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Emphasis is very important in communication: It helps to establish what is of primary importance, versus what may be supporting or of secondary relevance.
Verbal communication contains a variety of strategies for creating emphasis. For instance, you’re instructing your children on pool safety: Don’t run next to the pool, no splashing in other people’s faces, etc. But most important of all: No children allowed in the water without a grown-up. How would you emphasize this statement’s import? You might repeat it several times; you might raise your voice; you might grab your child’s hand and look him or her in the eye; you might sit the child, down, pause, and then speak.
How is emphasis created in a piece of music? Being able to recognize and interpret such emphases is essential to active listening. When a composer is communicating with you through music, it is very helpful to know what he or she considers to be of primary importance.
Musical emphasis may be created by duration, change and extremes. When emphases are coordinated to help illuminate musical structure, rhetorical reinforcement is created.
Music is a time-art: Therefore, if you want to emphasize something in a piece of music, make it last. The longer something is before the listeners’ ears, the greater the importance it assumes.
The ends of phrases in this Bach Chorale are emphasized through duration.
Duration is used to emphasize the words “Rote fürßtliche Rubine” in this movement from Arnold Schoenberg’s Pierrot Lunaire.
Repetition creates a durational emphasis. As in the Bach Chorale above, the ends of phrases are emphasized in Chopin’s Prelude in A-Major, only this time the chords are repeated rather than held.
Repetition is used to create two powerful durational emphases in this excerpt from Igor Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring.
Through repetition and other means of prolongation, durational emphasis can span a whole section of even an entire composition. Marriage is a form of durational emphasis: A favored relationship outlasts passing acquaintances. Similarly, in a piece of music, that which endures has a priority over that which is fleeting. A melodic idea, a rhythmic pattern, a particular texture all may be sustained throughout an entire work.
A rhythmic pattern is prolonged throughout Frederic Chopin’s Piano Prelude in c-minor.
In the third of Elliott Carter’s Eight Etudes and a Fantasy, a single chord is held throughout the entire piece. The instruments constantly shift so that the chord is never voiced the same way twice. Nevertheless, throughout the subtle surface motions, one sound is clearly emphasized by duration.
When listening to music, concentrate on what is most persistent. That which lasts longest is most essential; everything else is supporting. In a non-verbal, time-dependent art form, duration is the composer’s primary means of emphasis.
Change is a second way of creating emphasis. We change into our pajamas to indicate we’re ready to go to sleep. We all notice when the weather changes. If the lights go out, it will catch your attention. If the crowd noise suddenly rises at a sporting match, you will want to know what happened. Likewise, in music, a change—of register, texture, density, speed, dynamic, etc.—will create an emphasis.
In the Berlioz: Requiem, the text “Hosanna in excelsis ” is first sung by high voices and instruments. When low voices and instruments enter, the change in register creates an emphasis.
Similarly, in Kristof Penderecki’s Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima, each string entrance is emphasized by a change in register.
The greater the change, the greater the emphasis. In the Finale of Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 2, the change in density is sudden and dramatic.
In “Danse de la fureur” from Olivier Messaien’s Quartet for the End of Time, a sudden change in dynamics creates a strong emphasis.
The longer a particular state has been maintained, the greater the emphasis of the change.
The opening of Alfred Schnittke’s Concerto Grosso No. 1 begins with spare sounds played on the prepared piano (a piano with objects inserted inside the instrument to make its pitch more undefined). The solo violins enter quietly. But after such a long introduction, a well-marked emphasis is created by the change of instrumentation.
Extremes are another powerful means of emphasis: A moment of silence stresses the solemnity of a memorial service; blaring sirens alert us to the dangers of a fire. A solitary figure on the street highlights the late hour; a standing-room only crowd draws attention to a show’s success.
Musical extremes include fastest and slowest, longest and shortest, highest and lowest, loudest and softest, densest and most spare.
Beethoven’s Violin Concerto begins with the following melody.
Later, the soloist emphasizes the melody by playing it in an extremely high register.
Gyorgy Ligeti’s Desordre presents a melody in the upper register, echoed in the low.
The melody is particularly emphasized when both of the pianist’s hands play in a very high register.
The longer an extreme is maintained, the more emphatic it is.
An emphasis on its own may catch our attention. When several emphases join together to mark an important structural moment, it creates a stronger accentuation that we will term rhetorical reinforcement.
