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Retrograde (music)

A melodic line that is the reverse of a previously or simultaneously stated line is said to be its retrograde or cancrizans (/ˈkæŋkrɪˌzænz/[1] "walking backward", medieval Latin, from cancer "crab"). An exact retrograde includes both the pitches and rhythms in reverse. An even more exact retrograde reverses the physical contour of the notes themselves, though this is possible only in electronic music. Some composers choose to subject just the pitches of a musical line to retrograde, or just the rhythms. In twelve-tone music, reversal of the pitch classes alone—regardless of the melodic contour created by their registral placement—is regarded as a retrograde.

In modal and tonal music edit

In treatises edit

Retrograde was not mentioned in theoretical treatises prior to 1500.[2] Nicola Vicentino (1555) discussed the difficulty in finding canonic imitation: "At times, the fugue or canon cannot be discovered through the systems mentioned above, either because of the impediment of rests, or because one part is going up while another is going down, or because one part starts at the beginning and the other at the end. In such cases a student can begin at the end and work back to the beginning in order to find where and in which voice he should begin the canons."[3] Vicentino derided those who achieved purely intellectual pleasure from retrograde (and similar permutations): "A composer of such fancies must try to make canons and fugues that are pleasant and full of sweetness and harmony. He should not make a canon in the shape of a tower, a mountain, a river, a chessboard, or other objects, for these compositions create a loud noise in many voices, with little harmonic sweetness. To tell the truth, a listening is more likely to be induced to vexation than to delight by these disproportioned fancies, which are devoid of pleasant harmony and contrary to the goal of the imitation of the nature of the words."[3]

Thomas Morley (1597) described retrograde in the context of canons and mentions a work by Byrd.[4] Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg (1754) notes various names for the procedure imitatio retrograda or cancrizans or per motum retrogradum and says it is used primarily in canons and fugues.[5]

Some writers acknowledge that hearing retrograde in music is a challenge, and consider it a self-referential compositional device.[6][7][8]

In music edit

 
Nusmido, folio 150 verso of manuscript Pluteo 29.1, located in the Laurentian Library in Florence - the earliest known example of retrograde in music

Despite not being mentioned in theoretical treatises prior to 1500, compositions written before that date show retrograde.[2] According to Willi Apel, the earliest example of retrograde in music is the 13th century clausula, Nusmido, in which the tenor has the liturgical melody "Dominus" in retrograde (found in the manuscript Pluteo 29.1, folio 150 verso, located in the Laurentian Library in Florence).[9][10][11] (The word "Nusmido" is a syllabic retrograde of the word "Dominus.")[12]

Surveying medieval examples of retrograde, Virginia Newes notes that early composers were often also poets, and that musical retrogrades could have been based on similarly constructed poetic texts.[13] She quotes Daniel Poirion in suggesting that the retrograde canon in Machaut's three-voice rondeau, "Ma Fin est mon Commencement" could symbolize a metaphysical view of death as rebirth, or else the ideal circle of the courtly outlook, which encloses all initiatives and all ends.[14] She concludes that, whatever the reasons, construction of retrogrades and their transmission were part of the medieval composers' world, as they prized symmetry and balance as intellectual feats in addition to the aural experience. [15]

 
Machaut, the opening and closing bars of 'ma fin est mon commencement' (My end is my beginning.) Listen

Todd notes that although some composers (John Dunstaple, Guillaume Dufay and Johannes Ockeghem) used retrograde occasionally, they did not combine it with other permutations. In contradistinction, Antoine Busnois and Jacob Obrecht, used retrograde and other permutations extensively, suggesting familiarity with one another's compositional techniques.[16] Todd also notes that, by use of retrograde, inversion, and retrograde-inversion, composers of this time viewed music in a way similar to serialists of the 20th century.[17]

However, as Edmund Rubbra (1960, p. 35) points out, “This is, of course, a purely mental concept, as music can never do anything but go forwards, even if the given tune is reversed. The different relationships set up by reversing the direction of a theme make it completely unrecognizable; and when a composer indulges in this device the disclosure of it makes not the slightest difference to our apprehension of the music, which must be listened to as going parallel with the time-processes of our existence.”[18]

Nevertheless, there are examples of retrograde motion in the music of J.S. Bach, Haydn and Beethoven. Bach’s Musical Offering includes a two-voice canon in which the second voice performs the melodic line of first voice backwards:

Bach Canon 2 from Musical offering
 
Bach, two part canon from 'The Musical Offering.' The lower part is an exact retrograde of the upper part.

