2016 Lahan Charles Dissertation
2016 Lahan Charles Dissertation
2016 Lahan Charles Dissertation
GRADUATE COLLEGE
A DOCUMENT
Degree of
By
BY
______________________________
Dr. Jane Magrath, Chair
______________________________
Dr. Paula Conlon
______________________________
Dr. Barbara Fast
______________________________
Dr. Judith Pender
______________________________
Dr. Frank Riddick
Copyright by CHARLES B. LAHAN JR. 2016
All Rights Reserved.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
LIST OF FIGURES .......................................................................................................... v
ABSTRACT .................................................................................................................... vi
CHAPTER I: INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY ........................................................ 1
Purpose of the Study ..................................................................................................... 3
Need for the Study ........................................................................................................ 3
Limitations of the Study ............................................................................................... 6
Design and Procedures ................................................................................................. 6
Related Literature ......................................................................................................... 7
CHAPTER II: OVERVIEW OF MANNERISM ........................................................... 11
From Vasari through the Nineteenth Century ............................................................ 12
Twentieth Century Art Historians on Mannerism ...................................................... 21
Mannerism in Music ................................................................................................... 30
Mannerism as a Recurring Stylistic Phenomenon ...................................................... 39
CHAPTER III: ANALYSIS OF BACHS GOLDBERG VARIATIONS ........................ 44
Bach as Mannerist ...................................................................................................... 44
Formulas and Intellectual Constructivism .................................................................. 47
Imitation of Past Styles and Manners ......................................................................... 51
Artificial Intricacy ...................................................................................................... 53
Expressionism and Surrealism ................................................................................... 56
Refinement and Preciosity .......................................................................................... 60
CHAPTER IV: ANALYSIS OF BEETHOVENS DIABELLI VARIATIONS............... 63
Beethoven as Mannerist ............................................................................................. 63
Formulas and Intellectual Constructivism .................................................................. 66
Imitation of Past Styles and Manners ......................................................................... 70
Artificial Intricacy ...................................................................................................... 77
Expressionism and Surrealism ................................................................................... 80
Refinement and Preciosity .......................................................................................... 84
CHAPTER V: ANALYSIS OF LISZTS VARIATIONS
ON A THEME OF BACH, WEINEN, KLAGEN, SORGEN, ZAGEN ............................. 88
Liszt as Mannerist....................................................................................................... 88
Formulas and Intellectual Constructivism .................................................................. 90
Imitation of Past Styles and Manners ......................................................................... 94
Artificial Intricacy ...................................................................................................... 96
Expressionism and Surrealism ................................................................................... 99
Refinement and Preciosity ........................................................................................ 101
CHAPTER VI: SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS ................................................. 104
Suggestions for Further Research ............................................................................. 106
BIBLIOGRAPHY ........................................................................................................ 111
APPENDIX A: IRB RELEASE FORM ....................................................................... 115
APPENDIX B: G. HENLE PUBLISHERS RELEASE ............................................... 116
iv
LIST OF FIGURES
v
ABSTRACT
Mannerism was an artistic style that flourished in the sixteenth century between
the High Renaissance and the emergence of the Baroque era. Originating in Rome and
and El Greco.
Mannerism as an artistic style was not limited to painting and the visual arts.
Mannerism thrived throughout the sister arts as well. Notable examples of Mannerism
can be found in architecture, literature, and music. In music, the Italian madrigal is the
From roughly 1600 until 1900, the dominant critical view of Mannerism was
However, in the early twentieth century, this view began to change as scholars from
across the artistic disciplines began studying Mannerism with renewed interest. A
common goal amongst many of these scholars was to imbue Mannerism with positive
qualities.
proliferated. One such idea that has gained traction across disciplines is that Mannerism
proponent of this idea in the field of music was Canadian musicologist Maria Rika
Maniates.
vi
This document seeks to expand on Maniates arguments concerning recurring
Mannerism and analysis of keyboard works using Maniates criteria for recurring
Mannerism. The keyboard works are J.S. Bachs Goldberg Variations, Ludwig van
vii
CHAPTER I: INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY
Mannerism is a style of art that dominated Western Europe for much of the
sixteenth century. While the term Mannerism originated in the visual arts, Mannerism
is applicable to all branches of art, including literature and music. The style flourished
between the High Renaissance and the emergence of the Baroque era. In painting and
the visual arts, Mannerism is generally dated back to the death of Raphael in 1520 and
lasting until the end of the century. In music, Mannerism is closely linked to the Italian
madrigal. Musicologist Maria Rika Maniates dates the Age of Mannerism in music as
the sixteenth century artist and writer, identified maniera as one of the five qualities
displayed by the best artworks of the Renaissance. To Vasari, maniera meant style or
The Baroque era brought stylistic changes, favoring naturalism and emotional
urgency over stylization and intellectual caprice. In the Baroque era, the connotation
associated with maniera changed from the positive attribute originally intended by
Vasari to a derogatory one. Still today, words like mannered and mannerism carry
the negative meanings that began to be applied to them during the Baroque era.
