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<document xmlns="http://cnx.rice.edu/cnxml" xmlns:md="http://cnx.rice.edu/mdml/0.4" xmlns:m="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:bib="http://bibtexml.sf.net/" id="id7583565">
  <name>Building on Identity through Fragmentary Repetition</name>
  <metadata>
  <md:version>1.1</md:version>
  <md:created>2007/09/16 22:54:46.946 GMT-5</md:created>
  <md:revised>2007/09/24 10:26:19.380 GMT-5</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:maintainerlist>
  
  

  <md:abstract/>
</metadata>
  <content>
    <note>You must have the latest version of Macromedia's free <link src="http://www.macromedia.com/shockwave/download/download.cgi?P1_Prod_Version=ShockwaveFlash&amp;application/x-shockwave-flash">Flash plugin</link> to play the musical
	examples.  </note><para id="id7934920">In <emphasis>Great Expectations</emphasis>, the orphan Pip released from his apprenticeship to his blacksmith stepfather and invited to a life of fortune in London. “I had scant luggage to take with me to London, for little of the little that I possessed was adapted to my new station.” Leaving behind most of his belongings gives Pip the freedom to be <emphasis>transformed</emphasis>. In music, the same objective is accomplished by <term>fragmentary repetition. </term>Fragmentary repetition enables music to evolve rapidly and flexibly.</para>
    <para id="id7594853">In fragmentary repetion, the composer takes only a segment of a musical idea and uses it to create new music. The following excerpts from Beethoven’s <emphasis>Sonata in E-Major, opus 109 </emphasis>and Shostakovich’s <emphasis>Symphony No. 5</emphasis> demonstrate the expressive richness of fragmentary repetition.</para>
    
    <example id="element-431"><para id="element-927">Let us remind ourselves of Beethoven’s theme:</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex1.mp3" id="ex1">
<param name="composer" value="Beethoven"/>
<param name="title" value="Sonata in E-Major, Opus 109"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="BBC 446 934-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Alfred Brendel, piano"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-966"><para id="element-126">In the excerpts that follow, Beethoven uses the theme’s basic short-long motive to create a variety of new textures.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex2.mp3" id="ex2">
<param name="composer" value="Beethoven"/>
<param name="title" value="Sonata in E-Major, Opus 109"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 1"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="BBC 446 934-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Alfred Brendel, piano"/>
</media>

<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex3.mp3" id="ex3">
<param name="composer" value="Beethoven"/>
<param name="title" value="Sonata in E-Major, Opus 109"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 2"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="BBC 446 934-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Alfred Brendel, piano"/>
</media>

<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex4.mp3" id="ex4">
<param name="composer" value="Beethoven"/>
<param name="title" value="Sonata in E-Major, Opus 109"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 3"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="BBC 446 934-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Alfred Brendel, piano"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-80"><para id="element-605">Let us recall as well Shostakovich’s theme: </para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex5.mp3" id="ex5">
<param name="composer" value="Dmitri Shostakovich"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 5, I"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Sony SMK 61841"/>
<param name="performer" value="New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-603"><para id="element-206">Just like Beethoven, Shostakovich uses his basic motive in different contexts. In the first excerpt, the short-long motive is center stage in a passage of anguished intensity.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex6.mp3" id="ex6">
<param name="composer" value="Dmitri Shostakovich"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 5, I"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Sony SMK 61841"/>
<param name="performer" value="New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-261"><para id="element-725">In the second excerpt, the short-long motive anchors a soaring violin melody.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex7.mp3" id="ex7">
<param name="composer" value="Dmitri Shostakovich"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 5, I"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Sony SMK 61841"/>
<param name="performer" value="New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein"/>
</media>
</example><para id="id9087985">It is very common to focus on the <emphasis>head motive</emphasis><term>—</term>the first few notes of a theme--as a source of motivic development. </para>
    
