl. by E. Forbes and F. J. Adams jr., New York, Norton, 1971 (Norton Critical Score 9), pp. 164–182.
    • 2000 Japanese transl. by T. Noguchi.
  • 1925–1930 Das Meisterwerk in der Musik, 3 vols.
    • 1998 transl. under the direction of William Drabkin.
  • 1925 "Die Kunst der Improvisation", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I, pp. 9–40.
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
  • 1925 "Weg mit dem Phrasierungsbogen", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I, pp. 41–60.
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
  • 1925 "Joh. S. Bach: Sechs Sonaten für Violine. Sonata III, Largo", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I, pp. 61–73.
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
    • 1976 Transl. by J. Rothgeb, The Music Forum 4, pp. 141–159.
  • 1925 "Joh. S. Bach: Zwölf kleine Präludien, Nr. 6 [BWV 940]", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I, pp. 99–105.
    • [2010] French transl. by N. Meeùs.
  • 1925 "Joh. S. Bach: Zwölf kleine Präludien, Nr. 12 [BWV 942]", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I, 1925, pp. 115–123.
    • [2006] French transl. by N. Meeùs.
  • 1925 "Domenico Scarlatti: Keyboard Sonata in D minor, [L.413]", Das Meisterwerk in der Music I, pp. 125–135.
    • 1986 Transl. by J. Bent, Music Analysis 5/2-3, pp. 153–164.
  • 1925 "Domenico Scarlatti: Keyboard Sonata in G major, [L.486]", Das Meisterwerk in der Music I, pp. 137–144.
    • 1986 Transl. by J. Bent, Music Analysis 5/2-3, pp. 171–179.
  • 1925 "Chopin: Etude Ges-Dur op. 10, Nr. 5", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I, pp. 161–173.
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
  • 1925 "Erläuterungen", Das Meisterwerk in der Music I, pp. 201–205. (Also published in Der Tonwille 9 and 10 and in Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II.)
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
    • 1986 Transl. by J. Bent, Music Analysis 5/2-3, pp. 187–191.
    • [2011] French transl. by N. Meeùs.
  • 1926 "Fortsetzung der Urlinie-Betrachtungen", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II, pp. 9–42.
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
  • 1926 "Vom Organischen der Sonatenform", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II, pp. 43–54.
    • 1968 Transl. by O. Grossman, Journal of Music Theory 12, pp. 164–183, reproduced in Readings in Schenker Analysis and Other Approaches, M. Yeston ed., New Haven, 1977, pp. 38–53.
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
  • 1926 "Das Organische der Fuge, aufgezeigt an der I. C-Moll-Fuge aus dem Wohltemperierten Klavier von Joh. Seb. Bach", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II, pp. 55–95
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
  • 1926 "Joh. Seb. Bach: Suite III C-Dur für Violoncello-Solo, Sarabande", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II, 1926, pp. 97–104.
    • 1970 Transl. by H. Siegel, The Music Forum 2, pp. 274–282.
  • "Mozart: Sinfonie G-Moll", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II, pp. 105–157.
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
  • "Haydn: Die Schöpfung. Die Vorstellung des Chaos", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II, pp. 159–170.
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
  • "Ein Gegenbeispiel: Max Reger, op. 81. Variationen und Fuge über ein Thema von Joh. Seb. Bach für Klavier", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II, pp. 171–192.
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
  • 1930 "Rameau oder Beethoven? Erstarrung oder geistiges Leben in der Musik?", Das Meisterwerk in der Musik III, pp. 9–24.
    • 1973 Transl. by S. Kalib, "Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik: An Annotated Translation," PhD diss., Northwestern University.
  • 1932 Fünf Urlinie-Tafeln.
    • 1933 Five Analyses in Sketch Form, New York, D. Mannes Music School.
    • 1969 New version with a glossary by F. Salzer: Five Graphic Music Analyses, New York, Dover.
  • 1935/1956 Der freie Satz. Translations of the 2nd edition, 1956.
    • 1979 Free Composition, transl. by E. Oster, 1979.
    • 1993 L'Écriture libre, French transl. by N. Meeùs, Liège-Bruxelles, Mardaga.
    • 1997 Chinese translation by Chen Shi-Ben, Beijing, People's Music Publications.
    • 2004 Russian transl. by B. Plotnikov, Krasnoyarsk Academy of Music and Theatre.

