Webern and Atonality - The Path From The Old Aesthetic
Webern and Atonality - The Path From The Old Aesthetic
Webern and Atonality - The Path From The Old Aesthetic
Arnold Whittall
The Musical Times, Vol. 124, No. 1690. (Dec., 1983), pp. 733-737.
Stable URL:
http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0027-4666%28198312%29124%3A1690%3C733%3AWAATPF%3E2.0.CO%3B2-G
The Musical Times is currently published by Musical Times Publications Ltd..
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at
http://www.jstor.org/about/terms.html. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained
prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in
the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use.
Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at
http://www.jstor.org/journals/mtpl.html.
Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed
page of such transmission.
The JSTOR Archive is a trusted digital repository providing for long-term preservation and access to leading academic
journals and scholarly literature from around the world. The Archive is supported by libraries, scholarly societies, publishers,
and foundations. It is an initiative of JSTOR, a not-for-profit organization with a mission to help the scholarly community take
advantage of advances in technology. For more information regarding JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
http://www.jstor.org
Fri Nov 23 18:24:47 2007
1962),
1964), 104
(Vienna, 1960), Eng, trans., The Parh ro rhe A-eew Music, ed. \Y'. Reich (Bryn Mawr,
1963)
op cit (1963), 42
op cit, 18
(b)
A B flat
A B flat
(4 A
A flat
E flat
A flat
E flat
(d) A A sharp G sharp
(4
E flat
1 2
3
4
D C sharp
D C sharp E F C F sharp B
C
B
C sharp E
C G flat
G
5 6
7 8 9 10
11 12
l1
l 3 The Srruciure of Aronai Music (New Haven and London, 1973), 126 - 31
work: hence the power ofthe Schenkerian concept of tonality, in which substructure is the purest kind of structure.
T o interpret, and therefore to analyse, is not just to describe,
but to categorize, and it may be, to reiterate a formulation
made above, that an atonal composition can be usefully
analysed through the demonstration ofcontrasting categories
- through polarities rather than centralities. (The relatively new techniques associated with the application of
semiotics to musical analysis may eventually prove to be
ofvalue here, in view of their concern with all those features
that contribute to the textural character and structural
significance of an event.14)
Webern's op.7 no.3 can provide a relatively simple model
for the analysis of polarities, not least because it is not one
of those early 20th-century works which inhabit a twilight
world between 'tonal' and 'atonal'. Anyone who looks hard
enough for evidence of residual tonal features will probably
be able to find them in any piece: but to my ears the recurrences of A and the placement of elements fundamental to
an A tonality in op.7 no.3 are simply not organized in ways
to suggest that Webern wished to create such associations.
They are stronger in other - later - pieces, such as the
op.12 songs, but that is another story.
Any composition of any period for violin and piano is likely
to exploit the evident and substantial differences between
the instruments, and op.7 no.3 is no exception, despite the
uniformity ofthe extremely soft dynamics. And at least one
other of the basic textural polarities evident in the piece could
equally well be present in a tonal composition: that involving 'sustaining' and 'punctuating' elements. Table 2 points
TABLE 2
Segtnenr
(a) violin sustains a single note
piano sustains: a legato statement
(b)
In RH
(a')
(e)
(c)
up the distinctions. This analysis, using only minimal verbal description, focusses on the superimposition and succession of surface events. It is so laid out that only the final
segment (e) involves one instrument alone, and this stresses,
in the simplest possible way, the sense in which the piece
may be said to end with its strongest contrast. Table 3,
describing further polarities, pursues this matter in relation to the registral and rhythmic profiles of the five
segments.
Although Table 3 does not seek to divorce the final segment from all connection with its predecessors it should by
735
Segrnenr
(a) Both instruments have single pitches close together. (This A and B flat
form the central 'axis' between the highest and lowest notes used In the
plece. T h e highest is the piano E In b.6, the lowest the piano E flat in
b.12. There 1s no evldence of consisent mirror-symmetry.)
(b) T h e piano l ~ n ebegins to ascend, without repeating pitches, and the
violin to be reduced to a subord~naterole.
