Ton de Leeuw, Music of The Twentieth Century
Ton de Leeuw, Music of The Twentieth Century
Ton de Leeuw, Music of The Twentieth Century
Music of
the Twentieth
Century
A Study of Its Elements
and Structure
a m s t e r da m u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s
Music of the Twentieth Century
Music of
the Twentieth Century
A Study of Its Elements and Structure
TON DE LEEUW
isbn
nur
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Table of Contents
Chapter : Panorama 19
Chapter : Rhythm 37
Chapter : Melody 59
Chapter : Simultaneity 77
Chapter : Timbre 97
Chapter : Exoticism and Folklore 117
Chapter : From Free Atonality to -Note Music 135
Chapter : From -Note Music to 163
Chapter : From the Sixties to the Present Day 195
Notes 205
List of Examples 209
List of Abbreviations 213
Acknowledgements 215
About the Author 217
Index 219
5
Foreword
Ton de Leeuw basically wrote Music of the Twentieth Century in the period 1961
to 1962, a time of considerable change, both in contemporary music and in the
authors own life. The strong post-1945 emphasis on concerted radical structur-
al innovation of music had however largely passed. New music was opening up
in many new ways to many worlds of music, both past and present.
In 1961, De Leeuw travelled to India with a commission from the Dutch
Ministry of Education, Arts and Sciences to explore the possibilities of cross-
cultural artistic interaction. He shared a positive outlook on this type of inter-
action with other composers and culture makers in a time of de-colonialisa-
tion. The trip to India reinforced De Leeuws awareness of the polarity that
had once been associated with East and West. De Leeuw at that time con-
sidered this to be one of the major defining issues of contemporary Western
art. On the one hand, he pointed to the exaggerated cult of personality, and
on the other, to a way of life which he characterised as a liberation from sub-
jective individualism, and as a return to original being. He illustrates this
notion in chapter 6, in an account of Zen archery in Japan. Although he does
not explicitly advocate either attitude in this book which he does, for exam-
ple, in many of his other texts it is clear from his wording that his sympa-
thy rests with the latter.
Parallel to this polarity, he also compares the musical practices which
directly relate to romantic aesthetics, the central notion of which he describes
as a servitude to oneself , with those that preceded and followed it. One of
his motives for writing this book was to wean his readers away from roman-
tic aesthetics, which had already lost much of its vitality and relevance, and
toward the opening of their ears to unheard worlds of music, such as the work
of Debussy and Webern, which is sometimes described as where silence
becomes audible. De Leeuw focuses on both of these interrelated polarities.
Musically, the polarities consist of, for example, harmonic tonality on the one
hand, and melodic and rhythmic modality on the other, not only in relation
to music structure, but also as an expression of general attitudes toward life.
Although a positive Western attitude toward Eastern sources and cultural
practices, however biased, can be traced back to at least the end of the eigh-
teenth century, it was still a relatively rare viewpoint in the study of music at
the time De Leeuw was writing his book. A breakthrough had yet to occur.
This finally happened at the end of the 1960s, during which time De Leeuws
7
compositions, his work for radio, and for the print media including the pres-
ent book played a role in this development, at least in the Netherlands.
During his apprenticeship with the ethnomusicologist Jaap Kunst from 1950
to 1954, De Leeuw studied both written and sound sources of what was then
still called non-Western music cultures. Ton de Leeuw wrote his book from
the viewpoint of a composer, with an eye to cultural criticism, especially in the
final chapter. Therefore, his book is neither a history of music or a proposal for
a new musical theory, nor a scientific study of musical structure. All of these
aspects, however, do play a role. The reader is offered a general historical
framework in chapter 1, while the last three chapters also offer a diachronic
dimension. The authors treatment of notation and terminology, meanwhile,
contributes to the transmission and development of music theory. He also
makes references to insights from scientific fields such as (psycho-)acoustics.
The authors two perspectives as composer and as critic will certainly
serve as an incentive for readers to develop their own thoughts about music
in a creative way. De Leeuw sets a good example in his various moments of
wonderment, such as his awe for Debussys discovery of listening, and his
discussion of the surprising parallels that Hidekazu Yoshida observed between
Weberns world of sound and Japans traditional art forms.
De Leeuws book is presented as a study of the elements and structure of
twentieth-century music. This is most evident in the extensive discussion of
rhythm, melody, simultaneity and timbre, each of which is covered in its own
chapter. The issue of terminology also plays a significant role here; it was
important at the time of writing, and remains relevant to this day. New musi-
cal practices call for the development of a new language.
The music that De Leeuw focuses on is a continuation of and reaction to
the classical-romantic Western traditions that cover the period from Debussy
until the mid-1960s. The final chapter offers an additional assessment of musi-
cal developments and attitudes during the period from the later 1960s to the
mid-1990s. The author, in a separate chapter, also expresses a marked interest
in the approaches of Western composers to the various practices of folk music,
of classical music traditions outside Europe and North America, and of jazz.
The emphasis is on those aspects of twentieth-century music that were new
during the time they were emerging. De Leeuw therefore focuses on a rela-
tively small group of composers whom he considered as principal innovators:
Debussy, Schnberg, Stravinsky, Webern, Bartk, Hindemith, Messiaen and
Boulez. Varse, Milhaud, Stockhausen and Ligeti also receive ample attention,
as does the Dutch composer Willem Pijper, with whom De Leeuw had want-
ed to study in 1947, but who passed away that very year. Ravel is mentioned
only in passing, although the author was a fan of his work.
Ton de Leeuws concise analyses are rare gems of musical acuteness. They
represent a distinct invitation to readers to engage in their own research, and
are inspired by De Leeuws promise of an ever-increasing sensitivity to both
structure and sound.
Rokus de Groot
It is remarkable how poorly informed those active in musical life generally are
about even the most elementary technical matters concerning contemporary
music. Such a lack of knowledge would probably not be tolerated in any other
profession. Since even specialised literature hardly offers solace, the present
book aims to underline certain technical aspects of contemporary musical
language. It has been written from the point of view of the composer rather
than that of the theoretician, an approach which has its advantages and dis-
advantages, as one can easily imagine.
This book is intended for various categories of readers. First and foremost
it is addressed to the music student of today, for whom some knowledge of
contemporary music may now be considered normal. Subsequently, it is writ-
ten for all musicians engaged in one way or another in new music: perform-
ers, teachers and others who in practice often face certain problems that can
be solved through a deeper investigation of the structure of the musical lan-
guage. But the well-informed musical amateur too may consult many chap-
ters to his advantage.
To make matters as concrete as possible, much use is made of easily acces-
sible scores; thus compositions are discussed that may regularly be heard in
the concert hall or through recordings. Electronic music has been left out of
consideration. Not only are scores scarce, but a technical approach to the sub-
ject is hardly meaningful unless the reader is at home in the world of the elec-
tronic studio.
The above-mentioned paucity of technical literature has obliged the writer
to organise the content in his own way. It proved necessary, even with regard
to terminology, to devise names and definitions for certain concepts. This,
together with the hitherto unknown diversity of individual styles and tech-
niques, will safeguard the reader from generalising about what is discussed, a
path that would merely lead to new academicism. The specific purpose of this
book is to encourage everyone to become better acquainted with living music.
9
tion therefore contains a number of additions that cast light on the develop-
ments of recent years.
After the many fortunately favourable reactions to the first edition,
one critical remark persisted: the names of a number of important contem-
porary composers are hardly mentioned or have been omitted altogether. This
is indeed the case, and the reason lies in the aim that I have pursued. For what
I have written has no documentary pretension at all, but is based on the study
of those aspects of twentieth-century music that are new in respect to classi-
cal traditions. I chose the period around as my starting point, with the
works of composers then in their thirties, since it was then that these new
phenomena first occurred with some frequency, and in a manner essentially
integrated into musical thought.
The musical world of the twentieth century is a divided world. None of the
dreams and expectations of enthusiastic minds at the beginning of the twen-
tieth century has been fulfilled. In our new society an old nucleus has per-
sisted, with its own customs and imagination stemming directly from con-
cepts rooted in the nineteenth century.
Worldwide social revolutions, a series of unbelievable and radical scientif-
ic discoveries, entirely new views concerning almost every field of life, and
different generations of composers and performers, scholars and technicians
have not succeeded in preventing the official music world from revolving, and
continuing to revolve, around a very definite period of the past with a span
of scarcely two hundred years.
This historical heritage is in itself a strange amalgam of a number of bril-
liant masterpieces alongside musical follies as numerous as they are popular,
of broadly speaking an exceptionally high level of performance, and of
related musical theory developed to a similar degree. This is coupled, on the
other hand, to a most rudimentary musical aesthetic, characterised by entirely
bourgeois, romantic concepts which continue to rule our democratised musical
life as a mere imitation of what was once in the nineteenth century a liv-
ing and authentic intellectual movement.
The contemporary creative artist can hardly function in such a musical
practice. The public at large that fills our concert halls has become both
anonymous and amorphous. It has no need of nor does it make demands
upon creative contemporaries. The small and select social groups that deter-
mined European artistic life until far into the eighteenth century are no
longer; the so essential interaction between creator and receiver has therefore
disappeared. Through the lack of any collective stimulus, only the most vital
of individuals are able to maintain contact with contemporary art. The enjoy-
ment of music has become a strictly individual matter, just like composition.
The disinclination to regard oneself as a revolutionary is typical of many
modern composers. Stravinsky, in his conversations with Robert Craft,
claimed that he could not imagine that his music could sound strange to the
public. Equally characteristic is the attitude of Anton Webern, who spoke of
his most radical pieces as if they were classical sonatas.
Yet here is precisely the dichotomy: modern music is not the result of
11
wanting to be different, but is indeed normal in the imagination of the cre-
ator. The fact that this normality sounds so abnormal to so many people
indicates the full extent of present-day individualism.
When individualism increases, signs indicate that subjectivism decreases.
Debussy, an individualist par excellence, maintained close contact with nature,
though in a different way from the romantics. The romantic mind projected
itself in nature, while Debussy in the first place listened. Webern listened too.
Silence became audible. A new world was revealed. Those who had ears, heard
the new sound: the sound of an overpowering universe in which humanity had
lost its central position. The gardens of Versailles and the idyllic Viennese
Forest made way for the mysteries of microcosm and macrocosm.
Unprecedented elementary forces came to the fore in mankind too, lead-
ing especially at the beginning of the twentieth century to volcanic erup-
tions. The dynamic world of technique released new and vital energy. On the
other hand, the importance of craftsmanship, the general preference for lucid,
neo-classical contours, and a religious trait in various creative contemporaries
which should not be underestimated, bore witness to a new mentality in
which the romantic desire to be expressive seemed to have lost all meaning.
This is probably where the problem lies for many people. Is not expres-
sivity the purpose of music making? The desire to be expressive has even
become second nature to many performers. The inclination to interpret, to
create an expressive sound, is revealed in even the tiniest details of perform-
ance. The average listener and critic expect nothing more. A musician either
is expressive or has no feeling. There is hardly room for gradations within
such a restricted musical antithesis. The fact is ignored that by far the most
music ever produced by mortal man never had expressivity as its purpose.
Music has been made to exorcise spirits, to symbolise the order of the uni-
verse, to bring man into harmony with his surroundings, for the pure joy
evoked by the movement of dance, to sing the praises of God, to pray, to work
better, to calm animals and children, and to honour kings. The making of
music to convey ones own personal emotions arose only at a time when the
artist could feel that he was the centre of the world, in which there was only
one form of servitude, namely to himself. This enslavement to oneself has
given rise to immoderate overestimation of the self and to pathological con-
ditions. It is not surprising that the romantic period was so successful in pro-
ducing the type of artist who had been shaken out of balance, and who could
therefore create enormous mental tension in his work.
A rapid expansion of all musical resources was to increase the transmission
of this tension, particularly from the time of Beethoven onwards. The artist
freed himself conclusively from any social servitude and delivered a soliloquy.
A tendency arose to overwhelm the listener, to make him defenceless. Not
The contrasts mentioned above hardly constitute a problem for those who are
truly sensitive to music, unless milieu or training have debased the capacity
to feel. This applies likewise to a related misunderstanding which is very
widespread in present-day musical life, namely an underestimation of the ele-
ment of craftsmanship. It is astonishing to discover how even musicians
accept as a matter of course the highest demands made on them in instru-
mental or vocal proficiency, but adopt a most negative attitude as soon as
there is any mention of craftsmanship in the creative process. This is seen at
best as a necessary evil; it is the familiar problem of form and content viewed
as two separate entities, with the emphasis on content the artists emotions.
For a genuine artist this problem is meaningless, and the splitting of form and
content inconceivable. What he puts on paper, in sudden visions or through
long and persistent work, is one and indivisible. What he brings to the sur-
face is a living organism, with innumerable internal relationships. Where is
the form and what is the content? Any intervention disturbs and falsifies this
fabric. The theoretically minded deform it into a scheme, the hunters after
expression hold up a colourful soap bubble in their hands. Naturally, emo-
tions may play a large part in the creative process. They can stimulate or
accelerate, they can slow down and extinguish. There is a close interaction
which escapes our perception. It is certain, however, that the value of the
result is subject to totally different criteria, the essence of which we cannot
describe, but only experience. Provided we are receptive... to music.
The element of craftsmanship therefore comes to stand in quite a
different light. Like the directly emotional, it can accelerate or slow down,
stimulate or extinguish the creative process. It is really as unavoidable as it is
unreal for the ultimate essence of the musical work of art. It is entirely un-
important whether a composer calculates little or much, whether he allows
himself to be carried along by his emotions, or controls himself. The sources
of the phenomenon of music are just as unknown to him as they are to the
listener. Our only concern is to reveal this mysterious human utterance as
accurately as possible. It is the composers own affair what means he uses,
introduction 13
what attitude he adopts, whether it be one of nervous tension or complete
mental balance. What we are really trying to say is that the element of crafts-
manship embraces immeasurably more than the mere technical aspect. To the
real creator each act and thought are a function of his creative work. His emo-
tions, experiences, daily contacts, consciousness, in short his whole personal-
ity, are attuned to it. The most brilliant of ideas can be disturbed by a blem-
ish on the wallpaper.
Conscious control of the material, or technique, therefore plays a part too
in this complicated and somewhat impenetrable process of creation, in which
not the partial man the emotional man but the whole personality is
involved. We are now going to extricate this control from the whole, because
it is the most easily approachable and, at the same time, the most neglected
aspect of contemporary music.
Where weak figures are involved, conscious technical intervention may
result in sterility. In the work of great creative artists, the opposite is often
seen: the more inner charge, the more need for rigorous mastery of the mate-
rial. Great romantic composers form no exception.
In another manner this also applies to us. Any analysis is worthless if we
do not have the required musical fantasy. Those who regard technique and
analysis as necessary evils not infrequently do so precisely because of their
own lack of fantasy.
The romantic composer had a different attitude from his classical predeces-
sors. He believed that music had to express something from his subjective
world of experience. Although he adhered essentially to the forms of the clas-
sical period, his increasing need for expression resulted in their becoming hol-
lowed out; yet also enriched, since the slow disintegration of the classical
structure into its elements was coupled with an unprecedented differentia-
tion, particularly in harmony, which is the expressive resource par excellence.
From about floating tonality made its appearance. The bonds of classical
balance had become too narrow, and the desire for expression sought an
escape by avoiding an all too emphatic effect of key. The means to this end
included the following:
frequent modulation
absence of (or indistinct) chord resolution
resolution otherwise than suggested
increasingly ambiguous harmonic functions
chords inclining towards harmonic ambiguity
enharmonic devices
relations based on the mediant instead of the fifth
increasingly intensive chromatic leading-note function (thwarting the
vertical-functional relationship)
Concepts of form in classical tonality have their limitations too. Once again,
it was the increasing demand for harmonic expression which, for example,
began to disturb the classical balance of sonata form. This balance is very
closely related to the tonal balance of the sections. In strong contrast to the
firm planes of sound of the exposition, with its central points of tonic and
dominant, there is the harmonic quicksand of the development, based on a
well-considered plan of modulation. The transition from the unstable har-
mony of the development to the original tonal basis of the recapitulation is
in many works, particularly those of Mozart, a breathtaking musical occur-
rence. An absolutely superior game is played here, as the very structure
becomes expression, while the consciousness of form is perfectly classical.
The romantics gain in terms of harmonic wealth went hand in hand with
introduction 15
the loss of this classical awareness of form. In the second half of the nine-
teenth century, the first subject of a sonata sometimes contained so many
modulations that the development lost its contrasting function. The same
applied to so-called thematic assimilation. Tonal forces contributing to form
were levelled out, and larger tension relationships lost their function in favour
of differentiation of detail. Naturally, this did not apply solely to harmony.
Disintegration into elements was general, but this tendency itself became inde-
pendent at the same time. Harmony, tone colour and dynamics underwent
this process, to which the early modern composers also added rhythm. This
process of disintegration and independence came to a temporary end in
recent serial music, but in the meantime something had happened. The early
moderns were becoming aware of this independence, and the elements began
to lead an autonomous life: rhythm in Stravinsky, sound in Varse, atonal
chromaticism in Schnberg, etc.
What has been said here briefly could easily fill a whole chapter. The imag-
inative reader, however, will realise that one of the turning points lies here.
The generation that tried to take a different path on the basis of these eman-
cipated elements marked the beginning of a new music. Other concepts of
form arose, but traditional ones were to continue until the present day. All
sorts of transitional phases occurred, depending on the composer in question.
Let us look at just one example from the work of Debussy, but from a broad
angle, since it is impracticable to discuss all important details here.
From a classical point of view, the first movement of La Mer is an insolu-
ble problem. It comprises four sections, the first and last of which have the
character of a prologue and epilogue. The symmetrical enclosure of classical
form is absent here; what is more, the sections have no unity of key, tempo
or theme. The whole nonetheless forms a unity. How does this arise, and to
what extent is it expressed in the musical technique? In chapter we will find
the surprising solution: a unity of interval in all the melodic material. This
unity lies on a material level, as it were, before the material is shaped into
higher categories of form. The contrasts are therefore not as large as they
appear (on paper): all the melodies are different crystallisations of the same
basic intervals.
In Nuages (from Trois Nocturnes) we encounter exactly the opposite: with
a few exceptions towards the end, this piece consists of a continual alterna-
tion of two most rudimentary melodic motifs. There is no question of classi-
cal thematic development in this continual repetition. Ostensibly, Debussy
does nothing at all, and there is a lack of contrast. The more one delves into
the score, however, the more the master appears to exploit an extremely sub-
tle and highly developed art of variation, particularly in terms of tone colour.
With regard to form, this element became an absolutely indispensable factor,
without which we miss something essential. The emancipated element of
timbre acquired an autonomous formal function, replacing earlier means of
contrast.
The absence or reduction of causality and symmetry may also be perceived in
the harmony (abandonment of harmonic functions) and rhythm (abandon-
ment of the metrical context). The resulting open, asymmetrical chain struc-
tures occur in many modern works but are in fact as old as the history of
music itself. Exceptional is the enclosed, symmetrical development form, the
very type that flourished during the era of classical tonality. It is remarkable
that the romantics among the moderns, Schnberg and Bartk, did their best
to adhere to this type, as is expressed particularly in their pursuance of a
strongly developed motivic development technique, a procedure not found in
composers such as Stravinsky, Debussy and Varse. This genetic manner of
writing gave rise to a method that can be referred to as germ-cell technique.
Yet in a figure such as the Dutch composer Pijper, for instance, theory and
practice diverged considerably: his germ-cell technique was far from genetic
and consisted rather of an additive juxtaposition of the same or related indi-
vidual motifs.
Aesthetic views revolving around the question of what is or is not foresee-
able do not make the situation any clearer. Certain composers were nothing
less than allergic to anything foreseeable. They were found most easily in cir-
cles influenced by the Viennese school which, from the very beginning, pri-
marily stressed the principle of variation in every aspect of music. This ten-
dency obviously moved towards atonality and all that goes with it, and it has
continued until the present day. But here again this all too simple view was
clouded by Anton Webern, who from about in particular increasingly
incorporated the element of symmetry in his structures, even reinstating
repeat signs.
After all that has been said, the reader will realise that it is impracticable
to put down on paper even an approximation of the whole subject of form in
modern music. So many factors are involved that insight into this new, con-
fusing and so individual world of form can be gained only through an exhaus-
tive study of relevant compositions.
introduction 17
Tonality is in some respects very old and very general. Its traditional inter-
pretation, however, is a historical phenomenon with the limited range of
approximately two centuries. As soon as music outside these two centuries is
discussed, a surprisingly large number of musicians sometimes have difficul-
ty in escaping from it. They neither see nor feel that the linear polyphony of
the Renaissance, for instance, is quite a different matter; they give a vertical
interpretation to originally horizontal phenomena and are supported in this
by apparent similarities. Something similar also occurs in contemporary
music. A different view can result in a distorted interpretation and a lopsided
picture of what is actually taking place. Anything falling outside traditional
modes of interpretation is easily experienced as arbitrariness. It need hardly
be said that the norms that protect artistic freedom from arbitrariness cannot
be linked to a world of ideas that was valid only for a certain period.
Panorama
The nineteenth century was not only the age of romanticism but also the
period of great scientific discoveries and the tremendous rise of industry.
Science and industry brought unsuspected change to society: on the one hand
they stimulated an lan and optimism, in the hope of a better world, while
on the other hand industrial development in particular caused great upheaval
and disquiet, expressed in increasing criticism of the society of the time. Both
of these forces were active in the early years of the twentieth century. The tri-
umphant march of discovery proceeded, but at the same time more and more
nationalist tendencies and political tensions developed, leading in , from
central Europe, to World War I. This disaster brought Europe to ruin, and
despite attempts at repair, political and economic crises have been rife ever
since. Many lands introduced a form of controlled economy, and in some
countries, dictatorial rule was established: Russia in , Italy in ,
Germany in and Spain in . The democratic countries of the West
were weak and divided. The world picture changed slowly but surely.
America, Japan and other non-European countries developed considerably,
partly through the destitution of Europe after World War I. Tension increased
in Europe, and inner conflicts led to World War II some twenty years after
World War I. Spenglers pessimistic prophecy of , Untergang des
Abendlandes, seemed to approach fulfillment. The decolonisation of almost
all African and Asian countries was completed at a furious speed. Meanwhile
America, Russia and China became world powers, and in between them the
Asian peninsula of Europe was threatened with suffocation. However, the
opposite occurred: the first steps toward European unity were taken, and an
unexpected upsurge was felt in all fields, bearing witness to the vitality of this
ancient but torn part of the world.
