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A Geometry of Music: Harmony and Counterpoint in the Extended Common Practice (PDF eBook)


A Geometry of Music: Harmony and Counterpoint in the Extended Common Practice (PDF eBook)

eBook by Tymoczko, Dmitri

A Geometry of Music: Harmony and Counterpoint in the Extended Common Practice (PDF eBook)

£44.17

ISBN:
9780199714353
Publication Date:
03 Dec 2010
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
480 pages
Format:
eBook
For delivery:
Download available
A Geometry of Music: Harmony and Counterpoint in the Extended Common Practice (PDF eBook)

Description

How is the Beatles' Help! similar to Stravinsky's Dance of the Adolescents? How does Radiohead's Just relate to the improvisations of Bill Evans? And how do Chopin's works exploit the non-Euclidean geometry of musical chords? In this groundbreaking work, author Dmitri Tymoczko describes a new framework for thinking about music that emphasizes the commonalities among styles from medieval polyphony to contemporary rock. Tymoczko identifies five basic musical features that jointly contribute to the sense of tonality, and shows how these features recur throughout the history of Western music. In the process he sheds new light on an age-old question: what makes music sound good?A Geometry of Music provides an accessible introduction to Tymoczko's revolutionary geometrical approach to music theory. The book shows how to construct simple diagrams representing relationships among familiar chords and scales, giving readers the tools to translate between the musical and visual realms and revealing surprising degrees of structure in otherwise hard-to-understand pieces. Tymoczko uses this theoretical foundation to retell the history of Western music from the eleventh century to the present day. Arguing that traditional histories focus too narrowly on the common practice period from 1680-1850, he proposes instead that Western music comprises an extended common practice stretching from the late middle ages to the present. He discusses a host of familiar pieces by a wide range of composers, from Bach to the Beatles, Mozart to Miles Davis, and many in between.A Geometry of Music is accessible to a range of readers, from undergraduate music majors to scientists and mathematicians with an interest in music. Defining its terms along the way, it presupposes no special mathematical background and only a basic familiarity with Western music theory. The book also contains exercises designed to reinforce and extend readers' understanding, along with a series of appendices that explore the technical details of this exciting new theory.

