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<!DOCTYPE document PUBLIC "-//CNX//DTD CNXML 0.5 plus QML//EN" "http://cnx.rice.edu/technology/cnxml/schema/dtd/0.5/cnxml_qml.dtd">
<document xmlns="http://cnx.rice.edu/cnxml" xmlns:md="http://cnx.rice.edu/mdml/0.4" xmlns:q="http://cnx.rice.edu/qml/1.0" xmlns:bib="http://bibtexml.sf.net/" id="id28818874">
<name>Expository and Developmental</name>
<metadata>
  <md:version>1.7</md:version>
  <md:created>2006/08/28 10:34:36 GMT-5</md:created>
  <md:revised>2007/01/11 10:39:39.701 US/Central</md:revised>
  <md:authorlist>
      <md:author id="abrandt">
      <md:firstname>Anthony</md:firstname>
      
      <md:surname>Brandt</md:surname>
      <md:email>abrandt@rice.edu</md:email>
    </md:author>
  </md:authorlist>

  <md:maintainerlist>
    <md:maintainer id="abrandt">
      <md:firstname>Anthony</md:firstname>
      
      <md:surname>Brandt</md:surname>
      <md:email>abrandt@rice.edu</md:email>
    </md:maintainer>
    <md:maintainer id="lizzardg">
      <md:firstname>Elizabeth</md:firstname>
      
      <md:surname>Gregory</md:surname>
      <md:email>elizabeth@cnx.org</md:email>
    </md:maintainer>
  </md:maintainerlist>
  
  <md:keywordlist>
    <md:keyword>developmental</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>expository</md:keyword>
  </md:keywordlist>

  <md:abstract>Expository passages establish the identity of a musical idea.  Developmental passages put musical material into action.  The balance between the expository and the developmental is an important expressive feature of music.</md:abstract>
</metadata>
<content>


<note>Please note that you must have the most recent copy of Macromedia's Flash plugin installed to play the musical examples.</note><para id="id30548858">In order to listen with a larger perspective
of a musical work, it is important to distinguish between
<term>expository</term> and <term>developmental</term> passages.</para>

<para id="id6603589">The function of an expository section is to
establish <emphasis>identity</emphasis>. Its goal is to make a musical material
<emphasis>memorable</emphasis> and <emphasis>recognizable</emphasis>. “My name is Bond—James Bond” is an
expository statement.</para>

<para id="id32500006">The following are examples of expository
statements:</para>

<example id="id8428815"><media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/mozart_piano.mp3" id="mus_mozartpiano">
		<param name="composer" value="Mozart"/>
		<param name="title" value="Piano Concerto in B-flat Major, II"/>
		<param name="comments" value="Ivor Bolton, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra"/>
		<param name="total-time" value="55"/>
		<param name="label-number" value="Hybrid Sacd 2866"/>
		<param name="performer" value="Mariaclara Monetti"/>
	</media>
</example>

<example id="organsymph"><media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/saintsaens_organ.mp3" id="mus_organ">
		<param name="composer" value="Camille Saint-Saens"/>
		<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 3 in c-minor, “Organ,” II"/>
		<param name="comments" value="Baltimore Symphony Orchestra"/>
		<param name="total-time" value="23"/>
		<param name="label-number" value="Vanguard 4014"/>
		<param name="performer" value="Sergiu Commissiona"/>
	</media>
</example>

<example id="berceuse"><media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/stravinsky_firebird.mp3" id="mus_berceuse">
		<param name="composer" value="Igor Stravinsky"/>
		<param name="title" value="“Berceuse” from The Firebird"/>
		<param name="comments" value=""/>
		<param name="total-time" value="59"/>
		<param name="label-number" value=""/>
		<param name="performer" value="Pierre Boulez, Chicago Symphony Orchestra"/>
	</media>
</example>