Textbooks

  • Oswald Jonas, Das Wesen des musikalischen Kunstwerks, Wien, Universal, 1934; revised edition, Einführung in die Lehre Heinrich Schenkers. Das Wesen des musikalischen Kunstwerkes, Wien, Universal, 1972. English translation of the revised edition, Introduction to the Theory of Heinrich Schenker: The Nature of the Musical Work of Art, transl. J. Rothgeb, New York and London, Longman, 1982; 2d [revised and expanded] edition, Ann Arbor, Musicalia Press, 2005.
  • Felix Salzer, Structural Hearing: Tonal Coherence in Music, 2 vols., New York, Charles Boni, 1952. Reprint, 2 vols. bound as one, New York, Dover, 1982.
  • Allen Forte and Steven E. Gilbert, Introduction to Schenkerian Analysis and Instructor's Manual for Introduction to Schenkerian Analysis, New York, London, Dover, 1982.
  • Allen Cadwallader and David Gagné, Analysis of Tonal Music. A Schenkerian Approach, New York, Oxford University Press, 3rd edition, 2011 (1st edition, 1998).
  • Edward Aldwell and Carl Schachter, Harmony and Voice Leading, Boston, Schirmer, Cengage Learning, 4th edition (with Allen Cadwallader), 2011 (1st edition, 2003).
  • Tom Pankhurst, Schenkerguide. A Brief Handbook and Website for Schenkerian Analysis, New York and London, Routledge, 2008 Schenkerguide website.
  • William Renwick and David Walker, Schenkerian Analysis Glossary.
  • Larry J. Solomon, A Schenkerian Primer.
  • Nicolas Meeùs, Análise schenkeriana, Portuguese (Brasil) translation from the French by L. Beduschi, 2008.
  • Luciane Beduschi and Nicolas Meeùs, Analyse schenkérienne (in French), 2013; several earlier versions archived on the same page. Albanian translation by Sokol Shupo, available on the same webpage.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Schenker described the concept in a paper titled Erläuterungen (“Elucidations”), which he published four times between 1924 and 1926: Der Tonwille vol. 8–9, pp. 49–51, vol. 10, pp. 40–42; Das Meisterwerk in der Musik, vol. 1, pp. 201–205; 2, pp. 193–197. English translation, Der Tonwille, vol. 2, pp. 117–118 (the translation, although made from vols. 8–9 of the German original, gives as original pagination that of Das Meisterwerk 1; the text is the same). The concept of tonal space is still present in Free Composition, especially §13 where Schenker writes: "By the concept of tonal space, I understand the space of the horizontal fulfillment of the Urlinie. ... The tonal space is only to be understood horizontally."
  2. ^ Free Composition, § 21.
  3. ^ Schenker writes: "In the distance between the Urlinie and the foreground, between the diatony and the tonality, the spatial depth of a musical work expresses itself, the distant origin in the utter simple, the transformation through subsequent stages, and the diversity in the foreground" (Im Abstand von der Urlinie zum Vordergrund, von der Diatonie zur Tonalität, drückt sich die Raumtiefe eines Musikwerkes aus, die ferne Herkunft vom Allereinfachsten, der Wandel im späteren Verlauf und der Reichtum im Vordergrund.). Der freie Satz, 1935, p. 17; Free Composition, p. 5 (translation modified).
  4. ^ Robert Snarrenberg, Schenker's Interpretive Practice, Cambridge Studies in Music Theory and Analysis 11, 1997.
  5. ^ Free Composition, pp. xxi-xxiv, 158-162. Der Tonwille, English translation, Vol. I, 17.
  6. ^ For a complete list of the works discussed by Schenker, see Larry Laskowski, Heinrich Schenker. An Annotated Index to his Analyses of Musical Works, New York, Pendragon, 1978. Influential early exponents of Schenker's theory in the United states, Adele T. Katz and Felix Salzer, opposed Schenker's musical conservatism and expanded the analytical method to more modern repertoire. See § Early reception in the US
  7. ^ Das Meisterwerk in der Musik, vol. II, pp. 17-18, 192 (English translation, p. 1-22, 117)
  8. ^ See Schenker's "instructional plan" described in his Introduction to Free Composition, pp. xxi–xxii. The steps of this plan are: "Instruction in strict writing (according to Fux-Schenker), in thorough-bass (according to J.S. and C.P.E. Bach) and in free writing (according to Schenker), that finally combines all studies and places them in the service of the law of organic coherence as it reveals itself in the Ursatz (Urlinie and bass arpeggiation) as background, in the voice-leading transformations as middelground and ultimately through the foreground." (Translation modified following Der freie Satz, 1935, p. 2.)
  9. ^ Der Tonwille 1 (1921), p. 23; 2 (1922), pp. 31 and 35; Der Tonwille, English translation, vol. I, pp. 22, 77 and 82. The term has been taken over by Wilhelm Furtwängler, Wort und Ton, Wiesbaden, Brockhaus, 1954, pp. 201–202.
  10. ^ Felix Salzer, Structural Hearing, New York, Boni, 1952.
  11. ^ Free Composition, § 1. See also Harmony, § 13.
  12. ^ The same link is made, for instance, in Schoenberg's Harmonielehre, Wien, Universal, 1911, 7/1966, p. 16.
  13. ^ Harmony, § 23
  14. ^ Harmony, § 79.
  15. ^ Robert E. Wason, Viennese Harmonic Theory from Albrechtsberger to Schenker and Schoenberg, Ann Arbor, London, UMI Research Press, 1982/1985.
  16. ^ Matthew Brown, Explaining Tonality. Schenkerian Theory and Beyond, Rochester, University of Rochester Press, 2005, p. 69, reproduces a chart showing that the "tonality of a given foreground can be generated from the diatony of the given background through various levels of the middleground".
  17. ^ Heinrich Schenker, Counterpoint, vol. I, p. 12: "In the present day, when it is necessary to distinguish clearly between composition and that preliminary school represented by strict counterpoint, we must use the eternally valid of those rules for strict counterpoint, even if we no longer view them as applicable to composition".
  18. ^ N. Meeùs, "Schenker's fließender Gesang and the Concept of Melodic Fluency", Orfeu 2/1, 2017, pp. 160-170.
  19. ^ Counterpoint, vol. I, p. 74. J. Rothgeb and J. Thym, the translators, quote Cherubini from the original French, which merely says that "conjunct motion better suits strict counterpoint than disjunct motion", but Schenker had written: der fliessende Gesang ist im strengen Stile immer besser as der sprungweise (Kontrapunkt, vol. I, p. 104) ("the fluent melody is always better in strict style than the disjunct one"). Fliessender Gesang not only appears in several 19th-century German translations of Cherubini, but is common in German counterpoint theory from the 18th century and might go back to Fux' description of the flexibili motuum facilitate, the "flexible ease of motions" (Gradus, Liber secundus, Exercitii I, Lectio quinta) or even earlier. N. Meeùs, Schenker's Fliessender Gesang and the Concept of Melodic Fluency, Orfeu 2/1 (2017), pp. 162-63.
  20. ^ Counterpoint, vol. I, p. 94.
  21. ^ The canonical Ursatz is discussed in Free Composition, §§ 1–44, but it was first described in Das Meisterwerk in der Musik, vol. III (1930), pp. 20–21 (English translation, p. 7-8). The word Ursatz already appeared in Schenker's writings in 1923 (Der Tonwille 5, p. 45; English translation, vol. I, p. 212).
  22. ^ Free Composition, pp. 4–5.
  23. ^ Schenker himself mentioned and refuted the criticism, in § 29 (p. 18) of Free Composition
  24. ^ Counterpoint, vol. I, 1910, quoted above.
  25. ^ Free Composition, § 10.
  26. ^ Free Composition, § 106.
  27. ^ a b Free Composition, § 120.
  28. ^ Free Composition, § 16.
  29. ^ William Rothstein, "Articles on Schenker and Schenkerian Theory in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd edition," Journal of Music Theory 45/1 (2001), pp. 218–219.
  30. ^ Beach 1983, ch. "Schenker's Theories: A Pedagogical View", p. 27.
  31. ^ H. Schenker, Fünf Urlinie-Tafeln (Five Analyses in Sketchform), New York, Mannes Music School, 1933; Five Graphic Analyses, New York, Dover, 1969. The Foreword is dated 30 August 1932.
  32. ^ On this most interesting topic, see Kofi Agawu, "Schenkerian Notation in Theory and Practice", Music Analysis 8/3 (1989), pp. 275–301.
  33. ^ William Rothstein, "Rhythmic Displacement and Rhythmic Normalization", Trends in Schenkerian Research, A. Cadwallader ed., New York, Schirmer, 1990, pp. 87–113. Rothstein's idea is that ornamentations such as retardations or syncopations result from displacements with respect to a "normal" rhythm; other diminutions (e.g. neighbor notes) also displace the tones that they ornate and usually shorten them. Removing these displacements and restoring the shortened note values operates a "rhythmic normalization" that "reflects an unconscious process used by every experienced listener" (p. 109).
  34. ^ Kofi Agawu, "Schenkerian Notation in Theory and Practice", op. cit., p. 287, quotes Czerny's representation of the "ground-harmony" of Chopin's Study op. 10 n. 1 (in his School of Practical Composition, 1848), reproduced here in a somewhat simplified version.
  35. ^ Edward Aldwell, Carl Schachter and Allen Cadwallader, Harmony and Voice Leading, 4th edition, Schirmer, Cengage Learning, 2011, p. 692.
  36. ^ Allen Cadwallader and David Gagné, Analysis of Tonal Music: A Schenkerian Approach, New York, OUP, 3/2011, pp. 66–68.
  37. ^ Op. cit., p. 384.
  38. ^ Harmonielehre, p. 281; English translation, p. 211.
  39. ^ William Rothstein, "Rhythmic Displacement and Rhythmic Normalization", Trends in Schenkerian Research, op. cit.
  40. ^ See http://nicolas.meeus.free.fr/Cours/2012Elaborations.pdf, examples 5 a and b, pp. 3 and 4.
  41. ^ Heinrich Schenker, "Elucidations", Der Tonwille 8–9, English translation, vol. II, p. 117 (translation by Ian Bent)
  42. ^ "Erläuterungen", Der Tonwille 8–9, English translation, vol. I, p. 117 (translation by Ian Bent).
  43. ^ Free composition, p. 78, §221.
  44. ^ Free Composition, pp. 74–75, §§ 205–207. Schenker's German term is scheinbare Züge, literally "apparent linear progressions"; Oster's translation as "illusory" may overstate the point.
  45. ^ The matter of the elaboration of seventh chords remains ambiguous in Schenkerian theory. See Yosef Goldenberg, Prolongation of Seventh Chords in Tonal Music, Lewinston, The Edwin Mellen Press, 2008.
  46. ^ Drabkin, William (2001). "Reaching over". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5.‎. See also Nicolas Meeùs, "Übergreifen," Gamut: Online Journal of the Music Theory Society of the Mid-Atlantic, vol. 8, iss. 1, article 6.
  47. ^ Free composition, p. 50, §140.
  48. ^ For a detailed study of "unfolding", see Rodney Garrison, Schenker's Ausfaltung Unfolded: Notation, Terminology, and Practice, PhD Thesis, State University of New York at Buffalo, 2012.
  49. ^ Drabkin, William (2001). "Register transfer". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5.
  50. ^ See David Gagné, "The Compositional Use of Register in Three Piano Sonatas by Mozart", Trends in Schenkerian Research, A. Cadwallader ed., New York, Schirmer, 1990, pp. 23–39.
  51. ^ Free Composition, §§ 236–237.
  52. ^ Free Composition, §106.
  53. ^ The cases described in the following paragraphs are discussed in Heinrich Schenker, "Further Consideration of the Urlinie: II", translated by John Rothgeb, The Masterwork in Music, vol. II, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1996, pp. 1–22.
  54. ^ Free Composition, §§ 87–101.
  55. ^ Free Composition, § 193.
  56. ^ Free Composition, p. 87, §242.
  57. ^ Matthew Brown, Explaining Tonality. Schenkerian Theory and Beyond, Rochester, University of Rochester Press, pp. 96–98.
  58. ^ Letter of June 1, 1927. See David Carson Berry, "Schenker's First 'Americanization': George Wedge, The Institute of Musical Art, and the 'Appreciation Racket'", Gamut 4/1 (2011), Essays in Honor of Allen Forte III, particularly p. 157 and note 43.
  59. ^ Benjamin Ayotte, "The Reception of Heinrich Schenker's Concepts Outside the United States as Indicated by Publications Based on His Works: A Preliminary Study", Acta musicologica (CZ), 2004 (online).
  60. ^ Berry 2003, p. 104.
  61. ^ Martin Eybl, Ideologie und Methode. Zum ideengeschichtlichen Kontext von Schenkers Musiktheorie. Hans Schneider, 1995.
  62. ^ Philip A. Ewell, "Music Theory and the White Racial Frame", MTO: A Journal of Music Theory 26/2, September, 2020. doi:10.30535/mto.26.2.4
  63. ^ David Carson Berry, "Schenker's First 'Americanization'", op. cit., pp. 143–144.
  64. ^ David Carson Berry, "Victor Vaughn Lytle and the Early Proselytism of Schenkerian Ideas in the U.S.", Journal of Schenkerian Studies 1 (2005), pp. 98–99. Theory and Practice 10/1-2 (1985) published for the 50th anniversary of Schenker's death other early American texts, including an unsigned obituary in The New York Times (February 3, 1935); Arthur Plettner, "Heinrich Schenker's Contribution to Theory" (Musical America VI/3, February 10, 1936); Israel Citkowitz, "The Role of Heinrich Schenker" (Modern Music XI/1, November–December 1933); Frank Knight Dale, "Heinrich Schenker and Musical Form", Bulletin of the American Musicological Society 7, October 1943); Hans Weisse, "The Music Teacher's Dilemma", Proceedings or the Music Teachers National Association (1935); William J. Mitchell, "Heinrich Schenker's Approach to Detail", Musicology I/2 (1946); Arthur Waldeck and Nathan Broder, "Musical Synthesis as Expounded by Heinrich Schenker", The Musical Mercury XI/4 (December 1935); and Adele T. Katz, "Heinrich Schenker's Method of Analysis" (The Musical Quarterly XXI/3, July 1935). See also David Carson Berry, A Topical Guide to Schenkerian Literature: An Annotated Bibliography with Indices (Hillsdale, New York, Pendragon Press, 2004), section XIV.c.ii., "Reception through English Language Writings, Prior to 1954", pp. 437–443.
  65. ^ The Musical Quarterly 21/3 (July 1935), pp. 311–329.
  66. ^ Adele Katz, Challenge to Musical Tradition. A New Concept of Tonality, New York, Alfred Knopf, 1945. The book is divided in nine chapters, the first describing "The Concept of Tonality", the eight following devoted to J. S. Bach, Ph. E. Bach, Haydn, Beethoven, Wagner, Debussy, Stravinsky and Schoenberg respectively. On Adele Katz, see David Carson Berry, "The Role of Adele T. Katz in the Early Expansion of the New York 'Schenker School,'" Current Musicology 74 (2002), pp. 103–151.
  67. ^ Reproduced in Critical Inquiry 2/1 (Autumn 1975), pp. 113–119.
  68. ^ Critical Inquiry 2/1, p. 118.
  69. ^ The Musical Quarterly 32/2, pp. 301–302.