The minuet (third) movement of Joseph Haydn’s, Symphony no. 47, is an exact palindrome. Haydn also transcribed this piece for piano and this version forms the second movement of his Piano Sonata in A major XVI/26

Minuet from Piano Sonata in A
 
Minuet 'al rovescio' from Haydn Sonata in A major.

The fugal fourth movement of Beethoven, Piano Sonata no. 29, op. 106, "Hammerklavier", has the following main theme:

Hammerklavier fugue subject, first four bars
 
Hammerklavier fugue subject, first four bars

Later in this movement, Beethoven conjures up and uses the retrograde version of the subject. Beethoven does not create a strict note-for-note reversal of the theme.[19]

Hammerklavier fugue subject, retrograde version, last four bars
 
Hammerklavier fugue subject, retrograde version, last four bars

Examples in modal and tonal music edit

In post-tonal music edit

 
Prime (top-left), retrograde (top-right), inverse (bottom-left), and retrograde-inverse (bottom-right).

As early as 1923, Arnold Schoenberg expressed the equivalence of melodic and harmonic presentation as a "unity of musical space." Taking the example of a hat, Schoenberg explained that the hat remains the same no matter if it is observed from below or above, from one side or another. Similarly, permutations such as inversion, retrograde, and retrograde inversion are a way to create musical space.[27]

Heinrich Jalowetz discussed Arnold Schoenberg's frequent use of retrograde (and other permutations) as a compositional device for twelve-tone music: "The technique serves two main functions. One is to provide a substitute for classical tonality, with all its melodic and harmonic consequences...The second function is to provide a means of interrelationship. This is done by presenting the row not only in normal position but in inversion, retrogression, and retrograde inversion. The music derives a strict inner cohesion through the artful treatment of such relationships, even though the listener may often be unable to follow what is happening."[28]

In twelve-tone music, retrograde treatment of pitch is a commonplace, but rhythmic retrogrades are comparatively rare. Examples of rhythmic retrogrades occur in the music of Alban Berg, for example in the operas Wozzeck and Lulu, and in the Chamber Concerto.[29] In discussing Berg's extensive use of retrograde and palindrome, Robert Morgan coins the word "circular" to describe musical situations "in which an opening gesture returns at a composition's close, thereby joining the music's temporal extremes."[30]

Dorothy Slepian, writing in 1947, observed that "modern American composers write canons that, whether simple or complicated in structure, clearly discernible or subtly concealed, are a natural means of expression growing directly out of the individual needs of the melodic material. Therefore, most of the composers regard cancrizans as an artificial device imposed upon a theme rather than as a consequence germinated by it."[31] Specifically, Douglas Moore, Harold Morris, Paul Creston, and Bernard Rogers "flatly refute the expressive powers of the cancrizans" whereas Walter Piston, Adolph Weiss, Wallingford Riegger, and Roger Sessions use it often.[32] One particularly colorful and effective example is found in the second movement of Piston's Concerto for Orchestra, where continuous rapid string passages with an ostinato bass rhythm and a melody in the English horn returns later in the movement performed backwards as a recapitulation.[31]

Examples in post-tonal music edit

  • Alban Berg, Der Wein (1929), "Der Wein der Liebenden" (measures 112–40 are then heard in retrograde as measures 140–70)
  • Alban Berg, Lulu, the "silent film " interlude in Act 2.
  • Ruth Crawford Seeger, Diaphonic Suite No. 3 for two clarinets (1930), third movement, the first clarinet in bars 45–56 present an exact retrograde of the same part, bars 2–13,[33]
  • Karel Goeyvaerts, Nummer 5 met zuivere tonen (Number 5 with Pure Tones, 1953) superimposes an exact retrograde of its materials on the "forwards" version.[34] As a result, not only does each event in the second half occur according to an axis of symmetry at the centre of the work, but each event itself is reversed, so that the note attacks in the first half become note decays in the second, and vice versa.[35]
  • Paul Hindemith's Ludus Tonalis cycle is highly palindromic, its Postludium being almost a retrograde inversion of its Introitus.
  • Charles Ives, Scherzo: All the Way Around and Back (1907–08) is palindromic.[36]
  • Olivier Messiaen, "Abîme des oiseaux", from the Quatuor pour la fin du temps (1941) exhibits many retrograde relationships among its elements,[37] as well as one rhythm that is "a retrograde version of rāgavardhana, No. 93 in Sharngadeva's collection," the Sangita Ratnakara.[38]
  • Luigi Nono, Incontri (1955).[39]
  • Carl Ruggles, Sun-Treader (1926–31) has a rhythmically free pitch palindrome in b. 68–118, and a retrograde canon in b. 124–33.[40]
  • Igor Stravinsky, Canticum Sacrum (1956). The fifth movement is an almost exact retrograde of the first.[41]
  • Iannis Xenakis, Metastaseis (1953–54) contains many instances of retrograde relationships.[42]

Non-retrogradable rhythm edit

In music and music theory, a non-retrogradable rhythm is a rhythmic palindrome, i.e., a pattern of note durations that is read or performed the same either forwards or backwards.[43] The term is used most frequently in the context of the music of Olivier Messiaen. For example, such rhythms occur in the "Liturgie de cristal" and "Danse de la fureur, pour les sept trompettes"—the first and sixth movements—of Messiaen's Quatuor pour la fin du temps.