Among the first to announce the new era in spectacular fashion were the
futurists. The past was over and done: destroy it, only then can a new world
arise, as Marinetti cried in . With Milan as the focal point, artists of var-
ious backgrounds gathered around Marinetti, idealists dreaming of a new
world. Their ideas were revolutionary in every field, but the movement did
19
not advance beyond its visions, perhaps because time was not yet ripe for
their many proclamations. Russolo was the key figure in the music world. He
glorified the new sounds of motors and technique: the modern, creative use
of the machine was fertile, unlike the romantic fear of it. He advocated new
instruments producing noise, and discovered unsuspected life forces in
rhythm. But none of this developed: atonality, microtones, free rhythm,
primitivism, objectivity, noise, the discovery of the machine only later, gen-
erally speaking, did other composers translate all of this into creative achieve-
ment. World War I brought an abrupt end to such futuristic dreams. Other
members of the group included the painter Severini and, briefly, the poet
Guillaume Apollinaire.
Expressionism found fertile ground in the heavily afflicted German regions.
Poets including Stephan George, Rilke, Werfel, Trakl and others had already
set their mark on the culture of these lands before World War I. Pechstein,
Nolde, Kirchner and Kokoschka were among the expressionist painters, while
Schnberg and his pupils must be mentioned as expressionist musicians.
Schnberg stemmed directly from the late-romantic tradition.
Expressionism in music may therefore be considered as a continuation of late
romanticism. One could attempt to define expressionism as subjectivism
taken to the furthest boundary. The world of the artists personal feelings is
expressed through the most extreme of means. A characteristic of this expan-
sion was the release from old bonds (tonality).
The concepts of subjectivism and expansion were hardly strange to late-
German romanticism. The breach, however, lay in expansion. Where the
romantic expressed himself in general forms as handed down by history, the
expressionist seized means that were strictly individual, breaking radically
with tradition. The expressionist exhibited ecstatic and absolutist leanings, he
was the true interpreter of current threats. Like the futurist he hated the
romantic flight into dreams the mask was cast off. His tragedy was that he
was and still is misunderstood, not through a lack but rather an excess of sub-
jective expression. His superabundance of inner tension, and the extreme
resources which he employed to express them, led him towards an isolation
that has not essentially been broken until this day.
The diversity of movements that arose before and during World War I may
be illustrated in another manner by juxtaposing two extremes that both
became concrete around : surrealism, a movement particularly evident in
literature, and neo-plasticism, born of the activities of the painter Mondriaan.
The precursor of surrealism was dadaism, which can be viewed as a revolt
against the utter senselessness of war. Here again we encounter the name of
Apollinaire, the French poet who during his short life (-) did so
much for the futurists, for cubist painters such as Braque, Picasso, Juan Gris
panorama 21
secretive world opened up for us by the microscope, while the surrealists
groped in the mysteries of the subconscious. In so far as man played a role
here, it was the unknown man. Here was the beginning of the great mental
adventure of the twentieth century. If one realises this, one also understands
something of the visionary, the enthusiastic, but also of the chaotic, of the fear
and uncertainty that went hand in hand with the discovery of this new world.
The great centres of the day were Paris and Vienna. Paris in particular was a
hive of artistic activity. Even before Stravinsky settled there, Claude Debussy
had created a new art. In a hardly revolutionary tonal language he reacted
against the expansive subjectivity of the Wagnerians and the academicism of
other contemporaries. The further we fathom the works of Debussy, the more
wide-ranging his innovations appear to have been. In succeeding chapters his
name will therefore be mentioned frequently.
The impresario Sergey Diaghilevs Russian ballet company made its first
appearance in Paris in . Despite an interruption during the war,
Diaghilevs activities were to set an enduring stamp on the artistic climate of
the time. He pursued an independent ballet style in which musicians and
painters were also involved, and unusually, he understood well the impor-
tance of decors and music, and sensed exactly which artists were of impor-
tance. French cultural life knew more such versatile figures, including Breton,
Cocteau and Apollinaire. Of the most important composers associated with
these annual Russian ballets, mention should be made of Stravinsky, Debussy,
Satie, Milhaud, Poulenc, Prokofiev, De Falla, Hindemith and Auric. Painters
included Picasso, Derain, Matisse, Braque, Gris, Utrillo, Miro and Chirico.
Of the musicians, Stravinsky (-) was to dominate the scene. This
versatile composer reached a first peak at the age of thirty with his ballets The
Firebird, Petrushka and The Rite of Spring. We speak of his Russian period:
the ties with his fatherland were indeed not yet broken; this was expressed in
his music through the use of Russian material and in the influence of his
teacher Rimsky-Korsakov, particularly in instrumental aspects. Not until after
the Russian Revolution of was Stravinsky to break the ties completely
and assimilate Western particularly Latin culture astonishingly quickly. In
the year of the revolution he wrote The Wedding, perhaps the most Russian
work from his hand. Although the rhythmic-syllabic structure and instru-
mentation for four pianos and percussion accompanying choir and soloists
deviate from The Rite, yet the similarities are greater. We would draw atten-
tion to such matters as the form, the interlacing of short formulas without
development, and similar melodic characteristics. Folkloric elements are used
as material, while the story interests the composer less than the musical
potential that it conceals. Here we encounter one of Stravinskys essential
characteristics: his strongly speculative sense. The solution to a given problem
The second centre, Vienna, formed quite a different picture. Here conserva-
tive influence was much stronger, and instead of the vital optimism of many
Parisian artists circles we find the loaded tension of central European expres-
sionism. Moreover, Vienna had had no Debussy to prepare the way. The great
generation of late romantics was therefore suddenly succeeded by that of
Schnberg (-) and his most prominent pupils Berg and Webern.
Their expressionist art was just as volcanic and certainly more charged than
that of Stravinsky, but the spark did not ignite. The Schnberg group
remained isolated in the big city; little became of it except for a few minor
scandals, and not until forty years later did its music gain widespread atten-
tion. The list of works in section includes a single but prominent exception:
the opera Wozzeck by Alban Berg. (Further information on the Viennese
composers is to be found in chapter , section .)
Bla Bartk (-) grew up in Hungary, far from the musical centres
of Vienna or Paris. His influence at the time was therefore negligible; gener-
ally speaking, this also goes for figures who lived on the periphery such as
^
Ives, Jancek and even Varse (New York).
panorama 23
For Bartk too, late-romantic German composers constituted the most
important example (the official Hungarian music world was under strong
German influence). A visit to Paris in , however, brought him into con-
tact with music by Debussy and Ravel. In the same period (from ) he was
occupied with the folklore of his country. Although late romanticism still pre-
dominated in his First String Quartet (), Debussy and folklore were to
become the two great determining forces in his development. As far as
Debussy was concerned, this was a question of his stimulating influence
rather than concrete and lasting adoption of stylistic elements. Where folklore
was concerned, Bartk assimilated more and more elements in his work.
Though the resulting style is not outwardly similar to folk music, melodic and
rhythmic elements betray a clear relationship. Bartk remained a romantic,
and his innovations can be viewed as an extension of the romantic means of
expression. Although he did not by any means go as far as Schnberg, expres-
sionism was nevertheless to leave its mark on his work. This is illustrated by
his choice of libretti (Bluebeards Castle and The Miraculous Mandarin), and
particularly in hard and pithy chords which reach their climax in the granite-
like Fourth String Quartet (first movement). In such works chromaticism tem-
porarily dominates the fundamentally diatonic structure of his music. But the
same quartet features another element, counterpoint, which had already been
present in his work for some years and was about to gain greater significance.
Imitation technique in particular is employed in many ways, and hardly a new
motif appears without imitation in the other parts. Canon and fugue occur
much less frequently, probably because Bartks style at the time was strongly
motivic. Contrapuntal technique is therefore closely merged with the devel-
opment of motifs as we know it in Beethoven. Only now do we understand
the meaning of Bartks pronouncement: Debussy has re-established the
sense of using chords. He was just as important as Beethoven who revealed
the genetic form of development to us, and just as important as Bach who ini-
tiated us in counterpoint in the highest sense. Can we, he followed, com-
bine these three elements and make them live for the moderns? At this time
a process of austerity and stabilisation began that was to bring Bartk to the
great works written between and (see section ).
In broad outline we have seen how the music of the three great figures Bartk,
Schnberg and Stravinsky developed in the first quarter of the twentieth cen-
tury. Beside the many differences there was a striking similarity in the earlier-
mentioned breadth of experience of the modern artist. Stravinsky, the man
who brought elementary, primitive forces into European art music for the
first time in human memory, reached out later in his severe and uplifted views
on music to a highly developed spiritual ideal, beyond the grasp of most mor-
tals. Schnberg, the tormented expressionist with an excess of tensions,
attempted to capture them later in the strictest technique that our century has
produced. Bartk, the type of the modern artist: city dweller, rational, nerv-
The following panoramic survey includes the most important works by the
three composers discussed above, as well as those of later figures. Despite all
individual differences, considerable parallel undercurrents are evident, which
we have attempted to present by distinguishing between three major periods.
The list of works for each period is followed by a discussion of particular
details and tendencies, in so far as these have not been mentioned above.
(b) ca. -ca. . Same vitality and innovative drive as before World War I. But strong
tendency towards austerity as consolidation of the attained (Stravinsky, Schnberg,
Bartk), as reaction against excess (Satie, Les Six), or as reaction to expressionism
(Hindemith). Disillusionment of World War I quickened these tendencies. Expressionist
peaks in Vienna (Wozzeck), consolidation in in -note technique of Schnberg.
Return to Baroque counterpoint in Hindemith, shortly after in Bartk too. In Latin coun-
tries neo-classicism and aesthetics of Les Six (, Le Coq et lArlequin). From ca. first
jazz in Europe. Protest continued to sound, but now as social commentary in work of
Kurt Weill and Bertold Brecht. At same time, Gebrauchsmusik as attempt to reach wider
community (Hindemith). New sense of reality also evident in influence of industrial tech-
panorama 25
nique on music (Pacific and The Steel Step). Related, but more prophetic and radical:
Edgard Varse.
Satie, Parade
Prokofiev, Classical Symphony
Stravinsky, The Wedding
Stravinsky, The Soldiers Tale
Stravinsky, Pulcinella
Milhaud, Le Boeuf sur le Toit
Poulenc, Le Bestiaire
Bartk, The Miraculous Mandarin
Stravinsky, Symphonies of Wind Instruments
Berg, Wozzeck
Honegger, Le Roi David
Hindemith, Suite
De Falla, El Retablo de Maese Pedro
Schnberg, Five Piano Pieces op.
Hindemith, Das Marienleben
Milhaud, La Cration du Monde
Honegger, Pacific
Varse, Octandre
Milhaud, LOrestie
Prokofiev, ballet The Steel Step
Pijper, Third Symphony
Bartk, Fourth String Quartet
Weill, Die Dreigroschenoper
Frei ist die Tonkunst geboren, und frei zu werden ihre Bestimmung (music
was born free, and free will be its destination). These words of Busoni would
be a fitting motto at the cradle of new music.
Schnbergs op. announced the period of free atonality based on intu-
ition. The expressionist urge to discover new resources explains many hither-
to unknown phenomena such as Klangfarbenmelodik (Schnberg op. ,
Webern op. ), athematicism (Erwartung, beside other works), aphorisms
(Six Bagatelles by Webern, lasting three-and-a-half minutes), Sprechgesang in
Pierrot lunaire, etc. Schnberg and Webern began to part company, and Berg
went his own way too his String Quartet betrays his attachment to the
romantic tradition. The same applies to Bartks First String Quartet; his
musical language was fundamentally simpler than that of the Viennese com-
posers. The Allegro barbaro was a first expression of a spontaneous rhythmic
impulse, stimulated by Balkan folk music. The rhythm of The Rite was more
complex and self-willed. In The Rite and Petrushka Stravinsky created two
panorama 27
De Fallas best compositions: El Retablo de Maese Pedro. After his better
known, impressionist works, De Falla revealed an inclination for the austere.
Employing neo-classical resources (dances from the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries, the harpsichord), but also medieval liturgical chant, the composer
penetrated the austere, ascetic spirit of ancient Castile. Here, inspired by folk
traditions, De Falla is the great counterpart of Bartk, indeed more so than
in his earlier works with their Andalusian flavour.
La Cration de Monde, Milhauds Negro ballet, opens with a neo-classical
introduction inspired directly by Bach. More important, the work was one of
the few successful examples of the assimilation of jazz influences. We hear
echoes of the linear improvisation of the New Orleans style, and passages
already announcing the world of Gershwin (his Rhapsody in Blue dates from
). Naturally, the heterogeneous sound of jazz ensembles greatly appealed
to the neo-classicists.
Technique was to the vital and dynamic young generation as nature to the
romantics. Honegger glorified the steam locomotive in Pacific , and was
also inspired by sport (Rugby, ); Prokofiev, who lived in the West from
, wrote the ballet The Steel Step, celebrating industry and the machine
even before his return to Russia in . In this respect, however, the work of
Edgard Varse was of much greater significance. The music of Pacific was
still traditionally conceived, with or without the train; Octandre, on the other
hand, presented an entirely new and comprehensive musical world. Sound
became a tangible and acoustic reality, separate from any technical analogy,
separate too from harmonic and contrapuntal associations. Varse evoked
sound in its rough and elementary natural state, and was thus further
removed from the European tradition than any of his contemporaries.
Hindemith likewise pursued austerity, finding inspiration in baroque
music. His first period (ca. ) was in fact characterised by influence from
his own surroundings rather than any personal characteristic. An example
from these wild years is the Suite , with its carefree sound and American
dances: Boston, Shimmy and Ragtime, the latter with the recommendation:
Play this piece really wildly but in strict rhythm like a machine; treat the key-
board as an interesting sort of percussion. Bartks percussion style, the
machine, jazz, the aesthetics of Les Six, indeed the entire mood of the time
was captured in this piece. Hindemiths own ideal was revealed as early as
in the song cycle Das Marienleben to texts by Rilke. He became the great
German anti-romantic, characterised by objectivity, linearity and the strict
application of form, and he developed to become more embedded in tradi-
tion than any other composer of our time. For the moment, however, the
carefree composer was active on all fronts: music for mechanical instruments
(), Gebrauchsmusik and Zeitopern at about the same time, and strongly
simplified music for amateurs around , including Plner Musiktag ()
for students. His activities coincided briefly with those of Kurt Weill, who in
his Dreigroschenoper succeeded in creating popular, sometimes banal and
panorama 29
Stravinsky, Oedipus rex
Schnberg, Variations for Orchestra op.
Webern, Symphony op.
Stravinsky, Symphony of Psalms
Varse, Ionisation
Hindemith, Mathis der Maler
Berg, Violin Concerto
Messiaen, La Nativit du Seigneur
Honegger, Jeanne dArc au bcher
Bartk, Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta
Webern, Piano Variations op.
Orff, Carmina burana
Bartk, Sixth String Quartet
Webern, Orchestra Variations op.
Schnberg, Ode to Napoleon
Messiaen, Trois petites Liturgies
Stravinsky, Symphony in Three Movements
Stravinsky, Mass
Orff, Antigone
Hindemith, Die Harmonie der Welt
Stravinsky, The Rakes Progress
The first period determined the gamut of new music, while the second built
on these foundations. The older generation sought consolidation, while the
younger one even the greatest individuals such as Messiaen and Orff sum-
moned sufficient strength from the potential already created. The only figure
to cause a brief stir belonged to the older generation: Edgard Varse, who
maintained his initial lan in Ionisation. Stravinskys neo-classicism was con-
firmed only too clearly in Oedipus rex: his pursuance of a superpersonal mon-
umentality became an impersonal, conventional language in which even
rhythm lost its force. He employed Latin for the text, since the fossilised
monumentality of this dead language excluded any romantic subjectivity. It
is surprising that he did not turn to Greek, since ancient Greek vocabulary
rules out any personal element, both in length and accent. The ancient Greek
language is a substantial eminence in itself, beyond human influence; it reach-
es into the world of the original unity between subject and object, which most
languages thereafter lost. It is a language of the mask, as ancient Greek drama
is a drama of the mask. What we do understand is that Stravinsky was fasci-
nated by Greek culture for a long time. But the sacral-ritual tendency also
made itself felt, and strongly so, in the Symphony of Psalms. Nearly twenty
years later his increasing profoundness found utterance in the ascetic Mass, a
work already anticipating the most austere pieces written after the opera The
panorama 31
sound, harmony was simply a source of colour. In his instrumentation too the
sound pursued, for instance in the Trois petites Liturgies, is like a sensual caress.
Carl Orff wrote his first characteristic work, Carmina burana, in . He
had something in common with Stravinsky: a preference for Latin, for addi-
tive forms, ostinato effects, elementary melodic lines, rhythm, etc. But the
essence of his style lay elsewhere. His entire development moved toward a
concept in which drama was primary; music, dance, text and action were
merely different aspects of it and had a subservient function. Stravinsky was
a composer, and he differentiated his material. Orff tended to the contrary,
simplifying music more and more until, in his later dramas such as Antigone,
it served at best only to lend rhythm to the text. In purely musical terms the
significance of Orff was limited, though the musical world probably under-
estimated the value of his spiritual conception.
Naturally, beside the above-mentioned composers there were others who con-
tributed to this period. Most did not advance beyond a somewhat pale neo-
classicism, stripped of its original stimuli. But there were exceptions, including
Blacher, Britten, Dallapiccola, Egk, Hartmann, Kodly, Martin, Petrassi and
others, all of whom wrote important works. Our concern here is to present a
characteristic picture of the period rather than to be historically comprehen-
sive. In order to avoid arbitrariness we have limited our list to the essentials.
A new generation, born between and , emerged after .
Dictatorship, loyal to itself, opposed any utterance of modern art and creat-
ed a sort of vacuum in Europe. The thirsty younger generation pounced upon
all music that had previously been banned. Central figures and places arose
spontaneously, with followers thronging around to study the forbidden art.
Messiaen, teaching in Paris, had a broad interest in everything related to
music: the cries of primitive peoples, the art of Asian cultures, birdsong,
Greek music, it all had his unremitting interest. The horizon of his pupils,
including Boulez at the time, was consequently widened; the world of music
became more spacious and greater than it had ever been before. At work in
the same city was Ren Leibowitz, whose books, supplying the first extensive
information on Schnberg and his pupils, were of enormous influence in the
years prior to . Many students came to him to run the high school course
of classical dodecaphony. In Germany, an international centre formed in
Darmstadt within just a few years. Concerts and courses met the generally felt
demand to catch up.
panorama 33
The first, decisive turn of events occurred around . Of all music, it
was Weberns pure world of sound that was to make more and more impres-
sion. Webern had never had much influence: the tranquility of his life was not
interrupted by great successes or scandals; even his tragic death in had
something unintentional, and at that moment hardly anyone in the musical
world felt his death to be an important fact. The development of Webern, not
as the pupil of Schnberg but as the creator of an entirely new sound world,
was to fundamentally influence the music of succeeding years.
A new and scientific approach to many musical phenomena grew in the
same period: acoustics, information theory and experiments with the elec-
tronic generation of music, leading to the establishment of the first electron-
ic studio in Cologne in . In Paris Pierre Schaeffer had already commenced
with his concrete music in , and his tude pathtique became a classic in
this direction, which ran aground, however, in a repetition of futuristic clam-
our.
The manner in which Messiaen produced the first concrete example of a
multidimensional composition in his Mode de valeurs et dintensits is discussed
in the final chapter. Four musical elements pitch, duration, dynamics and
colour (attack) are made autonomous and ordered according to modal-serial
qualifications. For the younger generation this was more than a technical
stunt, it was the proclamation of a new ideal, which they had also undergone
when listening to Webern. From this point things moved quickly. The first and
exuberant works by Boulez, such as his Sonatine for flute and piano, were
already written. Formative for this composer, beside Messiaen and Leibowitz,
were Stravinsky in particular and, later, Debussy. Consequently, elements such
as rhythm already played a major role in his youth works. A swift development
led to the punctual style of Structures. Le Marteau sans Matre brought relax-
ation and can be viewed as a transition to the Improvisations sur Mallarm, one
of the first outstanding works of the new music. Stockhausen made his debut
with Kreuzspiel. A somewhat rigid way of thinking, combined with brilliant
giftedness, was to guide him in to the first masterpiece of electronic
music: Gesang der Jnglinge. Many elements of this work were governed by
serial determinacy, even including the human voice.
Meanwhile two Italians, Nono and Berio, appeared on the stage. Like his
compatriot Dallapiccola, Nono expressed his lyrical sympathy with the suf-
fering of humanity. His many vocal works include Il Canto sospeso, the inter-
rupted song of resistance fighters who had been condemned to death. Berio
was more virtuosic and jocular, though no less lyrical. His Omaggio a Joyce
employs a text by this writer (from Ulysses) in three languages, the point of
departure for electronic manipulation aimed to gradually transform the text
into completely autonomous music. Not only Joyce but Mallarm too proved
to be a stimulating example, in the first place for Boulez in his Third Piano
Sonata. Together with the slightly earlier Klavierstck XI by Stockhausen, this
work formed the basis of a new development through which the performer
panorama 35
entity: it was used increasingly as a sound environment, free of traditional
ideas on form and concert performance.
This takes us back to the beginning of the century. Two familiar names
remain: Stravinsky and Varse. Threni was Stravinskys first entirely dodeca-
phonic work. After Webern stripped the -note technique of its original
expressionist basis, Stravinsky was able to embrace the technique without
scruple. But he remained himself. Threni, the lamentations of Jeremiah, con-
firmed his strongly religious character, as did the Mass, Canticum sacrum and
other later compositions. Moreover, the strong simplicity of his final period
had already been announced by songs written after the war, including the
wonderful In Memoriam Dylan Thomas.
Varse could at last employ electronic resources to realise his pre-
ideals. Dserts, for an ensemble of wind, percussion and electronically pre-
pared sounds, was a late echo of that eruptive poque, an poque in which the
entire picture of the new art was determined if not by technical means, then
through mental and spiritual processes.
Rhythm
The twentieth century brought great development in the field of rhythm, in
the following two ways:
. The structure and development of rhythm in general became richer and
more diversified;
. Interest in percussion increased, while other instrumental groups were
also assigned important rhythmic functions.
example 1
37
rhythm with major triads, the effect proves much weaker; by placing the tri-
ads in a higher register, the result already improves. It appears, therefore, that
rhythm is determined by other musical elements than duration and dynam-
ics alone. Another example: if we play a melody in a tempo dictated exactly
by the metronome, but first very high with short and strong staccato notes,
and then low, soft and legato, the first version will seem slower than the sec-
ond. Again, the duration of the notes is influenced by several elements: not
only the notated, metronomic length, but the musical length too, that which
is organically incorporated into the whole and to which we react. In a piece
of music, innumerable subtle forces react to one another. How we ourselves
react to all this is a question for the music psychologist. For the moment it is
sufficient to realise the great danger of approaching rhythm abstractly, isolat-
ed from the whole. And if we do so, in the course of further analysis, then we
must be aware of the danger of drawing all too formalistic conclusions which
may lead us onto the wrong track.