References

Further reading

  • Blasius, Leslie D. (1996). Schenker's Argument and the Claims of Music Theory, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-55085-8.
  • Brown, Matthew (2005). Explaining Tonality: Schenkerian Theory and Beyond. University of Rochester Press. ISBN 1-58046-160-3.
  • Berry, David Carson(2004). . Hillsdale, New York: Pendragon Press; ISBN 9781576470954. A thorough documentation of Schenker-related research and analysis. The largest Schenkerian reference work ever published, it has 3600 entries (2200 principal, 1400 secondary) representing the work of 1475 authors. It is organized topically: fifteen broad groupings encompass seventy topical headings, many of which are divided and subdivided again, resulting in a total of 271 headings under which entries are collected.
  • Cook, Nicholas (2007). The Schenker Project: Culture, Race, and Music Theory in Fin-de-siècle Vienna. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-974429-7.
  • Eybl, Martin and Fink-Mennel, Evelyn, eds. (2006). Schenkerian traditions. A Viennese school of music theory and its international dissemination. Vienna, Cologne, Weimar: Böhlau. ISBN 3-205-77494-9.
  • Jonas, Oswald (1982). Introduction to the theory of Heinrich Schenker: the nature of the musical work of art. ISBN 9780967809939, translated by John Rothgeb. New York and London: Longman. "Most complete discussion of Schenker's theories." (Beach 1983)

Essays on the dissemination of Schenkerian thought in the U.S. by David Carson Berry:

  • "The Role of Adele T. Katz in the Early Expansion of the New York 'Schenker School'". Current Musicology. 74: 103–151. 2002.
  • "Victor Vaughn Lytle and the Early Proselytism of Schenkerian Ideas in the U.S". Journal of Schenkerian Studies. 1: 92–117. 2005.
  • "Schenkerian Theory in the United States: A Review of Its Establishment and a Survey of Current Research Topics". Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft für Musiktheorie. 2 (2–3): 101–137. 2005.
  • Eybl, Martin; Fink-Mennel, Evelyn, eds. (2006). "Hans Weisse (1892–1940)". Schenker-Traditionen: Eine Wiener Schule der Musiktheorie und ihre internationale Verbreitung [Schenker Traditions: A Viennese School of Music Theory and Its International Dissemination]. Vienna: Böhlau Verlag. pp. 91–103. ISBN 978-3-205-77494-5.

Summaries

Pedagogical works

  • Forte, Allen and Gilbert, Steven E. (1982). Introduction to Schenkerian Analysis. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-95192-8. Schenker never presented a pedagogical presentation of his theories, this being the first according to its authors.
  • Snarrenberg, Robert (1997). "Schenker's Interpretive Practice." Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-49726-4.
  • Cadwallader, Allen and Gagné, David (1998). Analysis of Tonal Music: A Schenkerian Approach, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-510232-0. The second major English-language textbook on Schenkerian analysis"
  • Kalib, Sylvan (1973). Thirteen Essays from The Three Yearbooks “Das Meisterwerk in Der Musik,” by Heinrich Schenker: An Annotated Translation. (Vols. I–III). Ph.D. diss., Northwestern University.
  • Westergaard, Peter (1975). An Introduction to Tonal Theory. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 9780393093421
  • Aldwell, Edward, and Schachter, Carl (2003). Harmony and Voice Leading. Schirmer. 2nd ed. 2008; 3rd ed. (with Allen Cadwallader), 2011. ISBN 0-495-18975-8.
  • Pankhurst, Tom (2008), SchenkerGUIDE: A Brief Handbook and Web Site for Schenkerian Analysis, New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-97398-8 – an introduction for those completely new to the subject.

Expansions

  • Epstein, David (1979). Beyond Orpheus – Studies in Musical Structure. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
  • Salzer, Felix (1952). Structural Hearing: Tonal Coherence in Music. New York: Charles Boni. "The first book to present a reorganization (as well as modification and expansion) of Schenker's writings from a pedagogical standpoint." (Beach 1983)
  • Westergaard, Peter (1975). An Introduction to Tonal Theory. New York: W.W. Norton.
  • Yeston, Maury, ed. (1977). Readings in Schenker Analysis and Other Approaches. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Post-tonal expansions

Rhythmic expansions

  • Komar, Arthur (1971/1980). Theory of Suspensions: A Study of Metrical Pitch Relations in Tonal Music. Princeton: Princeton University Press/Austin, Texas: Peer Publications. (Beach 1983)
  • Yeston, Maury (1976). The Stratification of Musical Rhythm. New Haven: Yale University Press. (Beach 1983)

Political issues

  • Clark, Suzannah (2007). "The Politics of the Urlinie in Schenker's Der Tonwille and Der freie Satz", Journal of the Royal Musical Association 132/1, pp. 141-164.
  • Cook, Nicholas (2007). The Schenker Project: Culture, Race, and Music Theory in Fin-de-siècle Vienna. Oxford University Press.
  • Eybl, Martin (1995). Ideologie und Methode. Zum ideengeschichtlichen Kontext von Schenkers Musiktheorie. Tutzing, Hans Schneider.
  • Federhofer, Hellmut Federhofer (1985). Heinrich Schenker. Nach Tagebüchern und Briefen in der Oswald Jonas Memorial Collection, Chapter V, Schenkers Weltanschauung. Hildesheim, Olms, pp. 324-330.
  • Schachter, Carl (2001), "Elephants, Crocodiles, and Beethoven: Schenker's Politics and the Pedagogy of Schenkerian Analysis", Theory and Practice, 26: 1–20, JSTOR 41054326

Criticisms

  • Narmour, Eugene (1977). Beyond Schenkerism: The Need for Alternatives in Music Analysis. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226568478.

External links

  • Schenker Guide by Tom Pankhurst
  • List of Schenker's writings concerning analysis on the Schenkerian site of Luciane Beduschi and Nicolas Meeùs (Paris)
  • Yale University's Gilmore Music Library provides an introduction to primary and secondary sources