    <example id="element-177"><para id="element-485">The first movement of Franz Schubert’s <emphasis>Symphony No. 8, “Unfinished,”</emphasis> opens with a somber melody played by the cellos.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex8.mp3" id="ex8">
<param name="composer" value="Franz Schubert"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 8, ‘Unfinished’"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Telarc 80608"/>
<param name="performer" value="The Cleveland Orchestra, Christoph von Dohnányi"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-900"><para id="element-554">In the passage that follows, Schubert dwells on the <emphasis>head motive </emphasis>of the theme: He stretches and compresses it and turns it upside down. By the end of the excerpt, he has twisted it quite out of shape: The motive’s rhythm is the same; but instead of rising and falling in a small arch, its contour plunges downwards.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex9.mp3" id="ex9">
<param name="composer" value="Franz Schubert"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 8, ‘Unfinished’"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Telarc 80608"/>
<param name="performer" value="The Cleveland Orchestra, Christoph von Dohnányi"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-246"><para id="element-5">At the close of the movement, Schubert creates another passage out of the <emphasis>head motive</emphasis>. Because the head motive’s repetition is more unmoving and insistent, the mood is more resigned.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex10.mp3" id="ex10">
<param name="composer" value="Franz Schubert"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 8, ‘Unfinished’"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Telarc 80608"/>
<param name="performer" value="The Cleveland Orchestra, Christoph von Dohnányi"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-668"><para id="element-852">The head motive of Arnold Schoenberg’s <emphasis>Fantasy for violin and piano</emphasis> is a repeated note.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex11.mp3" id="ex11">
<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="DG 447 122-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Gidon Kremer, violin; Oleg Massenberg, piano"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-89"><para id="element-804">
Throughout this work, Schoenberg plays the head motive at different speeds. Here is a slow version:
	</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex12.mp3" id="ex12">
<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="DG 447 122-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Gidon Kremer, violin; Oleg Massenberg, piano"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-146"><para id="element-853">Here is a rapid series of repeated notes.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex13.mp3" id="ex13">
<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="DG 447 122-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Gidon Kremer, violin; Oleg Massenberg, piano"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-836"><para id="element-737">Finally, here is a more extended passage in which repeated notes are generously woven into the melodic fabric. This passage acts as a preparation for the transformed return of the primary theme. 
	</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex14.mp3" id="ex14">
<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="DG 447 122-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Gidon Kremer, violin; Oleg Massenberg, piano"/>
</media>
</example><para id="id6312272">In addition to the <emphasis>head motive</emphasis>, other motives can be extracted from a theme. Beethoven’s <emphasis>Symphony No. 6, “Pastorale,” </emphasis>opens with a bucolic melody:</para>
    <example id="element-746"><media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex15.mp3" id="ex15">
<param name="composer" value="Ludwig van Beethoven"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 6, ‘Pastorale,’ I"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value=" DG 437 928-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Vienna Philharmonic, Karl Böhm"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-716"><para id="element-408">The following excerpt is not built from the head motive, but rather from a motive from the <emphasis>interior</emphasis> of the theme. The elaboration of this motive is interrupted twice by more complete statements of the theme.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex16.mp3" id="ex16">
<param name="composer" value="Ludwig van Beethoven"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 6, ‘Pastorale,’ I"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value=" DG 437 928-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Vienna Philharmonic, Karl Böhm"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-87"><para id="element-729">The first movement of Bela Bartok’s <emphasis>Concerto for Orchestra</emphasis> introduces a fleet, agitated theme:</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex17.mp3" id="ex17">
<param name="composer" value="Bela Bartok"/>
<param name="title" value="Concerto for Orchestra, I"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 103116"/>
<param name="performer" value="Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Pierre Boulez"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-260"><para id="element-829">The excerpt that follows features an interior motive of the theme:</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex18.mp3" id="ex18">
<param name="composer" value="Bela Bartok"/>
<param name="title" value="Concerto for Orchestra, I"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 1"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 103116"/>
<param name="performer" value="Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Pierre Boulez"/>
</media>

<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex19.mp3" id="ex19">
<param name="composer" value="Bela Bartok"/>
<param name="title" value="Concerto for Orchestra, I"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 2"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 103116"/>
<param name="performer" value="Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Pierre Boulez"/>
</media>
</example><para id="id7566408">The <emphasis>contour</emphasis> of a theme can also serve as a main identifying feature in dynamic repetition.</para>
    <example id="element-303"><para id="element-828">The theme of the Queen from Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s Suite from <emphasis>Le Coq d’Or</emphasis> is characterized by a gradually sinking contour:</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex20.mp3" id="ex20">
<param name="composer" value="Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov"/>
<param name="title" value="Suite from Le Coq d’Or"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 447 084-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Russian National Orchestra, Mikhail Pletnev"/>
</media>
</example>
    
    <example id="element-404"><para id="element-54">The following excerpts refer to the Queen using the falling contour of her theme.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex21.mp3" id="ex21">
<param name="composer" value="Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov"/>
<param name="title" value="Suite from Le Coq d’Or"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 1"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 447 084-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Russian National Orchestra, Mikhail Pletnev"/>
</media>

<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex22.mp3" id="ex22">
<param name="composer" value="Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov"/>
<param name="title" value="Suite from Le Coq d’Or"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 2"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 447 084-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Russian National Orchestra, Mikhail Pletnev"/>
</media>

