Terefenko 173-196
Terefenko 173-196
Terefenko 173-196
Dariusz Terefenko
University of Rochester
Rochester
Introduction
In recent years the furtive field of music theory pedagogy has produced remarkable
textbooks that have significantly improved and modernized the quality of music theory
instructions1. As some textbooks seem to advocate the importance of hands-on approaches to studying certain theoretical concepts, there is, however, a considerable scarcity of sources that consider teaching improvisation at a level appropriate in academia2.
While the mastering of specific tasks chorale harmonization, continuo realization,
model composition, lead-sheet interpretation, motivic and phrase improvisation requires a considerable amount of practical instruction that may potentially be realized in
time by the student, the introduction of more comprehensive theoretical topics from an
improvisational standpoint in keeping with the techniques and methodologies cultivated
in the Baroque period necessitates a well-developed pedagogy and clearly specified objectives. The issue of the priority of harmony versus counterpoint, for instance, their interactions with or influence on the metric or rhythmic structure, and the role they exert in
conveying formal properties may be addressed through studying improvisation. Not only
does the addition of topics in baroque improvisation warrant effective theory pedagogy,
J.N. Straus, Elements of Music, Upper Saddle River, NJ 2008; S. Laitz, The Complete Musician: An Integrated Approach to Tonal Theory, Analysis, and Listening, New York 2007; R. Gauldin, Harmonic
Practice in Tonal Music, New York 2005; E. Henry, M. Rogers, Tonality and Design in Music Theory,
Englewood Cliffs, NY 2005; J.P. Clendinning, E. West Marvin, The Musicians Guide to Theory and
Analysis, New York 2004; C. Mayfield, Theory Essentials: An Integrated Approach to Harmony,
Ear Training, and Keyboard Skills, Vols. 1-2, Belmont, CA 2003; M. Roig-Francoli, Harmony in Context, New York 2002.
2
D. Ledbetter, Continuo Playing According to Handel: His Figured Bass Exercises With a Commentary,
New York 1990; A. Brings, Ch. Burkhart, R. Kamien, L. Kraft, F. Pershing, A New Approach to Keyboard Harmony, New York 1979; S. Berkowitz, Improvisation through Keyboard Harmony, Englewood Cliffs, NY 1975; W. Pelz, Basic Keyboard Skills. Harmonization and Modulation, Transposition,
Accompaniment, Improvisation, Boston, MA 1963; M. Lieberman, Keyboard Harmony and Improvisation, New York 1957; R.O. Morris, Figured Harmony at the Keyboard, London 1932.
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but it also provides a welcome practical respite that directly focuses on the music as opposed to an over-intellectualized theoretical discourse. As improvisation an overtly neglected, yet important musical tradition becomes less of an exception and more a norm
in theory curricula, the level of musicianship among the students will increase as the
practical involvement with music theory will promote expedient assimilation and comprehensive understanding of its concepts.
How did baroque musicians learn to improvise? What was the process accompanying their improvisations? Was it entirely practical and conceptual with little theory behind it or vice versa? In the absence of harmonic science at least in its current manifestations what specific theoretical concepts enabled musicians to learn their craft?
What was the role of counterpoint in advancing musical improvisation? While these
and similarly framed questions might be considered rhetorical, an attempt to find answers is highly relevant to the current study.
In this paper I propose amending music theory curricula with topics in baroque improvisation. A complementary, yet very effective pedagogical tool, improvisation can
be utilized for studying the principles of form, counterpoint and its harmonic implications, phrase structure, motivic development, invertible counterpoint, modulations, and
numerous other concepts. To that end I will employ one of the most accessible variation forms from common practice music, namely, the passacaglia3. The attractiveness
of this formal design its relative improvisational manageability and applicability to
music theory instructions corresponds to its salient structural properties: the recurrence of the bass line, open harmonic framework, unambiguous contrapuntal layout,
and symmetrical phrase structure. These properties lend themselves to a number of
melodic, contrapuntal, harmonic, rhythmic, textural and tonal transformations that subsequently participate in the unfolding of formal structure.