schenkerian, analysis, method, analyzing, tonal, music, based, theories, heinrich, schenker, 1868, 1935, goal, demonstrate, organic, coherence, work, showing, foreground, notes, score, relates, abstracted, deep, structure, ursatz, this, primal, structure, roug. Schenkerian analysis is a method of analyzing tonal music based on the theories of Heinrich Schenker 1868 1935 The goal is to demonstrate the organic coherence of the work by showing how the foreground all notes in the score relates to an abstracted deep structure the Ursatz This primal structure is roughly the same for any tonal work but a Schenkerian analysis shows how in each individual case that structure develops into a unique work at the foreground A key theoretical concept is tonal space 1 The intervals between the notes of the tonic triad in the background form a tonal space that is filled with passing and neighbour tones producing new triads and new tonal spaces that are open for further elaborations until the surface of the work the score is reached The analysis uses a specialized symbolic form of musical notation Although Schenker himself usually presents his analyses in the generative direction starting from the Ursatz to reach the score and showing how the work is somehow generated from the Ursatz the practice of Schenkerian analysis more often is reductive starting from the score and showing how it can be reduced to its fundamental structure The graph of the Ursatz is arrhythmic as is a strict counterpoint cantus firmus exercise 2 Even at intermediate levels of reduction rhythmic signs open and closed noteheads beams and flags display not rhythm but the hierarchical relationships between the pitch events Schenkerian analysis is an abstract complex and difficult method not always clearly expressed by Schenker himself and not always clearly understood It mainly aims to reveal the internal coherence of the work a coherence that ultimately resides in its being tonal 3 In some respects a Schenkerian analysis can reflect the perceptions and intuitions of the analyst 4 Contents 1 Fundamentals 1 1 Goals 1 2 Harmony 1 3 Counterpoint voice leading 1 4 Ursatz 1 4 1 Fundamental line 1 4 2 Arpeggiation of the bass and the divider at the fifth 2 Schenkerian notation 3 Techniques of prolongation 3 1 Arpeggiation neighbour note passing note 3 2 Linear progression 3 3 Lines between voices reaching over 3 4 Unfolding 3 5 Register transfer coupling 3 6 Voice exchange 4 Elaboration of the fundamental structure 4 1 Initial ascent initial arpeggiation 4 2 First order neighbor note 4 3 Articulation of the span from I to V in the bass arpeggiation 4 3 1 I III V 4 3 2 I IV V or I II V 4 3 3 I II III IV V 4 4 Interruption 4 5 Mixture 4 6 Transference of the fundamental structure 5 Legacy and responses 5 1 Europe before World War II 5 2 Early reception in the US 5 3 After World War II 5 3 1 Translations 5 3 2 Textbooks 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Summaries 9 2 Pedagogical works 9 3 Expansions 9 3 1 Post tonal expansions 9 3 2 Rhythmic expansions 9 4 Political issues 9 5 Criticisms 10 External linksFundamentals EditGoals Edit Schenker intended his theory as an exegesis of musical genius or the masterwork ideas that were closely tied to German nationalism and monarchism 5 The canon represented in his analytical work therefore is almost entirely made up of German music of the common practice period especially that of Johann Sebastian Bach Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach Joseph Haydn Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Ludwig van Beethoven Franz Schubert and Johannes Brahms 6 and he used his methods to oppose more modern styles of music such as that of Max Reger and Igor Stravinsky 7 This led him to seek the key to an understanding of music in the traditional disciplines of counterpoint and figured bass which was central to the compositional training of these composers Schenker s project was to show that free composition freier Satz was an elaboration a prolongation of strict composition strenger Satz by which he meant species counterpoint particularly two voice counterpoint He did this by developing a theory of hierarchically organized levels of elaboration Auskomponierung called prolongational levels voice leading levels Stimmfuhrungsschichten or transformations Verwandlungen the idea being that each of the successive levels represents a new freedom taken with respect to the rules of strict composition 8 Because the first principle of the elaboration is the filling in of the tonal space by passing notes an essential goal of the analysis is to show linear connections between notes which filling a single triad at a given level remain closely related to each other but which at subsequent levels may become separated by many measures or many pages as new triads are embedded in the first one The analyst is expected to develop a distance hearing Fernhoren 9 a structural hearing 10 Harmony Edit The tonic triad that from which the work as a whole arises takes its model in the harmonic series However the mere duplication of nature cannot be the object of human endeavour Therefore the overtone series is transformed into a succession a horizontal arpeggiation which has the added advantage of lying within the range of the human voice Thus the harmonic series is condensed abbreviated for the purposes of art 11 Linking the major triad to the harmonic series Schenker merely pays lip service to an idea common in the early 20th century 12 He confirms that the same derivation cannot be made for the minor triad Any attempt to derive even as much as the first foundation of this minor system i e the minor triad itself from Nature i e from the overtone series would be more than futile The explanation becomes much easier if artistic intention rather than Nature herself is credited with the origin of the minor mode 13 The basic component of Schenkerian harmony is the Stufe scale degree scale step i e a chord having gained structural significance Chords arise from within chords as the result of the combination of passing notes and arpeggiations they are at first mere embellishments mere voice leading constructions but they become tonal spaces open for further elaboration and once elaborated can be considered structurally significant they become scale steps properly speaking Schenker recognizes that there are no rules which could be laid down once and for all for recognizing scale steps 14 but from his examples one may deduce that a triad cannot be recognized as a scale step as long as it can be explained by passing or neighboring voice leading Schenkerian analyses label scale steps with Roman numerals a practice common in 19th and 20th century Vienna developed by the theoretic work of Georg Joseph Vogler and his student Gottfried Weber transmitted by Simon Sechter and his disciple Anton Bruckner the classes of whom Schenker had followed in the Konservatorium in Vienna 15 Schenker s theory is monotonal the Ursatz as the diatonic unfolding of the tonic triad by definition cannot include modulation Local tonicisation may arise when a scale step is elaborated to the point of becoming a local tonic but the work as a whole projects a single key and ultimately a single Stufe the tonic 16 Counterpoint voice leading Edit Two voice counterpoint remains for Schenker the model of strict writing Free composition is a freer usage of the laws of strict counterpoint One of the aims of the analysis is to trace how the work remains subject to these laws at the deepest level despite the freedom taken at subsequent levels 17 One aspect of strict two voice writing that appears to span Schenker s theory throughout the years of its elaboration is the rule of fluent melody fliessender Gesang or melodic fluency 18 Schenker attributes the rule to Luigi Cherubini who would have written that fluent melody is always preferable in strict counterpoint 19 Melodic fluency the preference for conjunct stepwise motion is one of the main rules of voice leading even in free composition It avoids successive leaps and produces a kind of wave like melodic line which as a whole represents an animated entity and which with its ascending and descending curves appears balanced in all its individual component parts 20 This idea is at the origin of that of linear progression Zug and more specifically of that of the Fundamental Line Urlinie Ursatz Edit Main article Ursatz Minimal Ursatz a line supported by an arpeggiation of the bass source source source Ursatz usually translated as fundamental structure is the name given by Schenker to the underlying structure in its simplest form that from which the work as a whole originates In the canonical form of the theory it consists of the Urlinie the fundamental line supported by the Bassbrechung the arpeggiation of the bass The fundamental structure is a two voice counterpoint and as such belongs to strict composition 21 In conformity with the theory of the tonal space the fundamental line is a line starting from any note of the triad and descending to the tonic itself The arpeggiation is an arpeggiation through the fifth ascending from I to V and descending back to I The Urlinie unfolds the tonal space in a melodic dimension while the Bassbrechung expresses its harmonic dimension 22 The theory of the fundamental structure is the most criticized aspect of Schenkerian theory it has seemed unacceptable to reduce all tonal works to one of a few almost identical background structures This is a misunderstanding Schenkerian analysis is not about demonstrating that all compositions can be reduced to the same background but about showing how each work elaborates the background in a unique individual manner determining both its identity and its meaning Schenker has made this his motto Semper idem sed non eodem modo always the same but never in the same manner 23 Fundamental line Edit Main article Fundamental line The idea of the fundamental line comes quite early in the development of Schenker s theory Its first printed mention dates from 1920 in the edition of Beethoven s Sonata Op 101 but the idea obviously links with that of fluent melody ten years earlier 24 Schenker first conceived the Urlinie the fundamental line as a kind of motivic line characterized by its fluency repeated under different guises throughout the work and ensuring its homogeneity He later imagined that a musical work should have only one fundamental line unifying it from beginning to end The realization that such fundamental lines usually were descending led him to formulate the canonical definition of the fundamental line as necessarily descending It is not that he rejected ascending lines but that he came to consider them hierarchically less important The fundamental line begins with or and moves to via the descending leading tone 25 The initial note of the fundamental line is called its head tone Kopfton or primary tone The head note may be elaborated by an upper neighbour note but not a lower one 26 In many cases the head note is reached through an ascending line Anstieg initial ascent or an ascending arpeggiation which do not belong to the fundamental structure properly speaking 27 Arpeggiation of the bass and the divider at the fifth Edit Main article Bass arpeggiation The arpeggiation through the fifth is an imitation of the overtone series adapted to man sic who within his own capacities can experience sound only in a succession 28 The fifth of the arpeggiation coincides with the last passing note of the fundamental line This at first produces a mere divider at the fifth a complex filling in of the tonal space However as a consonant combination it defines at a further level a new tonal space that of the dominant chord and so doing opens the path for further developments of the work It would appear that the difference between the divider at the fifth and the dominant chord properly speaking really depends on the level at which the matter is considered the notion of the divider at the fifth views it as an elaboration of the initial tonal space while the notion of dominant chord conceives it as a new tonal space created within the first But the