Music theory in concept and practice
著者
書誌事項
Music theory in concept and practice
(Eastman studies in music)
University of Rochester Press, 1997
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This collection of nineteen essays, all by leaders in the field of music theory, reflects the rich diversity of topics and approaches currently being explored. The contributions fall within three principal areas of study that haveremained at the heart of the discipline. One is historical research, which includes efforts to trace the development of theoretical ideas and their philosophical bases. Representing this broad category are essays dealing with issues like Scriabin's mysticism, neoclassicism, modern aesthetics, and the development of the concept of pitch collection in twentieth-century theoretical writings. The second area embraces the theory and analysis of common-practicetonality and its associated repertoire (including chromatic and "transitional" music). Within this category are several studies related directly to or derived from Schenkerian theory, covering repertoire from Bach through Schubert and Chopin to Gershwin. Complementing these articles are a study of a chromatic work by Liszt and an essay on Schoenberg's concept of tonality. The third broad category includes the large body of work associated with the theoryand analysis of post-tonal music. Representing this extensive area of inquiry are essays dealing with voice leading in atonal music and extending Allen Forte's theory of the set complex, and analytical studies dealing with works by Schoenberg and Webern. Adding to these contributions are articles that deal with works by composers less frequently discussed in the analytical literature, Milhaud and Peter Maxwell Davies, and an empirical study of aural cognition of atonal and tonal music.
These essays, all by colleagues, friends, and students of Allen Forte are intended as a celebration of his enormous contribution to the discipline of music theory.
James Baker isProfessor of Music at Brown University.
David Beach is Dean of the Faculty of Music at the University of Toronto.
Jonathan Bernard is Professor of Music at the University of Washington.
目次
Chord, Collection, and Set in Twentieth-Century Theory - Jonathan W. Bernard
Scriabin's Music: Structure as Prism for Mystical Philosophy - James M. Baker
Tonality: A Conflict of Forces - Patricia Carpenter
Neoclassicism and Its Definitions - Pieter C. van den Toorn
Modernist Aesthetics, Modernist Music: Some Analytical Perspectives - Arnold Whittall
Salient Features - John Rothgeb
Synthesis and Association, Structure and Design in Multi-Movt. Compositions - David Neumeyer
Tonal/Atonal: Cognitive Strategies for Recognizing Transposed Melodies - Elizabeth West Marvin
Voice Leading in Atonal Music - Joseph N. Straus
K, Kh, and Beyond - Robert D. Morris
The Submediant as Third Divider: Its Representations at Different Structural Levels - David W. Beach
The Form of Chopin's Polonaise-Fantasy - William Rothstein
Chasing the Scent: Tonality in Liszt's Blume und Duft - Robert P. Morgan
Reflection on a Few Good Tunes: Linear Progressions and Intervallic Patterns in Popular Song and Jazz - Steven E. Gilbert
Bitonality, Pentatonicism, and Diatonicism in a Work by Milhaud - Daniel Harrison
Signposts on Webern's Path to Atonality: The Dehmel Lieder (1906-08) - Robert W. Wason
Some Notes on Pierrot Lunaire - David Lewin
Form and Idea in Schoenberg's Phantasy - Christopher Hasty
Elision and Structural Levels in Peter Maxwell Davies's Dark Angels - Ann K. McNamee
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