First, I will briefly examine two passacaglias from the Baroque period by Dietrich
Buxtehude and Johann Sebastian Bach4. The analysis of these pieces exposes a number
of very important improvisational techniques, typical of the style and period, that were
masterfully implemented to project a sense of the form in general, and contrapuntal,
melodic, rhythmic, and textural properties in particular. Next, I will discuss specific
improvisational strategies and their practical manifestations in the context of an eightmeasure passacaglia. In order of importance, I will focus on the following issues: the role
of outer-voice counterpoint in 1:1 melodic ratio, contrapuntal reifications of the outer-voice framework, diminutions in 2:1 and 3:1 with resultant stable and unstable tones,
motivic and rhythmic development, invertible counterpoint at the octave, modulation to
relative major and minor dominant, three-voice texture, free imitation, and the principles of large-scale form. Having discussed the nuts and bolts of improvisation, I will conclude by suggesting possible formal outlines for passacaglias of medium (ten variations) and large (twenty variations) size.
For an extensive survey of the genre see Richard Hudsons Passacaglio and ciaccona: from guitar
music to Italian keyboard variations in the 17th century (Ann Arbor, Mich. 1981).
4
For the sake of space I will refer to the scores available online. They can be downloaded at http:
//imslp.info/files/imglnks/usimg/1/1e/IMSLP29678-PMLP66660-Buxtehude-BuxWV161.pdf (accessed
on April 29, 2009): BuxWV161; and, http://imslp.info/files/imglnks/usimg/6/61/IMSLP01337-BW
V0582.pdf (accessed on April 29, 2009): J.S. Bach, BWV582.
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Among many mysteries surrounding improvisation, the facts that its practitioners
are naturally predisposed to it or that the principles governing the process itself are too
complex to be acquired in any methodologically construed manner stand out as the
most commonly misunderstood. General absence of improvisation from theory curricula seems to corroborate this point. While the claim pertaining to the complexity and
comprehensiveness of improvisation (especially in its more advanced stages) is partially true with respect to common-practice improvisation after all, following its
flourishing in the Baroque and Classical era, it witnessed a period of relative obscurity
in the 19th and 20th centuries in jazz, to the contrary, methodologies and strategies for
teaching the principles of improvisation sprang exponentially in the second half of the
20th century and continue to be developed5.
Improvisation may yield compelling results provided that its pedagogy is solidly
built and its edifice resembles a well-planned and hierarchically organized structure.
And, as in any other musical activity, its success depends just as much on the quality of
instructions as it does on the diligence of students in appropriating and internalizing
consecutive improvisational steps.
For instance: M. Levine, The Jazz Theory Book, Petaluma, CA 1995 and B. Dobbins, A Creative
Approach to Jazz Piano Harmony, Rottenburg 1991.
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dominant formation, Eb7, resolving deceptively to Fm. It can be argued that the new
harmonic support in Variation II creates a sense of phrase continuation that, combined
with Variation I, forms a large sixteen-measure antecedent/consequent period. In Buxtehudes piece, the opening two variations are texturally unified, yet the treatment of
suspensions in Variation II is noticeably different from Variation I.
While the texture of these passacaglias may become quite intricate and dense at
times, the amount of rhythmic and melodic diminution does not affect the properties of the
outer-voice counterpoint that, in both cases, is harmonically autonomous and clearly
defines the underlying tonality. The outer-voice counterpoint, then, acquires the status
of a structural and conceptual entity that controls the unfolding of melodic ideas, and
its members have the potential of being contrapuntally reified as components of other
harmonic formations.
The comparison of the two passacaglias proves that the composers had quite different attitudes toward ways of articulating the overall form of the piece6. In Buxtehudes
composition, tonal motion to the relative major (for the duration of seven variations:
variations VIII-XV) and, then, directly to the minor dominant (for the durations of
seven variations: variations XVI-XXII) creates a sense of tonal departure. The overall
form (twenty eight repetitions of the ground) displays a palindromic design with seven
variations in the tonic at the beginning and at the end circumscribing fourteen variations in the middle (seven in III and seven in v). Alternatively, in Bachs case (twenty
repetitions of the ground), a distinct combination of gradual tapering of the musical
texture in variations XIV-XV, the embellished presentation of the ground in variations
V and VIII, and the use of invertible counterpoint in variation XI-XIII generate a sense
of textural departure. All of these techniques constitute effective form-building entities
that can be successfully implemented in our passacaglias.
The ground is harmonically open with a clear 4+4 phrase division: mm. 1-4 prolong the tonic and mm. 5-8 move, via iv, to V. The harmonic rhythm is relatively
slow and its possible realizations conform to the rules of common practice tonality.
Example 2 proposes an exhaustive assortment of figured bass realizations of the
ground7.