See also edit

References edit

  • Apel, Willi. "Retrograde". Harvard Dictionary of Music. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1969.
  • Barthel-Calvet, Anne-Sylvie. "MÉTASTASSIS-Analyse: Un texte inédit de Iannis Xenakis sur Metastasis". Revue de Musicologie 89, no. 1 (2003): 129–87.
  • Bukofzer, Manfred F. "Speculative Thinking in Mediaeval Music". Speculum 17, no. 2 (April 1942), p. 165–80.
  • Burkholder, J. Peter, James B. Sinclair, and Gayle Sherwood. "Ives, Charles (Edward)". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001.
  • Covach, John. "Balzacian Mysticism, Palindromic Design, and Heavenly Time in Berg's Music." In Encrypted Messages in Alban Berg's Music, edited by Siglind Bruhn, pp. 5–29. New York: Garland Press, 1998.
  • E[dwards], F[rederick] G[eorge]. "John Stainer". Musical Times and Singing Class Circular 42, no. 699 (May 1, 1901), pp. 297–309.
  • Grant, M[orag] J[osephine]. Serial Music, Serial Aesthetics: Compositional Theory in Post-war Europe. Cambridge, U.K.; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001.
  • Griffiths, Paul. 2001. "Messiaen, Olivier (Eugène Prosper Charles)". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001.
  • Grove, George, and Waldo Selden Pratt. "Recte et Retro, Per". Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, vol. 4, p. 40. Philadelphia: Theodore Presser, 1922.
  • Jalowetz, Heinrich. "On the Spontaneity of Schoenberg's Music". Musical Quarterly 30, no. 4 (October 1944), pp. 385–408.
  • Jarman, Douglas. "Some Rhythmic and Metric Techniques in Alban Berg's Lulu". Musical Quarterly 56, no. 3 (July 1970): 349–66.
  • Levarie, Siegmund, and Ernst Levy. Musical Morphology: A Discourse and a Dictionary. Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 1983.
  • Marpurg, Friedrich Wilhelm. Abhandlung von der Fuge: nach den Grundsätzen und Exempeln der besten deutschen und ausländischen Meister entworfen: nebst Exempeln in LXII und LX Kupfertafeln. 2 vols. Berlin: Haude u. Spener, 1753–54. Facsimile reprint, New York: G. Olms, 1970. Facsimile reprint, Laaber: Laaber Verlag, 2002. ISBN 3-89007-384-0. Translated in Alfred Mann, The Study of Fugue. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1958.
  • Mazzola, Guerino, Stefan Göller, and Stefan Müller. The Topos of Music: Geometric Logic of Concepts, Theory, and Performance. Basel: Birkhäuser, 2002.
  • Meyer, Christian. "Vexilla regis prodeunt: Un canon énigmatique de Leonhard Paminger". In Festschrift Christoph-Hellmut Mahling zum 65. Geburtstag, edited by Axel Beer, Kristina Pfarr, and Wolfgang Ruf, p. 909–17. Mainzer Studien zur Musikwissenschaft 37 (2 volumes). Tutzing: Hans Schneider, 1997. ISBN 3-7952-0900-5.
  • Morgan, Robert P. "The Eternal Return: Retrograde and Circular Form in Berg" in Alban Berg: Historical and Analytical Perspectives ed. by David Gable and Robert P. Morgan. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991, p. 111–49.
  • Morgan, Robert P. "Symmetrical Form and Common-Practice Tonality". Spectrum 20, no. 1 (Spring 1998), p. 1–47.
  • Morley, Thomas. A Plain and Easy Introduction to Practical Music, edited by R. Alec Harman. London: J. M. Dent & Sons, 1952.
  • Morris, David. "A Semiotic Investigation of Messiaen's 'Abîme des oiseaux'". Music Analysis 8, nos. 1–2 (March–July 1989): 125–58.
  • Newbould, Brian. "A Schubert Palindrome". 19th Century Music 15, no. 3 (1992), p. 207–14.
  • Newes, Virginia. "Writing, Reading and Memorizing: The Transmission and Resolution of Retrograde Canons from the 14th and Early 15th Centuries." Early Music 18, no. 2 (May, 1990), p. 218–34.
  • Nicholls, David. American Experimental Music 1890–1940. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991. ISBN 0-521-42464-X.
  • Poirion, Daniel. "Le Poète et le prince: l'évolution du lyrisme courtois de Guillaume de Machaut à Charles d'Orléans. Paris: Presses universitaires de France, 1965.
  • Rubbra, Edmund. Counterpoint. London: Hutchinson University Library, 1960.
  • Sabbe, Herman. Het muzikale serialisme als techniek en als denkmethode: Een onderzoek naar de logische en historische samenhang van de onderscheiden toepassingen van het seriërend beginsel in de muziek van de periode 1950–1975. Ghent: Rijksuniversiteit te Gent, 1977.
  • Schleiermacher, Steffen. "Bei Liese sei lieb!: Das Palindrom in der Musik". Neue Zeitschrift für Musik: Das Magazin für neue Töne 171, no. 2 (March–April 2010): 62-63.
  • Slepian, Dorothy. "Polyphonic Forms and Devices in Modern American Music". Musical Quarterly 33, no. 3 (July 1947), p. 311–26.
  • Stenzl, Jürg. "Nonos Incontri". Melos 39, no. 3 (May–June 1972): 150–53.
  • Todd, R. Larry. "Retrograde, Inversion, Retrograde-Inversion, and Related Techniques in the Masses of Jacobus Obrecht". Musical Quarterly 64, no.1 (Jan. 1978), p. 50–78.
  • van den Toorn, Pieter C. The Music of Igor Stravinsky. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983.
  • Vicentino, Nicola. L'antica musica ridotta alla moderna prattica. Rome: A. Barre, 1555. English edition, as Ancient Music Adapted to Modern Practice trans. by Maria Rika Maniates. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996.
  • Watkins, Holly. "Schoenberg's Interior Designs". Journal of the American Musicological Society 61, no. 1 (Spring 2008), p. 123–206.
  • White, Eric Walter. Stravinsky: The Composer and His Works, second edition. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1979. ISBN 0-520-03985-8.