<para id="id16463670">Whereas an expository section shows what a
musical material <emphasis>is</emphasis>, a developmental section shows what the
material <emphasis>can do</emphasis>. Development sections are characterized by
instability and rapid change; they <emphasis>postpone rest</emphasis>. 007 jumps from a
plane and speeds down a mountainside on one ski, pursued by
villains from every direction. This is an example of
<term>development</term>.</para>

<para id="id35777134">The terms <term>exposition</term> and <term>development</term> are
commonly used in classical music, to denote large sections where
material is either introduced or rapidly transformed. However, the
concept of <term>expository</term> or <term>developmental</term> may be generalized to any
kind of music.</para>

<exercise id="ex1_kreutzer">
	<q:item id="kreu_item1" type="single-response">
		<q:question>
			<section id="kreu_q_s">
				<para id="id4987795">In the following excerpt from Beethoven:
				Violin Sonata No. 7, “Kreutzer,” which comes first—an expository
				passage or a developmental one?</para>

				<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/beethoven_violin.mp3" id="mus_kreu">
					<param name="composer" value="Ludwig van Beethoven"/>
					<param name="title" value="Violin Sonata in A-Major, opus 47, “Kreutzer”"/>
					<param name="comments" value=""/>
					<param name="total-time" value=""/>
					<param name="label-number" value="Teldec 4509-95998-2"/>
					<param name="performer" value="Nathan Milstein, violin; Georges Pludermacher, piano"/>
				</media>

				<para id="id35960286">Which comes first?</para>
			</section>
		</q:question>
		<q:answer id="kreu_exp"><q:response>Expository</q:response></q:answer>
		<q:answer id="kreu_dev"><q:response>Developmental</q:response></q:answer>		
		<q:feedback>The first portion of the excerpt is highly
		active and fast changing. This leads to an arrival point that is
		much more relaxed and stable. Therefore, a developmental section
		leads to an expository one.</q:feedback>
		<q:key answer="kreu_dev"/>
	</q:item>
</exercise>

<exercise id="ex_fantasy">
	<q:item id="fantasy" type="single-response">
		<q:question>
			<section id="fantasy_s">
				<para id="id32855778">In this excerpt from Arnold Schoenberg’s
				Fantasy for violin and piano, which comes first—the expository
				section of the developmental one?</para>

				<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/schoenberg_fantasy.mp3" id="mus_fantasy">
					<param name="composer" value="Arnold Schoenberg"/>
					<param name="title" value="Fantasy for violin and piano"/>
					<param name="comments" value=""/>
					<param name="total-time" value=""/>
					<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 447 112-2"/>
					<param name="performer" value="Gidon Kremer, violin; Oleg Maisenberg, piano"/>
				</media>

				<para id="id35722957">Which comes first?</para>
			</section>
		</q:question>
		<q:answer id="fantasy_exp"><q:response>Expository</q:response></q:answer>
		<q:answer id="fantasy_dev"><q:response>Developmental</q:response></q:answer>
		<q:feedback>Schoenberg’s musical language is far removed
		from Beethoven’s. However, the same distinction between expository
		and developmental exists. Just as in Beethoven, a mercurial,
		forward moving section leads to a calmer, more grounded one: A
		developmental section is followed by an expository one.</q:feedback>
		<q:key answer="fantasy_dev"/>
	</q:item>
</exercise>


<section id="id31480270">
	<name>Distinguishing between the Expository and the Developmental</name>

	<para id="id15297911">Stability facilitates recognition: That is
	why suspects in a police line-up are asked to stand still. In
	music, <term>expository statements</term> are usually “grounded” in some way:
	They are often repetitive; and they are often supported by a fixed,
	reliable accompaniment.</para>

	<para id="id32453304">On the other hand, if a suspect is trying to
	escape, it is better to <emphasis>keep moving</emphasis>. In <term>developmental passages</term>,
	stability is undercut: Repetitions become more cursory and
	incomplete; fixed accompaniments are absent.</para>