opinions of modern Schenkerians diverge on this point 29 Schenkerian notation EditGraphic representations form an important part of Schenkerian analyses the use of music notation to represent musical relationships is a unique feature of Schenker s work 30 Schenkerian graphs are based on a hierarchic notation where the size of the notes their rhythmic values and or other devices indicate their structural importance Schenker himself in the foreword to his Five Graphic Analyses claimed that the presentation in graphic form has now been developed to a point that makes an explanatory text unnecessary 31 Even so Schenkerian graphs represent a change of semiotic system a shift from music itself to its graphical representation akin to the more usual change from music to verbal analytic commentary but this shift already exists in the score itself and Schenker rightly noted the analogy between music notation and analysis 32 One aspect of graphic analyses that may not have been enough stressed is the desire to abolish time to represent the musical work as something that could be apprehended at a glance or at least in a way that would replace a linear reading by a tabular one Rhythmic reduction of the first measures of Chopin s Etude Op 10 no 1 Simplified version of the analysis of the ground harmony in Czerny s School of Practical Composition 1848 source source source Original source source source Reduction The first step of the analytic rewriting often takes the form of a rhythmic reduction that is one that preserves the score but normalizes its rhythm and its voice leading content 33 This type of reduction has a long tradition not only in counterpoint treatises or theory books 34 but also in the simplified notation of some Baroque works e g the Prelude to Handel s Suite in A major HWV 426 or early versions of Bach s C major Prelude of Book I of the Well Tempered Keyboard One indirect advantage of rhythmic reduction is that it helps reading the voice leading Czerny s example hereby transforms Chopin s arpeggios into a composition in four or five voices Edward Aldwell and Carl Schachter write that the first rewriting should produce a setting that is reasonably close to note against note 35 Allen Cadwallader and David Gagne suggest a special type of rhythmic reduction that they call imaginary continuo 36 stressing the link between the rhythmic reduction and a notation as a melody with figured bass Basically it consists in imagining a figured bass line for the work analyzed and writing a chordal realization of it Schenker himself usually began his analyses with a rhythmic reduction that he termed Urlinietafel From 1925 onwards he complemented these with other levels of representation corresponding to the successive steps leading to the fundamental structure At first he mainly relied on the size of the note shapes to denote their hierarchic level but later abandoned this system as it proved too complex for contemporary techniques of musical engraving Allen Cadwallader and David Gagne propose a description of Schenker s system of graphic notation which they say is flexible enabling musicians to express in subtle and sometimes different ways what they hear and how they interpret a composition They discuss open noteheads usually indicating the highest structural level and filled in noteheads for tones of lower levels slurs grouping tones in an arpeggio or in linear motions with passing or neighbor tones beams for linear motions of higher structural level or for the arpeggiation of the bass broken ties for repeated or sustained tones diagonal lines to realign displaced notes diagonal beams connecting successive notes that belong to the same chord unfolding etc 37 Techniques of prolongation EditMain article Prolongation The meat of a Schenkerian analysis is in showing how a background structure expands until it results in the succession of musical events on the surface of the composition itself Schenker refers to this process under the term Auskomponierung literally composing out but more often translated as elaboration Modern Schenkerians usually prefer the term prolongation stressing that elaborations develop the events along the time axis Schenker writes In practical art the main problem is how to realize the concept of harmony in a live content In Chopin s Prelude Op 28 No 6 thus it is the motif source source source Chord source source source Arpeggio that gives life to the abstract concept of the triad B D F sharp 38 The elaboration of the triad here mainly in the form of an arpeggio loads it with live content with meaning Elaborations take the form of diminutions replacing the total duration of the elaborated event by shorter events in larger number By this notes are displaced both in pitch and in rhythmic position The analysis to some extent aims at restoring displaced notes to their normal position and explaining how and why they were displaced 39 Elaboration of the F major chord source source source One aspect of Schenkerian analysis is that it does not view the work as built from a succession of events but as the growth of new events from within events of higher level much as a tree develops twigs from its branches and branches from its trunk it is in this sense that Schenkerian theory must be considered organicist The example shown here may at first be considered a mere elaboration of an F major chord an arpeggiation in three voices with passing notes shown here in black notes without stem in the two higher voices it is an exemplification of the tonal space of F major The chord labelled V at first merely is a divider at the fifth However the meeting of the fifth C in the bass arpeggiation with the passing notes may also be understood as producing a dominant chord V arising from within the tonic chord I This is the situation found at the beginning of Haydn s Sonata in F major Hob XVI 29 where the incomplete dominant chord appears at the very end of bar 3 while the rest of the fragment consists of arpeggios with neighbor notes of the F chord 40 source source source Arpeggiation neighbour note passing note Edit Arpeggiation is the simplest form of elaboration It delimits a tonal space for elaboration but lacks the melodic dimension that would allow further developments it remains a harmonic phenomenon 41 From the very structure of triads chords it follows that arpeggiations remain disjunct and that any filling of their space involves conjunct motion Schenker distinguishes two types of filling of the tonal space 1 neighbor notes Nebennoten ornamenting one single note of the triad by being adjacent to it These are sometimes referred to generically as adjacencies 2 passing notes which pass by means of stepwise motion from one note to another and fill the space in between and are thus sometimes referred to as connectives Both neighbor notes and passing notes are dissonances They may be made consonant by their coinciding with other notes as in the Haydn example above and once consonant may delimit further tonal spaces open to further elaborations Insofar as chords consist of several voices arpeggiations and passing notes always involve passing from one voice to another Linear progression Edit Main article Linear progression A linear progression Zug is the stepwise filling of some consonant interval It usually is underlined in graphic analyses with a slur from the first note of the progression to the last The most elementary linear progressions are determined by the tonal space that they elaborate they span from the prime to the third from the third to the fifth or from the fifth to the octave of the triad in ascending or descending direction Schenker writes there are no other tonal spaces than those of 1 3 3 5 and 5 8 There is no origin for passing tone progressions or for melody 42 Linear progressions in other words may be either third progressions Terzzuge or fourth progressions Quartzuge larger progressions result from a combination of these Linear progressions may be incomplete deceptive when one of their tones is replaced by another but nevertheless suggested by the harmony In the example below the first bars of Beethoven s Sonata Op 109 the bass line descends from E3 to E2 F 2 is replaced by B1 in order to mark the cadence but it remains implicit in the B chord In addition the top voice answers the bass line by a voice exchange E4 F 4 G 4 above G 2 F 2 E2 in bar 3 after a descending arpeggio of the E major chord The bass line is doubled in parallel tenths by the alto voice descending from G 4 to G 3 and the tenor voice alternatively doubles the soprano and the bass as indicated by the dotted slurs It is the bass line that governs the passage as a whole it is the leading progression on which all the other voices depend and which best expresses the elaboration of the E major chord 43 source source source Reduction source source source Original Schenker describes lines covering a seventh or a ninth as illusory 44 considering that they stand for a second with a register transfer they do not fill a tonal space they pass from one chord to another 45 Lines between voices reaching over Edit Passing tones filling the intervals of a chord may be considered forming lines between the voices of this chord At the same time if the chord tones themselves are involved in lines from one chord to another as usually is the case lines of lower level unfurl between lines of higher level The most interesting case is when the lines link an inner voice to the upper voice This may happen not only in ascending a case usually described as a line from an inner voice but also in descending if the inner voice has been displaced above the upper line by a register transfer a case known as reaching over Ubergreifen also translated as superposition or overlapping 46 In the example from Schubert s Wanderers Nachtlied below the descending line G F E D at the end of the first bar may be read as a reaching over Unfolding Edit Main article Unfolding music Unfolding Ausfaltung is an elaboration by which several voices of a chord or of a succession of chords are combined in one single line in such a manner that a tone of the upper voice is connected to a tone of the inner voice and then moves back or the reverse 47 At the end of Schubert s Wanderers Nachtlied op 4 no 3 the vocal melody unfolds two voices of the succession I V I the lower voice B A G is the main one expressing the tonality of G major the upper voice D C B is doubled one octave lower in the right hand of the accompaniment source source source Reduction source source source Original In his later writings from 1930 onwards Schenker sometimes used a special sign to denote the unfolding an oblique beam connecting notes of the different voices that are conceptually simultaneous even if they are presented in succession in the single line performing the unfolding 48 Register transfer coupling Edit Register transfer is the motion of one or several voices into a different octave i e into a different register Schenker considers that music normally unfolds in one register the obligatory register Ger Obligate Lage but at times is displaced to higher or lower registers These are called respectively ascending register transfer Ger Hoherlegung and descending register transfer Ger Tieferlegung 49 Register transfers are particularly striking in piano music and that for other keyboard instruments where contrasts of register and the distance between the two hands may have a striking quasi orchestral effect 50 Coupling is when the transferred parts retain a link with their original register The work in this case appears to unfold in two registers in parallel Voice exchange Edit Main article Voice exchange Voice exchange is a common device in counterpoint theory Schenkerians view it as a means of elaborating a chord by modifying its position Two voices exchange their notes often with passing notes in between At the end of the example of Beethoven s Op 109 above the bass and soprano exchange their notes G is transferred from bass to soprano while E is transferred from soprano to bass The exchange is marked by crossed lines between these notes 51 Elaboration of the fundamental structure EditThe