Before commencing a discussion of the rhythmic phenomena of new music,
we have to deal with another difficulty, namely the great confusion concern-
ing terminology. To this end, several short observations on the theory of
rhythm are given here.
In musical movement three time categories can be distinguished, three
layers which may occur simultaneously:
. The actual rhythm is the highest and most autonomous expression of
time-consciousness. It can occur entirely independently, or it may be grafted
upon a lower time category, that of the:
. Rhythmic modes. These are certain rhythmic proportions that occur fre-
quently and can, as it were, become species of a certain rhythmic perception.
In literature these modes are called metrical feet. The Dutch poet Albert
Verwey (-) wrote of them: I view the measures within which human
art is made as principles of humanity.
. The most elementary time category is that indicated by the pulse unit.
In the movement of sound, one perceives equidistant nuclear points. One
could speak here of periodic rhythm, and in this sense periodicity is a musi-
cal reality, the living heartbeat of musical movement. Physiological rhythm
too is characterised by periodicity. We also speak of metre, but the pulse unit
and the notated metre may not always coincide. In very many cases the pulse
unit is smaller than the notated metre, coinciding with the beat. In the slow
3/4 bar of Example 78, the notated metre is not perceptible, unlike the crotch-
et unit which works as the real periodic rhythm. This is probably related to
the time span between two pulse units, which must be neither too large nor
too small to remain perceptible. The Belgian musicologist Paul Collaer main-
tains that the periodicity of elementary bodily rhythms lies between forty and
example 2
Notation is not problematic as long as the rhythm is periodic and the music
can be metrically notated. After all, the barline conforms to the natural peri-
odic movement of the music, and indicates the pulse unit or a group of the
same. But matters change when non-periodic rhythm makes its appearance,
or when it no longer proves possible to bundle equal groups of pulse units, as
is increasingly the case in music written after about . The barline fol-
lowed the now irregular movement and thus lost its original purpose; the era
of multiple bar changes had begun. And this was not the only difficulty
either. The barline and the dynamic accent were frequently coupled together
to become inseparable quantities. Elsewhere, schematisation of the notation
prompted a choice for a ticking metronome rather than the living heartbeat
of music. All this brought a reaction, one that can be summarised in the often
rhythm 39
quoted and, in its compactness, so suggestive maxim: Metre is nothing,
rhythm is everything. As old bonds were shaken off, free rhythm became
popular. And the baby was thrown out with the bath water.
notation problems. In the meantime our composers continued to strug-
gle with the barline. Could it be avoided? Almost impossible. By now the sign
on paper had come to serve other purposes than its original one (avoid-
ance of too many accidentals, legibility of scores).
. As long as there was mention of periodic movement with only inciden-
tal interruption, the barline could be easily adapted.
. Non-periodic music offered various possibilities. In Pijpers Piano
Sonata (Example ) the barline largely followed the main points of the musi-
cal discourse. It is not always entirely clear, however: in this fragment the
rhythmic module plays a dominant role; it occurs both in trochaic and
iambic forms, but it is notated in no less than seven different ways (after and
across the barline, with different sorts of accents, etc.).
example 3
. Related to this was the use of the barline as a so-called colotomic sign to
indicate structural boundaries such as phrases, motifs, etc. (see Example ).
Colotomic signs are used in gamelan music, for instance, where they are made
audible on percussion instruments.
. Other composers joined Honegger in wishing that la mesure doit jouer
le rle de borne kilomtrique sur une route (the bar must play the role of the
milestone along a road). However, in Honeggers scores, too, some kilome-
tres are longer than others. In the pursuance of clarity such inconsistencies
were apparently not entirely avoidable. The logical solution to this view
would be the introduction of music paper printed with fine, vertical lattice-
divisive and additive rhythm. Instead of making a distinction
between periodic and non-periodic rhythms, the terms divisive and additive
rhythms are also employed. However, the pairs of terms are not synonymous.
One could say that the first division tells us what form of rhythm is meant,
while the second is more indicative of the psychic focus that has induced its
creation. Although we are on thin ice here, it is worth throwing some light on
this matter, since an investigation of rhythm in this sense may help us to
understand it better.
Divisive rhythm. A comparison: one walks with an easy, springing pace. At
some point this pace prompts one to whistle a random tune which fits the
walking rhythm in a natural, periodic way: the tune is bundled in regular
groups of two or more paces. Music-while-you-work is created in this way, as
regular bodily movement and corresponding music stimulate one another.
The same goes for marches and indeed much dance music: common to it all
is this correspondence between music and bodily movement. The music auto-
matically becomes organised in larger and equivalent groups of pulse units.
Countless other melodies betray the same tendency towards regularity with-
out having been conceived in relation to dancing, marching or working
movements. For the basis of this divisive rhythm is a psychic focus. The music
is made spontaneously in larger musical units that are subdivisible in an equal
number of pulses thus the word divisive. In the music of the Viennese clas-
sical composers, this divisive rhythm is carried exceptionally far. What goes
for the perception of all periodicity probably applies here, too: the larger
components of this time pattern must lie within reasonable limits. If they are
too large we are no longer conscious of them as musical units. In Indian tala
patterns, regular blocks of twenty or more pulse units are sometimes formed.
However, these are too large to be perceptible as a whole; they are in fact accu-
mulations of smaller units.
Additive rhythm. It would now be only too simplistic to consider additive
rhythm as something unnatural. Music is the resultant of many and mysteri-
ous forces active in the human being. An additive concept of music proves to
be current among very many peoples, while in west European art music of the
nineteenth century it also gained ground. In additive rhythm we do not find
a regularly subdivisible time pattern that exists a priori in the mind. The
material is built up from a small beginning, and the notes accumulate as it
were, depending on the technique in question. In most cases the result differs
considerably from divisive regularity, although this is not necessarily true.
Much additive music has an elementary periodic layer of subdivisible pulse
rhythm 41
units. The pulse unit itself, however, can no longer be viewed as part of a
higher unit that can be divided equally, even if the movement, when count-
ed up, could be put to paper in 4/4 time for instance.
Conclusion. Additive rhythm is a loose accumulation of concrete inde-
pendent quantities. In divisive rhythm, values are less independent: they are
always heard in relation to a higher coordinative unit.
Examples of divisive rhythm are hardly required. The fact that the heyday
of this rhythmic concept occurred in the Viennese classical period has already
been mentioned. Tonal cadence formulas lend themselves well to this rhythm;
example 4
The music is typically divisive: larger two-bar groups are directly audible, and
these in turn can be equally subdivided. Players schooled in the West tend to
struggle with this rhythm; they are not readily able to make a clear distinc-
tion between the units and , and have to grasp the latter via an additive
approach. In other words, in their minds they divide these units into two and
three quavers, respectively. The result is usually laborious, while a divisive
interpretation (as an irregular 4/4 bar) is lighter and springier. See also the
analysis of Example , and chapter , section .
Example (Jolivet, Trois Temps) illustrates how divisive rhythm as it is now
applied is often enlivened by syncopation. This is indeed only possible thanks
to divisive rhythm, since syncopation does not occur in additive rhythm.
example 5
example 6
rhythm 43
temporary music in which rhythm fulfills a role as an autonomous construc-
tive element. In higher categories of form, too, we find an analogous distinc-
tion between the chain structures and development structures of the classical
masters. Sometimes it is just as difficult to make a definitive division between
additive and divisive rhythms as it is between the traditional terms
homophony and polyphony, and in both cases insight into general stylistic
features is required. Only then can one perceive the agents working in the
background of the music, an awareness that can be of great significance
towards a convincing interpretation.
Let us now discuss several rhythmic phenomena that may occur in the music
of today, limiting ourselves to matters that are new in respect to the preced-
ing period.
Floating rhythm. In Western music periodic rhythm has always been of
great importance. The movement of the music without being too tightly
bound usually flows in a bedding of periodic pulse units (within the range
of the tempo giusto). This was the situation in the era of the figured bass and
melodic continuation technique, for instance. A particular feature appeared
after about : in the music of the Viennese classical composers, the metri-
cal-rhythmic framework was determined not only by the periodicity of the
pulse units but also by a strong tendency towards symmetry; in other words,
pulse units were bundled into groups of , or , and answered in principle
by a group of equal length. This was made possible by the strong function of
the cadence in classical harmony, to which not only rhythmic patterns were
subordinate but melodic lines too, changing from the Baroque continuation
type to the period structure of the classical masters. For the sake of conven-
ience let us now leave all exceptions (including early dance music) and tran-
sitional phases aside and have a look at the general picture sketched above, in
all its extreme contrasts:
figure 1
Baroque period
continuation technique
figured bass
pulse unit
period structure
harmonic cadence
pulse unit
From the moment that the classical harmonic basis slackened, and particu-
larly during the period of floating tonality (the second half of the nineteenth
century), it was to be expected that classical period form would disintegrate.
And disintegrate it did, in two directions: composers either reverted to the
pre- situation (the Baroque motorial rhythm of the line Reger-
Hindemith), or found a different solution in so-called floating rhythm.
Floating rhythm, of which we are particularly fond of speaking in rela-
tion to some of Debussys works, is really nothing other than a mitigation of
the elementary metrical layer. The latter is still present, but the higher rhyth-
mical layer traverses it freely, and is so much more important that one is
inclined to forget the metre. This explains why syncopation, which one
would expect from such friction, hardly occurs. The same situation was
already increasingly manifest in late-romantic music. Classical tonality, how-
ever, did not lend itself to an entirely floating rhythm because of the purpo-
siveness of the cadence functions. It could only be realised in the free modal-
ity of Debussy, and indeed in free atonality, which is related in terms of
rhythm. The composer indicated this in Example (Voiles) with the words:
Dans un rythme sans rigueur et caressant (in a rhythm without strictness,
caressingly). The first two motifs could just as well come on the first beat of
the bar, for instance, which indeed happens when they are repeated further
on (bar ff ). There the motif marked (bar ) is omitted, so that the
distance between the first and second motifs is shortened, likewise with few
consequences. (If a classical composer shortened material in this way, it often
created a hasty impression because the metrical proportions were impaired
and harmonic progressions accelerated.) The semiquavers at the end of bar
slow the movement down in respect to the preceding demisemiquavers; thus
the second motif is lengthened and asymmetry created. The entry of the next
melodic idea (pp expressivo) is similarly characteristic: the first melodic climax,
the note C, does not coincide with a metrical nuclear point. Nevertheless,
there is no effect of syncopation due to the extremely weak perceptibility of
the metre.
rhythm 45
example 7
rhythm 47
Bla Bartk also continued in the classical tradition with respect to rhythm,
although he employed new rhythmic elements which gave his music particu-
lar enrichment. One such element originates from a practice current in the
Balkans but quite unknown to us, namely that of aksak or limping rhythm:
two different units are combined in a single rhythmic mode, in the propor-
tion : 1/2 (see further chapter , section ).
In the fourth movement of the Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta, these
elements are mixed in a striking manner (Example ). The 2/2 notation is cor-
rect for the first four bars, in which the movement speeds up to arrive at bar
where, however, a new situation occurs. Here, in triple time, we see two
forms of limping modes, one on top of the other:
example
The lower mode (violins and plus violas ) is subdivided, likewise entire-
ly in correspondence with folk music practice in the southern Balkans. It
takes the tupan (drum) players years to master this non-symmetrical long-
short proportion, and it is therefore hardly surprising that performances by
Western musicians are rarely satisfying. A correct notation would be:
(1 1/2 + 1 1/2 + 1)/4 for the upper part and (1 + 1 1/2 + 1 1/2)/4 for the lower
one. It is an east European and Turkish counterpart of our triple bar. The
rhythm is divisive. See also Examples and .
In the previous movement of the same work, we find a typical example of
Bartks rubato style, with strongly differing note lengths (contrast) and fre-
quent use of the rhythmic mode (Example ).
In The Rite rhythm occupies a primary place it is the driving force of the
music. We have already noted the use of the percussive chord and indeed the
larger role of percussion instruments in the orchestra. Let us now investigate
an important principle of Stravinskys rhythm: the continual alternation of
constant and inconstant units. In this case the units concerned are rhythmic
cells. In the simplest case a single cell appears repeatedly, but interposed by
variants to form a variable ostinato (Example ). Here the variant of the cell
is nothing other than its shortening to 3/4 and sometimes 4/4: one or two
crotchets, respectively, are taken off the end. This example comes from a sec-
example
At the beginning of the Danse sacrale we find the same technique, but now
using more cells. With the exception of the first bar, which amounts to an
introduction, this fragment can be divided into three equivalent parts of ,
and semiquavers, respectively: A-A-B. A comprises two rhythmic cells,
(a) and (b); B introduces a third cell (c). Of these three cells, (a) and (c) are
inconstant. With respect to (a) this is well illustrated in Example : there are
three values, namely and . Only (b) remains constant: .
example
Note that the cells may borrow material from one another. Thus, (c) is a
fusion of (a) and (b). Here again we see a typically Stravinskian combination
of constant and inconstant quantities. The same recurs in the polyrhythm of
The Soldiers Tale (see section ), but then one on top of the other. The cells
are juxtaposed in free order, and the rhythm is therefore additive.
Naturally, one could devote an entire chapter on rhythm to Stravinsky. In The
Wedding yet another procedure is applied, one that is determined by the syl-
rhythm 49
lables of the text. Curt Sachs called this numerical rhythm. It is a form of
additive rhythm, because the text syllables are linked by means of equivalent
note values regardless of the total number of syllables per line. Accents follow
the rhythm of the words consistently.
We find a contrasting, very clear divisive rhythm in the fugue subject from
La Cration du Monde by Darius Milhaud (Example ). The rhythm is
strongly syncopated, and the work is also an example of the early influence of
jazz (discussed further in chapter , section ).
A much simpler form of rhythm is found in the music of Carl Orff.
Although rhythm plays an essential role in his work, he returns to the most
elementary musical resources in his pursuit of primary dramatic force and
direct, almost magical effects. In his rhythm this results in a frequent use of
ostinato, among other things. The monotony of this can create more physio-
logical-psychological tensions than musical ones, as is the case in primitive
music. Stravinskys variable ostinato was an essential step forward.
We have already noted other ways of returning to elementary resources in
Bartk and Stravinsky. The Rite also contains extensive ostinato passages. The
cell technique in this work, however, illustrates that quite a different devel-
opment of rhythm is possible, namely one in which it comes to play an inde-
pendent-constructive role in the musical structure. We will go into this in the
following examples, but not before discussing several forms of polyrhythm.
polyrhythm. In the light of our observations on time categories (section
), polymetre is nothing other than a form of polyrhythm. We can even say
that in certain cases polyrhythm is suggested without being written down (as
a single part can be written to suggest two). If we compare Examples and ,
it appears that in the first case the three rhythmic layers form one and the
same movement, while in Jolivet the metrical layer (= periodic rhythm) func-
tions as a basis of tension for the rhythmic layer. Syncopation is created. Such
musical elements, not (completely) realised but nonetheless perceptible, are
of great significance. As the author of a novel may sometimes achieve more
through the suggestion of a few words than a lengthy description, the com-
poser too has many and subtle resources of creating musical relationships and
tensions. What we normally refer to as polyrhythm is indeed realised; in other
words, two or more parts lead their own rhythmic lives. Let us look more
closely at some characteristic forms of this.
In the fugue from La Cration du monde (Example ), there are two layers:
() the fugal entries and () the percussion and piano. The fugal entries are
organised in a five-bar pattern. The piano chords come once every three
crotchets and therefore suggest a / metre. After the fifth chord, however, the
distance is lengthened by a crotchet, and the game starts again from the very
rhythm 51
beginning. The pattern therefore embraces four bars ( times + ). The same
goes for the percussion part, which consists of three rhythmic cells separated
by a crotchet rest, repeated every four bars in a certain order (A, B, A, B, C).
The structure of the piano and percussion parts, while forming a single
whole, is nevertheless differentiated. Both layers together, with their -bar
pattern, clash constantly with the -bar fugal pattern. This shifting causes
each fugue entry to come at a different moment in relation to the percussion.
The rhythm of both layers is very metrically conceived, so that the entirety,
partly as a result of tight repetition, is more schematic than the polyrhythm
of Stravinsky. The continual metrical shifting reinforces the impression of lin-
earity. This is indeed necessary since, unlike for instance the fugue from
Bartks Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta, the melodic life of this fugue
is secondary. Primary is the whole arrangement of metrical patterns; the
melodic lines are grafted onto them, as it were.
More developed in terms of rhythm is Stravinskys earlier work The
Soldiers Tale (). The composer has a predilection for the combination of
constant and inconstant rhythms, so that the shifting variant of the various
parts is greater than in Milhauds technique. In Example there are three lay-
ers: the bass and violin (layer A) repeat a direct-constant rhythmic figure; the
percussion (layer B) has an indirect-constant figure: the group alter-
nates with (interpolated quaver rest). Above this, finally, is the vari-
able rhythm of layer C, consisting of a melody with additive rhythm. The
combination of constant and variable rhythms occurs frequently in this work,
but always in different proportions.
example
In Example , from Pijpers Sonata for two Pianos, the upper stave could in
itself be a 3/4 metre . But it is a 6/8 with syncopation, as illustrat-
ed, because the 6/8 metre of the middle stave predominates (through the har-
monic progressions and the tritone leaps in the bass part). The lower stave has
a neutral series of semiquavers and could therefore have been in 6/8
. The melodic profile, however, suggests groups of four semi-
quavers. The question of why it is not written in 3/4 , which
would simplify the score, is answered by the fact that a 4/8 metre occurs
example
The first composer of the twentieth century to consciously assign a primary
structural role to rhythm was Olivier Messiaen, who liked to call himself a
rythmicien. He built on the foundation laid by Stravinsky, but enriched his
technique with new elements mainly derived from the ancient Hindus and the
isorhythm of the Middle Ages. The lesson of The Soldiers Tale (polyrhythm
and ostinato technique) was worked out as follows in LAnge aux Parfums:
example
rhythm 53
The bass has an ostinato motif, called pdale rythmique. Above it is a rhyth-
mic canon in retrograde: the rhythm of the right hand is adopted in retro-
grade by the left hand. This canon is continually repeated, but each time the
middle part shifts up a quaver in relation to the upper part. Since the length
of the bass ostinato differs, the three parts continually shift in relation to one
another.
Also common in Messiaens music is the so-called rythme non-rtrograd-
able, referring to a rhythmic formula that remains the same when retrograd-
ed. The first three notes in the bass feature such a rhythm ( ); it is imme-
diately followed by the diminution ( ) and then the original version again.
This entire bass pattern too, which is repeated, is therefore non-rtrogradable!
example
example
rhythm 55
Two slightly older contemporaries of Messiaen, Hermann Heiss and Boris
Blacher, must not go unmentioned. Heiss wrote a Tonbewegungslehre in which
he too attempted to apply existing contrapuntal principles to the purely
rhythmic element (Schlagstze). Blacher introduced the principle of variable
Metren which, when treated with levity and imagination, gave rise to fasci-
nating rhythmic structures despite the fact that it avoided the real rhythmic
problem. In short his principle amounted to the following: the size and
sequence of the bars is determined by a given series; the simplest arithmetic
series produces, for instance, the sequence 2/8, 3/8, 4/8, 5/8, 6/8, 7/8,..., but
retrograde and other permutations may also be employed. The continually
changing bars are not marked by accents but by the melodic and harmonic
structure of the music (Second Piano Concerto):
example
Needless to say, in the first instance the variable metre created formal prob-
lems, prompting the question: how can such rhythm be integrated into the
whole while avoiding juxtaposition of totally different principles of structure?
Notable, incidentally, is that works by Blacher without variable metre possess
the same rhythmic sparkle.
Less striking, but no less important was Weberns treatment of rhythm, espe-
cially in his later works. Although he retained a simple metrical notation, his
rhythm, in contrast to that of Schnberg and Berg, gained a great degree of
structural independence. By means of register changes, interval relations,
dynamics, tempo changes, phrasing and shifting accents, Webern created a
subtle spectacle of rhythmic nuance. In Example contrapuntal variants are
also applied, such as diminution and retrograde. The beginning of op.
demonstrates how Webern achieved a fascinating rhythmic interplay with
example
example
rhythm 57
a. new element (bar ): irrational proportion (2/3) in respect to ;
b. faster movement (bar -): cells A and C overlapped;
c. slower movement (bar -): cell A with interpolated quaver rest.
The three quavers of cell A are heard in 2/3 proportion , but the suc-
ceeding fragment (not included here) introduces the proportions 3/2
and 4/3 , presenting refined possibilities for creating rhythmic
structures. Meanwhile, traditional relations to other musical elements are evi-
dent: the rhythmic curve of faster and slower movement, for example, is relat-
ed to crescendo and decrescendo, respectively.
The examples by Stravinsky, Messiaen and Webern have been fruitful. The
loose, additive juxtaposition of increasingly varied cells lends this music great
suppleness. This is reinforced by the many changes of tempo fondly pre-
scribed by Boulez. Despite all differences, it is tempting to draw a compari-
son with Debussy!
But the very next year, , saw the appearance of Messiaens tudes ryth-
miques, in which the composer systematically treated the various musical ele-
ments entirely autonomously. A new stage had been reached. The problems
presented by this dissociation of the elements of music will be dealt with in
the discussion of serial music in chapter .
Melody
How many attempts have been made to define the concept of melody? It is
not our intention here to add another new and undoubtedly limited one to
those already current. For we can assume that any definition of melody is
related to our general musical attitude. How very different must the concept
of melody be, or must have been, among peoples living beyond or before
Western polyphony, in comparison for instance to the ideas of our nine-
teenth-century forefathers! Jean-Jacques Rousseau anticipated that century
when he wrote: Melody arises from harmony. And however much those
same forefathers focused their expressive urge on the melodic, the indispen-
sable basis for melody was nonetheless formed by harmony.
The disintegration of this harmonic system, however, brought one conse-
quence: the melodic element began to collapse and was thus in need of revi-
sion. Classical period form, for example, was replaced immediately by melody
moving more freely in relation to metrical nuclear points, harmonic cadences
and symmetrical structures.
A far more important outcome was that the melodic element slowly but
surely became primary, a development which was often misunderstood. This
is not to say that musical expression became even more concentrated on the
melodic than it had been before, but that the melodic, or more generally the
melic element, began to play the same structural role as that previously
assigned to harmony. For many composers it became a constructive factor of
great significance.