	<example id="ex_quintet"><para id="id34747799">The opening of the fourth movement of Robert
		Schumann’s Piano Quintet in E-flat Major is grounded by both
		extensive repetition and a steady accompaniment.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/schumann_quintet_1.mp3" id="mus_quintet_1">
			<param name="composer" value="Robert Schumann"/>
			<param name="title" value="Piano Quintet in E-flat Major"/>
			<param name="comments" value="opening"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="CBS MPK 45885"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Rudolf Serkin, piano; The Budapest String Quartet"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id32202004">In the following developmental passage,
		Schumann’s theme is no longer anchored: The instruments enter in
		imitation, pushing the music towards new destinations. Notice that
		the original steady accompaniment is replaced by faster moving
		figures.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/schumann_quintet_2.mp3" id="mus_quintet_2">
			<param name="composer" value="Robert Schumann"/>
			<param name="title" value="Piano Quintet in E-flat Major"/>
			<param name="comments" value="developmental passage"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="CBS MPK 45885"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Rudolf Serkin, piano; The Budapest String Quartet"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<example id="ex_quartet"><para id="id4380380">As in the Schumann example, the opening of the
		second movement of Bela Bartok’s String Quartet No. 2 is grounded
		by repetition and a steady accompaniment.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/bartok_quartet2_1.mp3" id="mus_bartok4_2_1">
			<param name="composer" value="Bela Bartok"/>
			<param name="title" value="String Quartet No. 2, II"/>
			<param name="comments" value="opening"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Simax, PSC 1197"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Vervato String Quartet"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id36140148">Once again, in the following developmental
		passage, the music becomes more mobile and unrooted.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/bartok_quartet2_2.mp3" id="mus_bartok4_2_2">
			<param name="composer" value="Bela Bartok"/>
			<param name="title" value="String Quartet No. 2, II"/>
			<param name="comments" value="developmental passage"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Simax, PSC 1197"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Vervato String Quartet"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<para id="id30969277">As the above examples indicate, the pace of
	events speeds up in developmental passages. Thus, whereas
	<term>expository passages</term> allow the time for <emphasis>complete statements</emphasis>,
	<term>development passages</term> are characterized by <emphasis>fragmentation</emphasis>.
	<emphasis>Fragmentation</emphasis> enables the music’s progress to accelerate. When you
	travel, you can’t bring all of your belongings with you; instead,
	you bring just an overnight bag with a change of clothes.
	Similarly, you can’t afford to carry a whole theme with you during
	a developmental passage: Taking the time to play the theme in its
	entirety would slow you down. Instead, you must travel “light,”
	with just a fragment of the theme.</para>

	<example id="ex_mozart40"><para id="id16464701">The Finale of Mozart’s Symphony no. 40 in
		g-minor begins with the following expository statement. Note how
		each half of the theme is repeated, increasing its
		stability.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/mozart_sym40IV_1.mp3" id="mus_mozart40_1">
			<param name="composer" value="Mozart"/>
			<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 40, IV"/>
			<param name="comments" value="expository statement"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="DG 427 210-2"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Karl Böhm, Berlin Philharmonic"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id15411825">Later in the movement, Mozart creates a
		developmental passage based entirely on the upward motion with
		which the theme begins. Only fragments occur; the complete theme is
		never stated.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/mozart_sym40IV_2.mp3" id="mus_mozart40_2">
			<param name="composer" value="Mozart"/>
			<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 40, IV"/>
			<param name="comments" value="developmental passage"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="DG 427 210-2"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Karl Böhm, Berlin Philharmonic"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<example id="ex_shost_quartet"><para id="id12937395">The fourth movement of Dmitri Shostakovich’s
		String Quartet No. 2 introduces a long, lyrical theme, played
		several times in its entirety.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/shostakovich_quartet_1.mp3" id="mus_shost4_1">
			<param name="composer" value="Dmitri Shostakovich"/>
			<param name="title" value="String Quartet No. 2 in A-Major, IV"/>
			<param name="comments" value="lyrical theme"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Decca 455 776-2"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Fitzwilliam Quartet"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id8245412">In a subsequent developmental section, the
		theme is broken into fragments that get shorter and shorter: at one
		point, the theme is reduced to just two notes. As in the Mozart
		developmental passage, the complete theme is never stated.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/shostakovich_quartet_2.mp3" id="mus_shost4_2">
			<param name="composer" value="Dmitri Shostakovich"/>
			<param name="title" value="String Quartet No. 2 in A-Major, IV"/>
			<param name="comments" value="developmental section"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Decca 455 776-2"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Fitzwilliam Quartet"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<para id="id34695579">Other musical features help to differentiate
	expository and developmental sections. In expository passages, the
	primary activity is often concentrated in one instrument or
	register. In development passages, multiple instruments and
	registers may trade the musical ideas back and forth, in dialogue
	or competition.</para>