When we talk about the form of passacaglia we have to remember that great composers were concerned with the projection of a larger formal structure (with its typical form-building entities) unto
a sectional form.
7
I will use figured bass notation as a more idiomatic way of indicating harmonic possibilities.
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Even though this striking transformation of the normative ^5-^1 motion into a completely new and unexpected one adds a welcome addition to the overall structure of the
passacaglia, the amount of contrapuntal calisthenics required to get back on tonal
tracks makes it quite ambitious to accomplish.
One of the techniques employed by Buxtehude involves the presentation of the
ground in the relative major and minor dominant. These unexpected tonal shifts create
a sense of harmonic departure and greatly enhance the overall form of the passacaglia.
Example 4 illustrates the realization of the ground in the relative major9.
8
9
Another set of guidelines may explore larger intervallic skips in the counterpoint.
While the resulting, unembellished line may not be as idiomatic as those in Example 5,
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the goal of this exercise is more pragmatic and utilitarian rather than idealistic; by improvising intervallicaly diverse counterpoints in 1:1 ratio, a foundation has been laid for the
ensuing melodic and rhythmic diminutions. Example 6 shows such a framework.
Example 6: Larger intervallic skips
Each consecutive variation may features a specific type (or types) of non-harmonic
tone. While retaining a single type of non-harmonic tone within one variation might be
either untenable or if, indeed attempted overtly unmusical, occasional additions of other
non-harmonic tones seem necessary to improvise a more satisfying counterpoint. The
methodology used for creating these and similar exercises follows the principles of
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combining various melodic and contrapuntal possibilities, and, at the same time, developing control over the material and delivering it in metered time10.
One of the most challenging and necessary conditions for successful improvisation
is the ability to maintain a steady pulse. While the importance of keeping time cannot
be underestimated under any musical circumstances, it is particularly vital in projecting
various melodic diminutions in general and suspensions in particular. Rhythmic events,
suspensions can only be reified within a well-established metric structure. Not only
does the use of suspensions require theoretical understanding of their tripartite rhetoric,
but, more importantly, their proper use in improvisation is ultimately connected to the
rhythmic and metric properties of the musical structure. Example 8 (a through e) lists
some of the possible suspensions that can be utilized within a two-voice framework.
Example 8: Suspension possibilities
a)
Measure 1-2
b)
Measure 3-4
c)
Measure 4-5
d)
Measure 5-6
10
It also becomes apparent that not all the possibilities will be explored because of the sheer number
of available combinations.
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e)
Measure 6-8
In a 3:1 melodic ratio more possibilities for non-harmonic tones ensue such as:
elaborate suspension resolutions, three-note cambiatas, multiple passing tones, arpeggiation, and others. Improvisational strategies can be systematically organized according to the explicit properties of the melodic line: stepwise (ascending/descending), arpeggiation (ascending/descending), and mixed. Examples 9 show possible realizations
of the ground using some of these properties.
Example 9: 3:1 diminutions
To explore these ideas to their full potential and develop control over them, one
may alternate between stepwise motion and arpeggiation on a measure-by-measure basis (or vice versa) thus creating more melodic variety as shown in Example 10.
Example 10: Alternating stepwise and arpeggiation
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11
J. Fux, Gradus ad Parnassum, trans. A. Mann as The Study of Counterpoint, New York 1965;
R. Parks, 18th-century counterpoint and tonal structure, Englewood Cliffs, NY 1984; R. Gauldin,
A Practical Approach to 16th-century Counterpoint, Englewood Cliffs, NY 1985; T. Benjamin,
Counterpoint in the Style of J.S. Bach, New York 1986; P. Schubert, Modal Counterpoint, Renaissance Style, London 1999.
12
Buxtehude, in his passacaglia, includes tonal motions to relative major and minor dominant.
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Just as in the minor counterpart, the use of invertible counterpoint in the relative
major can add another layer of complexity to the passacaglia.
While the rules governing the behavior of the ground and accompanying counterpoint are similar in both keys, advancing a successful modulation in time either to
relative major or minor dominant involves a discussion of pertinent theoretical issues
to make these tonal shifts successful.
^5-^6 motion
Example 14 shows a ^5-^6 contrapuntal motion destabilizing the tonic and initiating
a diatonic ascending second sequence to the relative major. The use of ^5-^6 sequence
connects i and III in a most unencumbered and natural manner.
13
In Example 15, the same ^5-^6 motion, albeit chromatically altered, initiates motion
to v.