elaborations of the fundamental structure deserve a specific discussion because they may determine the form of the work in which they occur Initial ascent initial arpeggiation Edit The starting point of the fundamental line its head note Kopfton may be reached only after an ascending motion either an initial ascending line Anstieg or an initial arpeggiation which may take more extension than the descending fundamental line itself This results in melodies in arch form Schenker decided only in 1930 that the fundamental line should be descending in his earlier analyses initial ascending lines often are described as being part of the Urlinie itself 27 First order neighbor note Edit Schenker stresses that the head note of the fundamental line often is decorated by a neighbor note of the first order which must be an upper neighbor because the lower neighboring note would give the impression of the interruption The neighbor note of the first order is or the harmony supporting it often is the IVth or VIth degree which may give rise to a section of the work at the subdominant 52 Articulation of the span from I to V in the bass arpeggiation Edit The canonic form of the bass arpeggiation is I V I The second interval V I forms under the perfect authentic cadence and is not susceptible of elaboration at the background level The first span I V on the other hand usually is elaborated The main cases include 53 I III V Edit This is the complete arpeggiation of the triad Once elaborated it may consist in a succession of three tonalities especially in pieces in minor In these cases III stands for a tonicisation of the major relative This often occurs in Sonata forms in minor where the first thematic group elaborates degree I the second thematic group is in the major relative degree III and the development leads to V before the recapitulation in the tonic key I IV V or I II V Edit Bass elaboration I IV V I source source source Even though he never discussed them at length these elaborations occupy a very special place in Schenker s theory One might even argue that no description of an Ursatz properly speaking is complete if it does not include IV or II at the background level Schenker uses a special sign to denote this situation the double curve shown in the example hereby crossing the slur that links IV or II to V That IV here F is written as a quarter note indicates that it is of lower rank than I and V notated as half notes Here there is an unexpected link between Schenkerian theory and Riemann s theory of tonal functions a fact that might explain Schenker s reluctance to be more explicit about it In modern Schenkerian analysis the chord of IV or II is often dubbed the predominant chord as the chord that prepares the dominant one and the progression may be labelled T P D T for tonic predominant dominant tonic I II III IV V Edit The dominant chord may be linked to the tonic by a stepwise linear progression In such case one of the chords in the progression II III or IV usually takes preeminence reducing the case to one or the other described above Interruption Edit The interruption Unterbrechung is an elaboration of the fundamental line which is interrupted at its last passing note before it reaches its goal As a result the bass arpeggiation itself is also interrupted at the divider at the fifth V Both the fundamental line and the bass arpeggiation are bound to return to their starting point and the fundamental structure repeats itself eventually reaching its goal The interruption is the main form generating elaboration it often is used in binary forms when the first part ends on the dominant or if the elaboration of the dividing dominant above V takes some importance it may produce ternary form typically sonata form 54 Mixture Edit Schenker calls mixture Mischung the change of mode of the tonic i e the replacement of its major third by the minor one or of its minor third by the major one The elaboration of the resulting chord may give rise to a section in minor within a work in major or the reverse 55 Transference of the fundamental structure Edit The forms of the fundamental structure may be repeated at any level of the work Every transferred form of the fundamental structure has the effect of a self contained structure within which the upper and lower voices delimit a single tonal space 56 That is to say that any phrase in a work could take the form of a complete fundamental structure Many classical themes e g the theme to the set of variations in Mozart s K 331 piano sonata form self contained structure of this type This resemblance of local middleground structures to background structures is part of the beauty and appeal of Schenkerian analysis giving it the appearance of a recursive construction 57 Legacy and responses EditEurope before World War II Edit Schenker himself mentioned in a letter of 1927 to his student Felix Eberhard von Cube that his ideas continued to be felt more widely Edinburgh with John Petrie Dunn also New York probably with George Wedge Leipzig with Reinhard Oppel Stuttgart with Herman Roth Vienna myself and Hans Weisse Otto Vrieslander in Munich yourself von Cube in Duisburg and August Halm in Wickersdorf Thuringia 58 Von Cube with Moritz Violin another of Schenker s students founded the Schenker Institut in Hamburg in 1931 59 Oswald Jonas published Das Wesen des musikalischen Kunstwerkes in 1932 and Felix Salzer Sinn und Wesen des Abendlandischen Mehrstimmigkeits in 1935 both based on Schenkerian concepts Oswald Jonas and Felix Salzer founded and edited together the short lived Schenkerian journal Der Dreiklang Vienna 1937 1938 60 World War II brought European studies to a halt Schenker s publications were placed under Nazi ban and some were confiscated by the Gestapo It is in the United States that Schenkerian analysis knew its first important developments This history has been contextualized by comments on both sides of the Atlantic notably by Martin Eybl 61 and Philip A Ewell 62 Early reception in the US Edit George Wedge taught some of Schenker s ideas as early as 1925 in the Institute of Musical Arts New York 63 Victor Vaughn Lytle who had studied with Hans Weisse in Vienna wrote what may be the earliest English language essay dealing with Schenkerian concepts Music Composition of the Present The American Organist 1931 without however really crediting Schenker for them 64 Weisse himself who had studied with Schenker at least from 1912 immigrated to the United States and began teaching Schenkerian analysis at the Mannes School of Music in New York in 1931 One of his students Adele T Katz devoted an article to Heinrich Schenker s Method of Analysis in 1935 65 then an important book Challenge to Musical Tradition in 1945 in which she applied Schenkerian analytical concepts not only to some of Schenker s favorite composers Johann Sebastian and Philipp Emmanuel Bach Haydn and Beethoven but also to Wagner Debussy Stravinsky and Schoenberg this certainly represents one of the earliest attempts to widen the corpus of Schenkerian analysis 66 The opinions of the critics were not always positive however Roger Sessions published in Modern Music 12 May June 1935 an obituary article under the title Heinrich Schenker s Contribution 67 where after having recognized some of Schenker s achievements he criticizes the development of the last years until Der freie Satz which he admits is not yet available in the US and concludes that It is precisely when Schenker s teachings leave the domain of exact description and enter that of dogmatic and speculative analysis that they become essentially sterile 68 The most raging attack against Schenker came in the Editorial that Paul Henry Lang devoted in The Musical Quarterly 32 2 April 1946 to the recently published book by Adele Katz Challenge to Musical Tradition which he opposed to Donald Tovey s Beethoven also published in 1945 his attacks also target Schenker s followers probably the American ones He writes Schenker s and his disciples musical theory and philosophy is not art its whole outlook at least as expressed in their writings lacks feeling There was seldom a colder spirit than theirs the only warmth one feels is the warmth of dogmatism Music interests them only insofar as it fits into their system In reality music serves only to furnish grist for the mill of their insatiable theoretical mind not for their heart or imagination There is no art no poetry in this remarkable system which deals with the raw materials of music with a virtuoso hand Schenker and his disciples play with music as others play chess not even suspecting what fantasy what sentimental whirlpools lie at the bottom of every composition They see lines only no colors and their ideas are cold and orderly But music is color and warmth which are the values of a concrete art 69 After World War II Edit Translations Edit Schenker left about 4000 pages of printed text of which the translations at first were astonishingly slow Nearly all have been translated into English and the project Schenker Documents Online is busy with the edition and translation of more than 100 000 manuscript pages Translations in other languages remain slow 1904 Ein Beitrag zur Ornamentik 1976 Transl by H Siegel Music Forum 4 pp 1 139 1979 Japanese translation by A Noro and A Tamemoto 1906 Harmonielehre 1954 Harmony transl by Elisabeth Mann Borgese edited and annotated by Oswald Jonas ISBN 9780226737348 with editorial cuts in text and music examples 1990 Spanish transl by R Barce 1910 Kontrapunkt I 1987 Counterpoint I transl by J Rothgeb and J Thym 1912 Beethovens neunte Sinfonie 1912 1992 Beethoven s Ninth Symphony a Portrayal of its Musical Content with Running Commentary on Performance and Literature as well transl by J Rothgeb 1992 2010 Japanese transl by H Nishida and T Numaguchi 1913 Beethoven Sonate E dur op 109 Erlauterungsausgabe 2012 Japanese transl by M Yamada H Nishida and T Numaguchi 2015 English transl by J Rothgeb 1914 Beethoven Sonate As dur op 110 Erlauterungsausgabe 2013 Japanese transl by M Yamada H Nishida and T Numaguchi 2015 English transl by J Rothgeb 1915 Beethoven Sonate C moll op 111 Erlauterungsausgabe 2015 English transl by J Rothgeb 1920 Beethoven Sonate A dur op 101 Erlauterungsausgabe 2015 English transl by J Rothgeb 1921 1924 Der Tonwille 10 vols 2004 2005 Der Tonwille transl under the direction of William Drabkin 1922 Kontrapunkt II 1987 Counterpoint II transl by J Rothgeb and J Thym 1922 Haydn Sonate Es Dur Der Tonwille III pp 3 21 1988 Transl by W Petty Theoria 3 pp 105 160 1923 J S Bach Zwolf kleine Praludien Nr 2 BWV 939 Der Tonwille IV 1923 p 7 2007 French transl by N Meeus 1923 J S Bach Zwolf kleine Praludien Nr 5 BWV 926 Der Tonwille V pp 8 9 2006 French transl by N Meeus 1924 Mendelssohn Venetianisches Gondellied op 30 Nr 6 Der Tonwille X pp 25 29 2011 French transl by N Meeus 1924 Schumann Kinderszenen Nr 1 Von fremden Landern und Menschen Der Tonwille X pp 34 35 2011 French transl by N Meeus 1924 Schumann Kinderszenen op 15 Nr 9 Traumerei Der Tonwille X pp 36 39 2011 French transl by N Meeus 1925 Beethovens V Sinfonie Darstellung des musikalischen Inhaltes nach der Handschrift unter fortlaufender Berucksichtigung des Vortrages und der Literatur Vienne Tonwille Verlag and Universal Edition Reprint 1970 1971 Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony N 5 in C minor partial transl by E Forbes and F J Adams jr New York Norton 1971 Norton Critical Score 9 pp 164 182 2000 Japanese transl by T Noguchi 1925 1930 Das Meisterwerk in der Musik 3 vols 1998 transl under the direction of William Drabkin 1925 Die Kunst der Improvisation Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I pp 9 40 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University 1925 Weg mit dem Phrasierungsbogen Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I pp 41 60 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University 1925 Joh S Bach Sechs Sonaten fur Violine Sonata III Largo Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I pp 61 73 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University 1976 Transl by J Rothgeb The Music Forum 4 pp 141 159 1925 Joh S Bach Zwolf