References edit

  1. ^ Pronunciation indicated s.v. in the online Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
  2. ^ a b Newes, p. 218.
  3. ^ a b Vicentino, p. 298.
  4. ^ a b Morley, p. 288–89.
  5. ^ Marpurg, p. 148–49.[full citation needed]
  6. ^ Levarie and Levy, p. 242.
  7. ^ Mazzola, Göller, and Müller, p. 15.
  8. ^ "The fact that listeners may not recognize the second phrase as a reversal of the first does not defeat the idea: a mirror structure under time produces a possible, comprehensible result, not necessarily a recognizable transformation." Morgan, "Symmetrical Form", p. 26.
  9. ^ Apel, p. 728. Todd and Newes accept Apel's identification of Nusmido as the earliest work found containing a retrograde passage.
  10. ^ Many citations to early examples of retrograde and other permutations and their literature can be found in Todd p. 71–76.
  11. ^ Newes, p. 218. Newes transcribes the excerpt.
  12. ^ Bukofzer, p. 176. Bukofzer believes the existence of this retrograde is based on intellectual satisfaction.
  13. ^ Newes, p. 233.
  14. ^ Poirion, p. 322.
  15. ^ Newes, p. 218, 234.
  16. ^ Todd, p. 55.
  17. ^ Todd, p. 69–70.
  18. ^ Rubbra, p. 35.
  19. ^ In a lecture on this Sonata, pianist Andras Schiff explains at how Beethoven explores the retrograde version of this subject.
  20. ^ Schleiermacher, p. 62.
  21. ^ Grove and Pratt, p. 40.
  22. ^ Meyer, p. 909 et passim.
  23. ^ Morgan, "Symmetrical Form", p. 26.
  24. ^ Apel, p. 728
  25. ^ Newbould, passim. Newbould suggests this is the sole example of a retrograde palindrome in 19th-century music.
  26. ^ E[dwards], p. 308.
  27. ^ Watkins, p. 184.
  28. ^ Jalowetz, p. 394.
  29. ^ Jarman, p. 351, 357, and 364.
  30. ^ Covach, p. 20, citing Morgan, "The Eternal Return," p. 112
  31. ^ a b Slepian, p. 314.
  32. ^ Slepian, p. 322.
  33. ^ Nicholls, pp. 106–07.
  34. ^ Sabbe, p. 73.
  35. ^ Grant, p. 64–65.
  36. ^ Burkholder, Sinclair, and Sherwood.
  37. ^ Morris, p. 129, 135, 138–39, 144–45, 147–48, 152–53.
  38. ^ Morris, p. 148.
  39. ^ Stenzl, p. 150–53.
  40. ^ Nicholls, p. 99–101.
  41. ^ van den Toorn, p. 414; White, p. 488–89.
  42. ^ Barthel-Calvet, p. 155, 166, 173.
  43. ^ Griffiths.