	<example id="ex2_mozart40"><para id="id28916001">In the first movement of Mozart’s Symphony
		No. 40 in g-minor, the violins introduce the primary theme.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/mozart_sym40I_1.mp3" id="mus2_mozart40_1">
			<param name="composer" value="Mozart"/>
			<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 40, I"/>
			<param name="comments" value="primary theme"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="DG 427 210-2"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Karl Böhm, Berlin Philharmonic"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id27687499">In a subsequent developmental section, the
		violins repeatedly play a fragment of the theme, gradually sinking
		in register. Suddenly, the music becomes far more turbulent as the
		fragment is traded between the violins and celli.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/mozart_sym40I_2.mp3" id="mus2_mozart40_2">
			<param name="composer" value="Mozart"/>
			<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 40, I"/>
			<param name="comments" value="developmental section"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="DG 427 210-2"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Karl Böhm, Berlin Philharmonic"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<example id="ex_endoftime"><para id="id9864682">In the brief Intermède from Olivier Messaien’s
		Quartet for the End of Time, the main theme is initially presented
		fixed in register.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/messiaen_endoftime_1.mp3" id="mus_endoftime_1">
			<param name="composer" value="Olivier Messiaen"/>
			<param name="title" value="Quartet for the End of Time, Intermède"/>
			<param name="comments" value="main theme"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 423 247-2"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Luben Yordanoff, violin; Albert Tetard, cello; Claude Desurmont, clarinet; Daniel Barenboim, piano"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id32485006">As the theme is developed, fragments of the
		theme shift in register:</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/messiaen_endoftime_2.mp3" id="mus_endoftime_2">
			<param name="composer" value="Olivier Messiaen"/>
			<param name="title" value="Quartet for the End of Time, Intermède"/>
			<param name="comments" value="fragments of the theme"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 423 247-2"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Luben Yordanoff, violin; Albert Tetard, cello; Claude Desurmont, clarinet; Daniel Barenboim, piano"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<para id="id29752323">Expository sections tend to be more
	predictable. On the other hand, development sections are often
	unpredictable and irregular, with abrupt changes of texture,
	dynamics, rhythm, etc.</para>

