ECU Libraries Catalog

Romantic music : Sound and syntax / Leonard G. Ratner.

Author/creator Ratner, Leonard G.
Format Book and Print
Publication InfoNew York : Schirmer Books ; Toronto : Maxwell Macmillan Canada, ©1992.
Descriptionxix, 348 pages : music ; 25 cm
Subject(s)
Contents Part I. New sounds. Sound as criterion. Tone color ; Mood and imagery ; Amount of sound ; Harmonic color ; Historical views -- Texture. Figured bass ; Duet layout ; Melody and accompaniment ; Arpeggiation ; Full-chord texture ; Polyphony -- The piano: texture and sound. Physical and critical evidence ; Internal evidence ; Arpeggiation ; Full chords ; Polyphonic texture ; The piano as orchestra -- The orchestra: texture and sound. The classic orchestra ; The romantic orchestra ; Orchestration treatises ; Romantic orchestral scoring -- Chamber music: texture and sound. Chamber music for strings ; Chamber music for winds ; Chamber music for piano and strings -- Harmonic color. Amplification: duration and scoring ; Harmonic progressions ; Modal harmony -- Part II. Traditional syntax. Period structure. The rhetorical period ; The symmetrical period -- Rhetorical reduction -- Part III. Sound and period structure. Symmetrical arrangements. Symmetry enhanced by sound ; Sound controlled by symmetry -- Modifications of symmetry. Symmetry modified by sustained sounds ; Symmetry modified by harmonic progressions -- Extensions. Songlike declamation ; Discursive declamation -- Part IV. Sound and form. Small forms. Two-reprise form: I-V, x-I ; Three-part form: ABA -- Sonata form. Descriptions and definitions ; Standard layouts ; Adaptations.
Abstract Profound changes took place in musical sound throughout the nineteenth century. An expanded range of sound in many instruments - including the piano - a new richness of timbre, and a variety of expressive sound effects opened new options for composers. Many, such as Hector Berlioz and Gustav Mahler, used the possibilities of new sounds as a strategy of composition, regarding innovative sounds as important values in their own right. For listeners, too, colorful sound was an immediate clue to the expressive content of a composition. Pushing against the perimeters of Classic syntax to form new Romantic musical styles, composers simultaneously retained the entire traditional apparatus of Classic music, including melodic construction, phrase and period structures, and harmonic progressions, while adding to it a new quality of sound that enriched the traditional possibilities of the music. This book is the first study to examine the role played by qualities of sound in shaping Romantic musical form. By demonstrating the crucial interaction of sound and syntax in Romantic music, the author demonstrates the effectiveness of a new theoretical approach to musical analysis, incorporating sound as an analytical factor for the first time. The book is divided into 13 chapters. Chapter 1 surveys critical comments dealing with qualities of sound in the nineteenth century. Chapter 2 examines the continuity between Classic and Romantic texture and sound. Specific examples drawn from piano, orchestral, and chamber music literature are discussed in chapters 3-5. Chapter 6 explores the uses of harmonic color in the Romantic repertoire. Chapter 7 reviews the tradition of the period form in Western music and its continuity in Romantic music. Chapter 8 discusses rhetorical reduction, a technique that factors out the changes introduced by the new sound values to uncover the conventional outlines of the music. Chapter 9 examines symmetrical arrangements in the music of Johannes Brahms, Giuseppe Verdi, Felix Mendelssohn, and Robert Schumann. Chapter 10 discusses the modification of symmetry by sustained sounds and harmonic progressions in the music of Carl Maria von Weber, Franz Schubert, Frederic Chopin, and Richard Wagner. Chapter 11 explores the extensions of periodic symmetry in the music of Hector Berlioz, Gustav Mahler, Franz Liszt, Brahms, and Wagner. The last two chapters treat small forms and sonata forms in the music of Mendelssohn, Brahms, Liszt, and Mahler.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references (pages 315-320) and indexes.
LCCN 92010566
ISBN0028720652

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Music Course Reference ML196 .R27 1992 ✔ Available