retrograde, music, melodic, line, that, reverse, previously, simultaneously, stated, line, said, retrograde, cancrizans, walking, backward, medieval, latin, from, cancer, crab, exact, retrograde, includes, both, pitches, rhythms, reverse, even, more, exact, re. A melodic line that is the reverse of a previously or simultaneously stated line is said to be its retrograde or cancrizans ˈ k ae ŋ k r ɪ ˌ z ae n z 1 walking backward medieval Latin from cancer crab An exact retrograde includes both the pitches and rhythms in reverse An even more exact retrograde reverses the physical contour of the notes themselves though this is possible only in electronic music Some composers choose to subject just the pitches of a musical line to retrograde or just the rhythms In twelve tone music reversal of the pitch classes alone regardless of the melodic contour created by their registral placement is regarded as a retrograde Contents 1 In modal and tonal music 1 1 In treatises 1 2 In music 1 3 Examples in modal and tonal music 2 In post tonal music 2 1 Examples in post tonal music 3 Non retrogradable rhythm 4 See also 5 References 6 ReferencesIn modal and tonal music editIn treatises edit Retrograde was not mentioned in theoretical treatises prior to 1500 2 Nicola Vicentino 1555 discussed the difficulty in finding canonic imitation At times the fugue or canon cannot be discovered through the systems mentioned above either because of the impediment of rests or because one part is going up while another is going down or because one part starts at the beginning and the other at the end In such cases a student can begin at the end and work back to the beginning in order to find where and in which voice he should begin the canons 3 Vicentino derided those who achieved purely intellectual pleasure from retrograde and similar permutations A composer of such fancies must try to make canons and fugues that are pleasant and full of sweetness and harmony He should not make a canon in the shape of a tower a mountain a river a chessboard or other objects for these compositions create a loud noise in many voices with little harmonic sweetness To tell the truth a listening is more likely to be induced to vexation than to delight by these disproportioned fancies which are devoid of pleasant harmony and contrary to the goal of the imitation of the nature of the words 3 Thomas Morley 1597 described retrograde in the context of canons and mentions a work by Byrd 4 Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg 1754 notes various names for the procedure imitatio retrograda or cancrizans or per motum retrogradum and says it is used primarily in canons and fugues 5 Some writers acknowledge that hearing retrograde in music is a challenge and consider it a self referential compositional device 6 7 8 In music edit nbsp Nusmido folio 150 verso of manuscript Pluteo 29 1 located in the Laurentian Library in Florence the earliest known example of retrograde in music Despite not being mentioned in theoretical treatises prior to 1500 compositions written before that date show retrograde 2 According to Willi Apel the earliest example of retrograde in music is the 13th century clausula Nusmido in which the tenor has the liturgical melody Dominus in retrograde found in the manuscript Pluteo 29 1 folio 150 verso located in the Laurentian Library in Florence 9 10 11 The word Nusmido is a syllabic retrograde of the word Dominus 12 Surveying medieval examples of retrograde Virginia Newes notes that early composers were often also poets and that musical retrogrades could have been based on similarly constructed poetic texts 13 She quotes Daniel Poirion in suggesting that the retrograde canon in Machaut s three voice rondeau Ma Fin est mon Commencement could symbolize a metaphysical view of death as rebirth or else the ideal circle of the courtly outlook which encloses all initiatives and all ends 14 She concludes that whatever the reasons construction of retrogrades and their transmission were part of the medieval composers world as they prized symmetry and balance as intellectual feats in addition to the aural experience 15 nbsp Machaut the opening and closing bars of ma fin est mon commencement My end is my beginning Listen Todd notes that although some composers John Dunstaple Guillaume Dufay and Johannes Ockeghem used retrograde occasionally they did not combine it with other permutations In contradistinction Antoine Busnois and Jacob Obrecht used retrograde and other permutations extensively suggesting familiarity with one another s compositional techniques 16 Todd also notes that by use of retrograde inversion and retrograde inversion composers of this time viewed music in a way similar to serialists of the 20th century 17 However as Edmund Rubbra 1960 p 35 