	<example id="ex_beethoven8"><para id="id35722686">For instance, the Finale of Beethoven’s
		Symphony No. 8 opens with a vivacious expository section,
		interrupted only by a few brief hesitations.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/beethoven_sym8_2.mp3" id="mus_beethoven8_1">
			<param name="composer" value="Beethoven"/>
			<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 8 in F-Major, IV"/>
			<param name="comments" value="expository section"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="SBK 89832"/>
			<param name="performer" value="George Szell, Cleveland Orchestra"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id9644514">In a later developmental section, the
		hesitations are exaggerated and disrupt the flow of the
		music.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/beethoven_sym8_1.mp3" id="mus_beethoven8_2">
			<param name="composer" value="Beethoven"/>
			<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 8 in F-Major, IV"/>
			<param name="comments" value="developmental section"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="SBK 89832"/>
			<param name="performer" value="George Szell, Cleveland Orchestra"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<example id="ex_bartok4_4"><para id="id3200951">In the fourth movement of Bela Bartok’s String
		Quartet No. 4, each player takes a turn playing the plucked theme.
		Occasional chords underlie the theme’s presentation.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/bartok_quartet4_1.mp3" id="mus_bartok4_4_1">
			<param name="composer" value="Bela Bartok"/>
			<param name="title" value="String Quartet No. 4, IV"/>
			<param name="comments" value="theme"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Simax PSC 1196"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Vertavo String Quartet"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id8430288">In a subsequent developmental passage, the
		chords are brought to the fore, becoming more forceful and abrupt.
		These and silences irregularly disrupt the music’s flow. Only
		fragments of the theme are played, and the instruments alternate
		more rapidly.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/bartok_11b.mp3" id="mus_bartok4_4_2">
			<param name="composer" value="Bela Bartok"/>
			<param name="title" value="String Quartet No. 4, IV"/>
			<param name="comments" value="developmental passage"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Simax PSC 1196"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Vertavo String Quartet"/>
		</media>	
	</example>

	<para id="id32630579">In expository sections, there is usually only
	one theme or musical idea presented at a time. In developmental
	sections, multiple themes may be presented simultaneously.</para>

	<example id="ex_sorcerer"><para id="id16470223">Paul Dukas’ The Sorcerer’s Apprentice tells
		the story of a wizard’s assistant (played by Mickey Mouse in
		Disney’s "Fantasia") who, rather than clean his master’s lair
		himself, furtively casts a spell that rouses the mops, pails and
		brooms.</para>

		<para id="id29967789">As each tool is wakened, Dukas introduces a
		new theme:</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/dukas_sorcerer_1.mp3" id="mus_sorcerer_1">
			<param name="composer" value="Paul Dukas"/>
			<param name="title" value="The Sorcerer’s Apprentice"/>
			<param name="comments" value="tool theme 1"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Telarc 80515"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Jesús López-Cobos, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra"/>
		</media>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/dukas_sorcerer_2.mp3" id="mus_sorcerer_2">
			<param name="composer" value="Paul Dukas"/>
			<param name="title" value="The Sorcerer’s Apprentice"/>
			<param name="comments" value="tool theme 2"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Telarc 80515"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Jesús López-Cobos, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id36000892">Unfortunately, the apprentice isn’t able to
		command the tools. As chaos ensues, Dukas combines the two themes,
		creating a developmental pandemonium:</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/dukas_sorcerer_3.mp3" id="mus_sorcerer_3">
			<param name="composer" value="Paul Dukas"/>
			<param name="title" value="The Sorcerer’s Apprentice"/>
			<param name="comments" value="developmental pandemonium"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Telarc 80515"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Jesús López-Cobos, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<example id="ex_lyric"><para id="id32162977">In Alban Berg’s annotated score of the "Lyric
		Suite," the composer describes the second movement as a domestic
		scene in which his married love interest, Hanna Fuchs-Robettin, is
		playing with her two children. Each family member is given a
		theme:</para>