Once more, it was the dodecaphonic world which applied this most thor-
oughly. The structural principle that emerged was exactly the opposite of its
predecessor: the melic element a succession of notes came to determine
much of the construction and sequence of the vertical sound.
But elsewhere too, the constructional role of the melic element came to
the fore in many shapes. We must bear in mind, however, that the disinte-
gration into elements that typified all developments of the past one hundred
and fifty years also applied to the strictly melodic. Melodies became motifs,
motifs in turn could be reduced to intervals (or incidentally even to single
notes), and from these small units larger structures were determined.
59
Before examining several examples from the work of modern composers we
should give some thought to general differences of melodic treatment among
the great three: Schnberg, Stravinsky and Bartk.
Schnberg continued along the path that had led from Beethoven via
Wagner to the late romantics, employing strongly concentrated expressive
units in which chromaticism and wide intervals served to push expressivity to
the extreme. It was hardly a coincidence that Schnberg himself was to model
his later melodic style increasingly on traditional procedures. Here again the
conflict of this most complicated of personalities emerges strikingly. Yet the
-note technique was to become an important stimulus for many composers
to revitalise the melodic element in their own individual ways.
Bartks use of melody, like that of Schnberg, was inconceivable without
the historical background. We should bear in mind what has been said about
him in chapter , section . However, in order to revitalise the somewhat
worn melodic style of late romanticism, he also turned to other resources: folk
music. Fresh blood from the Balkans, from Spain, and from jazz and early
polyphony was to play a significant role in the hands of many composers.
Stravinsky also ventured into folklore, but his attitude was quite different.
In his music, melody was never a means towards intimate, subjective expres-
sion. As far as he made use of folkloric elements, he did so precisely in pur-
suit of the non-subjective, the extra-personal. Once more we see the astound-
ing genius of a man who literally transformed all that he assimiliated to serve
that single, great concept behind his work. In his melodic style too, whether
folkloric or not, Stravinsky was the great antithesis of Schnberg and Bartk;
his example had far-reaching consequences.
In exploring new melodic paths it was again Debussy who had taken the lead.
Of great influence on his approach to melody was one particular aspect of his
work, that of floating rhythm (see chapter , section ). His lines, almost
weightless, originated without a strong relation to metrical-harmonic stress.
This quasi-weightlessness had another side to it too: in Debussys works such
melodic writing had become completely detached from classical thematic
functions, in accordance with his attitude to musical form in general (see
introduction, section ). His melody had therefore also been liberated from
the emphatic-expressive load that continued to play such a prominent role in
German developments, acquiring an almost ornamental significance, to use a
dangerous word. The traditional thematic function meant that the main
themes of a work were directly related to one another, either as variants or by
means of contrast, lending a great degree of unity to all thematic material.
Since Debussy abandoned this generative, thematic concept, the question
arises of how the master created the required unity in large-scale works.
example
Above are the four main large melodic forms of the first movement. One is
struck by the widely divergent structure, a divergence accentuated moreover
by the fact that each of the four melodies has a different tempo. There is no
symmetrical recapitulation of an opening theme to end the work in the clas-
sical manner. Neither is there mention of a development!
Four different melodies, four tempos, and yet unity. Upon closer exami-
nation all this material proves to be very similar in terms of interval structure.
The major nd and minor rd predominate by far, and are often joined to
make a th, whether or not filled in to produce a tetrachord:
example
or
The many little separate motifs in the work also prove to possess largely the
same interval structure. Indeed, the interval as such acquires constructive sig-
nificance. It ensures, as it were, that the material of these most divergent
melodic lines remains consistent. Just one example by Beethoven is sufficient
to illustrate the very different structure of classical themes:
melody 61
example
Of importance in this theme are the opening motif and the melod-
ic curve , two elements which are extended to create a larger, strongly
cohesive unit. The fact that the th in bar becomes a th in bar and an
octave in bar is of only secondary importance: in principle the theme is
recognisable by means of the above two elements.
Quite the contrary applied to Debussy: here the interval was primary, and
the rhythm and curve of the motif were therefore much freer. This was a first
step on the road to athematic music.
La Mer is instructive in other respects too. The intervals of the major nd and
minor rd, together amounting to a perfect th, form an ancient melodic
nucleus in the history of music. Some ethnomusicologists assume that it was
the basis of later pentatonism, in which two such nuclei are combined at a
rather obvious distance from the two centres:
example
But this was already familiar among peoples with a much higher level of
musical development. Pentatonism therefore formed the recognisable begin-
ning of an endless modal development in which the division of the octave
into seven parts was to become predominant. The ancient melodic nucleus,
however, crops up again and again: we find it in Gregorian chant, in childrens
and folk songs, and now... in La Mer, the work of one of the most sophisti-
cated composers of our time.
Thereafter this nucleus became a familiar sight, beginning with The Rite
(). And what entered the stage in Debussy became quite clear in
Stravinsky. For one of the first reactions to the disintegration of classical
tonality was the search for other cohesive means. This had already begun in
the nineteenth century, and was manifest for the time being in increasing
interest in medieval modal elements. But this remained superficial, grafted
onto the classical diatonic basis. Debussy was the first to go much further,
by... going much further back beyond early modality (see chaper , section ).
The increasing significance of that elementary building block, the inter-
We have already discussed The Rite, and elsewhere the variable ostinato that
the work employed (see chapter , section ). Here is an example of melodic
structure by means of this technique:
example
melody 63
example
Another common phenomenon was declamatory melody, which had become
increasingly popular from the sixteenth century onwards and was therefore
hardly new. With the (spoken) text as point of departure, the melody
attempted to translate its inflexions, accents and length proportions more or
less exactly into pitches. This became easier as the notes became less depend-
ent on harmonic-metrical laws, and it is therefore obvious that declamatory
melody was used increasingly in our period. In German-speaking countries in
particular, it was also transferred to instrumental melody, and as a parallel to
Debussys floating rhythm something was created that could be described as
melody with free articulation. Common features of this type of instrumen-
tal melody were rhythmic and dynamic contrast, wide leaps, and an attempt
to escape from an all too clear sense of the bar (by means of syncopation,
anti-metrical figures, etc.). The most conspicuous difference in respect to
Debussys free melody was the evident will to create melodic expression. In
this respect the German aesthetic, in comparison to that of Debussy, was
essentially more bound to the romantic tradition until far into the twentieth
century. Thus, this desire to push melodic Ausdruck to the extreme by
employing the model of human speech.
An example of normal declamatory melody to text is not included here,
since the vocal works of Schnberg and Alban Berg are full of it, and there is
no essential difference in respect to Wagner. What we do include is a special
case: the Sprechgesang from Schnbergs Pierrot lunaire ():
melody 65
example
All this goes to show that freer melodic development was pursued along many
paths; Debussys freely floating melody, Stravinskys ornamentation, and the
declamatory melody of the Viennese School were the first fruits of this
endeavour. Not yet mentioned is the so-called rubato melody, a type found
frequently in Bartk, but also in Hindemith. There are, incidentally, various
remarkable stylistic similarities between these two so divergent composers.
Despite the indication rubato (in Hindemith: frei im Zeitma), the tech-
nique of rubato melody is essentially different from the free melody of
Debussy, since remarkably enough it is strongly related to the metrical bed-
ding. Example from Bartks Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta makes
this clear:
example
Characteristic here are the emphases on the metrical layer, strongly divergent
and contrasting durations, thetic motifs and dynamic accents. The rhythmic
mode appears very frequently in Bartks music. His thetic motif struc-
ture is probably related to the inflexion of the Hungarian language, with the
accent on the first syllable. (See also Example , the rubato melody from
Mathis der Maler.)
Bartks rubato melody was the antithesis of tempo giusto melody, of
strictly metrical organisation; in Hindemith it contrasted to the similarly
strict, motorial melodic writing of the Baroque, a style so familiar that no
example is required.
melody 67
In section we already noted the disintegration of melody in the twentieth
century. Lengthy and cohesive melodic lines were rarely pursued; on the one
hand, a clear harmonic-metrical basis for this was lacking, and on the other
the relationship between melody and accompaniment had in many cases
changed. Both could be derived from one and the same series in the music of
the dodecaphonists in particular; they were therefore much more closely relat-
ed in terms of structure, while the two elements continually interacted. This
in turn stimulated a strongly motivic and at the same time instrumental man-
ner of writing (in the case of songs). Yet there were sufficient exceptions to
this rule, and in the remainder of this chapter some examples of more exten-
sive and largely monophonic melodies will be discussed, enabling us to deal
with certain hitherto unmentioned aspects at the same time.
The melody forming the main thread of Bla Bartks Sixth String Quartet is
introduced in a monophonic exposition by the viola (Example ). It is a typ-
ical example of the other side of Bartk, in which the rhythmic impulse
withdrew to the background and expressiveness lay mainly in a strongly chro-
matic idiom. Of the four segments of the melody, A and B are marked by
strongly condensed chromaticism, while C and D bring contrast through
wider leaps. Characteristic chromatic features also found among the Viennese
composers are:
1. A structural element by means of which the most important note of
each of the four segments (G , C , D, A , respectively) does not occur in
the preceding segment.
. The melodic formula that is so very typical of Bartk: the crosswise rela-
tionship in nds ( ), avoiding direct repetition of a preceding pitch. Both
() and () are characteristic of chromatic expansion, the pursuit of comple-
tion of a chromatic field.
. The above-mentioned Sekundgang, which is largely chromatic. Note the
falling and rising chromatic line beginning in bar !
example
The celebrated melody from Paul Hindemiths Mathis der Maler belongs to
the rubato group, the general characteristics of which have already been dis-
cussed. The orchestra plays in unison, reinforced by the wind from the end
of bar . The type of structure is familiar:
example
melody 69
C. The end has the effect of a cadence. A Sekundgang makes its first
appearance, descending against a repeated D . The dotted rhythm already
announced in (B) now predominates.
Rhythmically speaking, the accelerated movement in (B) is retarded in
(C). Tension generated by the thrust is not released by the dotted rhythm but
rather by the rustling of the percussion, which therefore fulfills a most essen-
tial role in the melodic proceedings! As in Bartk we see strongly developed
chromaticism (the twelve chromatic notes are introduced at the very begin-
ning) which, however, is embedded in the tonal framework A -D . Again
there is mention of the same type of climax, though more accentuated.
example
example 32
The given fragment is based on two modes (see chapter , section ): A and
A are in mode , and B and B in mode . The contrast between A and B is
mainly determined by this modal difference, since B is actually a variant of A.
In comparison with the preceding examples the type of melody is quite dif-
ferent. There is no attempt to create a cohesive curve of tension and relax-
ation. The rhythm and the juxtaposition of small melodic cells are additive,
and a remarkable feature of this is the frequent recurrence of the same cells,
Although Pijpers Sonatine II for piano employs one of Messiaens modes (no.
), the work is based on quite different premises. Here we encounter Pijpers
germ-cell technique:
example
example 34
Bar introduces this cell, a four-note motif that according to the compos-
ers intentions at least is to determine the melodic-harmonic and rhythmic
development. We can imagine the germ cell as a seed from which the whole
melody 71
plant grows organically. One is therefore to assume an absence of a priori
existing form schemes: each form is entirely defined by the properties already
present in the germ cell. Let us examine what happens.
In terms of rhythm the germ cell is a mode, while melodically it consists
of two descending ths at a distance of a minor rd from one another. The
entire proceedings quickly prove to revolve around triads that are interrelated
by this minor rd (A in Example ). When amalgamated, an octatonic scale
arises, equivalent to Messiaens second mode. Bar (Example ) brings the
first peak: a composite chord (see chapter , section ) and the triad on D are
heard for the first time. The ensuing relaxation coincides with a lengthened
bar (4/8 instead of 3/8). From bar a new ascending line reaches a peak in bar
with another composite chord and a new triad based on F. A kind of mod-
ulation follows, brought about quite traditionally by a pivot chord, and
indeed the octatonic scale is subsequently transposed up a semitone. Figure B
in Example belongs to both scales and therefore functions as the pivot. The
episode in bars - contrasts strongly with the preceding: the mode is trans-
posed and we hear neither chordal density nor the rhythm of the germ cell.
Instead, a rapid semiquaver movement is hurried along by a shortened bar
(5/16 instead of 3/8). This linear movement resolves in a long A (bar ) which
again has a pivot function, and the accumulated tension is released in a bril-
liantly spread composite chord in the initial mode. Only the (opening) triad
on A would be required to close the circle of relationships based on the
minor rd.
This passage is a wonderful example of primary melic-rhythmic organisa-
tion, in which the vertical sound, incorporated in this static-modal environ-
ment, has no constructive role. The melodic framework moves (in broken
chords, for instance) through a bedding of vertical sounds that is modally
determined and that does not allow any development.
Webern is more difficult than any other composer when it comes to analysing
a single aspect of his music in this case his melodic technique. The analysis
of Example demonstrates that all musical elements are incorporated in the
entire structure in a highly developed and autonomous manner. We must
therefore ask the reader to supplement the following remarks on the com-
posers op. with what is said at that point. In terms of melody several strik-
ing differences in respect to the preceding examples may be noted: () extreme
economy and sobriety; () far-reaching motivic disintegration: though found
elsewhere, it is reinforced here by changes of register and tone colour, and
rapid dynamic contrasts:
. Economy was of course a slogan in the dodecaphonic camp; it was one
of the main raisons dtre of the -note series. But Webern went further, split-
ting his series into three motifs of four notes that determine the entire work
both horizontally and vertically. Moreover, the third motif is closely related to
the first (both have two minor nds and one minor rd). Finally, the second
Finally, the solo for bass flute that ends Boulezs Le Marteau sans Matre
(Example ). We are again far from classical -note technique, and the strict
serial form of the earlier Structures for two pianos is also replaced here by a
greater freedom, without sacrificing the general principles of the new idiom.
Differentiation is taken to the extreme:
. The motivic-rhythmic structure of traditional themes is obviously com-
pletely abandoned. In the example by Webern it was still discernible, but
Boulez followed Debussy in this respect and departed completely from clas-
sical motivic structures. Instead, the work is built up from melodic cells that
continually appear in different rhythmic guises.
. Although a certain preference for the major th, minor th and the tri-
tone is noticeable, there is great diversity of intervals. This again is a striking
contrast to Webern, though both have wide leaps of atonal melodic writing
in common.
. The entire compass of the instrument is exploited: three octaves, from
G to G.
. Rhythmically and dynamically this music is highly variegated, although
the dynamics are not independent but usually geared to the melodic curve.
Beside Debussy, Stravinsky was the guiding light, as is demonstrated by such
matters as the rich ornamentation.
Variegation, therefore, was rife. Where it was written out, as in the pres-
ent case, the score inevitably became complicated, indeed too complicated.
The notation of rhythm, for instance, suggested a precision that could no
longer be achieved in practice. Yet Boulez pursued suppleness and a fluctuat-
ing tempo: elsewhere in the work he speaks of mouvements respiratoires.
Here, more than ever, the notation is inhibiting. Several years later he
attempted to achieve his aim by introducing a new element: greater freedom
for the performer.
melody 73
Though at first acquaintance it may seem difficult to make heads or tails
of this variegation, further investigation does bring recognisable structural
elements to light.
In the first place certain combinations of intervals continually recur, as the
first eight notes go to illustrate. Between the second and eighth notes are the
perfect th, major th, minor th, major nd, major th and perfect th. This
amounts to interval reversion, therefore, in which the second half (except the
major th) also employs interval inversion: the perfect th becomes a perfect
th, etc. This passage includes many such cell structures. This same nonetu-
plet has eight different notes, a chromatic 8-note field, which determines as it
were the subsequent situation. And although this is not -note music, chro-
matic completion is nonetheless pursued in other ways: the notes B , F , G
and A, not included in the eight-note field, thereafter become the main
melodic notes.
example
While common intervals thus lend cohesion to the elementary material, three
segments (A, B and C) are evident in a higher structural layer:
A is typified by a very wide compass, very different durations, and the
recurring melodic peak on G with a fall to B (bars - and -). These
descending leaps are characteristic: G-B in bar becomes G-F in bar ;
example
example
melody 75
chapter four
Simultaneity
For some ten centuries the European tradition has been particularly distin-
guished from other music cultures by the phenomenon of simultaneity. The
eighteenth century in particular saw the erection of a magnificent edifice in
which harmony undisputedly ruled over all other musical elements. The great
romantics wielded harmony as an expressive means of the very finest sort.
Even theoreticians were content, for here lay an open field allowing system-
atic excavation. Music could now be explained, and functions and cadences,
modulations and alterations obediently joined ranks in a well-ordered and
logical whole. Ever since, generations of musicians have been and indeed con-
tinue to be trained in what we call the theory of harmony. While new dis-
coveries in this field would hardly seem likely, the reverse side of the medal is
twofold:
. The theory of harmony as it is understood today covers only a few cen-
turies of the entire development of simultaneity in the broad sense of the
word;
. Even more fatal to unimpeded rhythmic and/or melodic development
than this restriction is the fact that simultaneity plays such a primary role in
our experience. Here, music reacts like any other living organism: one-sided
development of a single aspect can work to the detriment of other ones.
Only now are we able to view these matters more clearly. A deeper study
of some Eastern cultures has made us aware of our inferiority in terms of
melody and rhythm. But these are indeed cultures in which simultaneity is of
only secondary significance! While it cannot be ruled out that we Westerners
have a natural disposition for harmony, it is at the same time true that
thoughtful musical training can protect us from one-sidedness and atrophy.
Once there was a time when we took care with our dosage of dissonances,
and now we do likewise with our consonances. However the case may be, as
long as we remain oversensitive to such phenomena, simultaneity will con-
tinue to form one of the main problems of Western music.
What did the twentieth century achieve in this field? By now we realise that
there is no simple answer to this question, having experienced every aspect
ranging from uncompromising counterpoint (Hindemith in the s), in
which simultaneity was an entirely random result of horizontal textures, to
77
the most cautious, subtle expressiveness of Weberns chromaticism.
In general we can say of the initial period that one tendency was wide-
spread from Debussy to Schnberg, namely the abandonment of the concept
of harmonic functions. The chord was considered not as a function, as a link
in a cadence progression, but purely as a sound in itself: sometimes for the
sake of an entirely free music that floated before Debussys eyes, sometimes
for the sake of expressiveness driven to the extreme, as in the free atonal works
of Schnberg and Webern. The consequence was an enormous increase in
diversity and complexity: structures based on rds were abandoned, chromat-
ic elements were incorporated as autonomous colours, chords of five, six or
more notes became common, modal elements and parallel movement were
introduced, etc.
It was not until after World War I that a general reaction occurred in the
form of a more austere approach and renewed attention to linearity. By then
the dissonance had been emancipated once and for all. Schnberg said that
dissonances are only further removed consonances in the overtone series.
Hindemith arrived at practically the same conclusion from a different angle
by saying that the difference between consonance and dissonance is only
gradual. Just for once these two opposites, and with them most modern com-
posers, agreed with one another.
Theoretically, however, the problem was not so simple. For centuries,
physicists, physiologists and psychologists had sought an explanation, usual-
ly considering the interval as an autonomous sound removed from its musi-
cal context. Classical musical theory did the same and arrived at the follow-
ing classification:
perfect consonances: , , , ;
imperfect consonances: , (major and minor);
dissonances: the remaining intervals.
Let us investigate this more thoroughly, firstly by putting the above view on
the problem of consonance to the test in a song by Debussy, Le Jet dEau,
written in :
example
simultaneity 79
The first five bars are purely modal. The series employed comprises the
uneven overtones (, , , , , ) and therefore has a strongly static charac-
ter. We call this the overtone series. In this modal, static environment the nd
C-D has the effect of a perfect consonance. But this modal tranquility is
interrupted by dynamic, tonal elements (bar ), while in bars - we hear a
tonal cadence from the dominant to the tonic. In this strongly tonal vertical
sound the nd C-D suddenly becomes dissonant: it must be resolved, and this
indeed happens in bar as the D rises to the rd E.
There is still much to be learnt from Debussy. A second and generally held
view is that, since the abandonment of the concept of harmonic functions,
the structure and progress of the vertical sound are largely determined by
melic and horizontal forces. This is the case in Debussy too. The simplest
example is the chord of the dominant th, now neutralised and no longer
bound to the cadential resolution from dominant to tonic. Debussy often
repeated it in parallel movement according to the melodic line; fine examples
of such parallel harmony are to be found in La Cathdrale engloutie, a piece
which reveals other interesting details too (Example ):
simultaneity 81
Modality is a common phenomenon in Debussys music; we have already
noted Examples (nd stave), (the overtone series common in his work),
and (the whole-tone scale).
But it was Debussys fellow countryman Olivier Messiaen who particular-
ly enriched this modal aspect. He developed the theory of the modes trans-
positions limites, based on the equal temperament of twelve chromatic notes.
These modes comprise identical groups and return to the original constella-
tion after a number of chromatic transpositions. In all cases, the last note of
each group is at the same time the first note of the following one:
example
Mode comprises six groups of two notes which can be transposed once; it
embraces the whole-tone scale. Mode comprises four groups of three notes
and can be transposed twice; it embraces the frequently used octatonic scale.
Mode is divided into three groups of four notes and can be transposed three
times. Mode has two groups of five notes and can be transposed five times.
The latter also goes for the th, th and th modes. Parallel movement reveals
the typical harmonic timbre of these modes:
The next new concept, that of the tone field, can again be discussed with ref-
erence to Debussy, the great innovator in this area. A tone field is a musical
episode that is marked by harmonic tranquility, since the driving forces of
harmonic movement are hardly, if at all, active. Technically speaking, many
such passages are characterised by frequent ostinato figures, long-held notes,
strongly modal note constellations or, rather, considerable chromatic density
through which harmonic tension may likewise be smoothed over. Timbre
often plays a prominent role. Tone fields may occur alone, but they are often
employed as counterpoint to a rhythmic or melodic part in which the ener-
gy of movement does make itself felt. Transitional situations from dynamic
passages to tone fields and vice versa are common. Beside Debussy, tone fields
are employed regularly by composers including Bartk, Stravinsky, Webern
and Messiaen.
At the beginning of the second movement of The Rite, Stravinsky creates
a wonderful and suggestive tone field from which, several bars later, a melod-
ic figure in the violins slowly but surely frees itself (see Example ). Example
(op. , no. by Webern) features a tone field in bars - in which the choice
of notes from the overtone series carries the mood of static tranquility to the
extreme. Tone fields are also employed in Weberns Symphony op. , though
in a far more sophisticated manner.