Consider the relation between the film and score in a conventional Hollywood film: The role of score is to support the action. The score helps to underline significant moments in the film by being synchronized with them. If you’re familiar with 007 films, you know who appears on screen at the end of this sound-clip:
When James Bond has appeared, there was a change of texture, a steady pulse was established and new instruments entered. The film and music joined together to create a united emphasis. By virtue of its compounding of emphases, rhetorical reinforcement promotes clarity.
Opera and ballet often have a similar relationship between narrative and music.
The overture of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Don Giovanni opens with stark chords.
As the stage action begins, Don Giovanni murders the Commendatore, the father of one of his lovers. Many scenes later, Don Giovanni and his servant are scheming in a churchyard when the dead man’s statue issues a warning. Don Giovanni blithely invites the statue to dinner.
The Don is celebrating later at the banquet when the statue of the Commendatore suddenly appears before him. The return of the stark chords--not heard since the overture--heralds the Commendatore’s reappearance: Silence, and abrupt changes in texture and speed contribute to the emphasis. Music and narrative are aligned, creating a powerful dramatic
arrival point.
In Francis Poulenc’s Dialogue of the Carmelites, a group of nuns are sentenced to death during the Reign of Terror. As the nuns are marched to the guillotine, they sing a chorale over a march-like rhythmic accompaniment. As each nun is executed, one singer drops out, finally leaving a single voice alone. The march-like rhythm and final female voice drop out with the fall of the blade: Once again, music and narrative are in perfect alignment.
Just as music and story can be coordinated, so too can the various musical dimensions within an abstract musical work: Emphases created by duration, change and extremes can join together to mark significant landmarks. For instance, listen to the following excerpt from Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5. The excerpt will stop on a particular note. In your opinion, is that note emphasized or not?
Correct!
Incorrect.
No musical training or theory is required to hear that the note is strongly emphasized. Just by ear, it is possible to analyze how the rhetorical reinforcement was created.
- It is the longest note so far.
- It is the highest note so far.
- It is the loudest note so far.
- The timpani and brass enter.
- As the note is held, there is a dramatic change in texture from full orchestra to the violins alone.
By aligning emphases of duration, register, dynamics and orchestration, Beethoven has used a compounding of emphases to stress the arrival pitch. The pitch’s importance is impossible to miss, because Beethoven has put so much musical muscle behind it.
Rhetorical reinforcement is frequently used to highlight the beginning of a new section or the return of an important passage. Listen to the main theme of the first movement of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2.
We will now fast forward to later in the movement. Do you recognize the return of the opening? What rhetorically reinforces it?
After an intense flurry of activity, the rhythm suddenly stopped. The texture and dynamics changed. The musical dimensions shifting in coordination signaled that an important formal arrival was taking place.
The Finale of Bartok’s Concerto No. 1 begins with the following explosive theme.
Once again, we will fast forward to later in the movement. Once again, do you recognize the return of the opening? What rhetorically reinforces it?
Once again, a compounding of emphases marked the return: The rhythm stopped; there was a loud cymbal crash, followed by a dramatic change in volume and texture. Rhetorical reinforcement has created an unmistakable formal landmark.
When extremes reinforce each other, they create a particularly strong emphasis.
In his Symphony in D, Cesar Franck uses extremes of volume and density to emphasize two appearances of his main theme. The theme is initially played softly and sparely.
It returns later, this time played loudly by the full orchestra.
Similarly, in Rituel, Pierre Boulez introduces his primary theme in the solo oboe, with a sparse accompaniment.
Later, the theme echoes between different instrumental groups, in a prolonged statement made powerful by is massive density and loud volume.
When the greatest number of extremes coincides, a climax is created. A climax is the “most of the mosts:” It represents a work’s maximum emphasis.
The Finale of Igor Stravinsky’s The Firebird begins with the following theme:
Stravinsky brings the work to a close by using maximum repetition, volume, density and speed—both fast and slow--to create a majestic emphasis.
A climax typically highlights that which is most essential: It gives you the most direct, powerful statement of a work’s main idea.