(c) T h e piano employs a very wide span. T h e vlolin part, deriving From its
Four notes In (b), is relat~velyregular in rhythm, perslstent, but enclosed
by the piano lines.
(4 Thls can be seen as a varied reversal of the roles of (a), the piano sustaining and the violin punctuating within a relatively narrow reglstral span.
(e) An 'inversion' of (4 to the extent that a single, sustained event is underpinned by a double, punctuating event.
NEW IN
FABER PAPERBACKS
Anatomy of the Orchestra
NOKRIAN IIISI, h1.4K
.4 highly-praised treatise on orchestral practice
written not just for students and professional
musicians b i ~ for
t e v e n o l i e interested in the
performance of orchestral nlusic. 'It tells V ~ L. I.all
.
those important things that the score and the
textbooks on orchestration don't tell vou' (Michael
Oliver reviewing the hardback edition for .l.lu.sic.
llT'ek(~1).528 pages, 403 music examples. 28.95
Structural Functions of
Harmony
..\KNOI,L) S<:HOI:NBEK<;
T h e first Faber Paperback edition of Schoenberg's
last completed theoretical ~ v o r k ,this book sets out
his final thoughts on the subject of classical and
romantic harmony and provides a valuable key to
the development of musical struct~ireover the last
two hundred and fifty years. 224 pages, copious
music examples. 23.05
anti ~oming~/lo?i+/y
Percussion Instruments
and their History
JAXIES B1,AL)ES
.4 reissue in paperback of James Blades's f i m o ~ ~ s
\vork, revised and updated by the author. 511
pages, numerous illustrations. 21.5.00
Arnold Schoenbergl
Wassily Kandinsky
Ixtters, Pictures and Documents
ISdited 11)- JI.:121<NA HAHI,-KOCH
7k/t1,s/ur~(/
411 .Johtl
(,'raz;fbrd
.A correspondence, most of rvhich now appears in
I<nglish for the first tirne, that is crucial for
ilnderstanding the n o r k of 110th these influential,
i n n o ~ . a t o nartists. 208 pages, 36 illustrations (23 in
colour). 27.9.5 (AILsoit/ h~r(/h((~k,
PI%Y fI.S.00)
(,I.
if
Mireille Revisited
Gounod's 'Mireille' is
revived by the E N 0 at the
Coliseum this month
Steven Huebner
Charles Gounod's career as an opera composer was marked
by some of the greatest successesbfthe 19th-century French
repertory and by some of its most abysmal failures. Whereas
Faust, first performed at the Thi.itre Lyrique in 1859, went
on to garner an international audience, such long-forgotten
efforts as La nonne sanglante (1854) or Polyeucte (1878) belong
among the unfortunate works that received the fewest performances at the 0pi.ra in the last century and have never
been revived. Even the initial success of a Faust or a Romio
et Juliette (1867) did not preclude modifications for
revivals. So when a work that had a poor reception on its
premiere was given a second or even a third chance, it is
not surprising that the upheavals effected by Gounod were
almost always massive. Except for his first opera, Sapho
(1851), Mireille (1864) has had the most turbulent history
ofthe works in this category. But unlike most ofthese operas,
it eventually obtained a place in the repertory and is now
the third most frequently performed of Gounod's operas.
It was in a version that featured, among other changes,
a reduction of the o ~ e r a ' sdimensions from five acts to three,
with the attendan;removal of more than a quarter of the
original music, the conflation of two subsidiary roles (Taven
and Vincenette),
,, the addition of an ariette in the manner
of the Faust Jewel Song, and the replacement of the tragic
ending with one in which the heroine suddenly recovers
from sunstroke, that Mireille first gained favour in a production at the Opera Comique in 1889. Between this revival
and the first rather poorly received performances at the
Theitre Lyrique from March to May 1864, the opera under-
ii, 220
(Paris,191 I),
http://www.jstor.org
LINKED CITATIONS
- Page 1 of 1 -
This article references the following linked citations. If you are trying to access articles from an
off-campus location, you may be required to first logon via your library web site to access JSTOR. Please
visit your library's website or contact a librarian to learn about options for remote access to JSTOR.
[Footnotes]
14
NOTE: The reference numbering from the original has been maintained in this citation list.