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Grasping the Whole Composition
Driving through a city for the first time can be very
disorienting. Building after building catches your eye. You
circle past a monument, then a fountain. Restaurants, hotels
and shops fly past. Trying to absorb and remember all of these
landmarks quickly becomes tiring. Was the town square before
or after the park? Did you pass a museum? If you don't speak
the language, an extra anxiety sets in. You try to decipher
the street signs, negotiate the traffic. By the time you
arrive at the hotel, you fall on your bed, exhausted.
Similarly, it is easy to get lost in the moment-to-moment
progress of a piece of music: There are often too many details
to remember, too many implications to contemplate. If the
work is particularly dynamic, you may become overwhelmed with
its rapid progress. If the musical language is unfamiliar,
even one poorly understood sound may throw you into confusion.
In your visit to a new city, it is wiser to begin with an
overview of the neighborhoods. First, you notice that you are
traversing the old town, where the buildings are closely
packed together and the streets narrow and winding. Then, you
pass into the modern section, with sleek high-rises, set apart
along straight thoroughfares. You don't need to speak the
language; nor is there the pressure to remember facades or
street-names. Later, you may revisit the old town on foot,
discovering quiet alleys and ancient monuments. But, for now,
you content yourself with a general sense of the city's
layout: How large is the old town compared to the new? How
much variety of architecture characterizes each neighborhood?
This more patient, disciplined approach helps to orient your
future explorations. It will be harder to get lost or
overwhelmed when you have a commanding sense of the city's
geography.
Similarly, the path to informed listening begins with a grasp
of the whole composition. There are tremendous advantages to
beginning with a commanding perspective: While details tend to
pass by very quickly; the overall trajectory of the music
unfolds more gradually, giving you more time to consider it.
The significance of an individual gesture is often clearer
when related to the work's overall destiny. And, while the
immediate sounds are bristling with personality and may be
difficult to grasp, the larger structure is often easier to
hear accurately.
Thus, we will approach listening to a piece of music by moving
from the whole into the details: We will begin by developing
an awareness of the composition's form and destiny, then
gradually sink into the details with a stronger sense of their
relevance.
Musical form is the wider perspective of a piece of music. It
describes the layout of a composition as divided into
sections, akin to the layout of a city divided into
neighborhoods.
Musical works may be classified into two formal types: A and
A/B. Compositions exist in a boundless variety of styles,
instrumentation, length and content--all the factors that make
them singular and personal. Yet, underlying this
individuality, any musical work can be interpreted as either
an A or A/B-form.
An A-form emphasizes
continuity and
prolongation. It flows, unbroken, from
beginning to end. In a unified neighborhood, wander down any
street and it will look very similar to any other. Similarly,
in an A-form, the music has a recognizable consistency.
The other basic type is the A/B-form. Whereas
A-forms emphasize continuity, A/B-forms emphasize
contrast and
diversity. A/B-forms are clearly broken
up into sections, which differ in aurally immediate ways. The
sections are often punctuated by silences or resonant pauses,
making them more clearly set off from one another. Here, you
travel among neighborhoods travels that are noticeably
different from one another: The first might be a residential
neighborhood, with tree-lined streets and quiet cul-de-sacs.
The next is an industrial neighborhood, with warehouses and
smoke-stacks.
The prime articulants of form are rhythm and
texture. If the rhythm and texture remain
constant, you will tend to perceive an A-form. If there is a
marked change in rhythm or texture, you will tend to perceive
a point of contrast--a boundary, from which you pass into a
new neighborhood. This will indicate an A/B-form.
Listen to the following examples. What is the form of
each?
Problem
1:
Correct!
Incorrect.
Are you sure? Try listening to the example again.
The Schumann is an example of an A/B-form. As the
music commences, the pace is languorous. The
strings and piano move together.
Then, there is a strong musical punctuation: The
music that follows is faster; the strings and piano
move in alternation.
Just because the two sections contrast with each
other doesn't mean they have nothing in common. If
you chose A-form as a response, it may have been
that you recognized that the two sections are
closely related: the B-section's melody is a speeded
up version of that of A's; the key of both sections,
E-flat Major, is identical.
However, the contrast in rhythm and texture is too
strong to overlook. A clear division between
sections is created: It would be impossible to
accurately describe the music without it.
Problem
2:
Correct!
Incorrect.
The Bach, unlike the Schumann, is an example of an
A-form. The rhythm is unbroken from beginning to
end, moving fleetly without interruption or change.
The texture is similarly steady. If there were a
B-section, where would it begin? --There is no
point of punctuation.
However, just because it is an A-form doesn't mean
that nothing novel or exciting happens. Bach's
melodic development is wonderfully inventive and
lively, and the music is harmonically active. A lot
happens in a short amount of time. Nevertheless,
the consistency of rhythm and texture, and the fact
that the continuity is unbroken--the piece never
pauses--support an analysis of this movement as an
A-form.
Are you sure? Try listening to the example again.
Problem
3:
Now consider a work in a less familiar style. What is
its form?
Correct!
Incorrect.
The Boulez and Bach share a lot in common: In both,
the rhythmic speed and texture remain constant.
Furthermore, in the Boulez, there is an insistently
repeating melodic figure--known as an
ostinato--which stretches from
beginning to end. The Boulez is an example of an
A-form.
Microscopically, there is a lot of diversity in this
movement. While the ostinato is a point of
reference, the music around it is constantly
changing. Listening to it moment by moment, the
music is filled with unpredictable events. However,
the freshness of ideas is very circumscribed: There
are no dramatic changes of speed, register or
density. Stepping back to a wider perspective, the
momentary gestures can be heard as an intricate
shimmer; they unsettle but do not displace the
movement's continuity.
The sounds of this movement may have been very
unfamiliar to you. However, if this exercise was
successful, you were able to follow the piece
through to its completion and analyze its structure.
Its language may still seem remote and intangible.
Nevertheless, on first hearing, you already know
something very crucial about the work: It prolongs a
single idea. You have gained a point of orientation
for future hearings.
Are you sure? Try listening to the example again.
Labeling the Forms
It is conventional to give alphabetic labels to the sections
of a composition: A, B, C, etc. If a
section returns, its letter is repeated: for instance, "A-B-A"
is a familiar layout in classical music.
As the unbroken form, A-forms come only in a single variety.
They may be long or short, but they are always "A".
As the contrast form, A/B-forms come in a boundless array of
possibilities. There may be recurring sections, unique ones,
or any combination of both. For instance, a
Rondo--a popular form in Classical
music--consists of an alternation of a recurring section and
others that occur once each. It would be labelled
A-B-A-C-A-D-A, etc. Many twentieth-century
composers became fascinated with arch-forms: A-B-C-B-A.
An on-going form, with no recurrence whatsoever, is also
possible: A-B-C-D-E... Any sequence of recurring and unique
sections may occur.
Example 1
How would you describe the following form? First, click
when you hear a new section. Then, use the pull-down
menu to label each section.
This movement is labeled as an A-B-A form. It opens with
frantic, somber, rhythmically persistent music. The
contrasting section has a lighter, more carefree feeling and
a new prevailing rhythm. Finally, the opening section
returns exactly.
Conclusion
Understanding the layout of the city is crucial for exploring
it: once you understand its topography, you know how to find
its landmarks, where the places for recreation or business may
lie. Similarly, determining the form of a piece will tell you
a lot about it. If it is an A-form, your next focus will be
on the work's main ideas, and how they are extended across the
entire composition. If it is an A/B-form, your next
investigations will be into the specific layout of sections
and the nature of the contrasts.