In Alban Berg’s opera Wozzeck, the beleaguered soldier Wozzeck becomes convinced of his wife’s infidelity. He lures his wife to a deserted lake and stabs her. Throughout the scene, as Wozzeck is contemplating his wife’s
murder, a fixed pitch hovers perpetually in the background. After Wozzeck has slain his wife, Berg creates one of the most
spectacular and climactic rhetorical reinforcements in music history: The fixed pitch swells in intensity until it consumes the entire orchestra. Emphases of duration, volume, register and density are all joined together. That which is most essential is given its strongest emphasis.
When a player for the home team hits a home run, the crowd rises to its feet cheering, music plays, the scoreboard flashes a replay: Strong rhetorical reinforcement occurs. But if a player for the visiting team hits a home run, the stadium is quiet: No one cheers, no sirens go off, no replays are shown. The fans refuse to acknowledge that an important event has occurred. There is an absence of rhetorical reinforcement.
Such equanimity is crucial when you play cards: If you are dealt four aces, it is important to maintain a “poker face,” betraying no hint of your good fortune.
Similarly, in music, it is possible for the rhetorical reinforcement to be weak or absent.
Listen to the opening of Schubert’s Quintet in C for two violins, viola and two cellos.
Once again, we will fast forward to later in the movement. Do you recognize the return?
You may have hesitated this time. Why? This time, the rhetorical reinforcement is much less emphatic.
At the opening, the strings move together in very slow values.
At the return, the instruments should change speed, texture and dynamic together. But the first violin does not cooperate! Instead, it continues with its pattern from the previous section. Thus, a united emphasis does not take place: The first violin is out-of-phase with the other instruments, creating a weaker acknowledgment of the form.
Whereas strong rhetorical reinforcement promotes clarity, weak or absent rhetorical reinforcement creates ambiguity. The degree of rhetorical reinforcement is one of the strongest measures of compositional intent. Schubert could have created a strongly articulated return. However, he chose to maintain a “poker face,” making the return less obvious. Why? This question can become a point-of-entry into a more in-depth study of the piece.
Climaxes depend on coordination between the musical dimensions. As a result, highly unrhetorical music will tend not to have a climax: The different dimensions are too out-of-phase from one another to create a clear structural alignment. In Morton Feldman’s Why Patterns?, the three players—flute, glockenspiel and piano—are instructed to proceed independently through the score. The synchronization of the players varies from one performance to the next; each time, the combination of the parts is unique. Under such conditions, rhetorical reinforcement and a reliable climax are impossible to produce. Feldman related this to the absence of perspective in Abstract Expressionist art: He wrote of “flattening the aural canvas” so that it lacked rhetorical peaks.
Duration, change and extremes are primary ways of creating emphasis in a musical composition. Being alert to such emphases--how they are created and what they are signaling—helps you to recognize significant musical events. When emphases are aligned to signal a formal landmark, rhetorical reinforcement is created. Strong rhetorical reinforcement promotes clarity; weak or absent rhetorical reinforcement promotes ambiguity.
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Musical Examples
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J.S. Bach, Chorale: “Das Wort sie sollen lassen stahn” from Cantata: Ein feste Burg ist under Gott
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Arnold Schoenberg, “Raub” from Pierrot Lunaire
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Frederic Chopin, Prelude in A-Major
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Igor Stravinsky, The Rite of Spring
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Frederic Chopin, Piano Prelude in c-minor
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Elliott Carter, Eight Etudes and a Fantasy, III
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Hector Berlioz, “Agnus Dei” from Requiem
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Kryzsztof Penderecki, Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima
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Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Symphony No. 2, IV
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Olivier Messiaen, “Danse de la fureur” from Quartet for the End of Time
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Alfred Schnittke, Concerto Grosso No. 1
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Ludwig van Beethoven, Violin Concerto, I, melody
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Ludwig van Beethoven, Violin Concerto, I, emphasis of the melody
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Gyorgy Ligeti, Désordre from Etudes, Book I, melody
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Gyorgy Ligeti, Désordre from Etudes, Book I, emphasis of the melody
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John Barry, Goldfinger
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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Don Giovanni, Overture
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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Don Giovanni, Act III
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Francis Poulenc, Dialogue of the Carmelites
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Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, I
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Ludwig van Beethoven, Symphony No. 2, I, main theme
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Ludwig van Beethoven, Symphony No. 2, I, return of the opening theme
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Bela Bartok, Concerto No. 1, theme
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Bela Bartok, Concerto No. 1, return to the opening idea
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Cesar Franck, Symphony in D, II, initial main theme
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Cesar Franck, Symphony in D, III, return of the theme
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Pierre Boulez, Rituel, primary theme
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Pierre Boulez, Rituel, echoing theme
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Igor Stravinsky, “Dissolution of Kashchei’s Palace “ from The Firebird, theme
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Igor Stravinsky, “Dissolution of Kashchei’s Palace “ from The Firebird, closing
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Alban Berg, Wozzeck, Act III, Scene 2
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Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, opening
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Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, return of the opening
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Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, slow opening
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Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, changes in the return
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Morton Feldman, Why Patterns?