Bartk employed this technique in quite a different way. Sometimes his
tone fields are rustling backgrounds full of mysterious nocturnal sounds, and
sometimes they are sober blocks formed by just a few parts, as in his Third
String Quartet:
simultaneity 83
example
The use of tone fields can probably be viewed in many cases in relation to a
reaction against subjectivism and expressiveness-in-every-note, and to the
pursuit of the sacral and suprapersonal, as for instance in Stravinsky.
Another phenomenon common from the beginning is the note nucleus.
Consisting of one or (usually) more notes, a note nucleus can acquire a lead-
ing role through continual repetition. Although such nuclei may be given a
certain central significance, this cannot be compared to the function of the
tonic in tonal music! This is proved particularly by the fact that note nuclei
occur frequently in free atonal music too. We should rather think in terms of
a melic phenomenon, a horizontal centre that occupies a position amid the
other parts but often entirely independent of them. Two examples follow, one
from the extended tonality of Bartk, the other from the free atonality of
Schnberg.
Bartks Bagatelle employs the note nucleus A -B (Example ).
Although it is not harmonically functional, its dependence on the other part
is evident, as the latter circles spirally around the note nucleus. A similar but
melodic interraction is found in Bagatel : the note nucleus here is a chro-
matically filled rd, with which the melodic line vies (Example ). In both
cases one could speak of a (figured) pedal point: in classical harmony too this
phenomenon is fundamentally independent of harmonic movement.
The second of Schnbergs Six Little Piano Pieces op. also employs a rd
as note nucleus (Example ). It plays an important role in the piece without
the least tonal influence on the surrounding notes, for in this free atonal envi-
ronment, simultaneity is determined by other laws (see section on the role
of intervals). The sixth piece from the same opus has a note nucleus consist-
ing of a three-part chord of ths. In the second of the Three Piano Pieces op.
example 44
example 45
(), we find a note nucleus in the bass, again a rd, which also fulfills a
rhythmic role in a continual pendulous movement.
We have already briefly mentioned parallel chords, a phenomenon too evi-
dent to devote many words to. We should note in passing that such parallels
may be either modal (adapted to the prevailing note series) or real, i.e., with
unadapted intervals. Parallel chords form the most extreme example of a
simultaneity governed by melic principles. The choice of (parallel) chords is
in many cases determined by the chordal timbre.
Parallel chords become much more interesting if they approach het-
erophony: the simultaneous rendering of the same melodic material, but var-
ied in each part. Example is a passage from Stravinskys The Rite (number
in the score). All three parts feature parallel movement of different inter-
vals. Moreover, the middle part is a variant of the upper one: heterophony.
The simultaneity is much more differentiated.
simultaneity 85
example
Schnbergs Five Piano Pieces op. no. provide another interesting exam-
ple. The composer had adopted a new technique, and in Example we find
a series (of five notes) in three layers one above the other, but each slightly dif-
ferent. This variation technique is therefore exclusively rhythmic.
example
Considered theoretically, polytonality is the simultaneous occurrence of dif-
ferent keys. This implies that harmonies and/or melodies can be split into
groups, each with their own centres to which the notes are functionally relat-
ed. Since such centres can usually only be determined by means of a succes-
sion of chords or melody notes, polytonality cannot be ascertained by means
of a single chord. This is a problematic situation, since it is necessary to dis-
tinguish clearly between three different forms:
. Genuine polytonality. In most cases this is not evident, since the influ-
ence of the bass note is so predominant that the ear perceives monotonality,
be it highly enriched. We have already mentioned the concept of extended
example
simultaneity 87
example
example
example
simultaneity 89
example
example
The Scherzo from Bartks Fifth String Quartet (Example ) also presents an
interesting example of a structure based on ths. In the first nine bars the two
violins move within a framework of ths: C -G -D -(G )-A . The cello
first provides D as bass, but moves up to G at the peak of the melodic
line (bar , second violin).
Finally, an example from the symphony Mathis der Maler by Paul
Hindemith (Example ). The crosses above the notes indicate how the
melodic line and thereafter the chord in bar move within a frame of ths
(G-D-A-E-B-F ). The trombone D of the cantus firmus (Es sungen drei
Engel) links up with this. The three repetitions of the cantus firmus move up
in major rds (D , F and A respectively). The third rendering ends on C ,
and from this point the frame of ths in the above example makes its entry
again. Via the notes D , A , E , B , F and C (the latter two again combined
simultaneity 91
in a chord) the introduction comes to an end and is followed by an allegro
beginning on G. The complete structure therefore incorporates the entire cir-
cle of ths according to the following scheme:
figure 3
example
Leaving aside our diversion into chromaticism via the tritone, our considera-
tion of simultaneity has as yet made no fundamental distinction between dia-
tonicism and chromaticism. Yet this distinction was gradually to become an
important point of difference among composers, and was frequently even
related to the question of whether a particular concept was tonal or not.
Let us cast our minds back to the situation in classical romantic music.
The basis was and remained diatonic: in other words, the chromatic element
played a secondary role, serving particularly to colour and enrich the diaton-
ic foundations. Not until the twentieth century did chromaticism become
autonomous in the work of the Viennese School of Schnberg and his disci-
ples. But the classical concept lived on in the form of extended and floating
tonality. One of the characteristic differences between the two groups was
that the Viennese School developed in a strongly cohesive and conscious
manner, while other composers could hardly be considered as a group because
each followed and extended traditional paths in his own way. Viennese devel-
opments will therefore be discussed in a separate chapter; let us now devote
attention to the only figure outside the -note composers who developed a
clear concept of his own and documented it in writing: Paul Hindemith. In
his Unterweisung im Tonsatz he assumed the presence of tone centres, and
that harmonic progressions give rise to different tensions. Based on calcula-
tions from the overtone series he produced an autonomous chromatic series,
as distinct from one derived from traditional diatonic scales. A hierarchical
order arose in the realm of notes (in their relation to the central note) and
intervals (in their harmonic and melodic values). He considered the major
and minor triad to be two facets of the same chord, drawing no sharp bound-
ary between the two. This also applied to his concept of consonance and dis-
sonance, as we have already seen.
The triad played a predominant role, but tertiary chord construction, its
simultaneity 93
ambiguity and invertibility, and the concept of alteration underwent thor-
ough revision. Chord construction was now determined by interval value and
the influence of the fundamental, the latter being the fundamental of the
most important of the component intervals:
example
Striking differences were to be found in music in which the mutual note rela-
tionships were not regulated by a tone centre. Here the note relationships dis-
tilled from the overtone series were not accepted as an article of law. A devel-
opment in this direction was made possible by the adoption of equal tem-
perament, not as a compromise but as an autonomous division of the octave
into twelve equal chromatic notes.
A first consequence was that the difference in traditional notation between
G and A , for instance, disappeared. The note G /A gained an auto-
nomous quality of its own. The harmonic and melodic development was now
determined by quite different principles. We propose to discuss all phenom-
ena resulting from this concept in the chapters on the development of -note
music. A side issue is the strongly chromatic style incidentally employed by
Bartk.
simultaneity 95
chapter five
Timbre
Every period and every style has its own sound; it arises automatically, accord-
ing to the manner of writing in fashion. Conversely, the composer may con-
sciously seek those instrumental or vocal resources best suited to the realisa-
tion of his tonal ideal. In a continuous interaction between these two quan-
tities, the classical orchestra expanded to become its romantic equivalent. A
first notable change was a gradual increase in the number of instruments.
Each individual group became larger, with three to four players to a part, and
new colours were introduced: the piccolo, cor anglais, bass clarinet, double
bassoon, saxophone, Wagner tuba, celesta and a certain amount of percussion
all made their entry. The clarity of the classical orchestra was replaced by a
more flaccid sound, nonetheless accompanied by an unprecedented increase
in the range of timbre. The art of orchestration became a study in its own
right, and manuals on the theory of instrumentation appeared, the best of
which offered refined thought on the handling of this enormous orchestral
machine. Precisely because the romantics wished to attach a subjective-emo-
tional value to timbre, great craftsmanship was required to master these new
resources, even though the superficial observer may sometimes be inclined to
assume the opposite.
And so we approach the years around . The mastery of orchestral
colour was passed on to modern composers, but the style changed, and
insights into orchestration changed with it. On the one hand a reaction to
romantic excess arose, manifest in a renewed preference for lucid, chamber
music-like scoring, while on the other hand the expressionists the direct off-
spring of German-romantic subjectivism developed a completely different
style of composition. Both groups sought to liberate timbre as a colouristic
means and relate it to structure, an aim which can be attained with both large
and small orchestras. The result in both groups was that the sound that had
previously blended now became divided. For romantic orchestration was
entirely based on a tonal concept that automatically produced a high degree
of blend. The disintegration of tonality likewise resulted in the division of the
sound. Characteristic differences included the following: with or without
polyphonic tendencies the romantic-tonal style remained embedded in a
homogeneous triadic structure; it was this verticality which brought about the
typical system of instrumental doubling that formed the basis of romantic
97
example
Naturally, all sorts of nuances were possible. Since analysis is more effective
than words, let us examine essential differences by taking the first few bars of
two works for large instrumental forces, both completed in : Das Lied von
der Erde by Gustav Mahler, and the Six Pieces op. for orchestra by Webern.
The passages are given at sounding pitch in Examples and ; Examples
and present them in score to facilitate instrumental analysis.
The concept of the two works is comparable: both begin in the middle
register, with the lower register introduced several bars later; both are also
clearly divided into two groups at the beginning, namely a horizontal (melod-
ic) and a vertical (harmonic) group.
example
timbre 99
example
Another extreme is found in the first bars of Weberns Six Pieces for orchestra.
Colour is not an additive here, but a component of the musical concept. As
in Mahler, the first three bars (A) present an initial horizontal and vertical
exposition, while bar (B) introduces new voices (Examples and ).
timbre 101
example
A: the horizontal motif consists of a rising and falling line, both played on the
flute. The highest and lowest notes are distinguished from this in both dura-
tion and timbre by the trumpet and horn, respectively. The two little groups
of chords too each have their own rhythm and timbre: celesta and muted low
strings. In terms of form they offer a counterpoint to the high and low notes
in the trumpet and horn, respectively. We may therefore refer to them as
colouristic counterpoint. The whole of A employs the four basic colours of the
orchestra: wood, brass, celesta and strings. The end of A is indicated by the
ritenuto and the written-out retardation in the second chord group. From a
very early stage Webern employed tempo to articulate form.
B (bar ) restores the tempo and brings four new entries against the held
note on the horn. Here again we see an amalgamation of differentiated
rhythm and timbre. And again the four basic colours of the orchestra are
employed: wood, brass, harp and cello (now solo to contrast with the pre-
ceding tutti). Both A and B therefore make use of each orchestral group. Yet
the musical structure is simple. A large orchestra is required here to create
structural rather than colouristic differentiation. The differentiation of tim-
bre is a logical consequence of this. Since traditional doublings have lost their
purpose, the characteristic picture of Weberns orchestral scores emerges, a
picture that was to become increasingly clear as years went by: only few and
widely spread notes, and many rests. Not a note is superfluous, and neither is
a timbre. It is not only difficult for the listener but for the performer too: no
longer can anything be concealed.
From this one comparison it becomes clear that the essential change of sound
was caused by the new style of composition rather than the use of small
ensembles. The latter were indeed employed, as a reaction to the large-scale
orchestral works of the late romantics, but much less than is sometimes sug-
gested. Both romantic and modern composers were familiar with large and
The term Klangfarbenmelodik was coined at a very early stage. Although
Weberns instrumentation is really a continuous illustration of this,
Schnberg was the first to describe it in his Harmonielehre of . Increasing
differentiation brought him to consider tone colour as a component of music
that was just as essential as pitch. Debussy had preceded him in this. The one-
sided approach to musical structure, based on pitch (melody and harmony),
was thus abandoned. Perhaps it will be possible in the future, he wrote, to
write real Klangfarben-melodies. The timbre, pitch and loudness of a note
are indeed merely different dimensions of the same phenomenon. It would
therefore be conceivable to arrange timbre in a determined, musical-logical
order, the same logic that now allows us to experience the unity of a pitch-
melody.
timbre 103
example
Example 61 shows the main component of the second phase. Again the tim-
bre changes every minim, but now differently in each part, as is indicated to
the right of the notes.
example
The third phase adds several ornamental motifs, while in the fourth the tim-
bre changes every crotchet or less, and likewise per part. The first bar alone
presents the following picture:
timbre 105
example
The consequences of this approach can be seen clearly in the given examples.
One only has to consider a single chord in isolation, and analyse the distri-
bution of instrumental timbre in each part, in order to measure the huge dis-
tance from romantic orchestration. In the meantime this work by Schnberg
apparently inspired Webern to write his op. (Example ). Comparison of
the two examples reveals how Webern directly applied Klangfarben-orches-
tration in his own particular way.
We have now considered two reactions to late-romantic composition tech-
nique. Besides the tendency of atonal composers to capture tone colour struc-
turally, scores such as The Soldiers Tale, but also Milhauds La Cration du
Monde and the young Hindemiths chamber music, reveal a clear preference
for small and heterogeneous ensembles. But there was also a third possibility:
the grandiose orchestration of Debussy and Ravel, which made such a deep
impression. The beginning of the second movement of The Rite (Example )
illustrates the mark they left.
There are two musical layers: the chord of D minor in the horns and oboes,
and the undulating movement in the flutes and clarinets on the minor triads
of C and D alternately. The chord of D minor is relatively stable in tim-
bre: four low and widely spread horns pp plus an upper partial instrumenta-
tion, the th of the chord, ppp in the oboes. The second layer, in contrast, has
undergone strong colouristic expansion. Mahlerian doubling, therefore, but
now serving to create a subtle blend of timbre: trumpets and strings run
through the same chords as the flutes, but always in deviating positions; the
regularly advancing flute parallels are, as it were, illuminated in subtle shades.
Everything serves to achieve complete fusion of timbre; the techniques
timbre 107
example
Bartk occupies only a modest place in this chapter. He is one of those great
masters whose work was rooted in tradition. His instrumental style built on
the attainments of the romantics and Debussy. Considered historically, more-
over, his influence could be but limited, since initially he lived too much on
the periphery. But although the element of timbre never played such a role as
in Debussy or Webern, within the framework of classical orchestration he cre-
ated the most rich and varied nuances. Three characteristic features must be
mentioned: (a) his treatment of the piano as a percussion instrument, dis-
cussed sufficiently elsewhere; (b) his nocturnal sounds mysterious sound
amalgams which suddenly appear to lend a new dimension to his work; (c)
his quartet sound. Hardly surprisingly, it was again in their tonal palette that
Bartks string quartets were most innovative. The last three in particular
grew far beyond the intimate chamber style so typical of this genre in tradi-
tional terms. Bartks monumental structures went hand in hand with high-
ly virtuosic treatment of the strings. Let us examine a page from the fascinat-
ing Prestissimo from his Fourth String Quartet (Example ).
We are in the middle of a series of tone fields, from which glissando arrows
suddenly dart upwards. In so far as individual notes are perceptible in the first
six bars (A), we mainly hear rising tetrachords leading to bars to , where a
glissando motif between C and B is imitated at a quaver distance in all parts.
Bars to (B) bring new imitations, interrupted by percussive pizzicato
chords. Thereafter follows C, again with imitations but now moving upwards.
The timbre is largely determined by playing techniques. Everything is
muted; A brings glissandi, B is sul ponticello, C in modo ordinario. But
two other aspects are also crucial. Firstly, the colour parallels: the motifs B and
C are written in parallel nds, which produce a timbre rather than sounding
as an interval or line; everything is very soft and extremely fast (prestissimo!).
There is also a modal trait which goes to determine the overall colour. A and
B are written in the mode C-D-E-F -G -A -B-C, while C is in the Ionic
timbre 109
mode (one of the few examples of non-tonal use of this scale in Western
music!). The timbre parallels are therefore modal, with alternating major and
minor nds according to the mode employed. The extent of the influence of
this modal timbre is apparent from the transition from one mode to the
other.
In addition, there are percussive pizzicato sounds. A percussive chord has
a highly complex frequency spectrum due to its compact dissonance. It can
therefore be heard as an impenetrable sound, in between fixed pitch and the
noise-like sound of percussion instruments. The first percussive chord com-
prises a concentration of major nds, while the second one is in minor nds.
Here Bartk anticipated later tone clusters (see section ).
These examples by Bartk, Stravinsky and the Viennese School present in a
nutshell the innovative breakthrough in the field of sound. Here yet again we
see that the first period (see chapter 1) was of essential importance. But there
was much more: bear in mind the piano orchestra of Petrushka (which
emerged from an original sketch for a concert piece for piano and orchestra),
the sound of The Wedding (see chapter , section ), Bartks ballets The
Wooden Prince and The Miraculous Mandarin, the introduction of the harpsi-
chord by De Falla (El Retablo and the Harpsichord Concerto), the preference
for wind instruments in works by Stravinsky, Varse, Milhaud and
Hindemith, the vigorous orchestral timbre of Honeggers Pacific , the hal-
lucinational colours of Wozzeck, and the impenetrable textures of Charles
Ives. All these pieces together went to determine the range of timbre of new
music, a range that was to hold for the Second Period as well.
Not many new elements were added; there was an occasional new colour,
such as the Ondes Martenot in works by Honegger, Jolivet and Messiaen. The
piano and percussion retained the position they had captured, sometimes
expanding to become a characteristic orchestral group together with the harp,
celesta, xylophone, etc. This was the case in works by Bartk (Music for
Strings, Percussion and Celesta, ), Messiaen (Trois petites Liturgies, )
and Dallapiccola (Canti di Prigionia, ), in the latter two combined with
a choir. Smaller ensembles too maintained the same picture. Differentiated
playing techniques (glissando, senza vibrato, sordino, flageolets,
Flatterzungen, extreme ranges) had more scope here, but did not differ in
principle from what had been introduced during the first period.
The causes of this relative tranquility were twofold. In the first place we
have seen how closely innovations in musical language and tone colour went
hand in hand, while the second period was characterised by consolidation of
the attainments of the first period. A second reason, not to be underestimat-
ed, is to be found in the division that had come about between creative music
and the concert hall. This cleft made interaction increasingly difficult; the
It is a remarkable fact that precisely in the field of tone colour America pro-
duced several most refractory figures. Were American composers less bound
to orchestral tradition? Like the early futurists in Italy, however, the artistic
result was not always in proportion to the good intentions. George Antheil
was only an average film composer, but he added his name to every history
book by writing a Ballet mcanique for ten pianos and several mechanical
instruments. Henry Cowell was more serious, and he devised the term tone
cluster to denote playing the piano with the flat hand or even the entire lower
arm, striking all chromatic notes within a certain area (see Example ). John
Cage likewise attempted to alter existing instrumental timbre with his pre-
pared piano, fitting the strings with dampers of various materials (rubber,
metal, wood, etc). This may not only influence tone colour but also pitch,
and noise effects may be created, making the piano even more of a percussion
instrument than it already was. The significance of Cages experiments
remained limited initially, but in the light of present-day concepts of musical
material, his activities proved to be of more than incidental value. At any rate,
in this field too, the piano appeared to be the pre-eminent working instru-
ment, and many later electronic experiments were based on the tonal mate-
rial of this instrument.
The Franco-American composer Edgard Varse was by far the most
important of these figures. Born in , he thus belonged to the great gener-
ation of Schnberg, Stravinsky and Bartk. In contrast to these composers,
however, Varse occupied himself primarily with tone colour, to the extent
that other aspects harmony, melody and rhythm were subservient and
indeed reduced to their most elementary form. The liberation of sound was
his ideal, i.e., the abolition of limitations imposed by our instruments and our
music system too. What he would have liked most was for composers to
design their own instruments, as architects choose their own materials. This
required not only a thorough knowledge of the acoustical properties of sound
material, but still more a feeling for concrete tone colour and its tangible real-
ity, independent of harmonic or melodic associations. This explains Varses
strange instrumental forces: his Ionisation () calls for thirteen players, the
instruments including percussion, rattles, bells, celesta, piano and sirens. But
timbre 111
the same primary sense of sound is also found in Octandre (), for more
traditional instruments:
example
The musical structure is very elementary, and in its blocklike form character-
istic of Varse: two elements A and B that alternate continuously. There is also
a melodic element, shared by the trumpet and E clarinet, a motif of three
notes which is repeated continuously, reminiscent of the melodic style of
Stravinskys The Rite (see chapter , section ).
A and B also differ rhythmically, and this is reminiscent of Stravinskys
variable ostinato technique (see chapter , section ). But there is no constant
unit here, and an organic breathing is created that is slightly different each
time. The simultaneity is a simply constructed -note field with four nuclear
notes (Example , upper stave), to which three notes are added in A, and the
remaining five in B, including the melodic notes E and D (lower stave).
ture of the chords and the dynamic contrasts between A and B are all features
that can be traced back in the first instance to just as many aspects of tone
colour, Varses single fundamental preoccupation. This octet therefore
sounds different from all works of the same type written before and since. The
element of tone colour was reduced to an almost physical state of nature, a
condition for which the composer later found a striking term: organised
sound. It was the first half of this definition that kept the work of this com-
poser within the realm of art, despite radical differences from all that we have
thought about music until now.
Pierre Boulez too felt attracted to combinations of percussion and plucked
instruments as mentioned above, including idiophones in particular. His
treatment of tone colour was rich and characteristic, though it lacked the
strictly functional significance already found in Webern; his lineage from
Debussy and Messiaen probably helps to explain this. That his treatment of
timbre could create unprecedented refinement is illustrated by a passage from
the Improvisations sur Mallarm (Example ):
This entire page can be reduced to a ten-part chord (Example ), the only
exceptions being the first notes in the piano and celesta and E in the harp
(appoggiatura in bar ). All other notes and even their register are determined
by this one chord, including the voice. They are, as it were, different rhyth-
micised timbres of the same ten-part chord. We have already seen something
similar in our analysis of Example a combination therefore of
Klangfarbenmelodik and tone field. One could indeed speak of rhythmicised
timbre. The manner in which this is achieved is indicated by the instrumen-
tal scheme next to the chord. Nearly all individual notes are heard in various
instrumental timbres.
timbre 113
example
timbre 115
chapter six
117
moment in the creative process, is ego-less, setting himself aside in order to
surpass himself. He is not spectacular, and he usually works in utter servitude
to a god, an ideal, or an employer.
Both concepts exist in our Western world, alongside one another and
intermingled, in all sorts of gradations and with the emphasis on the first-
mentioned. In the East the situation is the reverse. Nothing is more striking
than to experience how an authentic Indian singer gets going. He sits down
in what we would consider a rather awkward position. But he is never out to
exploit or exhibit the vocal apparatus! To the endless zooming of drone strings
he concentrates on the raga that he is about to sing. He slowly explores the
steps of the scale, and as he proceeds he becomes increasingly free of himself,
until he is finally swept along upon the magical stream of sound. The music
can begin. The moment of will is secondary: the artist surrenders himself to
become a voluntary and excellently trained medium in the service of music.
