Originally posted by Joseph K
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Modulations
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThis brings up something I wrote on another thread in answer to some points from Richard Barrett about approaching the music of the past by way of the music of its future. Is it possible to approach something historical from a point of emotional engagement, as though hearing it for the first time?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostSome of my favourite early "alerts" to the fascination of, for their time, unorthodox key changes, occur in well-known Russian works from the 19th century, which would go on to become "common practice" in Satie, and of course Debussy and Ravel, not to mention whole schools and hosts of 20th century composers who did not give up on tonal harmony, but used it in new ways, often "associatively" juxtaposed with older modal harmonic constructions, or, more accurately, neo-modal formulations, as beautifully explained by Anthony Payne in his radio description of Vaughan Williams's transition from modal ambiguity at the opening of the Fifth Symphony (where is the tonic?) to major diatonic resolution, in *both* senses, as the music modulates up a major third.
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These matters of harmonic movement and tension-resolution are I think germane to the thread subject matter of modulation, which I hope I will be forgiven for introducing in the interest of broadening the discussion.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostThanks for this interesting post, I am sure Dave doesn't mind you broadening the discussion! When you mentioned major third modulation, I thought of Coltrane's Giant Steps and Liszt's Benediction... the latter of whose key scheme is F sharp - D - B flat - F sharp, and not only that, but this thirds-relation operates on a more local level too. I believe the Russians (and Wagner) owe many of their harmonic practices to Liszt.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostThanks for this interesting post, I am sure Dave doesn't mind you broadening the discussion! When you mentioned major third modulation, I thought of Coltrane's Giant Steps and Liszt's Benediction... the latter of whose key scheme is F sharp - D - B flat - F sharp, and not only that, but this thirds-relation operates on a more local level too. I believe the Russians (and Wagner) owe many of their harmonic practices to Liszt.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostMy 'goose-bump' modulation is in Herbert Howells' song King David: an A flat (in E flat minor, the key the song is 'written' in) is held on the word 'rose'; it then becomes a G sharp and the ritornello he uses in the song returns in the key of E major, with the nightingale singing above.
Sheer magic.
Here's Sarah Connolly singing it:
Superb British mezzo-soprano Sarah Connolly, accompanied by pianist Eugene Asti, sings "King David" (1919), a setting of Walter de la Mare's poem about a dol...
And here's Janet Baker:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g185MEZfriQ
Thanks for the technical explanation of one of the most beautiful of moments in English Song Pulcie,much appreciated.
With my basic,self taught, knowledge of music theory I had no idea.“Music is the best means we have of digesting time." — Igor Stravinsky
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIn Rimsky, Borodin, Balakirev (to a lesser extent) and Mussorgsky one finds passages of "suspended tonality", using symmetrical modes of this and the whole-tone kind in ways that leave open which note is the root or tonic. John Coltrane and McCoy Tyner also made use of this to tonally ambiguous ends
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostOff-hand I've only noticed instances of Liszt's harmony which imply the octatonic scale, largely by using diminished seventh chords with added notes. As for augmented triads, try the opening of the first movement of his Faust Symphony, which also happens to be a twelve-tone row!
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post... which I would imagine they actually got directly from Monk. I think the octotonic mode (otherwise known as Messiaen's 2nd mode) does originate with the Russians as an "exotic" sound with suggestive tonal ambiguity; by the same token I've always thought that Wagner's emphatic use of augmented triads has a timbral function as much as a modulatory one - did he derive that from Liszt? I don't know Liszt's work very well.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octato...metric%20scale.
Apart from some arguably very early uses, it does seem that Rimsky and other Russians used these in the nineteenth century.
I listened to Schoenberg quartets 2 and 4. Not very easy listening.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThe article here gives some information about octotonic scales - though I wonder if the comment about the Pulcinella fragment is strictly correct. It depends on whether you treat A sharp and B flat as the same in those scale systems I think - I'm not sure how strict these things are. For practical purposes they are often identical. With that proviso, all the notes are in the third example scale in that article.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octato...metric%20scale.
Apart from some arguably very early uses, it does seem that Rimsky and other Russians used these in the nineteenth century.
I listened to Schoenberg quartets 2 and 4. Not very easy listening.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostJust a quibble about whether A sharp and B flat are treated the same in octatonic scales, or if they are strictly different. Sometimes people seem to worry about that kind of thing.
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