<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex23.mp3" id="ex23">
<param name="composer" value="Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov"/>
<param name="title" value="Suite from Le Coq d’Or"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 3"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 447 084-2"/>
<param name="performer" value="Russian National Orchestra, Mikhail Pletnev"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-164"><para id="element-717">The main theme of the fourth movement of Bartok’s <emphasis>Music for Strings, Percussion and Celeste</emphasis> has a “sawtooth” shape:</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex24.mp3" id="ex24">
<param name="composer" value="Béla Bartok"/>
<param name="title" value="Music for Strings, Percussion and the Celeste, IV"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Arte Nova Classics 277600"/>
<param name="performer" value="SWR Symphony Orchestra, Zoltán Peskó"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-71"><para id="element-621">Bartok later constructs a new, more poised theme that mimics the main theme’s zig-zag motion.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex25.mp3" id="ex25">
<param name="composer" value="Béla Bartok"/>
<param name="title" value="Music for Strings, Percussion and the Celeste, IV"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Arte Nova Classics 277600"/>
<param name="performer" value="SWR Symphony Orchestra, Zoltán Peskó"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-794"><para id="element-413">The following two passages also allude to the main theme by echoing its contour.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex26.mp3" id="ex26">
<param name="composer" value="Béla Bartok"/>
<param name="title" value="Music for Strings, Percussion and the Celeste, IV"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 1"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Arte Nova Classics 277600"/>
<param name="performer" value="SWR Symphony Orchestra, Zoltán Peskó"/>
</media>

<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex27.mp3" id="ex27">
<param name="composer" value="Béla Bartok"/>
<param name="title" value="Music for Strings, Percussion and the Celeste, IV"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 2"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Arte Nova Classics 277600"/>
<param name="performer" value="SWR Symphony Orchestra, Zoltán Peskó"/>
</media>
</example><para id="id10316244">The theme can also be identified by a <emphasis>rhythmic motive.</emphasis> Franz Joseph Haydn’s <emphasis>String Quartet in d-minor</emphasis> begins with the following melody:</para>
    <example id="element-683"><media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex28.mp3" id="ex28">
<param name="composer" value="Franz Joseph Haydn"/>
<param name="title" value="String Quartet in d-minor, Opus 76, No. 2, I"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="ASV DCA 1076"/>
<param name="performer" value="The Lindsays"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-926"><para id="element-848">The melody begins with four equal, long values. Haydn extracts this rhythmic motive and uses it throughout the movement. In the following excerpts, the texture, harmony and melodic contour all are varied; the rhythmic pattern remains the unifying feature.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex29.mp3" id="ex29">
<param name="composer" value="Franz Joseph Haydn"/>
<param name="title" value="String Quartet in d-minor, Opus 76, No. 2, I"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 1"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="ASV DCA 1076"/>
<param name="performer" value="The Lindsays"/>
</media>

<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex30.mp3" id="ex30">
<param name="composer" value="Franz Joseph Haydn"/>
<param name="title" value="String Quartet in d-minor, Opus 76, No. 2, I"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 2"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="ASV DCA 1076"/>
<param name="performer" value="The Lindsays"/>
</media>

<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex31.mp3" id="ex31">
<param name="composer" value="Franz Joseph Haydn"/>
<param name="title" value="String Quartet in d-minor, Opus 76, No. 2, I"/>
<param name="comments" value="Example 3"/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="ASV DCA 1076"/>
<param name="performer" value="The Lindsays"/>
</media>


</example>
    <example id="element-800"><para id="element-245">The Finale of Dmitri Shostakovich’s <emphasis>Symphony No. 5</emphasis> begins with a rousing theme:</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex32.mp3" id="ex32">
<param name="composer" value="Dmitri Shostakovich"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 5, IV"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Sony SMK 61841"/>
<param name="performer" value="New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-277"><para id="element-715">The theme’s head motive is as follows:</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex33.mp3" id="ex33">
<param name="composer" value="Dmitri Shostakovich"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 5, IV"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Sony SMK 61841"/>
<param name="performer" value="New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein"/>
</media>
</example>
    <example id="element-791"><para id="element-56">Towards the end of the movement, Shostakovich strips away the melodic contour of the head motive, reducing it to its rhythm. </para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/fragmentaryrepetition/ex34.mp3" id="ex34">
<param name="composer" value="Dmitri Shostakovich"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 5, IV"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Sony SMK 61841"/>
<param name="performer" value="New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein"/>
</media>
</example><para id="id7506762">In Philip Dick’s futuristic story <emphasis>Paycheck</emphasis>, an amnesia-stricken man retrieves an envelope he has left for himself. Inside is a strange collection of objects: “A ticket stub. A parcel receipt. A length of fine wire. Half a poker chip.. A bus token...” What do they have to do with his life? Gradually, he realizes that his younger self had seen into the future and planted these items to enable him to escape from ruthless pursuers. “ I must have looked ahead, seen what was coming. The SP (Security Police) picking me up. I must have seen that, and seen what a piece of thin wire and a bus token would do—if I had them with me at the exact moment.” From these bits and pieces, he reassembles his identity.</para>
    <para id="id6287824"><term>Fragmentary repetition</term> is to a listener what the bag of the possessions is to Dick’s protagonist: It refreshes the listener’s memory while driving the music forward and generating suspense.</para>
    <section id="id-236654361454">
      <name>The Shift from Foreground to Background</name>
      