Striking in this context, finally, is that the concept of harmony crops up
again and again in Eastern reflections on art, where in the West we prefer to
speak of the passion, the tension and emotion of art. This goes for both com-
posers and performers. The few artists who consciously pursue the first ideal
are therefore quickly branded as cold and insensitive. It is a deeply anchored
misunderstanding left to us by the subjective-romantic view of the world.
The bowman transported us without transition into the world of the East,
and the controversy thus evoked immediately went far beyond local differ-
ences between East and West. We are concerned here with basic concepts and
tendencies. But the question arises: why exoticism? Can we learn anything
from it, and if this is the case, is it necessary to do so?
First and foremost, let it be said that the question is entirely theoretical.
Artists allow themselves to be influenced and stimulated without delving into
such problems. But leaving this aside, the Western attitude to the East can be
divided roughly into two groups. On the one hand is a group very much
determined by fashion. From the chinoiserie of the fin-de-sicle to (Zen)
Buddhist novelties of contemporary intellectuals, we are witness to a contin-
uous but superficial contact with the East. Picturesque outward appearance
usually forms a substitute for the artists own personal concept. On the other
hand is a group that does accept the East as an autonomous world of its own,
but as a world that is too far removed from our intellectual and cultural life
to be able to influence it. Moreover, we are strong and vigorous enough it
is said to guarantee an evolution of our own.
The latter view is undeniably healthier and more realistic, but probably
requires qualification. A basic fact of our time is the increasing and now
unavoidable contact with every region of the world. This contact has long lost
its narrow diplomatic and commercial character and expanded into a much
more comprehensive amalgamation. We must bear in mind here that the
process of acculturation (hybridisation), the fusion and adoption of elements
from different cultures, may be counted among the most familiar phenome-
In the above words the East is a rather vague way of describing an abundance
of non-Western cultures. And in most cases we cannot pinpoint possible
influences, for it is usually more a question of general artistic (and aesthetic)
concepts than of clearly defined technical resources. Yet from this point
onwards it is useful to make a distinction between the art of highly developed
Eastern cultures (the Arab, Indian and Chinese-Japanese worlds) and those of
more or less primitive peoples. The latter art is of course highly variegated
too, but primitivism as a general term is used so often in contemporary
Western art that further investigation is well worthwhile.
The most vivid example of this primitivism remains Stravinskys The Rite.
The newness of this score was to a considerable extent due to an extremely
direct approach to the phenomenon of music. All listeners have undergone
beyond its modern refinement the primal force of this work. It has usually
been attributed to rhythm, but on further consideration this is only partially
true. We must venture on, and in so doing investigate the melodic aspect in
particular. The work proves to conceal many melodic features that even
considered strictly in terms of material display striking similarity with the
melodic world of primitive peoples. Let us look more closely at this aspect by
examining a varied selection from the rich motivic material of The Rite:
example
Details and nuances are not relevant in the context of this book; of interest to
us among these numerous possibilities is the fairly frequent occurrence of a
certain melodic nucleus comprising a combination of the major nd and
minor rd. The lowest point of the call was naturally rather unstable, but it is
assumed that the interval of a th soon brought more stability, and was sub-
divided (by being filled in) into this relationship of nds and rds, and some-
times into a tetrachord. Two melodies follow (my own transcriptions):
example
Observations on primitivism in The Rite may raise the objection that Stra-
vinskys source of inspiration was Russian folklore, so that he did indeed have
examples of elementary melodic form. This is certainly true, but we cannot
be sufficiently aware of the fact that there is a world of difference between
primitive melody as described above and the average sort of folk music heard
today around the world. One could almost compare this situation with the
geological layers of the earth: though a primitive layer may occur inciden-
tally in folk music, musical consciousness has now gained so many layers
that direct resemblance is rare. Moreover, the structure of the average folk
music of today is further developed than the cited motifs from The Rite!
Naturally, Stravinsky also made eager use of Russian folklore as a source of
inspiration, but this brings us to another chapter concerning the influence of
national folk music. Despite related traits a single example from The Rite
illustrates how this melodic style, tinted by folklore, is developed much fur-
ther: there is a clear modal framework, and the melodic structure is also more
developed.
example
example
The first traces of Negro music in Europe leaving aside Dvork, Debussy
and Ravel take us to the period around . Stravinsky: The Soldiers Tale
(), Ragtime (), Piano Rag-Music (); Hindemith: Suite (),
Kammermusik (); Milhaud: La Cration du Monde (), Negro ballet;
Krenek: jazz opera Johnny spielt auf (); Weill: Dreigroschenoper ().
La Cration du Monde (see Example ) stands out particularly in this
series. The heterogeneous tonal palette and free polyphony, the syncopated
rhythm, and the melodic writing with its typical blue notes lend this work
an unprecedented freshness and spontaneity. This same blue-note melodic
style ossified later in the domain of symphonic jazz, becoming a stereotype
formula from which only Gershwins melodic invention escaped.
For a moment it looked as though jazz was thus destined to play an impor-
tant role in Western art music. But this did not occur: with the exception of
one or two stray pieces Stravinskys Ebony Concerto () everyone went
their own way. The South American sounds eagerly absorbed by Milhaud
around fared likewise.
The wave of jazz that swept across Europe after World War I was not with-
example
The slendro scale, however, does feature subtle differences of interval, while
Europeans rather tend to interpret slendro as a more familiar pentatonic
series. It can be assumed that Debussy was also subject to this oral deception.
The whole-tone series also cropped up elsewhere in those days as the outcome
of strong chromatic alteration in late-romantic chord structure. Since
Debussy was also indebted to this, a comparison with slendro seems on the
whole to go a little too far (see, for instance, the String Quartet of ).
Nonetheless, later whole-tone passages can be found that escape late-
Since Debussy the neutralisation of the chord (also strongly evident in Voiles)
has become a common phenomenon. The tone field (chapter , section ) is
an expression of this, and total chromaticism also tends towards the same.
figure 4
The horizontal lines indicate the number of series used in each segment. In
the five segments shown here, , , , and successive series forms are there-
fore employed simultaneously. There are thus , , , and notes,
respectively, in each segment. These notes are further arranged in equal num-
bers and distributed across all the registers. Each segment lasts eight to ten
seconds. It is clear that there can no longer be any question here of harmon-
ic-dynamic development, as a glance at the score will confirm. There is a sta-
tistical density of chromaticism per segment, but within the boundaries of
each segment an indifference occurs with regard to simultaneity. Via a com-
pletely different path we thus encounter the same process of neutralisation
created by the use of strictly closed modal series la Messiaen. The sequence
of notes, viewed in terms of simultaneity, is unimportant. Forces are released
for other musical elements: in this sound environment they can be developed
unrestrictedly, free of any vertical function. Clearly, the latter three sentences
go for most Eastern art music, too. We are concerned here, mutatis mutandis,
with a parallel development in the West. In terms of rhythm, the succession
of segments is vaguely reminiscent of the Indian tala system. Each segment
lasts for demisemiquavers (the sum of all note values in the duration
series), and they are constantly rearranged. The Indian tala system likewise
consists of a sometimes large number of constant units, which may be filled
in differently in each period. But the comparison stops here. In Boulez the
beginning of each segment is a point of departure, from which the rhythmic
series unfold. In India the same point is a goal towards which the player
works, and from which he jumps to the next one. Here, age-long training and
well-balanced improvisation lend Indian rhythm unmistakable superiority.
Then there is the question of timbre. Among the exotic collection of instru-
ments, we may be especially struck by the often highly developed arsenal of
percussion. In particular, the range of nuance in the drum section and the
functional relation of these nuances to the rhythmic structure of the music
are matters that every contemporary composer has to deal with. We have
come a long way from kettledrum beats every eight bars.
Another fascinating sound from the East is the gamelan, and the idio-
This chapter concludes with several remarks made by the Japanese composer
Hidekazu Yoshida. Recent global developments have not left Japan unaffect-
ed. The assimilative capacity of Japanese artists is astonishing and indeed goes
so far that one may wonder whether it is not at the expense of their indige-
nous culture. Yoshida firmly denied this, and it is difficult for outsiders to
judge. But it is interesting to see how Yoshidas remarks run surprisingly par-
allel with the line of thought sketched above, according to which exotic influ-
ences felt in the West were viewed mainly as a general reaction to German-
romantic subjectivism. After remarking that the present generation of
Japanese composers has a particular affinity with Debussy, Yoshida writes:
Moreover, Debussys rather static harmony appeals to Japanese feeling much
more than the strongly expressive dynamics of German classicism and roman-
ticism. Further on, he underlines what has been said several times above: To
135
Berg chromaticism was primarily a question of expression. A new world of
sound was created, the laws of which were only intuitively applied. Schnberg
explored these innovations in his Harmonielehre: In the sequence of chords
there is obviously a tendency to avoid notes from the previous chord. This
brought chromatic expansion with it, expressed in Schnberg in the inciden-
tal use of chords of ths, for when accumulated they contain all twelve notes.
The consequence of this was important: harmony lost its function as a
(cohesive) element of form. It was no longer causal and functional, and nei-
ther was it the coincidental resultant of linear part-writing. On the contrary,
it was carefully weighed on the merits of its expressive potential in particular.
The first definitive manifestation of this was in Schnbergs Three Piano
Pieces op. (). There was a striking parallel with Debussy, who from
quite a different aesthetic approach demanded the same of his chords: not
functional, but purely expressive. But this was achieved by Debussy with
existing chords, a fact that only went to make this phenomenon even more
remarkable. For if even a concrete dominant-th chord could be stripped of
its function, this implied that the laws of nature upon which classical harmo-
ny were said to be based were decidedly unstable.
Melody too became freer of the tonal context, moving increasingly
towards motivic procedures. The motivic element became autonomous:
motivic units became related to one another rather than to a higher tonal
organisation as had previously been the case.
The melodic element disintegrated even further, however, down to the
interval. The resulting emancipation of the interval had many consequences
which must be briefly discussed. The first clear signs were found once more
in Debussy, where the function of the interval itself began to play a role. In
chapter , section and chapter , section the interval was discussed as a
colour contrast, an instability factor, and as protoplasm a sort of material
kinship with the capacity to bind together the most divergent melodies. The
intervals preferred by Stravinsky also come to mind, as well as the leaping
intervals of the Viennese composers, and their preference for chromatic rela-
tionships, etc.
This increasing sensitivity with regard to the interval also gave rise to the phe-
nomenon of athematicism. This was already referred to in section of chap-
ter , where a comparison was drawn with classical thematicism. The term
athematicism can now be further defined as the non-fixation of melody in a
recognisable thematic form that may thus acquire a thematic function. In
other words, the melodic curves of a work change incessantly, and not one of
them becomes a basis for thematic development. The thematic element lost
its primary significance and became an outcome. An outcome of what? Of
interval structure. The analysis of op. (Example ) reveals a typical case of
athematicism in the first bars. Traditional thematicism is also evident, how-
ever, as in the varied repetition of the opening theme in bars -.
Thus, the gravity of the major and minor scale was opposed to the symmetry
of chromaticism. In tonality all notes relate to a single fundamental, while in
atonality they relate to one another. Two elements were therefore absent in
example
example
Other examples include Bartks Sixth String Quartet (Example ), the fugue
subject in the Music (Example ), the second theme from his Violin Concerto,
and many passages in the Fourth String Quartet. Such completion is a logical
aftereffect of chromatic symmetry. In a negative light it can also be deployed
to counter tonal tendencies. But this hardly seems essential, which is why
examples by Bartk are deliberately quoted here. This last remark brings us to
the third point.
To illustrate the above matters, two pieces from the early period of free
atonality will now be analysed: one of the Three Piano Pieces op. by
Schnberg (), and one of the Five Pieces for String Quartet op. by
Webern ().
example
example
It is now clearer that interval diminution occurs: the th, tritone and perfect
th, respectively. This is to have its repercussions in the closing formula of II,
the group of semiquavers in bar :
example
example
The little violin motif above is again in A-B-A form, with B as a short devia-
tion from the field of harmonics:
example
. The last three bars contain a free and shifted repeat of earlier elements from
I and II. We recall the chromatic field mentioned under I, consisting of a
chromatically filled minor rd and a minor nd. Though the role of the minor
nd has meanwhile become clear, note the line B-C-B (bars and ) via F
-G-F (bar ) to D-C (bar ). The minor rd has a similar structural line.
In the opening two bars E -F demarcate the compass. In bar the minor
rd (G-B ) crops up again in the conclusion of fragment II. This line is now
prolonged via B-G (bars and ), C-E (bars and ) to
E -F (bar ), the rd with which the piece also commenced. The tone
field in this little piece therefore provides a clear form contrast in respect to
the other sections. Other conspicuous features are the strongly chromatic
ramifications which, as it were, crystallise from note to note, and the enor-
mous reduction of material. Unlike Bartk and sometimes Stravinsky,
The name of Debussy has cropped up frequently in the foregoing pages. Let
us now summarise the salient similarities so far found between the musical
structure of his own works on the one hand and those employing free atonal-
ity on the other:
. Autonomy of simultaneity and increasing differentiation of other
musical elements (fluctuating tempo, timbre, dynamics, etc.)
. Release from the classical causal context
. Analogous structure of total chromaticism and the whole-tone scale
. Influence of the interval
. Tone field
. Floating rhythm
Naturally, one should avoid generalisation. We are primarily concerned
here with Debussy and Webern, and as far as the former is concerned, with
only a small part of an oeuvre which was written much earlier. Moreover,
both composers shared a resolute aversion to any sort of pathos. Let us com-
pare Schnberg and Webern.
Schnberg (-), the elder of the two and the teacher, underwent a
gradual development from late-romantic floating tonality to atonality. His
late-romantic period (up to ) included Verklrte Nacht (), a sym-
phonic poem for chamber music ensemble (string sextet). This work by the
-year-old composer was highly romantic in its expression, like the poem by
Richard Dehmel upon which it was based. The harmonic style was daring,
but did not venture beyond the boundaries established at the time by Mahler
and Strauss. Conspicuous, however, is the strongly developed motivic-
contrapuntal treatment that was to become so characteristic of Schnbergs
further development. Via the Gurrelieder (), Pellas und Mlisande ()
and the Chamber Symphony (), he came to the last work of this period,
the Second String Quartet op. with soprano (-). It has the same heav-
ily charged romanticism, the same motivic density; the simultaneity, howev-
er, is much further developed, and in the final movement in particular it
reaches the boundaries of tonality.
Expressivity was the main cause of increasing chromaticism. The transition
from tonality to atonality was only an outcome of this. Schnbergs early
years of free atonality were characterised by a remarkable productivity. :
Three Piano Pieces op. , Five Orchestral Pieces op. , Erwartung op. ; :
Six Little Piano Pieces op. , Herzgewchse op. ; : Pierrot lunaire op. .
Here free atonality was spontaneously and volcanically explored. No compo-
Weberns life (-) knew no such division, unless it was that of a great
composer who was misunderstood throughout his life. Until the very end he
was not aware of the full extent of this cleft. I believe that people will be
astounded! he wrote passionately in about his string orchestra transcrip-
tion of op. . But nobody was astounded! And this was hardly to be expected at
a time when official musical life was becoming increasingly superficial.
Poignantly symbolic of these years is the fact that a contemporary music festival
in Vienna not only failed to perform Weberns music, but that the composer was
too poor to buy a ticket and was allowed to listen at the door. His lifes end, like
that of Bartk, formed the greatest indictment against the official contemporary
music world. His modesty and reserve bring another great fellow countryman
to mind: Anton Bruckner. Both composers worked towards a world of their
own, the full scale of which even they themselves were not aware.
Although Webern learnt much from Schnberg, he went his own way.
Even his expressionism was chaste and austere, as the Five Movements op. for
string quartet () reveal. Right and left are the words soft, fading, very
calm: rather than being driven by impetuosity, the composers new tonal
world was the opening of a lifelong inner monologue. The next instrumental
work, the Six Pieces for orchestra op. of (see Example ), was a relapse;
it is much less differentiated than op. , with a somewhat forced and facile
pathos. Webern was apparently susceptible to the outward influences of his
time. But he recovered quickly, and in and he wrote three instru-
mental works, op. , and , of which the Six Bagatelles op. , for example,
leave an impression of concentrated and highly refined atonality. Webern
approached a punctual style here, and motifs that were still comparatively
long for his style in op. were now split up almost to the interval. Comparison
with a work like Schnbergs Pierrot lunaire from the same period is most
enlightening, in that it illustrates how the two composers drifted apart. But in
both cases a surprising turn of events was in store. Schnberg maintained
silence until , while Webern turned to song, composing a considerable
number from op. to op. (-). With the exception of op. these songs
all require large instrumental forces: timbre was an important vehicle for the
bound atonality. In chapter the second half of the first period was typ-
ified as displaying a strong tendency towards reduction and consolidation of
accomplished innovation. This was indeed an almost general characteristic,
and one of its manifestations was a renewed interest in counterpoint, as is wit-
nessed by Hindemith, Stravinsky and Bartk. In the case of Bartk it took the
form of strongly chromatic counterpoint (especially in the Fourth String
Quartet, ) applied in a most individual manner that sometimes closely
approached the Viennese School. Essentially, however, Bartks music too
remained tonal. Of the Viennese School it was Webern in particular who
introduced an increasingly contrapuntal density in his series of songs. This
brought him to follow certain procedures also customary in -note tech-
nique, but what is essential is that, with or without this -note technique,
through the use of counterpoint he reached the stage of bound atonality.
example
Naturally, this again is a form of bound atonality. Although the series com-
prises only five notes, in terms of total chromaticism the simultaneity in this
movement is no different from much 12-note music. Nonetheless, Schnberg
was to introduce the 12-note series; it was to remain the standard for all clas-
sical dodecaphony until about 1950.
The opening bars of the first -note work (the fifth movement of op. )
follow; historically speaking, if not artistically too, they were of the greatest
historical significance:
example
Major scale
different intervals
a single tone centre to which all notes are related
differentiated hierarchy: distinction in significance of the notes
triadic structure
leading-note function
Chromatic series
all intervals equal
no tone centre, all-round symmetry
no hierarchy, but grey, levelled equality
no specific vertical structures
no leading-note function: twelve autonomous chromatic notes
Conclusion: the diatonic material is formed. A composer using the major and
minor scales well, must almost automatically write tonal music a close inter-
action is present. Atonal, chromatic material is formless (see also section ).
Symmetry and non-hierarchy steer the composer towards atonality; however,
this chromatic material requires greater structuralisation.
The -note series brought about the desired structuralisation once and for
all. The idea is simple: if the notes of a chromatic series cannot differ in sig-
nificance, they must differ in place. Traditional functions of the notes are
example
The following analyses help us to discuss several of the possibilities and to
elaborate on the differences between Schnberg and Webern which have
already been mentioned.
Let us first examine the theme from the Variations for Orchestra op.
(), Schnbergs first orchestral work to employ -note technique. The
primitive organisation of his firstling op. (see Example ) had been over-
come, and the work is a magnificent sample sheet of Schnbergs mastership
and versatility, for almost every variation reveals quite a different facet. From
the extremes of variation , with its light and almost pointillist touch, to the
actual theme, which is discussed here as a characteristic example of the com-
posers bond with tradition.
-note structure. The series P (for the entire work) and the extremely frequent
form I (Example ). The second half of P has the same notes as the first
half of I but in a different sequence, a common feature in Schnberg. Thus,
it is possible to employ P and I simultaneously and in parallel motion
without causing note doubling.
example
Theme phrase : A a A
Theme phrase :
A A A
Theme phrase :
a a A
Theme phrase : A A A
Each motif of the theme has the same number of notes as the simultaneous
chord. The arrangement of the forms of the series produces another corre-
spondence: all chords are the vertical and inverted projections of the motifs.
In musical terms this implies a precise reflection of melodic intervals in the
accompaniment, something already found, though employed intuitively, in
the early songs of Webern.
The words melody and accompaniment have been used instinctively.
For despite strict structure in rhythmic-harmonic and melodic terms, and
despite strict interaction between theme and chords, the essential truth of this
example is that Schnberg achieved a result that only deviates in terms of har-
mony from the classical-romantic tradition.
The above example was a paragon of strict logic. Let us now examine the
somewhat freer treatment in the Piano Piece op. a of (Example 89):
-note structure. Once again two forms, P and I are employed, with the
same correspondence: the second half of P has the same notes as the first half
of I, in a different order (Example ). The series is divided into groups of
three, four and six notes; in our fragment we see three groups of four, named
A, B and C for P, and A, B and C for I. The th plays a prominent role:
P and I are related by a th; moreover, the series includes three ths.
example 90
Musical structure. The preference for ths and the division into groups provide
two important means of contrast. At various points in the work, accumula-
tions of ths create contrast in the generally more complex simultaneity. In
Example there is a first and very modest instance of this in bar . The effect
of contrast is even stronger by means of the division into groups. Group B is
distinguished from A and C by a more blended character, enabling direct
recognition and characterisation of the vertical sound (the same goes for
example 91
Weberns series in op. , see Example ). The division into groups also
enables a more flexible use of the series. The first two bars present an exposi-
tion of the two fundamental forms: this is the material that is later to be of
influence, among other things through the ascending and descending curves.
In bar a motivic development begins, and it is conspicuous that the four-
note motifs gradually dissolve into other groups.
The rhythmic density of bars and leads to a variant repetition of bars
and . The A group occurs twice in bar , rhythmically different, and bar
demonstrates how group B provides contrast in the simultaneity. An impor-
tant means of articulation with regard to the form is the time span within
which a series (i.e. the complete -note field) occurs. This does not always
coincide with rhythmic density: bar , rhythmically calm, contains a -note
field, while bar includes no more than eight chromatic notes.
-note structure. The principal forms are given in Example . Both halves of
the series fill a chromatic th. The note B is a pivot, being the end of P and
I and the beginning of R and IR; thus, the corresponding tritone in the
middle, which is to play a prominent role.
The series continuation is given schematically in Figure :
figure 5:
P pivot note:
A (bars -) beginning of
R
IR)
A (bars -) I
IR
pivot note:
B (bars -) R beginning of
P IR)
B (bars -) I
IR
160
approach the work equally schematically and to gather all musical aspects in
a single diagram.
example
Only now can we understand the full scope of Weberns remark: Everything
that occurs in the piece is based on the two ideas contained in the first and
second bars (double bass and oboe). Elsewhere, however, he wrote:
Fundamentally, my overture is an adagio form, but the recapitulation of the
main theme appears in the form of a development, so this element is there-
fore present too. And when he quotes overtures by Beethoven and Brahms in
this respect, we are inclined to rub our eyes. Did this remarkably modest man
indeed fail to realise what a new world he had created?