Contents

PREFACE; PART I. THEORY; 1.1 THE FIVE FEATURES; 1.2. PERCEPTION AND THE FIVE FEATURES; 1.3 FOUR CLAIMS; A. HARMONY AND COUNTERPOINT CONSTRAIN EACH OTHER; B. SCALE, MACROHARMONY, AND CENTRICITY ARE INDEPENDENT; C. MODULATION INVOLVES VOICE LEADING; D. MUSIC CAN BE UNDERSTOOD GEOMETRICALLY; 1.4 MUSIC, MAGIC, AND LANGUAGE; 1.5 OUTLINE OF THE BOOK, AND A SUGGESTION FOR IMPATIENT READERS; 2.1 LINEAR PITCH SPACE; 2.2 CIRCULAR PITCH-CLASS SPACE; 2.3 TRANSPOSITION AND INVERSION AS DISTANCE-PRESERVING FUNCTIONS; 2.4 MUSICAL OBJECTS; 2.5 VOICE LEADINGS AND CHORD PROGRESSIONS; 2.6 COMPARING VOICE LEADINGS; 2.7 VOICE-LEADING SIZE; 2.8 NEAR IDENTITY; 2.9 HARMONY AND COUNTERPOINT REVISITED; 2.10 ACOUSTIC CONSONANCE AND NEAR-EVENNESS; 3.1 ORDERED PITCH SPACE; 3.2 THE PARABLE OF THE ANT; 3.3 TWO-NOTE CHORD SPACE; 3.4 CHORD PROGRESSIONS AND VOICE LEADINGS IN TWO-NOTE CHORD SPACE; 3.5 GEOMETRY IN ANALYSIS; 3.6 HARMONIC CONSISTENCY AND EFFICIENT VOICE LEADING; 3.7 PURE PARALLEL AND PURE CONTRARY MOTION; 3.8 THREE-DIMENSIONAL CHORD SPACE; 3.9 HIGHER-DIMENSIONAL CHORD SPACES; 3.10 VOICE LEADING LATTICES; 3.11 TRIADS ARE FROM MARS, SEVENTH CHORDS ARE FROM VENUS; 3.12 TWO MUSICAL GEOMETRIES; 3.13 STUDY GUIDE; 4.1 A SCALE IS A RULER; 4.2 SCALE DEGREES, SCALAR TRANSPOSITION, SCALAR INVERSION; 4.3 EVENNESS AND SCALAR TRANSPOSITION; 4.4 CONSTRUCTING COMMON SCALES; 4.5 MODULATION AND VOICE LEADING; 4.6 VOICE LEADING BETWEEN COMMON SCALES ; 4.7 TWO EXAMPLES; 4.8 SCALAR AND INTERSCALAR TRANSPOSITION; 4.9 INTERSCALAR TRANSPOSITION AND VOICE LEADING; 4.10 COMBINING INTERSCALAR AND CHROMATIC TRANSPOSITIONS; 5.1 MACROHARMONY; 5.2 SMALL-GAP MACROHARMONY; 5.3 PITCH-CLASS CIRCULATION; 5.4 MODULATING THE RATE OF PITCH-CLASS CIRCULATION; 5.5 MACROHARMONIC CONSISTENCY; 5.6 CENTRICITY; 5.7 WHERE DOES CENTRICITY COME FROM?; 5.8 BEYOND TONAL AND ATONAL. ; PART II. HISTORY AND ANALYSIS; 6.1 DISCLAIMERS; 6.2 TWO-VOICE MEDIEVAL COUNTERPOINT; 6.3 TRIADS AND THE RENAISSANCE; 6.4 FUNCTIONAL HARMONY; 6.5 SCHUMANN'S CHOPIN; 6.6 CHROMATICISM; 6.7 TWENTIETH-CENTURY SCALAR MUSIC; 6.8 THE EXTENDED COMMON PRACTICE; 7.1 THE THIRDS-BASED GRAMMAR OF ELEMENTARY TONAL HARMONY; 7.2 VOICE LEADING IN FUNCTIONAL HARMONY; 7.3 SEQUENCES; 7.4 MODULATION AND KEY DISTANCE; 7.5 THE TWO LATTICES; 7.6 A CHALLENGE FROM SCHENKER; 8.1 DECORATIVE CHROMATICISM; 8.2 GENERALIZED AUGMENTED SIXTHS; 8.3 BRAHMS AND SCHOENBERG; 8.4 SCHUBERT AND THE MAJOR-THIRD SYSTEM; 8.5 CHOPIN'S TESSERACT; 8.6 THE TRISTAN PRELUDE; 8.7 ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES; 8.8 CONCLUSION; 9.1 THREE SCALAR TECHNIQUES; 9.2 CHORD-FIRST COMPOSITION; A. GRIEG'S DROMMESYN, (VISION), OP. 62 NO. 5 (1895); B. DEBUSSY'S FETES (1899); C. MICHAEL NYMAN'S THE MOOD THAT PASSES THROUGH YOU (1993); 9.3 SCALE-FIRST COMPOSITION; A. DEBUSSY'S DES PAS SUR LA NEIGE (1910); B. JANACEK'S ON AN OVERGROWN PATH, SERIES II, NO. 1 (1908); C. SHOSTAKOVICH'S FS MINOR PRELUDE AND FUGUE, OP. 87 (1950); D. REICH'S NEW YORK COUNTERPOINT (1985); E. REICH'S THE DESERT MUSIC, MOVEMENT 1 (1984); F. THE WHO'S CAN'T EXPLAIN (1965) AND BOB SEGER'S TURN THE PAGE (1973); 9.4 THE SUBSET TECHNIQUE; A. GRIEG'S KLOKKEKLANG, (BELL RINGING), OP. 54 NO. 6 (1891); B. PETIT AIRS, FROM STRAVINSKY'S HISTOIRE DU SOLDAT (1918); C. REICH'S CITY LIFE (1995); D. STRAVINSKY'S DANCE OF THE ADOLESCENTS (1913); E. THE MILES DAVIS GROUP'S FREEDOM JAZZ DANCE (1966); 9.5 CONCLUSION; 10.1 BASIC JAZZ VOICINGS; 10.2 FROM THIRDS TO FOURTHS; 10.3 TRITONE SUBSTITUTION; 10.4 ALTERED CHORDS AND SCALES; 10.5 BASS AND UPPER-VOICE TRITONE SUBSTITUTIONS; 10.6 POLYTONALITY, SIDESTEPPING, AND PLAYING OUT. ; 10.7 BILL EVANS'S OLEO. ; 10.8 JAZZ AS MODERNIST SYNTHESIS; CONCLUSION; APPENDIX A. MEASURING VOICE-LEADING SIZE; APPENDIX B. CHORD GEOMETRY: A TECHNICAL LOOK; APPENDIX C. DISCRETE VOICE LEADING LATTICES; APPENDIX D. THE INTERSCALAR INTERVAL MATRIX; APPENDIX E. SCALE, MACROHARMONY, AND LERDAHL'S BASIC SPACE. ; APPENDIX F. SOME STUDY QUESTIONS, PROBLEMS, AND ACTIVITIES; BIBLIOGRAPHY; INDEX

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