		<para id="id10921133">Hanna’s theme:</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/berg_lyric_1.mp3" id="mus_lyric_1">
			<param name="composer" value="Alban Berg"/>
			<param name="title" value="The Lyric Suite, II"/>
			<param name="comments" value="Hanna's theme"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="From a live performance by Da Camera of Houston"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Curtis Macomber and Cal Wiersma, violins; Toby Appel, viola; Norman Fischer, cello"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id13611324">Her son, Munzo:</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/berg_lyric_2.mp3" id="mus_lyric_2">
			<param name="composer" value="Alban Berg"/>
			<param name="title" value="The Lyric Suite, II"/>
			<param name="comments" value="Munzo's theme"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="From a live performance by Da Camera of Houston"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Curtis Macomber and Cal Wiersma, violins; Toby Appel, viola; Norman Fischer, cello"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id34572332">Her daughter, Dorothea, was known by her
		nickname, Dodo. Since “Do” is a singing syllable for the note “C”
		(as in “do a deer, a female deer” from The Sound of Music), Dodo is
		represented by repeated c’s in the viola.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/berg_lyric_3.mp3" id="mus_lyric_3">
			<param name="composer" value="Alban Berg"/>
			<param name="title" value="The Lyric Suite, II"/>
			<param name="comments" value="Dodo's theme"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="From a live performance by Da Camera of Houston"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Curtis Macomber and Cal Wiersma, violins; Toby Appel, viola; Norman Fischer, cello"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id15303198">The peak of the movement is an argument
		between Munzo and Dodo that gets out of control. To depict this,
		Berg wrote a developmental passage that combines aspects of all
		three themes: Hanna’s lyrical melody is in the upper violin;
		Munzo’s dance-like theme and Dodo’s repeated notes are below. By
		the end of the excerpt, Hanna has finally quieted the children
		down:</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/berg_lyric_4.mp3" id="mus_lyric_4">
			<param name="composer" value="Alban Berg"/>
			<param name="title" value="The Lyric Suite, II"/>
			<param name="comments" value="argument"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="From a live performance by Da Camera of Houston"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Curtis Macomber and Cal Wiersma, violins; Toby Appel, viola; Norman Fischer, cello"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<para id="id33653897">In conclusion, expository sections tend to be
	more straightforward and direct: one musical idea is usually
	presented at a time; the idea is presented in its entirety; it is
	usually played in a single instrument or register; the music’s
	progression is more predictable. In contrast, development sections
	are more mercurial and complex: multiple ideas may be presented
	simultaneously; ideas may be broken into fragments and shift
	rapidly between instruments and registers; changes and
	interruptions may be more abrupt and extreme.</para>
</section>

<section id="s_balance">
	<name>The Balance Between Expository and Developmental</name>
	
	<example id="ex_romanian"><para id="id30085444">Some music may be almost exclusively
		<term>expository</term>. Bartok’s brief Romanian Folk Dance no. 1 consists of an
		expository statement in two halves, each of which is
		repeated.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/bartok_folk.mp3" id="mus_romanian">
			<param name="composer" value="Bela Bartok"/>
			<param name="title" value="Romanian Folk Dance no. 1"/>
			<param name="comments" value="expository statement"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Live performance"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Maureen Nelson, violin; Rod Waters, piano"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<example id="ex_proc"><para id="id33079161">In contrast, some music may be almost
		exclusively developmental: The music undergoes constant motion and
		transformation.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/lieberson_proc.mp3" id="mus_proc">
			<param name="composer" value="Peter Lieberson"/>
			<param name="title" value="“Proclamation” from Bagatelles"/>
			<param name="comments" value=""/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="09026-68189-2"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Peter Serkin, piano"/>
		</media>
	</example>
	
	<para id="id32456328">The balance between the expository and the
	developmental is a crucial expressive feature. If you want a restful vacation, you'll plan to stay put as much as possible and minimize the time spent on the road. On the other hand, if you're up for an adrenaline rush, you'll plan some high-flying travel.  Similarly, the
	greater the time spent in <term>exposition</term>, the greater the music’s
	stability. The greater the time spent in <term>development</term>, the greater
	the music’s unrest.</para>

	<para id="element-637"/><para id="id35818011">What if an exposition is highly charged? Will its development be calmer? The answer is "No:" Developmental passages always "up the ante."
	Someone fleeing from peril typically faces even greater dangers to
	escape. Similarly, the <term>development</term> of a highly charged material
	will tend to be even more intense.  </para>