Example 15: ^5-^6 motion: ascending second sequence to v
The same motion can be used in activating a descending second sequence with
a chain of 7-6 suspensions as shown in Example 16 and Example 17.
Example 16: ^5-^6 motion: descending second sequence to III
Not only are these two sequential progressions very effective in diatonic environments but they can be easily chromaticized to dramatize their presentation and to ad184
vance a tonal motion to other key areas as well. The chromaticized version of the ^5-^6
ascending motion is illustrated in Example 18 and Example 19 connecting III with v and
v and i, respectively.
Example 18: ^5-^6 motion: chromaticized ascending second sequence III-v
And just as the ^5-^6 contrapuntal expansion can be chromaticized to access intermediary key areas so can a local ^1-^b2 prompt chromaticized progressions. Examples
21, 22, and 23 show the diatonic and chromatic progression from i to III, III to v and i to
v utilizing the local ^1-^b2 motion, respectively.
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What becomes apparent from the progression in Example 24 is the manner in which
the leading tone, g#, is introduced and absorbed into the structure of the progression.
First, it is introduced as a lower, unaccented chromatic neighbor in the soprano (m. 2),
then as an accented lower neighbor in the bass (m. 2). In m. 3 it becomes more pronounced as it occurs on beat two. By that measure, it begins to assert its proper func
14
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tion: the leading tone of a new key. Finally, in m. 5 to confirm its proper function
within the progression g# occurs three times: in the bass, as an accented passing tone,
in the soprano, also as an accented passing tone, and in the bass on beat three, as a leading
tone of v. This gradual manifestation of its presence and affirmation of its function in
time is further evidence for the primacy of linear approach in improvisation.
Examination of the progressions from Examples 18-25 shows that the leading tone
is carefully woven into the polyphonic fabric, the phrase structure is highly symmetrical, and that the outer-voice counterpoint and resultant intervallic pairs controlling the
downbeats are tonally self sufficient. All of these make the arrival of the new key inevitable and musically satisfying.
The contrapuntal linear expansions ^5-^6 and ^1-^b2 and the functional subversion can also be used for advancing more elaborate modulations involving tonicizations
of intermediary key areas15. Example 26, for instance, includes a tonicization of iv, as
one of the possible intermediary key areas.
Example 26: i-III: The use of iv as an intermediary key area
15
Since more involved modulations are rare in passacaglias, I resort to a brief mention of that possibility. Indeed, the ability to modulate via intermediary key areas is one of the necessary conditions
for improvising more complex musical forms.
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The use of tonal inversion, retrograde and retrograde inversion can produce four
distinct variations. While the ability to apply these transformations to a melodic idea
in time can be ambitious at times, the choice of a specific motive that easily lends itself to these transformations can attenuate the process of improvisation. The main objective of these exercises is to equip the student with a subset of indispensible and
idiomatic improvisational techniques that can be discretionally used in improvisation.
Rhythmic diminutions
Broadly speaking, the creativity in handling stable and unstable tones and proper
dissonant treatment are central to successful improvisation. As melodies are intimately
connected to rhythm and one cannot exist without the other by shifting focus from
the melodic properties of the line to the rhythmic, the student can improvise a counterpoint that is unified by a single rhythmic idea. Example 28 shows rhythmic motives
that can be implemented for practicing rhythmic unity. For the purpose of practicing,
each of these rhythmic motives (and the palette of these can be greatly expanded)
should be retained within the context of a single variation.
Example 28: Rhythmic motives
Note that with each consecutive variation there is a sense of rhythmic growth and
logical expansion of the original rhythmic cell.
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In addition to the aforementioned, there are other fill-in devices that utilize some
of the most idiomatic baroque-like gestures: scales, arpeggiation, accented and unaccented non-harmonic tones, in various combinations. Example 30 lists more effective
combinations of these.
Example 30: Idiomatic melodic gestures
16
F.E. Niedt, The Musical Guide, 3 parts (1700-21), trans. P. Poulin, J. Taylor, Oxford 1988. For
similar figures, consult other sources such as: J.J. Quantz, On Playing the Flute, Lebanon, NH
2001; C.Ph.E. Bach, Essay on the True Art of Playing Keyboard Instruments, New York 1949;
L. Mozart, A Treatise on the Fundamental Principles of Violin Playing, New York 1985.
17
For more examples consult F. Niedt, The Musical Guide..., Part II, p. 75-88.