      <para id="id7594919">Protagonists are not always the center of attention; sometimes, they slip into the background. “It was pleasant and quiet, out there with the sails on the river passing beyond the earthwork...Whenever I watched the vessels standing out to sea with their white sails spread, I somehow thought of Miss Havisham and Estella; and whenever the light struck aslant, afar off, upon a cloud or sail or green hillside or water-line, it was the same.”</para>
      <para id="id9605433">Similarly, in music, one way to sustain musical material is by shifting it into a supporting role.</para>
      
      
      <example id="element-945"><para id="element-994">Mahler’s <emphasis>Symphony No. 6</emphasis> opens with a martial rhythm and an assertive theme introduced by the strings and brass.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/backgroundidentity/ex1.mp3" id="ex35">
<param name="composer" value="Gustav Mahler"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 6, I"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 103409"/>
<param name="performer" value="Vienna Philharmonic, Pierre Boulez"/>
</media>
</example>
      <example id="element-718"><para id="element-844">In the excerpt that follows, Mahler isolates a fragment of the theme: </para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/backgroundidentity/ex2.mp3" id="ex36">
<param name="composer" value="Gustav Mahler"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 6, I"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 103409"/>
<param name="performer" value="Vienna Philharmonic, Pierre Boulez"/>
</media>
</example>
      <example id="element-913"><para id="element-758">Played by plucked strings, the motivic fragment accompanies the woodwinds is an evocative passage.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/backgroundidentity/ex3.mp3" id="ex37">
<param name="composer" value="Gustav Mahler"/>
<param name="title" value="Symphony No. 6, I"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="Deutsche Grammophon 103409"/>
<param name="performer" value="Vienna Philharmonic, Pierre Boulez"/>
</media>
</example>
      
      <example id="element-249"><para id="element-879">We recall the opening theme of the second movement of Maurice Ravel’s <emphasis>String Quartet, </emphasis>played by plucked strings.</para>
<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/backgroundidentity/ex4.mp3" id="ex38">
<param name="composer" value="Maurice Ravel"/>
<param name="title" value="String Quartet"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="CBS MPK 44843"/>
<param name="performer" value="Budapest String Quartet"/>
</media>
</example><example id="element-70"><para id="element-845">Midway through the movement, the theme recedes into the background: Slowed down and played only by one instrument, it accompanies a lyrical melody. Then, like someone rushing back into the room, the theme speeds up and gets louder, gradually returning to prominence.</para>

<media type="audio/mpeg" src="http://music.cnx.rice.edu/Brandt/backgroundidentity/ex5.mp3" id="ex39">
<param name="composer" value="Maurice Ravel"/>
<param name="title" value="String Quartet"/>
<param name="comments" value=""/>
<param name="total-time" value=""/>
<param name="label-number" value="CBS MPK 44843"/>
<param name="performer" value="Budapest String Quartet"/>
</media>
</example>
    </section>
    <section id="id-931417993093">
      <name>Conclusion</name>
      <para id="id9955464">Is there any <emphasis>one</emphasis> factor that must be maintained to sustain musical identity? No. We have seen examples where the melody changed, the harmony changed, the rhythm changed, the instrumentation changed. Musical ideas are very malleable.</para>
      <para id="id5321698">The more aspects of the original material that are preserved, the stronger its identity is maintained. The fewer the aspects of the original material that are preserved or the more fragmentary the repetition, the farther the music moves away from its original form.</para>
      <para id="id7995235">Writers create complex characters by making their behavior multi-faceted and well motivated. Through <emphasis>dynamic repetition</emphasis>, composers are able to create musical personalities with a similar suppleness and depth.</para>
    </section>
  </content>
</document>