points out This is of course a purely mental concept as music can never do anything but go forwards even if the given tune is reversed The different relationships set up by reversing the direction of a theme make it completely unrecognizable and when a composer indulges in this device the disclosure of it makes not the slightest difference to our apprehension of the music which must be listened to as going parallel with the time processes of our existence 18 Nevertheless there are examples of retrograde motion in the music of J S Bach Haydn and Beethoven Bach s Musical Offering includes a two voice canon in which the second voice performs the melodic line of first voice backwards source source source Bach Canon 2 from Musical offering nbsp Bach two part canon from The Musical Offering The lower part is an exact retrograde of the upper part The minuet third movement of Joseph Haydn s Symphony no 47 is an exact palindrome Haydn also transcribed this piece for piano and this version forms the second movement of his Piano Sonata in A major XVI 26 source source source Minuet from Piano Sonata in A nbsp Minuet al rovescio from Haydn Sonata in A major The fugal fourth movement of Beethoven Piano Sonata no 29 op 106 Hammerklavier has the following main theme source source source Hammerklavier fugue subject first four bars nbsp Hammerklavier fugue subject first four barsLater in this movement Beethoven conjures up and uses the retrograde version of the subject Beethoven does not create a strict note for note reversal of the theme 19 source source source Hammerklavier fugue subject retrograde version last four bars nbsp Hammerklavier fugue subject retrograde version last four bars Examples in modal and tonal music edit Guillaume de Machaut Ma fin est mon commencement rondeau 14 20 William Byrd Diliges Dominum no 25 from Cantiones Sacrae 4 21 Jacob Obrecht Missa Grecorum Agnus Dei Leonhard Paminger Vexilla regis prodeunt from the Secundus tomus ecclesiasticarum cantionum Nuremberg 1573 22 Gregorius Joseph Werner Der curiose musikalische Instrumentalkalende Die Sonne im Krebs Menuetto cancrizante Joseph Haydn canon Thy Voice O Harmony Joseph Haydn Symphony No 47 3rd movement Minuetto al Roverso Joseph Haydn piano sonata XVI 26 minuet a transcription of the 3rd movement from Symphony No 47 23 Joseph Haydn Violin Sonata no 4 Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach Minuet C major Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Trio al rovescio from the minuet of the Serenade in C minor a work which was later arranged for string quintet Adalbert Gyrowetz Trio al rovescio from the minuet of the String Quartet in G major Op 29 2 Beethoven Piano Sonata no 29 Op 106 Hammerklavier fugal fourth movement includes an episode with the subject in retrograde 24 Franz Schubert Die Zauberharfe No 3 Melodram Der Finke fing 25 John Stainer Per Recte et Retro 26 John Tavener The Lamb In post tonal music edit nbsp Prime top left retrograde top right inverse bottom left and retrograde inverse bottom right As early as 1923 Arnold Schoenberg expressed the equivalence of melodic and harmonic presentation as a unity of musical space Taking the example of a hat Schoenberg explained that the hat remains the same no matter if it is observed from below or above from one side or another Similarly permutations such as inversion retrograde and retrograde inversion are a way to create musical space 27 Heinrich Jalowetz discussed Arnold Schoenberg s frequent use of retrograde and other permutations as a compositional device for twelve tone music The technique serves two main functions One is to provide a substitute for classical tonality with all its melodic and harmonic consequences The second function is to provide a means of interrelationship This is done by presenting the row not only in normal position but in inversion retrogression and retrograde inversion The music derives a strict inner cohesion through the artful treatment of such relationships even though the listener may often be unable to follow what is happening 28 In twelve tone music retrograde treatment of pitch is a commonplace but rhythmic retrogrades are comparatively rare Examples of rhythmic retrogrades occur in the music of Alban Berg for example in the operas Wozzeck and Lulu and in the Chamber Concerto 29 In discussing Berg s extensive use of retrograde and palindrome Robert Morgan coins the word circular to describe musical situations in which an opening gesture returns at a composition s close thereby joining the music s temporal extremes 30 Dorothy Slepian writing in 1947 observed that modern American composers write canons that whether simple or complicated in structure clearly discernible or subtly concealed are a natural means of expression growing directly out