J.S. Bach, Chorale: “Das Wort sie sollen lassen stahn” from Cantata: Ein feste Burg ist under Gott
J.S. Bach, Chorale: “Das Wort sie sollen lassen stahn” from Cantata: Ein feste Burg ist under Gott
x
L’Oiseau Lyre 455 706-2 — Joshua Rikkin, conductor; The Bach Ensemble
Arnold Schoenberg, “Raub” from Pierrot Lunaire
Arnold Schoenberg, “Raub” from Pierrot Lunaire
x
Koch 310 117 — Barbara Sukowa, Schoenberg Ensemble, Reinbert de Leeuw
Frederic Chopin, Prelude in A-Major
Frederic Chopin, Prelude in A-Major
x
Deustche Grammophon 431 584-2 — Martha Argerich, piano
Igor Stravinsky, The Rite of Spring
Igor Stravinsky, The Rite of Spring
x
Deutsche Grammophon 435 769-2 — Pierre Boulez; Cleveland Orchestra
Frederic Chopin, Piano Prelude in c-minor
Frederic Chopin, Piano Prelude in c-minor
x
Deutsche Grammophon 431 584-2 — Martha Argerich, piano
Elliott Carter, Eight Etudes and a Fantasy, III
Elliott Carter, Eight Etudes and a Fantasy, III
x
Boston Skyline BSD 137 — New York Woodwind Quintet
Hector Berlioz, “Agnus Dei” from Requiem
Hector Berlioz, “Agnus Dei” from Requiem
x
RCA RD86210 — Charles Munch; Boston Symphony, New England Conservatory Chorus
Kryzsztof Penderecki, Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima
Kryzsztof Penderecki, Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima
x
Vienna Modern Masters 3010 — Szymon Kawalla, conductor; Polish Radio and Television Orchestra
Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Symphony No. 2, IV (NaN:NaN)
Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Symphony No. 2, IV (NaN:NaN)
x
Geoffrey Simon, conductor; London Symphony Orchestra
Olivier Messiaen, “Danse de la fureur” from Quartet for the End of Time
Olivier Messiaen, “Danse de la fureur” from Quartet for the End of Time
x
Deutsche Grammophon 423 247-2 — Luben Yordanoff, violin; Albert Tetard, cello; Claude Desurmont, clarinet; Daniel Barenboim, piano
Alfred Schnittke, Concerto Grosso No. 1
Alfred Schnittke, Concerto Grosso No. 1
x
Col Legno Collage 20510 — Yur Bashmet, director; Ensemble-Soloists; Gidon Kremer & Tatiana Grindenko
Ludwig van Beethoven, Violin Concerto, I, melody
Ludwig van Beethoven, Violin Concerto, I, melody
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Deutsche Grammophon 289 471 349-2 — Anne-Sophie Mutter; New York Philharmonic; Kurt Masur
Ludwig van Beethoven, Violin Concerto, I, emphasis of the melody
Ludwig van Beethoven, Violin Concerto, I, emphasis of the melody
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Deutsche Grammophon 289 471 349-2 — Anne-Sophie Mutter; New York Philharmonic; Kurt Masur
Gyorgy Ligeti, Désordre from Etudes, Book I, melody
Gyorgy Ligeti, Désordre from Etudes, Book I, melody
x
Sony 62308 — Pierre-Laurent Aimard
Gyorgy Ligeti, Désordre from Etudes, Book I, emphasis of the melody
Gyorgy Ligeti, Désordre from Etudes, Book I, emphasis of the melody
x
Sony 62308 — Pierre-Laurent Aimard
John Barry, Goldfinger
John Barry, Goldfinger
x
Capitol 72435-80891-2-7
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Don Giovanni, Overture
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Don Giovanni, Overture
x
Philips 422 541-2 — Sir Colin Davis; Orchestra of Convent Garden
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Don Giovanni, Act III
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Don Giovanni, Act III
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Philips 422 541-2 — Sir Colin Davis; Ingvar Wixell, Luigi Roni, Wladimiro Ganzarolli
Francis Poulenc, Dialogue of the Carmelites
Francis Poulenc, Dialogue of the Carmelites
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Virgin Classics 7 59227 2 — Brigitte Fournier; Orchestre de l’Opéra de Lyon; Kent Nagano
Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, I
Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, I
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Sony 47651 — George Szell, The Cleveland Orchestra
Ludwig van Beethoven, Symphony No. 2, I, main theme
Ludwig van Beethoven, Symphony No. 2, I, main theme
x
Sony 47651 — George Szell, conductor; Cleveland Orchestra
Ludwig van Beethoven, Symphony No. 2, I, return of the opening theme
Ludwig van Beethoven, Symphony No. 2, I, return of the opening theme
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Sony 47651 — George Szell, conductor;
Bela Bartok, Concerto No. 1, theme
Bela Bartok, Concerto No. 1, theme
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Deustche Grammophon 395 323 5 — Maurizio Pollini, piano; Chicago Symphony
Bela Bartok, Concerto No. 1, return to the opening idea
Bela Bartok, Concerto No. 1, return to the opening idea
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Deustche Grammophon 395 323 5 — Maurizio Pollini, piano; Chicago Symphony; Claudio Abbado, conductor
Cesar Franck, Symphony in D, II, initial main theme
Cesar Franck, Symphony in D, II, initial main theme
x
Vanguard 4014 — Sergiu Comissiona; Houston Symphony
Cesar Franck, Symphony in D, III, return of the theme
Cesar Franck, Symphony in D, III, return of the theme
x
Vanguard 4014 — Sergiu Comissiona; Houston Symphony
Pierre Boulez, Rituel, primary theme
Pierre Boulez, Rituel, primary theme
x
Sony 45839 — Pierre Boulez, BBC Symphony Orchestra
Pierre Boulez, Rituel, echoing theme
Pierre Boulez, Rituel, echoing theme
x
Sony 45839 — Pierre Boulez, BBC Symphony Orchestra
Igor Stravinsky, “Dissolution of Kashchei’s Palace “ from The Firebird, theme
Igor Stravinsky, “Dissolution of Kashchei’s Palace “ from The Firebird, theme
x
Sony 101700 — Pierre Boulez; Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Igor Stravinsky, “Dissolution of Kashchei’s Palace “ from The Firebird, closing
Igor Stravinsky, “Dissolution of Kashchei’s Palace “ from The Firebird, closing
x
Sony 101700 — Pierre Boulez; Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Alban Berg, Wozzeck, Act III, Scene 2
Alban Berg, Wozzeck, Act III, Scene 2
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CBS 30852 — Walter Berry, Isabel Strauss; Orchestre de l’Opera Paris; Pierre Boulez, conductor
Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, opening
Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, opening
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Sony 53983 — Isaac Stern, Cho-Liang Lin, violins: Jaime Laredo, viola: Yo-Yo Ma, Sharon Robinson, cellos
Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, return of the opening
Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, return of the opening
x
Sony 53983 — Isaac Stern, Cho-Liang Lin, violins: Jaime Laredo, viola: Yo-Yo Ma, Sharon Robinson, cellos
Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, slow opening
Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, slow opening
x
Sony 53983 — Isaac Stern, Cho-Liang Lin, violins: Jaime Laredo, viola: Yo-Yo Ma, Sharon Robinson, cellos
Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, changes in the return
Franz Schubert, Quintet in C, I, changes in the return
x
Sony 53983 — Isaac Stern, Cho-Liang Lin, violins: Jaime Laredo, viola: Yo-Yo Ma, Sharon Robinson, cellos
Morton Feldman, Why Patterns?
Morton Feldman, Why Patterns?
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New Albion 039 — The California E.A.R. Unit
"Sound Reasoning has been updated (August 2010) with a new set of lessons on hearing harmonies. Here is how the author describes the new materials: "Hearing Harmony" is an introductory course on […]"