The step from Webern to the post-war period seems indeed to be but a small
one. Let us first summarise the achievements of Webern.
The causality and gravitational pull of tonality became things of the past.
The concept of musical space was introduced by Debussy (le temps ritmis),
Stravinsky and Schnberg, and the former two in particular departed also
from development form. But it was not until Webern that the new concepts
of form discussed in the previous chapter (section ) evolved.
Two processes were evident which may seem contradictory at first sight.
In the first place there was a tendency towards differentiation. In the expres-
sionist period this had been expressed primarily in strong chromaticism,
motivic fragmentation and subtle playing techniques. Differentiation was
later pursued more consciously and extended to other elements, even includ-
ing tempo. But at the same time there was a tendency towards reduction. This
stemmed from Weberns sense of balance and comprehensibility (Fasslichkeit),
and perhaps from a mystical trait which came to the fore at a later stage, a
trait not unfamiliar to figures such as Schnberg and Hauer.
In Weberns early work the principle of constant variation was still preva-
lent. In op. , however, he already employed literal repetition, and thereafter
the symmetrical blocks discussed previously. Although subtle shifting may
occur in such mirrored structures, contrast is reduced to a minimum by rea-
son of the fact that the primary factor is ultimately pitch. All this still gave the
composer a broad margin between repetition and contrast. The influence of
reduction is also felt in the series, which is mirrored in itself, limited to just a
few intervals, or divided into analogous cells.
Through the pursuit of differentiation, elements that had once been sec-
ondary became autonomous. However, in Webern these remained function-
al, continuing to lend structure to a form that is primarily a matter of pitch
organisation. The so-called punctual music of a later period was to abandon
this bond too, subjecting various musical elements to coequal, serial organi-
sation.
The pursuit of reduction brought about an attitude towards the series that
was immanently present but not yet clearly manifest. The series lost its last
thematic character and became a regulating factor, creating quantitative dis-
tinctions and measurable proportions. A greater and more conscious differ-
163
ence was made between the series as a preliminary moulding of the material,
and the unfolding of this material in the musical form. In the years -
young composers were to do all that was within their power to abolish this
division by upholding the fundamental unity between what was referred to as
material determination (Materialbestimmung) and material composition
(Materialkomposition).
This last point takes us on beyond Webern, whose achievements in the
course of a lifetime were inherited by other composers. It is hardly surprising
that the first so-called serial compositions seem almost primitive in compari-
son with those of Webern. In this respect a work such as Messiaens Mode
de Valeurs et dIntensits is comparable to Schnbergs op. , the first -note
piece. But this was not to be for long, and Weberns influence was to fade with
the increasing command of the new material. A new phase was heralded.
Messiaens Mode de Valeurs et dIntensits was published in ; it was the first
example of music in which four musical elements are determined in a series:
pitch, duration, dynamics and touch (it is written for piano). The work is not
based on four different series, therefore, but on a single series of pitches, each
with its own fixated duration, loudness and touch. The composer called this
a mode:
example
example
Critical listening to this work reveals that the result is not by any means as
differentiated as the technique would lead one to suppose. The reason lies pri-
marily in the durations chosen. While there is far too much diversity of dura-
tion (from to ), it is smoothed out again by mutual relationships.
Nobody can distinguish between durations of and . Theoretically
this should be possible between and , since this is a proportion of
:, but within the whole these values are so fast that considerable inaccuracy
will occur. Moreover, Messiaen introduced a kind of gravitational pull by
One of those young composers was Pierre Boulez, a pupil of Messiaen and
Leibowitz. The latter confronted him with -note music, which was to be of
decisive significance for his further development. However, classical -note
technique as taught by Leibowitz quickly became too academic for him, and
he moved towards a freer manner of writing based on short melodic and
rhythmic cells. An example from this period is the Second Piano Sonata of
. A rhythmic analysis is given in Example ; below is a short considera-
tion of the pitch structure of this work.
The first two bars present a -note series, divided into three cells A, B and
B (Example ). The mutual coherence of these cells reminds one of Webern:
Cell A: a th is followed by the smaller interval of a th.
Cell B: after the th comes the larger interval of the minor th.
Cell B: the vertical inversion of B.
example
Structures () for two pianos has already been mentioned in chapter , sec-
tion . Here again the first movement is based on several segments, the first
of which is given in Example .
In each segment a number of forms of the series occur one above the other:
two, four, three, one and six, respectively, etc. They begin and end together,
since note duration is also determined serially. Each pitch series is thus cou-
pled to one and the same duration series, with a total of +++ = ,
but each time in a different succession. Both series are derived from
Messiaens Mode de Valeurs et dIntensits (see Example ); the pitch series is
the same (the upper twelve in Messiaen). The duration series employs the
same type: a series of values between and . A glance at the example
reveals that pitch and duration change with each note, while loudness and
touch remain the same. But they too are organised serially, though they
change only with each segment. The first segment has two series forms: P
(Piano I) and I (Piano II). The upper duration series (expressed in ) is: ,
, , , , , , , , , , ; the lower series is: , , , , , , , , , , ,
.
The question arises how Boulez arrived at this succession and what crite-
ria determine its continuation. The answer is provided by Gyrgi Ligeti. It
can be summarised in a few sentences.
All material is subject to the given pitch series. Boulez numbers these from
to (Example ) and subsequently creates a transposition beginning on
note while retaining the numbering of the first series (Example ). Then
he commences a transposition on note , etc., thus creating a group of num-
ber series which he organises as a sort of chessboard. The same procedure
produces a second chessboard based on I. The reader inclined to reconstruct
these two chessboards will notice that the above mentioned duration series in
Piano I occurs in the bottom row of the second chessboard, while that of
Piano II is in the bottom row of the first chessboard (both read from back to
front). Now the picture becomes clear: all sequences of the four parameters
that are to be organised can be deduced from this chessboard. They can be
read horizontally, vertically or diagonally. How this actually occurs is unim-
portant; we must occupy ourselves with the question why the composer chose
this procedure.
The intention is clear. The relationships in the given pitch series literally
form the all-embracing criterion. The chessboards are slightly clumsy but
convenient representations of these relationships. Thus, Boulez aims to give
the four parameters a high degree of organisation, and to obtain unity by
relating these parameters to the same mutual relationships. The similarity
example 99
example 100
It is important to summarise the main features of this transitory period of
punctual music.
. Various parameters (provisionally only four: pitch, duration, dynamics
and timbre) were ordered by means of series. It was the beginning of serial
music proper, as distinct from earlier -note music in which only pitch was
organised through a series. The series acquired an increasingly regulative
function. Composers adopted a statistical approach, thinking in terms of
mutually related quantities. Mirror structures and transpositions made way
Boulezs attitude later became slightly less rigid. The Improvisations sur
Mallarm in particular are considerably more lucid than his earlier, overcom-
plicated style, revealing the individual poetry of his music (reminiscent of
Debussy) much more clearly. But let us now turn to the three-years-younger
The main objection to punctual music was indeed the coequality resulting
from a surplus of detail differentiation. The first step towards escaping this
was the introduction of a kind of series hierarchy. Instead of constantly reeling
off complete series simultaneously or in juxtaposition, it proved useful to
deploy them in different functions.
If, for example, one had a basic series of , , , , , , , , , , ,
(Boulezs Structures), it could be subdivided into smaller groups by applying
another series (for instance , , , , etc., which would result in / , / ,
, , , , , , , etc.). These little groups in turn could be used serially to cre-
ate a higher ordering. The further development of such serial organisation is
not of importance here. Naturally, the basic principle remains the pursuit of
unity in the proportions of all elements.
A much more important aspect is the choice of the proportions themselves
within the series. From Messiaen onwards our duration series were based on the
addition of the smallest unit ( to ). Stockhausen calls this a subhar-
monic sequence, for if we convert the durations etc., into much shorter
example
example
So-called irrational values arise, which are never evaluated individually, but
always in relation to the undivided unit. The same applies, as regards pitch,
to the overtone spectrum. Stockhausen employs the term harmonic phase spec-
trum, which is really nothing other than a conversion into durations of the
pitch relations in a harmonic overtone spectrum:
example
The overtones (partially) determine the timbre, and their conversion into the
harmonic phase spectrum therefore amounts to sound rhythm. What we have
really done is to convert the overtone spectrum with its microrelationships
into note duration (=macro)relationships by means of a huge time-magnifier.
Here we approach an essential point in Stockhausens argument, i.e., the cor-
respondence between macro- and microrelationships, which can be elucidat-
ed as follows: if we hear certain pulses at a decreasing distance from one
another (a rebounding marble, for example), the perception of duration
changes at a certain moment into a perception of pitch. This moment occurs
at about units per second; it is represented graphically in Figure :
cps
limit of perceptible pitches
Micro-area: perception of
pitch in ca. octaves
note values at =
transition of duration perception into pitch perception
Macro-area: perception of
duration in ca. octaves
The vertical axis gives the octaves: the duration-octaves in the macro-area
change into pitch-octaves in the micro-area. Why not continue according
to Stockhausen the tempered -fold division of pitch octaves in duration
octaves too. Though this cannot be written down in traditional notation,
metronome marks produce the following logarithmic table between for
instance and ( = ): = MM , ., ., ., ., ., ., .,
., ., ., ..
The next octave therefore begins with = , but now we can transpose by
taking the same numbers from the first octave = , etc.) and adopting
as the unit. If we apply this to the following series (from Gruppen fr drei
Orchester) we obtain:
example
76 60
The proportion between the second and third basic duration is :, so that
of the second basic duration are equal to of the third:
example
60 80
These four basic duration groups therefore indicate the proportion between
the first three notes of the series: :
:. The second member has a different
proportion to the preceding and following ones (as does the third member in
relation to and , etc.). Stockhausen expresses this by overlapping the sec-
ond basic duration group with the third (Example ). This overlapping
thus produces a rest (if the next proportion is expressed in a larger number),
or otherwise a temporary vertical accumulation of various basic duration
groups.
In Example (the harmonic phase spectrum) we saw how each basic dura-
tion has its own overtone spectrum in terms of durations. Stockhausen
applied this too, not for each individual basic duration, but for a whole basic
duration group a group spectrum, therefore. Such a spectrum is viewed as
one large complex with a certain characteristic, which can be serially deter-
mined as to density, dynamics, timbre, etc. By means of ties and rests, the
danger of exaggerated periodicity inherent in such spectrums can be avoided.
Time can be structured in the macro-area from harmonic spectrums to time
noise, just as timbre ranges from harmonic to noise spectrums.
The above is particularly well illustrated in the composers Gruppen fr
drei Orchester. The score is so large that there is little point in trying to fit a
page into this book. We would refer the reader to the Universal edition.
Although the above summary of Stockhausens article may suffer from con-
ciseness, a lengthier discussion has been avoided since this book is intended
either for readers who are able to consult the original text (despite its diffi-
culty), or for those who have a teacher at hand. For apart from a technical
introduction to the Gruppen fr drei Orchester, our main concern here is with
the background to these ideas, which are typical of Stockhausen and therefore
of many of todays serial composers. Although various objections could be
made to the reasoning as such, this is not of great importance at this moment.
It should be pointed out once more that in the past too, art is known to have
arisen from mistaken premises. We are concerned with the stimulating inter-
action between the thought and action of the composer. The creative process
is more complicated than we are able to fathom.
Let us now examine this against the background of an ancient European
tendency, inherited from the Greeks, a tendency towards unity down to the
very deepest layers, and expressed in numerical relationships. European his-
tory has witnessed numerous analogous endeavours, and it is hardly surpris-
ing that this concept has cropped up again among serial composers of today.
Schnberg already expressed the fundamental unity between the horizontal
and the vertical. His successors went further in search of the bond between
the various parameters, between the material and musical form, between the
micro- and macrostructures. Is this analytical reasoning, this constant pursuit
In section we discussed various tendencies that began to emerge during and
after the phase of punctual music. Around these became much clearer
and enabled composers to draw certain conclusions.
. The statistical approach to music came to the foreground. The primary
consideration became the ordering of higher categories of form rather than
the organisation of detail. This was already indicated by use of the term
group to refer to what is really the smallest unit, characterised by the detailed
effect of pitch, duration, timbre, etc.; within the group, however, a certain
freedom was possible without encroaching on the characteristic of the group.
This freedom was also evident in an easier use of interval proportions than
was ever conceivable in classical dodecaphony. It was no longer a question of
this and this or so and so many notes, but of a certain degree of density.
Density, register, direction of movement, degree of periodicity and many
other concepts emerged as aspects of music that could be ordered serially.
Attention to elements of detail made way for a more global determination,
and thus for the concept of form.
. In this process the series became increasingly neutral, functioning more
and more as a regulatory factor. Proportions became decisive: a rd from a
pitch series is a 5/4 proportion that can be manifest in any other musical ele-
ment. In so far as pitch series were still employed, they likewise had a neutral
character and were naturally no longer bound to the twelve notes. The series
in Gruppen still had twelve notes, and indeed a pronounced shape of its own,
presumably to attain large proportional contrasts in the macrofield. The
Klavierstcke I-IV however, dating from , retained only the rudiments of
the -note series. In the second and third pieces, respectively, they are as fol-
lows:
example
. The outstanding scholar Gyrgi Ligeti, who has already been mentioned,
introduced the concept of interval permeability. In section we have already
observed how the interval, and indeed other musical elements too, lost its
own existence by being taken up in higher, statistically determinable quanti-
ties. This desensitisation evoked new problems and new possibilities. The
music became manifest in layers, no longer characterised by the detail but by
a global material state (rough, granular, smooth, etc.). Such layers could be
combined, and exact synchronisation was obviously no longer relevant.
Indeed, exactness acquired a certain margin: synchronism was not essential,
but rather the spatial distribution of material states. Something of the sort
had already been achieved by Messiaen, among others, with his modality, in
which a certain indifferentiation likewise arose in terms of sequence of notes
and intervals. In serial music composers went further: different tempos were
combinable, and the new concept of field magnitude emerged, heralding
another important phase in new music that is usually described as aleatory
composition.
This did not appear out of thin air. Directly after the rigorously punctual style
of the Structures, Boulez reacted with his Marteau sans Matre, completed in
, in which the tempo in particular fluctuates through the many changes,
directions such as tempo et nuances trs instables, etc. The work breathes a
freedom and suppleness that reminds one immediately of Debussy. The many
short notes, separate or clustered, and the irrational values create a sort of
written-out rubato (see Example ). This differentiation, which was also
manifest, though somewhat differently, in Stockhausens work of the same
period, moved the latter to express the following thoughts (freely cited): An
inaccuracy factor arises in performance. The areas within which this factor is
P, C, G, T
C, G, T, P
G, T, P, C
T, P, C, G
But since the Commentaire section is included twice, four other possibilities
become available, depending on where this section is placed (it may only be
performed once); this can be represented as in Figure . Altogether eight dif-
ferent sequences are therefore available; compared to the millions in
Stockhausen, this illustrates just how much more control the composer has
retained over the final outcome.
The Trope from Boulezs Third Piano Sonata provided only a first and simple
answer to the new problems of form. Although the composer already estab-
lished new structural concepts, the territory as such was as yet hardly
explored. This is particularly evident if we bear in mind that the free sequence
of sections, which caused the most sensation in the beginning, was merely
one aspect of the complex concept of form that awaited exploitation.
However the case may be, through these preoccupations, form acquired
unprecedented autonomy, despite the astonishing authority granted (for the
time being) to the performer. This is already observed in the work of
Mallarm, who concentrated far more on the structure of language than on
its significance, or, in other words, attempted to convert this significance into
a symbolism of absolute value. Form had a life of its own, bringing the artist
to an attitude of anonymity, since the intrusion of purely personal incidents
was undesirable. Those with some knowledge of Asian culture will hardly be
surprised by this. But in Europe relationships are different, and particularly
for those less gifted than Boulez it is fitting to recall the words of Paul Valry,
a confidant of Mallarm. Concerning the latters ambitions he spoke later (in
his Lettre sur Mallarm) of diviniser la chose crite (divining that which is
written). But, he went on, ce nest point luvre faite et ses apparences ou ses
effets dans le monde qui peuvent nous accomplir et nous difier, mais seule-
ment la manire dont nous lavons faite (it is not the finished work and its
appearances, or its effects on the world, which can fulfill and edify us, but
only the manner in which we have accomplished it).
The concept of aleatory music has now broadened considerably, and we must
certainly mention one other composer under this heading.
We have already examined two aspects: action duration and the sponta-
neous decision in Stockhausen, and intervention possibilities in Boulez. In
the latter the performer is like a driver who may choose from a limited num-
ber of roads, while the road map itself remains the domain of the town plan-
ner. Boulez described Stockhausens solution as chance, while Stockhausen
used the term gelenkter Zufall (guided chance); but as we have seen, in reali-
ty the element of chance was less present than one might imagine. All this
only made the problem of form most acute, and the composer who was to
draw particularly radical conclusions was the American John Cage. Cage
came to Europe in I remember a momentous concert at the World
Exhibition in Brussels and was quick to cause the necessary stir. From his
One day when the windows were open, Christian Wolff played one of his
pieces at the piano. Sounds of traffic, boat horns, were heard not only during
the silences in the music but, being louder, were more easily heard than the
piano sounds themselves. Afterwards, someone asked Christian Wolff to play
the piece again with the windows closed. Christian Wolff said hed be glad to,
but that it wasnt really necessary, since the sounds of the environment were
in no sense an interruption of those of the music.
The above discussion helps us to clarify the concept of aleatory music. It is a
generic term for all aspects of music that are not predetermined. The rela-
tionship between determined and undetermined elements plays a role in all
types of music. The undetermined element brings unforeseeableness with it,
and can occur both in performance and during the process of composition.
Unforeseeableness can be manifest in differing degrees. In the perform-
ance of a classical composition, for example, the degree to which the fixated
notation can be deviated from is limited. Performance of a piece by John
Cage, on the other hand, can involve a high degree of unforeseeableness. But
even here general patterns of expectation can be formulated.
Finally, with regard to developments in the music of the period -,
the following aspects are of importance:
. In Cages work the element of chance to use this dubious word once
more was a means to obtain indetermination and to escape from the human
grasp of the music. Young European composers, on the other hand, were con-
cerned with gaining even stricter control of the musical material: even this
indeterminable area of free choice was consciously incorporated in the process
of composition.
. Bearing in mind changing concepts of musical form, we can say that
part of what once belonged to the individual and unique work of art is now
ascribed to the material employed by the performers. There is a certain incli-
nation to make matters absolute, which corresponds logically to the excessive
attention given to musical material that we have observed from onwards.
. Expansionism, moreover, is not foreign to serial technique, in the sense
that there is an inclination to exploit all the possibilities of the chosen mate-
rial. The limited means of dodecaphony of the past have been extended to
In the reaction against abstractions, serial music lost more and more influence
after . Boulez has remained a bastion of serial academicism, but
Stockhausen has changed enormously. He is no longer the great renewer, but
continues to react with great flexibility to any external stimulus that he
encounters. He is long past the stage of solving problems of form and tech-
nique. From Carr () and Originale () onwards his work comprises
ever more heterogeneous elements including happenings, pop, quotations,
indeterminate sound production (contact microphones), etc.
The use of contact microphones has now become very widespread, and
this opens up a new direction in the application of electronic resources. In
days past, electronic music was accurately recorded on tape in a studio. Many
In the meantime another new type of constructivism emerged in the work of
the Greek composer Iannis Xenakis. Faire de la musique signifie exprimer
lintelligence humaine par des moyens sonores (music making is the expres-
sion of human intelligence by means of sound), where intelligence is to be
understood in the broadest sense of the word, embracing all human faculties
involved in music making. Classical Greece is revived in the composers ideas
Classical notation moved increasingly towards exact representation in sym-
bols of the pitch and duration of notes. A certain spatial element was involved
in so far as high and low in the music roughly corresponded with the nota-
tion:
Although symbols of pitch were well suited to tonal music, from the period
of free atonality onwards the problem arose that this notation was tailored to
diatonic intervals, and that chromaticism, which had become independent,
still had to rely on accidentals.
A rather abstract notation had developed for the duration of notes. In the
above example, for instance, the four semiquavers together occupy as much
space on paper as the much longer dotted minim. For other musical elements
we have made do with additions in the form of dynamic signs, playing direc-
tions, tempo indications, etc.
These are the very elements, however, that have become increasingly
important in the past one hundred and fifty years. From the moment when
Beethoven made durations absolute by introducing metronome markings, it
was not long before scores contained a great variety of directions, pretending
increasingly to record the sound concept of the composer as exactly as possi-
ble. This development led among other things to the abolition of the nota-
tion of fingerings for transposing instruments and the introduction of
absolute pitches (scores in C).
Two problems were therefore presented:
. Increasing independence of the elements of music found no adequate
expression in the notation system.
. Increasing differentiation could not be accommodated in the notation
either: a division arose between what was notated and what could be performed.
One of the consequences of this has already been mentioned in section .
example
example
In Stockhausens Zyklus for percussion, the spatially enlarged score can also be
turned upside down. The piece employs the ring binder with unnumbered
pages found elsewhere since Boulezs Third Piano Sonata. Each composer
begins his score with a page full of instructions.
It would be premature to draw final conclusions concerning the develop-
ment of a new notation. A single example will suffice from the score of the
above-mentioned Liaisons by Roman Haubenstock-Ramati, for vibraphone,
or vibraphone and marimba (Example ). The score may be read either hor-
izontally or vertically (in both directions), but in principle one may not
depart from a chosen direction except at the arrows. The complete piece is
therefore the sum of the spatially represented areas, which in themselves are
largely determined by the interpretation of the performer(s).
The following provisional conclusions may be drawn:
. New manners of notation have arisen from new musical concepts. A
mutual interaction may be expected, in contrast to classical notation, which
through its obsolete system has exercised a most inhibiting influence on many
composers. Moreover, the function of notation has changed, the accent com-
ing to lie more and more on the actual performance in which the players are
Only a few of the more extreme tendencies in new music have been men-
tioned above. But like all that has been said, this short exploration too is only
intended to give the reader an impression of the paths along which this music
may be approached. And since the main intention was to be informative,
emphasis has been laid on innovative aspects, in so far as they can be ration-
ally described. While historical, technical or stylistic aspects can be specified,
the artistic value can never be captured in words. In some of the works men-
tioned or described, this value can be felt intuitively; others, on the contrary,
seem mouldy as soon as one has seen through the outer innovation. But they
are all characteristic of a trend, an attitude belonging to this period, which
already seems to be making way for another one, bringing newer and freer
insight. Comprehensiveness does not need to be our aim today less than
ever. Mobility has become characteristic, and the word itself is indicative of
different but analogous tendencies in music and literature, sculpture and
urban development. How can it be otherwise at a time when the possibility
of bringing planets out of their orbits is under consideration!