of the individual needs of the melodic material Therefore most of the composers regard cancrizans as an artificial device imposed upon a theme rather than as a consequence germinated by it 31 Specifically Douglas Moore Harold Morris Paul Creston and Bernard Rogers flatly refute the expressive powers of the cancrizans whereas Walter Piston Adolph Weiss Wallingford Riegger and Roger Sessions use it often 32 One particularly colorful and effective example is found in the second movement of Piston s Concerto for Orchestra where continuous rapid string passages with an ostinato bass rhythm and a melody in the English horn returns later in the movement performed backwards as a recapitulation 31 Examples in post tonal music edit Alban Berg Der Wein 1929 Der Wein der Liebenden measures 112 40 are then heard in retrograde as measures 140 70 Alban Berg Lulu the silent film interlude in Act 2 Ruth Crawford Seeger Diaphonic Suite No 3 for two clarinets 1930 third movement the first clarinet in bars 45 56 present an exact retrograde of the same part bars 2 13 33 Karel Goeyvaerts Nummer 5 met zuivere tonen Number 5 with Pure Tones 1953 superimposes an exact retrograde of its materials on the forwards version 34 As a result not only does each event in the second half occur according to an axis of symmetry at the centre of the work but each event itself is reversed so that the note attacks in the first half become note decays in the second and vice versa 35 Paul Hindemith s Ludus Tonalis cycle is highly palindromic its Postludium being almost a retrograde inversion of its Introitus Charles Ives Scherzo All the Way Around and Back 1907 08 is palindromic 36 Olivier Messiaen Abime des oiseaux from the Quatuor pour la fin du temps 1941 exhibits many retrograde relationships among its elements 37 as well as one rhythm that is a retrograde version of ragavardhana No 93 in Sharngadeva s collection the Sangita Ratnakara 38 Luigi Nono Incontri 1955 39 Carl Ruggles Sun Treader 1926 31 has a rhythmically free pitch palindrome in b 68 118 and a retrograde canon in b 124 33 40 Igor Stravinsky Canticum Sacrum 1956 The fifth movement is an almost exact retrograde of the first 41 Iannis Xenakis Metastaseis 1953 54 contains many instances of retrograde relationships 42 Non retrogradable rhythm editIn music and music theory a non retrogradable rhythm is a rhythmic palindrome i e a pattern of note durations that is read or performed the same either forwards or backwards 43 The term is used most frequently in the context of the music of Olivier Messiaen For example such rhythms occur in the Liturgie de cristal and Danse de la fureur pour les sept trompettes the first and sixth movements of Messiaen s Quatuor pour la fin du temps See also editCrab canon Palindrome Permutation music Retrograde inversionReferences editApel Willi Retrograde Harvard Dictionary of Music Cambridge Harvard University Press 1969 Barthel Calvet Anne Sylvie METASTASSIS Analyse Un texte inedit de Iannis Xenakis sur Metastasis Revue de Musicologie 89 no 1 2003 129 87 Bukofzer Manfred F Speculative Thinking in Mediaeval Music Speculum 17 no 2 April 1942 p 165 80 Burkholder J Peter James B Sinclair and Gayle Sherwood Ives Charles Edward The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers 2001 Covach John Balzacian Mysticism Palindromic Design and Heavenly Time in Berg s Music In Encrypted Messages in Alban Berg s Music edited by Siglind Bruhn pp 5 29 New York Garland Press 1998 E dwards F rederick G eorge John Stainer Musical Times and Singing Class Circular 42 no 699 May 1 1901 pp 297 309 Grant M orag J osephine Serial Music Serial Aesthetics Compositional Theory in Post war Europe Cambridge U K New York Cambridge University Press 2001 Griffiths Paul 2001 Messiaen Olivier Eugene Prosper Charles The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers 2001 Grove George and Waldo Selden Pratt Recte et Retro Per Grove s Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition vol 4 p 40 Philadelphia Theodore Presser 1922 Jalowetz Heinrich On the Spontaneity of Schoenberg s Music Musical Quarterly 30 no 4 October 1944 pp 385 408 Jarman Douglas Some Rhythmic and Metric Techniques in Alban Berg s Lulu Musical Quarterly 56 no 3 July 1970 349 66 Levarie Siegmund and Ernst Levy Musical Morphology A Discourse and a Dictionary Kent OH Kent State University Press 1983 Marpurg Friedrich Wilhelm Abhandlung von der Fuge nach den Grundsatzen und Exempeln der besten deutschen und auslandischen Meister entworfen nebst Exempeln in LXII und LX Kupfertafeln 2 vols Berlin Haude u Spener 1753 54 Facsimile reprint New York G Olms 1970 Facsimile reprint Laaber Laaber Verlag 2002 ISBN 3 89007 384 0 Translated in Alfred Mann The Study of Fugue New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press 