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The addition of a third voice energizes the musical texture considerably and provides the opportunity for introducing free imitation. The use of imitation, both strict
and free, tests ones ability to reify harmonic progressions horizontally with considerable degree of voice independence and harmonic complementation.
This technique is referred to as call and response whereupon one voice initiates
an idea and the other comments on it preserving or appropriating its salient features.
The use of this technique guarantees equal participation of the voices and the manifestation of a truly polyphonic fabric. Having explored free imitation between upper
voices, other voice combinations can be employed in an imitative dialogue. Examples
34 and 35 demonstrate a bass-tenor and bass-soprano pairing with the ground occurring
in the soprano and alto, respectively.
Example 34: Motivic imitation: the ground in the soprano voice
In Example 34, the ground is placed in the soprano with the two lower voices engaging in an imitative discourse. Example 35 illustrates a more complicated scenario with
the ground occurring in the inner voice with the outer voices supplying imitative counterpoints. As has been stressed time and time again, the use of free imitation in three-voice texture necessitates linear as opposed harmonic approach to improvisation. The
primary objective of free imitation is to develop a sense of voice independence, melodic
continuity and, above all, the ability to project contrapuntal lines so they rather than following the rigidity of harmonic constrains generate the harmonic structure.
Unequal voice polyphony in three-voices is closely related to the trio sonata texture in
which individual voices have a unique melodic and rhythmic profile as well as have
a clearly defined roles: the bass voice supplies a harmonic foundation, the soprano provides a melodic interest, and, at the same time, establishes a consonant bass-soprano
polarity, and the middle voice enhances the overall texture through complementary melodic diminutions and participates in free imitation18. By embellishing all of the voices,
including the ground, in a manner similar to the two-voice texture, a completely new
subset of variations can be improvised as demonstrated in Example 36.
Example 36: Free melodic elaboration in three voices
Even though variations in Example 36 gradually depart from the normative treatment of the passacaglia, they may still be successfully implemented within the passacaglia proper, and, also, may prepare the student for more advanced improvisational
studies such as: two-, three-part inventions, sonatas, baroque suite dances, and many
others. They create a sense of temporary departure from continuous variation procedures and constitute effective techniques for disguising the ground.
Formal improvisation
Improvising formal designs tests the students ability to organize his or her ideas eloquently and deliver them with conviction in real time. It is comparable to compositional processes in which decisions concerning local and global events shape the unfolding of the musical form. Making musical choices regarding the form as well as other
elements of the musical fabric requires a thorough familiarity with improvisational
techniques as well as with the pertinent melodic, contrapuntal and harmonic vocabulary.
Improvisation often requires prompt adjustment to the unexpected, as the game plan
might be sidetracked on the account of minute details be they rhythmic displacements
of non-harmonic tones or minor modifications of melodic ideas that frequently redirect
the music into a new territory. Competence for handling the unexpected is one of the prerequisite skills warranting improvisational success, i.e. the ability to save oneself, so to
speak. Improvising the passacaglia or any other continuous variation form (chaconne,
folia, or passamezzo) might be a little less complicated than improvising the sonata or the
18
Unequal voice polyphony unlike equal voice polyphony relates to common practice music in which the
polarity between soprano and bass plays much more significant role in the polyphonic fabric than inner
voices. This distinction has been brought to my attention be prof. M. Brown (Eastman School of Music).
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fugue which de facto are indentified with much more stringent formal and contrapuntal
processes; nevertheless, demonstrating formal considerations is just as important in the
passacaglia as it is in any other musical forms. What exactly do these considerations relate to? How do they interact with improvisation? What do they involve and how do they
assist the student in conveying the form of the passacaglia?
The answer to these questions is largely personal and depends on ones expediency in
delivering and organizing ideas in a musically creative and persuasive manner. Since the
passacaglia has a relatively loose formal organization, the articulation of its structure can
be accomplished in a number of ways. Depending on the level of proficiency, the student
may employ various formal paradigms: from the relatively simple, involving basic improvisational techniques, to the more complex, including the use of invertible counterpoint, relative major or dominant minor keys, and three-voice texture. In the process of articulating form, there are certain inevitable form-building entities, the presence of which
is not only idiomatic but, to a certain degree, required. Events such as tonicization of the
subdominant and the use of ^b7, ^b2, or the Neapolitan, signal the conclusion of the passacaglia and are bound to happen in the final variation. To project a sense of balanced or
arch-like formal design, the opening and closing variations may be linked by similar melodic, rhythmic, or textural properties. Invertible counterpoint, relative major and/or minor dominant section, or a disguised presentation of the ground, either in two- or three-voice texture are quite effective in introducing formal departures.