Musical developments take place rapidly. For some composers creative
work assumes the appearance of scientific invention. Imagination, stimulated
in and by rational thought, may produce fascinating results. Rational thought
has never been foreign to musicians, despite all romanticised ideas. In the
past, however, results were almost directly manageable and perceptible. This
is no longer the case. Rationally guided, early polyphony differs from mod-
ern serial structures as do the methods of Galileo or Newton from the mod-
ern calculation of a fourth dimension. Here again a division has occurred.
Our working activity is in danger of becoming autonomous, separated from
a directly perceivable horizon. The modern sorcerers apprentice knows no
boundaries; but he is still inhibited, and a large number of existing ensembles
and instruments have no place in his imagination. Equal temperament is
stubbornly maintained; all attempts in a different direction run into as yet
insurmountable practical problems. The anachronisms of an age-old notation
system have been mentioned above... Not without reason has the composi-
tional crisis become a stereotype phenomenon for many contemporaries.
Is there another path? Are those who compose in a traditional manner, in
all possible gradations, really as lacking in imagination as is sometimes sug-
Hilversum -, , .
195
some catching up. Does this imply that their composers must undergo the
same evolution as we have experienced, and conform to our norms? Or may
we expect them to go their own way and defend other values? The latter
would seem a good deal healthier. Music is not an international language,
however often and unhesitatingly this is claimed. Any musical idiom is the
result of a long cultural tradition. Where international conformity occurs at
so many levels, it is for the artist to do justice to the variegated wealth of our
multicultural society.
This struggle is undertaken with varying success by many non-Western
composers. Most remain in the shadow, through lack of resources or
unfavourable local conditions. Some have achieved a certain recognition:
Yuasa, Takemitsu and Ichyanagi (Japan), Chou Wen Chung and Tan Dun
(China), Isan Yun (Korea), Slamet Sjukur (Indonesia), Jose Maceda (the
Philippines), Essayed (Morocco) and others. For most of them the Western
model has been the decisive factor. It would be incorrect, however, to estimate
their significance entirely in these terms.
The participation of so many non-Western composers has undoubtedly
contributed to the most striking phenomenon of the s: the massive
return to tonal or modal, or at any rate diatonic, composition. The signifi-
cance of this cannot always be estimated. Where an atonal period has not
occurred one cannot speak of a return. On the other hand, one may have
expected east European composers, after the collapse of the Iron Curtain, to
plunge into the once forbidden atonal avant-garde style, but this reaction has
not followed. Reversion to a diatonic style may of course result from a certain
conservatism, or a submission to consumptive expectations. But this is not
enough to account for the phenomenon. Despite the brilliant results of his-
torical atonality, one wonders whether this was not a typically central
European product, based too closely on the Western tempered tuning.
Viewed within the present perspective, atonality would appear to be a finish-
ing point rather than a starting point.
The Dutch situation Before I round off this panoramic overview a few words
should be said about the situation in the Netherlands. In comparison with
most other countries the picture is positive: we have a favourable climate for
new music, a reasonably effective infrastructure, government support, institu-
tions, ensembles etc. This has contributed to the prosperity of Dutch music,
bringing to fruition the forebodes of the first half of the century. But we
should entertain no illusions, for we remain a small country. Our cultural
export is minimal, while as of old we have the perhaps somewhat provincial
tendency to import all sorts of things from abroad. Naturally, this also has its
advantages, and in Amsterdam one can hear more international music than in
most other cosmopolitan cities. Judging from my experience in the past forty
years, however, most imported new music is not superior, and is indeed some-
times inferior to that of the ten best composers whom our country boasts.
The whole span of Dutch music production fits well within the main con-
tours of the European tradition: expressionism, constructivism, neo-classi-
cism, neo-romanticism. One development, however, forms an exception and
A little later, and with other socio-cultural motives, music groups went out
onto the streets. And here we have different principles, a different audience,
Epilogue
The most important developments observed in the latest period are of an
extramusical nature: the enormous geographical distribution of creative activ-
ity, the growing awareness of the fact that we live in a multicultural world
with the associated signs of acculturation, and, finally, the strongly increased
international economic and commercial pressure on musical life. All this gives
rise to opposing forces which are difficult to control.
The modern composer can do little about all this. But it is precisely his
marginal role as a creative artist in contemporary society that should enable
him to consider matters from a distance and become aware of that which is
essential. This could induce the perception that genuine innovation in music
can no longer be based primarily on aesthetic and/or technical principles, but
must be of a spiritual nature, in the broad sense of the word, as the only pos-
sible counterpart to our materialistically orientated society.
This does not mean that genuine artistic possibilities are lacking in this democratised pub-
lic. On the contrary. They are constantly underestimated, however, by most programme
compilers.
Igor Stravinsky, Leben und Werk, Mainz/Zrich .
For the works mentioned in this chapter see the lists on page 25, 26, 30 and 32-33.
The choice of works included has been made primarily on the grounds of historic, stylis-
tic or technical significance. Although this often goes hand in hand with outstanding artis-
tic value, this is not always the case.
The development of music in eastern Europe has not been considered, since the writer has
insufficient material at his disposal.
Technical details concerning many of the works mentioned are discussed in the following
chapters.
Although the above observations sometimes deviate, as does the terminology, the essentials
are based on the lucid distinction between time categories made by J. Daniskas in his
Grondslagen ener analytische vormleer, Rotterdam .
Apparently, Albert Verwey considerably moderated this statement at a later stage.
A. Honegger, Je suis compositeur, Paris .
C. Sachs, Rhythm and Tempo, New York .
The Sekundgang was defined by Hindemith as the line that arises through the progression
in nds of the main highest and/or lowest points in a melody. In our example the notes
C (final note of bar ) -B-A-G-F -E form a Sekundgang of lowest points.
In this modality one can really no longer distinguish between harmony and melody; both
are determined by a common point of departure. In this respect we approach a similar
principle in atonality (chapter , section ).
Debussy employed this regularly. See also Examples (nd and rd staves) and (nd
stave).
The numbers indicate intervals, counted in minor nds.
P. Hindemith, Unterweisung im Tonsatz, Mainz .
It is remarkable that the pure interval relationship too, between the minor and major rd,
is smaller than our equal temperament would lead one to assume. For the tempered minor
rd is smaller than the pure minor rd, while the tempered major rd is larger than the pure
205
major rd. Equal temperament therefore exaggerates, as it were, the difference between
minor and major.
Igor Stravinsky, Leben und Werk, Mainz/Zrich .
A. Schnberg, Harmonielehre, Vienna .
E. Grassi, Kunst und Mythos, Hamburg .
R. Vlad, Stravinsky, London .
The rd and th degrees of the scale may be both major and minor. Harmonically, this
instability is experienced as colouring of the rd and th. The origin, however, is melod-
ic and may originate from the preference of many African Negroes for structures based on
rds, adapted to the two main notes of the Western scale:
Example
J.E. Berendt, Jazz und neue Musik, in Prisma der gegenwrtigen Musik, Hamburg .
J. Kunst, The music of Java, in Mededelingen Koninklijke Vereniging Koloniaal Instituut,
Amsterdam .
Debussy, Monsieur Croche, antidilettante, Paris .
Melos, February , Mainz.
A. Schnberg, Harmonielehre, Vienna .
Unfortunate terms such as athematicism and atonality have become too current to be
avoided.
E. Stein, Orpheus in New Guises, London .
This field does not necessarily comprise all twelve notes, but fills chromatically to the
boundaries of a given ambitus.
All biographical notes on Webern are taken from: W. Kolneder, Anton Webern,
Rodenkirchen .
Characteristic is a statement by this anti-romantic composer concerning Pierrot lunaire:
though he had no doubt as to its being a masterpiece, its aesthetic was entirely foreign to
him.
In so far as this chapter is concerned with important contrasts within the Viennese School,
a comparison of Schnberg and Webern is sufficient. Naturally, this implies no artistic
judgement whatsoever with regard to the scarcely mentioned Alban Berg.
A. Webern, Der Weg zur neuen Musik, Vienna .
H. Eimert, Lehrbuch der Zwlftontechniek, Wiesbaden .
The numbers indicate the employed transposition, counted upwards from the first note of
P (in this case B ).
These four forms can be reduced to two basic ones: the pitches of P and R are identical,
as are those of I and IR.
Here we therefore differ from R. Leibowitz (Introduction la musique de douze sons, Paris
), from whom the analysis of the series structure is taken. His considerations are decid-
edly brilliant and instructive, but unfortunately somewhat formalistic. Moreover, the
rhythmic structure of the theme apparently escaped him.
Die Reihe , Vienna .
Die Reihe , Vienna .
Stockhausens reasoning is in fact a curious example of obsolete quantitative thought that
takes no account of modern phenomenological insight. His reasoning is correct as long as
one assumes one-sided numerical relationships: both pitch- and duration-octaves can thus
be expressed by the proportion :. But in our perception there are essential differences
between micro- and macrorelationships. The phenomenon of octave identity occurs in
pitch but not in duration. In pitch intervals, on the other hand, we do not hear frequen-
cy proportions but rather linear additions. This is expressed in the traditional interval
names of nd, rd, th, etc., while in atonal music too we hear the major nd as the sum
of two minor ones, the minor rd as three, etc. In view of our perception, the first reaction
of Messiaen and others was therefore understandable: the aural counting-up of pitch inter-
vals was turned into a counting-up of duration intervals. But here again a profound dif-
ference of perception remains: we hear the difference between and minor nds (minor
and major th) just as clearly as that between and (minor and major nd), while in note
duration a completely different experience apparently occurred.
A recent orchestral work by Ligeti, Atmosphres, makes exclusive use of chromatically filled
sound areas, thus definitively encroaching upon the individuality of the interval. Musical
structure is now determined by measured units of other parameters such as density, tim-
bre, register, dynamics. Here, where the role of pitch and interval is reduced to a mini-
mum, one realises how fundamentally differently the musical ear reacts to other elements.
The elements of music are not equivalent; each has its own level of action and requires its
own structuring.
In quite a different and more abstract manner, something similar already occurred in
Weberns op. (middle section of the first movement). Here the two hands also play a role
in the mirror structure characteristic of the composition.
According to P. Boulez in an article in Darmstdter Beitrge, Mainz .
See the article by C. Wolff in Die Reihe , Vienna .
In Japan, too, Zen Buddhism has influenced art, including the celebrated Haiku literature.
Despite all spiritual radicalism, however, form coherence remains a conspicuous phenom-
enon.
From a lecture by John Cage at the World Exhibition in Brussels in .
Struktur und Erlebniszeit in Die Reihe , Vienna .
Article by P. Boulez in Darmstdter Beitrge, Mainz .
J. Cage, Silence, Middletown ; A Year from Monday, London .
Several of these laws are known to us from physics (Gauss, Poisson, Maxwell-Boltzmann).
An analysis would naturally exceed the bounds of this book: just one minute from
Pithoprakta would occupy many pages. It is perhaps of importance, however, to say that a
thorough knowledge of Xenakiss methods is not required to undertake this. Although I
differ with the composer here, I remain convinced that analysis of the score provides more
insight into the music than knowledge of the production method. Those interested in the
composition procedure as such should refer to the composers writings, collected in two
volumes: Musiques formelles, Paris and Musique. Architecture, Paris .
notes 207
Three tendencies can therefore be provisionally distinguished:
a. Result notation, representing that which actually sounds. Beside traditional quantita-
tive notation this includes the scores of Stockhausen and Boulez, in which field mag-
nitudes are represented in one way or another.
b. Action notation, primarily indicating what action has to be taken to obtain a certain
result; the latter may be fixated to a greater or lesser degree.
c. Reaction notation, concerned neither with the result nor the action, but with a synaes-
thetic reaction to an autonomous graphic image.
Forward-looking Hindu musicians have attempted to resist the introduction of classical
Western notation as much as possible. They understand that its unmistakable advantages
are outweighed by its paralysing effect on that which is fundamental to their own music:
guided improvisation.
209
. Bartk, Bagatelle
. Schnberg, Six Little Piano Pieces op.
. Stravinsky, The Rite of Spring
. Schnberg, Five Piano Pieces op.
. Milhaud, Saudades do Brazil
. Beethoven, Third Symphony
. Stravinsky, Mass
. Stravinsky, Four Russian Peasant Songs
. Bartk, Second String Quartet
. Hindemith, Mathis der Maler
. Bartk, Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta
. Chord of the minor th in different versions
& . Gustav Mahler, Das Lied von der Erde
& . Webern, Six Pieces op. for orchestra
-. Schnberg, Five Orchestral Pieces op.
. Stravinsky, The Rite of Spring
. Bartk, Fourth String Quartet
& . Varse, Octandre
& . Boulez, Improvisations sur Mallarm
. Stravinsky, The Rite of Spring
. Primitive forms of melody
. Stravinsky, The Rite of Spring
. Bartk, Mikrokosmos
. Melodic motifs from American Negro music
. Javanese slendro scale and whole-tone scale
. Basic forms of the BACH motif
. Bartk, Fifth String Quartet
. Schnberg, Three Piano Pieces op.
-. Webern, Five Pieces for String Quartet op.
& . Schnberg, Five Piano Pieces op.
. Major and chromatic scales
. Basic forms of -note series
& . Schnberg, Variations for Orchestra op.
& . Schnberg, Piano Piece op. a
& . Webern, Piano Variations op.
& . Webern, Variations for orchestra, op.
& . Messiaen, Mode de Valeurs et dIntensits
. Boulez, Second Piano Sonata
-. Boulez, Structures
. Subharmonic sequence according to Stockhausen
& . Harmonic subdivision of a basic duration according to
Stockhausen
-. Stockhausen, Gruppen for three orchestras
213
trb trombone
vibr vibrafono, vibraphone
vl violino, violin
vla viola
vlc violoncello
Voc voce, voice
Voc-T voce di tenore, tenor
Boosey & Hawkes, London (Bartk, Sixth String Quartet; Stravinsky, The
Rite, Mass)
Bote & Bock, Berlin (Blacher)
J. & W. Chester, London (Stravinsky, The Soldiers Tale)
Franco Colombo, Inc., New York (Varse)
Stichting Donemus, Amsterdam (Pijper, Sonata for two Pianos)
Durand & Cie, Paris (Debussy; Messiaen, Livre dOrgue, Mode de Valeurs et
dIntensits)
Max Eschig, Paris (Milhaud)
Wilhelm Hansen Musik-Forlag, Copenhagen (Schnberg, Five Piano Pieces
op. )
Heugel & Cie, Paris (Boulez, Second Piano Sonata)
Alphonse Leduc, Paris (Messiaen, Les Corps glorieux, LAnge aux Parfums)
Oxford University Press, London (Pijper, Piano Sonata, Sonatina II for
Piano)
Edition Peters, Leipzig (Schnberg, Five Orchestra Pieces op. )
B. Schotts Shne, Mainz (Hindemith; Stravinsky, Violin Concerto)
Universal Edition A.G., Vienna (Bartk, Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth
String Quartets, Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta; Boulez,
Improvisations sur Mallarm, Le Marteau sans Matre, Structures;
Haubenstock-Ramati; Hauer; Mahler; Messiaen, Cantyodjay; Schnberg,
Piano Pieces op. and op. , Pierrot lunaire, Variations for Orchestra op. ,
Piano Piece op. a; Stockhausen; Webern).
215
About the Author
217
- leading the annual International Composers Workshop with
Dimiter Christoff, alternately in the Netherlands and in
Bulgaria
guest professor at the University of California, Berkeley (Ernest
Blochs chair)
Matthijs Vermeulen Prize for Car nos vignes sont en fleur
Johan Wagenaar Prize for his entire oeuvre
- living in France as independent composer
Edison Prize for Chamber Music CD (Les adieux, Hommage
Henri, Trio)
dies May in his city of residence Paris
Matthijs Vermeulen Prize (posthumously) for Shakespeare
Songs
Edison Prize (posthumously) for CD Choral Works (Prire, A
cette heure du jour, Cloudy Forms, Car nos vignes sont en fleur,
Transparence)
219
constructivism 188, 198 Franck, Csar 103
contact microphone 186 futurists 19, 20
continuation technique 44 Gazzelloni, Severino 197
counterpoint 102 Gebrauchsmusik 25, 29
Cowell, Henry 111, 115 geographical distribution of musical activity
Craft, Robert 11 195-196
cubism 21 germ-cell technique 17, 71
Dadaism 20 Gershwin, George 28
Dallapiccola, Luigi 32, 34, 110 Glass, Philip 197
Debussy, Claude 12, 15, 16-17, 22, 27, 34, 35, Globokar, Vinko 197
58, 65, 67, 73, 78, 83, 88, 106, 109, 113, Golyshev, Yefim 152
121, 132, 136, 137, 138, 139, 141, 163, 170, Gorecki, Henryk 197
177, 185 group polyphony 86
Eastern music 128-129 Groupe des Six 25, 27, 28, 31
free atonality 146 Gubaidulina, Sofia 201
harmony 79-82 Hba, Alois 29
melody 60-62 harmonic phase spectrum 172
rhythm 45 harmonic series 172
declamatory melody 65 Hartmann, Karl 32
Diaghilev, Sergey 22, 23 Haubenstock-Ramati, Roman 191
diatonicism 80, 92, 93, 139 Hauer, Joseph 43, 152, 163
return to, 196 Heiss, Hermann 56
disintegration 16, 59, 68, 73 Henze, Hans Werner 199
dissonance 78, 79, 80 heterophony 85, 86
divisive rhythm 41 Hindemith, Paul 25, 28, 29, 31, 39, 45, 65,
dominant function 80 67, 69, 77, 91, 106, 110, 125, 148
Durey, Louis 27 principles of harmony 93, 94
Dvork, Antonin 125 Honegger, Arthur 27, 28, 31, 40, 110
Egk, Werner 32 Ichyanagi, Toshi 196
Eimert, Herbert 152 improvisation groups 187
electronic music 9, 34, 35, 36, 115, 171, indetermination 187, 189
186, 187, 190, 196, 197, 198, 202 interaction between different cultures 199-
hyperinstruments, 198 200
enharmonic devices 14 interval
equal temperament 139, 193 constructive role of 89-93
Essayed 196 function of 136
exposition 15 interval characteristics 89
expressionism 20, 23, 29, 36, 198, 204 interval permeability 177
expressivity interval structure 61, 136
as aim of music making 12, 13 isorhythm 53
as cause of chromaticism 146, 147 Ives, Charles 23, 25, 110, 184
Falla, Manuel de 28, 110, 125 Jancek, Leos 23
Feldman, Morton 35, 201 Janssen, Guus 199
Ferneyhough, Brian 197 jazz 23, 25, 50, 60, 111, 125, 126, 179, 187, 199,
field magnitude 177 202
fifth relationship 14 symphonic 126
Fluxus Movement 187 Jeune France, la 31
folklore 23, 24, 60, 117-133 Jolas, Betsy 201
Fontijn, Jacqueline 201 Jolivet, Andr 31, 43, 50, 110
index 221
punctual music 169, 170, 171 177, 178, 179, 182, 183, 186, 191, 196, 197,
raga 118, 127, 128, 152 200
Ravel, Maurice, 37, 106, 125 Strauss, Richard 129, 146
reaction notation 208 Stravinsky, Igor 11, 15, 16, 17, 22, 23, 24, 25,
Reger, Max 45, 103 27, 29, 30, 34, 36, 37, 46, 49, 53, 57, 58,
result notation 208 60, 67, 73, 83, 84, 85, 88, 110, 111, 112,
retrograde 54, 56, 137, 140, 151 115, 125, 132, 136, 145, 148, 161, 162, 163,
rhythm 184
floating 44-46, 60, 65, 135 folkore 122, 123
notation problems 39-41, 73 Greek culture 30
numerical 50 melody 63-65
rhythmic cell 48, 49, 55, 57, 130, 161, 166 neo-classical period 23, 30
rhythmic mode 38, 39, 48, 67 primitive melody 119, 120, 121
Rihm, Wolfgang 199 rhythm 48-49, 52
Riley, Terry 35, 187 Russian period 22, 123
Rimsky-Korsakov, Nikolay 22, 109 sacral aspect 23, 30, 84
Rotaru, Doina 201 timbre 103
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques 59 subharmonic series 171
rubato melody 46, 48, 67, 69 surrealism 20, 35
Russolo, Luigi 20 syncopation 43, 50, 52, 65, 125, 126
rythme non-rtrogradable 54 tachism 35
Saariaho, Kaya 201 Tailleferre, Germaine 27
Sachs, Curt 50 Takemitsu, Toru 196
Satie, Eric 25, 27 tala patterns 41, 131
Schaeffer, Pierre 34 Tan, Dun 196
Schlagsatz 56 Termos, Paul 199
Schnberg, Arnold 15, 16, 20, 23, 24, 25, thetic motifs 67, 121
29, 31, 33, 56, 60, 65, 66, 78, 84, 86, 89, timbre 16
111, 121, 129, 133, 135, 136, 137, 138, 140, time structure 171-175
141, 142, 163, 184 tonality 18, 20, 139, 146
comparison with Webern 146-148 extended 15, 84, 86, 90, 140
Klangfarbenmelodik 103-106 floating 14, 29, 45, 46
twelve-note technique 149-162 tone cluster 110, 111, 115
Schumann, Robert 15, 103 tone field 75, 83, 113, 129, 141, 145
Sekundgang 65, 68, 70, 155 tonic function 15
serial music 34, 35, 127, 177, 196 total chromaticism 129, 130, 131, 139, 142,
series continuation 154, 157, 158, 161, 169 149
series hierarchy 171 tritone 52, 89, 92, 139, 158, 159
Sjukur, Slamet 196 Tudor, David 197
slendro-djawar scale 128 tupan 124
sound rhythm 172 twelve-note series 72, 150-152, 166, 176
Sparnaay, Harry 197 twelve-note technique 29, 60, 73, 148, 149,
Spengler, Oswald 19 150-152, 166
Sprechgesang 26, 65, 66 valeur ajoute 55, 57
statistical technique 169, 170, 176, 177, 189, Varse, Edgard 16, 17, 23, 26, 28, 29, 30, 36,
196 37, 110, 171, 184
Stein, Erwin 66, 137 timbre 111-112
stochastic method 189 variable Metren 56
Stockhausen, Karlheinz 13, 34, 35, 115, 171, Vienna 22, 23, 135, 147
index 223