1958 Mazzola Guerino Stefan Goller and Stefan Muller The Topos of Music Geometric Logic of Concepts Theory and Performance Basel Birkhauser 2002 Meyer Christian Vexilla regis prodeunt Un canon enigmatique de Leonhard Paminger In Festschrift Christoph Hellmut Mahling zum 65 Geburtstag edited by Axel Beer Kristina Pfarr and Wolfgang Ruf p 909 17 Mainzer Studien zur Musikwissenschaft 37 2 volumes Tutzing Hans Schneider 1997 ISBN 3 7952 0900 5 Morgan Robert P The Eternal Return Retrograde and Circular Form in Berg in Alban Berg Historical and Analytical Perspectives ed by David Gable and Robert P Morgan Oxford Clarendon Press 1991 p 111 49 Morgan Robert P Symmetrical Form and Common Practice Tonality Spectrum 20 no 1 Spring 1998 p 1 47 Morley Thomas A Plain and Easy Introduction to Practical Music edited by R Alec Harman London J M Dent amp Sons 1952 Morris David A Semiotic Investigation of Messiaen s Abime des oiseaux Music Analysis 8 nos 1 2 March July 1989 125 58 Newbould Brian A Schubert Palindrome 19th Century Music 15 no 3 1992 p 207 14 Newes Virginia Writing Reading and Memorizing The Transmission and Resolution of Retrograde Canons from the 14th and Early 15th Centuries Early Music 18 no 2 May 1990 p 218 34 Nicholls David American Experimental Music 1890 1940 Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press 1991 ISBN 0 521 42464 X Poirion Daniel Le Poete et le prince l evolution du lyrisme courtois de Guillaume de Machaut a Charles d Orleans Paris Presses universitaires de France 1965 Rubbra Edmund Counterpoint London Hutchinson University Library 1960 Sabbe Herman Het muzikale serialisme als techniek en als denkmethode Een onderzoek naar de logische en historische samenhang van de onderscheiden toepassingen van het serierend beginsel in de muziek van de periode 1950 1975 Ghent Rijksuniversiteit te Gent 1977 Schleiermacher Steffen Bei Liese sei lieb Das Palindrom in der Musik Neue Zeitschrift fur Musik Das Magazin fur neue Tone 171 no 2 March April 2010 62 63 Slepian Dorothy Polyphonic Forms and Devices in Modern American Music Musical Quarterly 33 no 3 July 1947 p 311 26 Stenzl Jurg Nonos Incontri Melos 39 no 3 May June 1972 150 53 Todd R Larry Retrograde Inversion Retrograde Inversion and Related Techniques in the Masses of Jacobus Obrecht Musical Quarterly 64 no 1 Jan 1978 p 50 78 van den Toorn Pieter C The Music of Igor Stravinsky New Haven Yale University Press 1983 Vicentino Nicola L antica musica ridotta alla moderna prattica Rome A Barre 1555 English edition as Ancient Music Adapted to Modern Practice trans by Maria Rika Maniates New Haven CT Yale University Press 1996 Watkins Holly Schoenberg s Interior Designs Journal of the American Musicological Society 61 no 1 Spring 2008 p 123 206 White Eric Walter Stravinsky The Composer and His Works second edition Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press 1979 ISBN 0 520 03985 8 References edit Pronunciation indicated s v in the online Merriam Webster Dictionary a b Newes p 218 a b Vicentino p 298 a b Morley p 288 89 Marpurg p 148 49 full citation needed Levarie and Levy p 242 Mazzola Goller and Muller p 15 The fact that listeners may not recognize the second phrase as a reversal of the first does not defeat the idea a mirror structure under time produces a possible comprehensible result not necessarily a recognizable transformation Morgan Symmetrical Form p 26 Apel p 728 Todd and Newes accept Apel s identification of Nusmido as the earliest work found containing a retrograde passage Many citations to early examples of retrograde and other permutations and their literature can be found in Todd p 71 76 Newes p 218 Newes transcribes the excerpt Bukofzer p 176 Bukofzer believes the existence of this retrograde is based on intellectual satisfaction Newes p 233 Poirion p 322 Newes p 218 234 Todd p 55 Todd p 69 70 Rubbra p 35 In a lecture on this Sonata pianist Andras Schiff explains at how Beethoven explores the retrograde version of this subject Schleiermacher p 62 Grove and Pratt p 40 Meyer p 909 et passim Morgan Symmetrical Form p 26 Apel p 728 Newbould passim Newbould suggests this is the sole example of a retrograde palindrome in 19th century music E dwards p 308 Watkins p 184 Jalowetz p 394 Jarman p 351 357 and 364 Covach p 20 citing Morgan The Eternal Return p 112 a b Slepian p 314 Slepian p 322 Nicholls pp 106 07 Sabbe p 73 Grant p 64 65 Burkholder Sinclair and Sherwood Morris p 129 135 138 39 144 45 147 48 152 53 Morris p 148 Stenzl p 150 53 Nicholls p 99 101 van den Toorn p 414 White p 488 89 Barthel Calvet p 155 166 173 Griffiths Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Retrograde music amp oldid 1178204742, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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