Broadly speaking, conditions for the projection of musical forms involve the juxtaposition of opposing thematic and tonal areas, the development of motivic ideas, and the resolution of tonal or other conflicts. The rules for improvising the passacaglia are less stringent after all, they do not involve resolution of tonal or melodic conflicts nor do they refer to the strictures of a specific formal paradigm as they primarily refer to the development of musical ideas and the projection of large-scale loosely organized formal structure.
Example 37 illustrates a simple formal outline for a medium size passacaglia with
ten variations. Each variation begins with a specific idea (to be continued by the student).
Example 37: A medium passacaglia ten variations
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Note that the topoi of the first and last variation employ aria-like characteristics.
The content of the last variation, however, should, predictably, be enhanced with the
tonicization of iv and an inclusion of a Neapolitan, both of which effectively denote
the end of the piece. As the passacaglia unfolds, there is a gradual buildup of tension
created by rhythmic diminutions and accented and unaccented dissonances. Invertible counterpoint in Variations VI and VII adds a much-needed textural contrast to
the overall framework of the piece.
Example 38 shows a much more involved outline for a large-scale passacaglia
with twenty variations.
Example 38: A large-scale passacaglia: twenty variations
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Further directions
The ability to improvise, arguably, is an ultimate test examining students comprehension of numerous theoretical concepts. The notion of cadence, for instance, takes on
a completely different slant when one is asked to improvise a basic four-measure phrase
in 6/8 and conclude it with either a half cadence or another cadential formula19. Other
theoretical concepts be they sequences, phrases, stable/unstable tones, or chromaticism
can be solidly internalized by implementing improvisation into music theory curricula.
Having established the groundwork for improvising the passacaglia, I would like to
conclude with a few remarks and practical suggestions addressed to the student. Improvisation can be an enjoyable activity provided that enough time and effort have
been devoted to building the theoretical foundation and connecting it to musical practice. Theory and practice form a unique partnership that provides a necessary back
19
By giving this test to my students I can attest that the task looks much simpler on paper than it is in
practice.
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ground for the development and implementation of various improvisational methodologies. Among numerous improvisational skills guaranteeing pedagogical success, the ability to improvise two-voice 1:1 consonant frameworks without melodic embellishments
and played in a steady tempo is crucial in learning how to improvise20. This ability
permits the student to gradually add various melodic and rhythmic diminutions, implement motivically-based developmental procedures and textural variations, reharmonize
the ground, and, ultimately, develop a sense of long-range hearing whereupon certain
musical events can be anticipated prior to their actual occurrence. Needless to say, mastering of these skills requires a conceptual shift in the way we understand the behavior of
certain music properties. While specific theoretical concepts such as cadences or sequences, are intimately related to the vertical convergence of contrapuntal lines at various
levels of the musical structures, others, such as suspensions, are entirely linear in their
manifestations. The interplay between the vertical and horizontal approaches is crucial to
a successful improvisation; both play a unique role in improvisation: the vertical ensures
the tonal orthography in general and the projection of cadences in particular, the horizontal assures contrapuntal independence and melodic inventiveness.
In recent years, the philosophy of teaching music theory has changed considerably.
With the introduction of web-based instructions, computer assistant programs and other
technologies, improvisation may seem antiquated with no place in the postmodern
world. When, however, one considers long-lasting benefits and comprehensiveness of
acquired skills, it seems that benefits greatly outweigh challenges and spending more
time on teaching improvisation seems highly relevant and may indeed be a winning alternative in music theory pedagogy.
Summary
THE PASSACAGLIA A PRIMER FOR TEACHING BAROQUE
IMPROVISATION
During the lifetime of Bach such disciplines as harmony and thoroughbass were realized
directly at the keyboard by the student, providing a solid foundation for later and more
elaborate improvisatory skills skills which were mandatory for all clavier players of that
period. Unfortunately, the great majority of todays Baroque counterpoint classes rely on
the more academic process of committing notes to paper, thereby subjugating aural and
performance skills. In this article, I propose amending music theory curricula with topics in
baroque improvisation. To that end I will employ one of the most accessible variation forms
from common practice music: the passacaglia.
Key words: passacaglia, Baroque improvisation, figured bass, music theory, counterpoint
20
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