kleine Praludien Nr 6 BWV 940 Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I pp 99 105 2010 French transl by N Meeus 1925 Joh S Bach Zwolf kleine Praludien Nr 12 BWV 942 Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I 1925 pp 115 123 2006 French transl by N Meeus 1925 Domenico Scarlatti Keyboard Sonata in D minor L 413 Das Meisterwerk in der Music I pp 125 135 1986 Transl by J Bent Music Analysis 5 2 3 pp 153 164 1925 Domenico Scarlatti Keyboard Sonata in G major L 486 Das Meisterwerk in der Music I pp 137 144 1986 Transl by J Bent Music Analysis 5 2 3 pp 171 179 1925 Chopin Etude Ges Dur op 10 Nr 5 Das Meisterwerk in der Musik I pp 161 173 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University 1925 Erlauterungen Das Meisterwerk in der Music I pp 201 205 Also published in Der Tonwille 9 and 10 and in Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University 1986 Transl by J Bent Music Analysis 5 2 3 pp 187 191 2011 French transl by N Meeus 1926 Fortsetzung der Urlinie Betrachtungen Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II pp 9 42 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University 1926 Vom Organischen der Sonatenform Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II pp 43 54 1968 Transl by O Grossman Journal of Music Theory 12 pp 164 183 reproduced in Readings in Schenker Analysis and Other Approaches M Yeston ed New Haven 1977 pp 38 53 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University 1926 Das Organische der Fuge aufgezeigt an der I C Moll Fuge aus dem Wohltemperierten Klavier von Joh Seb Bach Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II pp 55 95 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University 1926 Joh Seb Bach Suite III C Dur fur Violoncello Solo Sarabande Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II 1926 pp 97 104 1970 Transl by H Siegel The Music Forum 2 pp 274 282 Mozart Sinfonie G Moll Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II pp 105 157 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University Haydn Die Schopfung Die Vorstellung des Chaos Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II pp 159 170 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University Ein Gegenbeispiel Max Reger op 81 Variationen und Fuge uber ein Thema von Joh Seb Bach fur Klavier Das Meisterwerk in der Musik II pp 171 192 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University 1930 Rameau oder Beethoven Erstarrung oder geistiges Leben in der Musik Das Meisterwerk in der Musik III pp 9 24 1973 Transl by S Kalib Thirteen Essays from the Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in der Musik An Annotated Translation PhD diss Northwestern University 1932 Funf Urlinie Tafeln 1933 Five Analyses in Sketch Form New York D Mannes Music School 1969 New version with a glossary by F Salzer Five Graphic Music Analyses New York Dover 1935 1956 Der freie Satz Translations of the 2nd edition 1956 1979 Free Composition transl by E Oster 1979 1993 L Ecriture libre French transl by N Meeus Liege Bruxelles Mardaga 1997 Chinese translation by Chen Shi Ben Beijing People s Music Publications 2004 Russian transl by B Plotnikov Krasnoyarsk Academy of Music and Theatre Textbooks Edit Oswald Jonas Das Wesen des musikalischen Kunstwerks Wien Universal 1934 revised edition Einfuhrung in die Lehre Heinrich Schenkers Das Wesen des musikalischen Kunstwerkes Wien Universal 1972 English translation of the revised edition Introduction to the Theory of Heinrich Schenker The Nature of the Musical Work of Art transl J Rothgeb New York and London Longman 1982 2d revised and expanded edition Ann Arbor Musicalia Press 2005 Felix Salzer Structural Hearing Tonal Coherence in Music 2 vols New York Charles Boni 1952 Reprint 2 vols bound as one New York Dover 1982 Allen Forte and Steven E Gilbert Introduction to Schenkerian Analysis and Instructor s Manual for Introduction to Schenkerian Analysis New York London Dover 1982 Allen Cadwallader and David Gagne Analysis of Tonal Music A Schenkerian Approach New York Oxford University Press 3rd edition 2011 1st edition 1998 Edward Aldwell and Carl Schachter Harmony and Voice Leading Boston Schirmer Cengage Learning 4th edition with Allen Cadwallader 2011 1st edition 2003 Tom Pankhurst Schenkerguide A Brief Handbook and Website for Schenkerian Analysis New York and London Routledge 2008 Schenkerguide website William Renwick and David Walker Schenkerian Analysis Glossary Larry J Solomon A Schenkerian Primer Nicolas Meeus Analise schenkeriana Portuguese Brasil translation from the French by L Beduschi 2008 Luciane Beduschi and Nicolas Meeus Analyse schenkerienne in French 2013 several earlier versions archived on the same page Albanian translation by Sokol Shupo available on the same webpage See also EditMusic Forum 1967 1987 music theory and analysis academic journal Glossary of Schenkerian analysisNotes Edit Schenker described the concept in a paper titled Erlauterungen Elucidations which he published four times between 1924 and 1926 Der Tonwille vol 8 9 pp 49 51 vol 10 pp 40 42 Das Meisterwerk in der Musik vol 1 pp 201 205 2 pp 193 197 English translation Der Tonwille vol 2 pp 117 118 the translation although made from vols 8 9 of the German original gives as original pagination that of Das Meisterwerk 1 the text is the same The concept of tonal space is still present in Free Composition especially 13 where Schenker writes By the concept of tonal space I understand the space of the horizontal fulfillment of the Urlinie The tonal space is only to be understood horizontally Free Composition 21 Schenker writes In the distance between the Urlinie and the foreground between the diatony and the tonality the spatial depth of a musical work expresses itself the distant origin in the utter simple the transformation through subsequent stages and the diversity in the foreground Im Abstand von der Urlinie zum Vordergrund von der Diatonie zur Tonalitat druckt sich die Raumtiefe eines Musikwerkes aus die ferne Herkunft vom Allereinfachsten der Wandel im spateren Verlauf und der Reichtum im Vordergrund Der freie Satz 1935 p 17 Free Composition p 5 translation modified Robert Snarrenberg Schenker s Interpretive Practice Cambridge Studies in Music Theory and Analysis 11 1997 Free Composition pp xxi xxiv 158 162 Der Tonwille English translation Vol I 17 For a complete list of the works discussed by Schenker see Larry Laskowski Heinrich Schenker An Annotated Index to his Analyses of Musical Works New York Pendragon 1978 Influential early exponents of Schenker s theory in the United states Adele T Katz and Felix Salzer opposed Schenker s musical conservatism and expanded the analytical method to more modern repertoire See Early reception in the US Das Meisterwerk in der Musik vol II pp 17 18 192 English translation p 1 22 117 See Schenker s instructional plan described in his Introduction to Free Composition pp xxi xxii The steps of this plan are Instruction in strict writing according to Fux Schenker in thorough bass according to J S and C P E Bach and in free writing according to Schenker that finally combines all studies and places them in the service of the law of organic coherence as it reveals itself in the Ursatz Urlinie and bass arpeggiation as background in the voice leading transformations as middelground and ultimately through the foreground Translation modified following Der freie Satz 1935 p 2 Der Tonwille 1 1921 p 23 2 1922 pp 31 and 35 Der Tonwille English translation vol I pp 22 77 and 82 The term has been taken over by Wilhelm Furtwangler Wort und Ton Wiesbaden Brockhaus 1954 pp 201 202 Felix Salzer Structural Hearing New York Boni 1952 Free Composition 1 See also Harmony 13 The same link is made for instance in Schoenberg s Harmonielehre Wien Universal 1911 7 1966 p 16 Harmony 23 Harmony 79 Robert E Wason Viennese Harmonic Theory from Albrechtsberger to Schenker and Schoenberg Ann Arbor London UMI Research Press 1982 1985 Matthew Brown Explaining Tonality Schenkerian Theory and Beyond Rochester University of Rochester Press 2005 p 69 reproduces a chart showing that the tonality of a given foreground can be generated from the diatony of the given background through various levels of the middleground Heinrich Schenker Counterpoint vol I p 12 In the present day when it is necessary to distinguish clearly between composition and that preliminary school represented by strict counterpoint we must use the eternally valid of those rules for strict counterpoint even if we no longer view them as applicable to composition N Meeus Schenker s fliessender Gesang and the Concept of Melodic Fluency Orfeu 2 1 2017 pp 160 170 Counterpoint vol I p 74 J Rothgeb and J Thym the translators quote Cherubini from the original French which merely says that conjunct motion better suits strict counterpoint than disjunct motion but Schenker had written der fliessende Gesang ist im strengen Stile immer besser as der sprungweise Kontrapunkt vol I p 104 the fluent melody is always better in strict style than the disjunct one Fliessender Gesang not only appears in several 19th century German translations of Cherubini but is common in German counterpoint theory from the 18th century and might go back to Fux description of the flexibili motuum facilitate the flexible ease of motions Gradus Liber secundus Exercitii I Lectio quinta or even earlier N Meeus Schenker s Fliessender Gesang and the Concept of Melodic Fluency Orfeu 2 1 2017 pp 162 63 Counterpoint vol I p 94 The canonical Ursatz is discussed in Free Composition 1 44 but it was first described in Das Meisterwerk in der Musik vol III 1930 pp 20 21 English translation p 7 8 The word Ursatz already appeared in Schenker s writings in 1923 Der Tonwille 5 p 45 English translation vol I p 212 Free Composition pp 4 5 Schenker himself mentioned and refuted the criticism in 29 p 18 of Free Composition Counterpoint vol I 1910 quoted above Free Composition 10 Free Composition 106 a b Free Composition 120 Free Composition 16 William Rothstein Articles on Schenker and Schenkerian Theory in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd edition Journal of Music Theory 45 1 2001 pp 218 219 Beach 1983 ch Schenker s Theories A Pedagogical View p 27 H Schenker Funf Urlinie Tafeln Five Analyses in Sketchform New York Mannes Music School 1933 Five Graphic Analyses New York Dover 1969 The Foreword is dated 30 August 1932 On this most interesting topic see Kofi Agawu Schenkerian Notation in Theory and Practice Music Analysis 8 3 1989 pp 275 301 William Rothstein Rhythmic Displacement and Rhythmic Normalization Trends in Schenkerian Research A Cadwallader ed New York Schirmer 1990 pp 87 113 Rothstein s idea is that ornamentations such as retardations or syncopations result from displacements with respect to a normal rhythm other diminutions e g neighbor notes also displace the tones that they ornate and usually shorten them Removing these displacements and restoring the shortened note values operates a rhythmic normalization that reflects an unconscious process used by every experienced listener p 109 Kofi Agawu Schenkerian Notation in Theory and Practice op cit p 287 quotes Czerny s representation of the ground harmony of Chopin s Study op 10 n 1 in his School of Practical Composition 1848 reproduced here in a somewhat simplified version Edward Aldwell Carl Schachter and Allen Cadwallader Harmony and Voice Leading 4th edition Schirmer Cengage Learning 2011 p 692 Allen Cadwallader and David Gagne Analysis of Tonal Music A Schenkerian Approach New York OUP 3 2011 pp 66 68 Op cit p 384 Harmonielehre p 281 English translation p 211 William Rothstein Rhythmic Displacement and Rhythmic Normalization Trends in Schenkerian Research op cit See http nicolas meeus free fr Cours 2012Elaborations pdf examples 5 a and b pp 3 and 4 Heinrich Schenker Elucidations Der Tonwille 8 9 English translation vol II p 117 translation by Ian Bent Erlauterungen Der Tonwille 8 9 English translation vol I p 117 translation by Ian Bent Free composition p 78 221 Free Composition pp 74 75 205 207 Schenker s German term is scheinbare Zuge literally apparent linear progressions Oster s