	<example id="ex_grosso"><para id="id32581685">For example, the fifth movement of Alfred
		Schnittke’s Concerto Grosso No. 1 introduces a frantic interplay
		between the two violin soloists, accompanied by the harpsichord.
		The string orchestra responds with a developmental passage that is
		even more animated and fervent. Soloists and ensemble
		alternate twice, dramatizing the contrast between the expository
		and the developmental.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/schnittke_grosso.mp3" id="mus_grosso">
			<param name="composer" value="Alfred Schnittke"/>
			<param name="title" value="Concerto Grosso"/>
			<param name="comments" value=""/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Col Legno Collage 20510"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Yur Bashmet, director; Gidon Kremer &amp; Tatiana Grindenko"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<para id="id3732580">Thus, no matter what the particular mood or
	haracter of a work, the balance of the <term>expository</term> and the
	<term>developmental</term> is a revealing expressive feature.</para>

	<example id="ex_bagatelle"><para id="id35698504">The balance between expository and
		developmental helps to create strong contrasts in Beethoven’s
		Bagatelle, opus 126, no. 4. [See also: <cnxn document="m11629">Musical Form</cnxn>] The A-section
		begins with a brief expository statement; but development soon
		predominates: The A-section is constantly roving, with abrupt
		silences and sudden changes in texture.</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/beethoven_bagatelle_1.mp3" id="mus_bagatelle_1">
			<param name="composer" value="Ludwig van Beethoven"/>
			<param name="title" value="Bagatelle, opus 126, no. 4"/>
			<param name="comments" value="A-section"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Le Chant du Monde 2781049"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Walter Chodack, piano"/>
		</media>

		<para id="id3767953">In contrast, the B-section is almost
		exclusively <term>expository</term>: It is grounded throughout and very
		repetitive.</para>
		
		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/beethoven_bagatelle_2.mp3" id="mus_bagatelle_2">
			<param name="composer" value="Ludwig van Beethoven"/>
			<param name="title" value="Bagatelle, opus 126, no. 4"/>
			<param name="comments" value="B-section"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Le Chant du Monde 2781049"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Walter Chodack, piano"/>
		</media>
		
		<para id="id35754184">In the end, Beethoven establishes a relative
		equilibrium between the expository and developmental by playing
		each section twice.</para>
		
		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/beethoven_bagatelle_3.mp3" id="mus_bagatelle_3">
			<param name="composer" value="Ludwig van Beethoven"/>
			<param name="title" value="Bagatelle, opus 126, no. 4"/>
			<param name="comments" value="equilibrium"/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Le Chant du Monde 2781049"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Walter Chodack, piano"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<example id="ex_solitude"><para id="id28710958">Expository and developmental passages are
		similarly contrasted in the second movement of John Harbison’s Four
		Songs of Solitude. In the end, does Harbison tip the balance in
		favor of exposition or development? How does this contribute to
		your emotional reaction to the movement?</para>

		<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/expository/harbison_solitude.mp3" id="mus_solitude">
			<param name="composer" value="John Harbison"/>
			<param name="title" value="Four Songs of Solitude, II"/>
			<param name="comments" value=""/>
			<param name="total-time" value=""/>
			<param name="label-number" value="Artek 0016-2"/>
			<param name="performer" value="Jennifer Frautschi, violin"/>
		</media>
	</example>

	<para id="id15202465">When you are studying the itinerary for a trip, you want to know how long you will spend at your destinations compared to how long you will spend en route.  Similarly, in the first few hearings of a work, try to
	identify <term>expository</term> versus <term>developmental</term> passages. How long does
	each type of passage last? The greater the amount of exposition,
	the more stable, simple and direct the music.  The greater the
	amount of development, the more the music is restless, complex and
	ambiguous. Directing your attention to these structural features,
	rather than to fleeting details, will help you build a more
	comprehensive understanding of the music.</para>
</section>
</content>
</document>