translation as illusory may overstate the point The matter of the elaboration of seventh chords remains ambiguous in Schenkerian theory See Yosef Goldenberg Prolongation of Seventh Chords in Tonal Music Lewinston The Edwin Mellen Press 2008 Drabkin William 2001 Reaching over In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 See also Nicolas Meeus Ubergreifen Gamut Online Journal of the Music Theory Society of the Mid Atlantic vol 8 iss 1 article 6 Free composition p 50 140 For a detailed study of unfolding see Rodney Garrison Schenker sAusfaltungUnfolded Notation Terminology and Practice PhD Thesis State University of New York at Buffalo 2012 Drabkin William 2001 Register transfer In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 See David Gagne The Compositional Use of Register in Three Piano Sonatas by Mozart Trends in Schenkerian Research A Cadwallader ed New York Schirmer 1990 pp 23 39 Free Composition 236 237 Free Composition 106 The cases described in the following paragraphs are discussed in Heinrich Schenker Further Consideration of the Urlinie II translated by John Rothgeb The Masterwork in Music vol II Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1996 pp 1 22 Free Composition 87 101 Free Composition 193 Free Composition p 87 242 Matthew Brown Explaining Tonality Schenkerian Theory and Beyond Rochester University of Rochester Press pp 96 98 Letter of June 1 1927 See David Carson Berry Schenker s First Americanization George Wedge The Institute of Musical Art and the Appreciation Racket Gamut 4 1 2011 Essays in Honor of Allen Forte III particularly p 157 and note 43 Benjamin Ayotte The Reception of Heinrich Schenker s Concepts Outside the United States as Indicated by Publications Based on His Works A Preliminary Study Acta musicologica CZ 2004 online Berry 2003 p 104 Martin Eybl Ideologie und Methode Zum ideengeschichtlichen Kontext von Schenkers Musiktheorie Hans Schneider 1995 Philip A Ewell Music Theory and the White Racial Frame MTO A Journal of Music Theory 26 2 September 2020 doi 10 30535 mto 26 2 4 David Carson Berry Schenker s First Americanization op cit pp 143 144 David Carson Berry Victor Vaughn Lytle and the Early Proselytism of Schenkerian Ideas in the U S Journal of Schenkerian Studies 1 2005 pp 98 99 Theory and Practice 10 1 2 1985 published for the 50th anniversary of Schenker s death other early American texts including an unsigned obituary in The New York Times February 3 1935 Arthur Plettner Heinrich Schenker s Contribution to Theory Musical America VI 3 February 10 1936 Israel Citkowitz The Role of Heinrich Schenker Modern Music XI 1 November December 1933 Frank Knight Dale Heinrich Schenker and Musical Form Bulletin of the American Musicological Society 7 October 1943 Hans Weisse The Music Teacher s Dilemma Proceedings or the Music Teachers National Association 1935 William J Mitchell Heinrich Schenker s Approach to Detail Musicology I 2 1946 Arthur Waldeck and Nathan Broder Musical Synthesis as Expounded by Heinrich Schenker The Musical Mercury XI 4 December 1935 and Adele T Katz Heinrich Schenker s Method of Analysis The Musical Quarterly XXI 3 July 1935 See also David Carson Berry A Topical Guide to Schenkerian Literature An Annotated Bibliography with Indices Hillsdale New York Pendragon Press 2004 section XIV c ii Reception through English Language Writings Prior to 1954 pp 437 443 The Musical Quarterly 21 3 July 1935 pp 311 329 Adele Katz Challenge to Musical Tradition A New Concept of Tonality New York Alfred Knopf 1945 The book is divided in nine chapters the first describing The Concept of Tonality the eight following devoted to J S Bach Ph E Bach Haydn Beethoven Wagner Debussy Stravinsky and Schoenberg respectively On Adele Katz see David Carson Berry The Role of Adele T Katz in the Early Expansion of the New York Schenker School Current Musicology 74 2002 pp 103 151 Reproduced in Critical Inquiry 2 1 Autumn 1975 pp 113 119 Critical Inquiry 2 1 p 118 The Musical Quarterly 32 2 pp 301 302 References EditBeach David ed 1983 Aspects of Schenkerian Theory New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300028003 Berry David Carson 2003 Hans Weisse and the Dawn of American Schenkerism Journal of Musicology 20 1 104 156 doi 10 1525 jm 2003 20 1 104 Schenker Heinrich 1908 1904 Ein Beitrag zur Ornamentik als Einfuhrung zu Ph Em Bachs Klavierwerken mitumfassend auch die Ornamentik Haydns Mozarts und Beethoven etc in German Vienna Universal Edition Schenker Heinrich 1906 Harmonielehre Harmony in German Stuttgart Berlin J G Cotta Schenker Heinrich 1954 1906 Oswald Jonas ed Harmony Translated by Elisabeth Mann Borgese Annotated by Oswald Jonas Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 73734 9 OCLC 280916 Schenker Heinrich 1910 Kontrapunkt Counterpoint in German Vol I Stuttgart Berlin J G Cotta Schenker Heinrich 1922 Kontrapunkt Counterpoint in German Vol II Vienna Leipzig Universal Edition Schenker Heinrich 1989 1910 1922 Counterpoint Translated by John Rothgeb Jurgen Thym New York London Schirmer Books ISBN 0 02 873220 0 Schenker Heinrich 1921 1924 Der Tonwille in German Vol 1 10 Vienna Tonwille Verlag Schenker Heinrich 2004 1921 1924 William Drabkin ed Der Tonwille Vol 1 10 Translated by Ian Bent e a Oxford etc Oxford University Press Schenker Heinrich 1925 1930 Das Meisterwerk in der Musik in German Vol 1 3 Munich Drei Masken Verlag Schenker Heinrich 1995 1997 1925 1930 William Drabkin ed The Masterwork in Music Vol 1 3 Translated by Ian Bent e a Cambridge Cambridge University Press Schenker Heinrich 1956 1935 Oswald Jonas ed Der freie Satz in German Vienna Universal Edition Schenker Heinrich 1979 1956 Oswald Jonas ed Free Composition Translated by Ernst Oster New York London Longman Further reading EditBlasius Leslie D 1996 Schenker s Argument and the Claims of Music Theory Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 55085 8 Brown Matthew 2005 Explaining Tonality Schenkerian Theory and Beyond University of Rochester Press ISBN 1 58046 160 3 Berry David Carson 2004 A Topical Guide to Schenkerian Literature An Annotated Bibliography with Indices Hillsdale New York Pendragon Press ISBN 9781576470954 A thorough documentation of Schenker related research and analysis The largest Schenkerian reference work ever published it has 3600 entries 2200 principal 1400 secondary representing the work of 1475 authors It is organized topically fifteen broad groupings encompass seventy topical headings many of which are divided and subdivided again resulting in a total of 271 headings under which entries are collected Cook Nicholas 2007 The Schenker Project Culture Race and Music Theory in Fin de siecle Vienna Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 974429 7 Eybl Martin and Fink Mennel Evelyn eds 2006 Schenkerian traditions A Viennese school of music theory and its international dissemination Vienna Cologne Weimar Bohlau ISBN 3 205 77494 9 Jonas Oswald 1982 Introduction to the theory of Heinrich Schenker the nature of the musical work of art ISBN 9780967809939 translated by John Rothgeb New York and London Longman Most complete discussion of Schenker s theories Beach 1983 Essays on the dissemination of Schenkerian thought in the U S by David Carson Berry The Role of Adele T Katz in the Early Expansion of the New York Schenker School Current Musicology 74 103 151 2002 Victor Vaughn Lytle and the Early Proselytism of Schenkerian Ideas in the U S Journal of Schenkerian Studies 1 92 117 2005 Schenkerian Theory in the United States A Review of Its Establishment and a Survey of Current Research Topics Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft fur Musiktheorie 2 2 3 101 137 2005 Eybl Martin Fink Mennel Evelyn eds 2006 Hans Weisse 1892 1940 Schenker Traditionen Eine Wiener Schule der Musiktheorie und ihre internationale Verbreitung Schenker Traditions A Viennese School of Music Theory and Its International Dissemination Vienna Bohlau Verlag pp 91 103 ISBN 978 3 205 77494 5 Summaries Edit Katz A T 1935 Heinrich Schenker s Method of Analysis The Musical Quarterly 21 3 311 329 doi 10 1093 mq XXI 3 311 JSTOR 739052 Katz Adele T 1945 Challenge to Musical Tradition A New Concept of Tonality New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 9781174860447 2011 reprint Forte A 1959 Schenker s Conception of Musical Structure Journal of Music Theory 3 1 1 30 doi 10 2307 842996 JSTOR 842996 Pedagogical works Edit Forte Allen and Gilbert Steven E 1982 Introduction to Schenkerian Analysis W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 95192 8 Schenker never presented a pedagogical presentation of his theories this being the first according to its authors Snarrenberg Robert 1997 Schenker s Interpretive Practice Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 49726 4 Cadwallader Allen and Gagne David 1998 Analysis of Tonal Music A Schenkerian Approach Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 510232 0 The second major English language textbook on Schenkerian analysis Kalib Sylvan 1973 Thirteen Essays from The Three Yearbooks Das Meisterwerk in Der Musik by Heinrich Schenker An Annotated Translation Vols I III Ph D diss Northwestern University Westergaard Peter 1975 An Introduction to Tonal Theory New York W W Norton ISBN 9780393093421 Aldwell Edward and Schachter Carl 2003 Harmony and Voice Leading Schirmer 2nd ed 2008 3rd ed with Allen Cadwallader 2011 ISBN 0 495 18975 8 Pankhurst Tom 2008 SchenkerGUIDE A Brief Handbook and Web Site for Schenkerian Analysis New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 97398 8 an introduction for those completely new to the subject Expansions Edit Epstein David 1979 Beyond Orpheus Studies in Musical Structure Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press Salzer Felix 1952 Structural Hearing Tonal Coherence in Music New York Charles Boni The first book to present a reorganization as well as modification and expansion of Schenker s writings from a pedagogical standpoint Beach 1983 Westergaard Peter 1975 An Introduction to Tonal Theory New York W W Norton Yeston Maury ed 1977 Readings in Schenker Analysis and Other Approaches New Haven Yale University Press Post tonal expansions Edit Travis R 1959 Towards a New Concept of Tonality Journal of Music Theory 3 2 257 284 doi 10 2307 842853 JSTOR 842853 Travis R 1966 Directed Motion in Schoenberg and Webern Perspectives of New Music 4 2 85 89 doi 10 2307 832217 JSTOR 832217 Rhythmic expansions Edit Komar Arthur 1971 1980 Theory of Suspensions A Study of Metrical Pitch Relations in Tonal Music Princeton Princeton University Press Austin Texas Peer Publications Beach 1983 Yeston Maury 1976 The Stratification of Musical Rhythm New Haven Yale University Press Beach 1983 Political issues Edit Clark Suzannah 2007 The Politics of the Urlinie in Schenker s Der Tonwille and Der freie Satz Journal of the Royal Musical Association 132 1 pp 141 164 Cook Nicholas 2007 The Schenker Project Culture Race and Music Theory in Fin de siecle Vienna Oxford University Press Eybl Martin 1995 Ideologie und Methode Zum ideengeschichtlichen Kontext von Schenkers Musiktheorie Tutzing Hans Schneider Federhofer Hellmut Federhofer 1985 Heinrich Schenker Nach Tagebuchern und Briefen in der Oswald Jonas Memorial Collection Chapter V Schenkers Weltanschauung Hildesheim Olms pp 324 330 Schachter Carl 2001 Elephants Crocodiles and Beethoven Schenker s Politics and the Pedagogy of Schenkerian Analysis Theory and Practice 26 1 20 JSTOR 41054326Criticisms Edit Narmour Eugene 1977 Beyond Schenkerism The Need for Alternatives in Music Analysis Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226568478 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Schenkerian analysis Schenker Guide by Tom Pankhurst List of Schenker s writings concerning analysis on the Schenkerian site of Luciane Beduschi and Nicolas Meeus Paris Yale University s Gilmore Music Library provides an introduction to primary and secondary sources Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Schenkerian analysis amp oldid 1136951322 Register transfer coupling, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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