It is important to remember that words like Gothic and Baroque formerly carried
1
Maria Rika Maniates, Mannerism in Italian Music and Culture, 1530-1630 (Chapel
Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1979), 1.
1
meaning of those terms has changed to neutral or even positive descriptors. A similar
process of revision has been underway in the twentieth century concerning Mannerism.
consistently authors begin by noting the complexity, controversy, and general lack of
agreement on the subject. One of the most controversial and intriguing contentions is
that stylistic evolution is cyclical and that Mannerism is a phase in this cycle. This idea
The greatest proponent of this idea in music was Maria Rika Maniates. In her
article Musical Mannerism: Effeteness or Virility?, she posits five criteria by which to
evaluate the recurrence of musical Mannerism. The five criteria are the domination of
formulas and intellectual constructivism, the exaggerated imitation of past styles and
This document will evaluate three sets of variations for keyboard that display
These pieces are J.S. Bachs Goldberg Variations, Beethovens Diabelli Variations, and
these analyses, the intellectual history of Mannerism from the sixteenth century to the
2
Maria Rika Maniates, Musical Mannerism: Effeteness or Virility?, The Music
Quarterly 57, no. 2 (1971): 278-9.
2
Purpose of the Study
Mannerism.
The first part of the study will present an historical overview of the genesis and
development of Mannerism. From the sixteenth century to the present, the connotations
associated with Mannerism have greatly changed. Originally an art historical term,
Mannerism in the twentieth century has been adopted by various academic fields
including music and literature. Furthermore, Mannerism has been expanded beyond the
confines of the sixteenth century to include other historical eras. Musicologists like
Seaton, Apel, and Maniates contend that Mannerism is a recurring phenomenon within
the arts.
The second part of the study will analyze three major keyboard works written at
different points within the common practice period as examples of historically recurring
Mannerism. The works will be analyzed for stylistic consistencies that are typical of
Mannerism. This study will add to the available literature concerning Mannerism as a
recurring stylistic phenomenon and will provide a novel analysis of major keyboard
works.
questions the use of the term, Mannerism, and its validity amongst the various artistic
disciplines. He writes:
3
Some scholars maintain the term should be used only in referring to
visual works of art, or even just to painting and prints, while others
would apply it to all the arts and even to social phenomena. There is no
question, then, that serious debate on Mannerism is needed; this fact, in
itself, would justify the present volume This book raises, implicitly
and sometimes explicitly, a fundamental question: Is it possibleor
desirableto have valid insights and interpretations of an
interdisciplinary nature?3
In the opinion of this author, the answer to the question posed in The Meaning of
Mannerism is yes.
In addition, the need for the present study is made evident by art historian
music, and interdisciplinary publications. The section of music entries is paltry, only
about two complete pages worth (most of which are in German). This is in comparison
to 29 pages of art related entries and ten pages of literature. Mannerism in music simply
Indeed, though several sources across disciplines mention the possibility that
phenomenon with any specificity and this document depends on her contribution. Yet,
while Maniates discusses recurring Mannerism and lists criteria by which to judge it,
she does not subject any music to analysis. As such, this document will be the first to
3
Franklin Robinson, The Meaning of Mannerism (Hanover: University Press of New
England, 1972), 3.
4
Richard Studing, ed., Mannerism in Art, Literature and Music: a Bibliography (San
Antonio: Trinity Press, 1979), 1.
4
merit and Mannerism is, in fact, a recurring stylistic phenomenon, this document will
provide validation.
disciplines has not always been so specialized. Today, students and scholars often
produces its share of experts, students and scholars alike can benefit from a broader
to art, literature, and music as well as philosophy, aesthetics and criticism. John
Shearman, an art historian, addresses the interdisciplinary issue in his book Mannerism,
century literature and music not only provides illustrations of such similarities but also
reflects a little light back on to the concept of Mannerism in the visual arts.5 Or, if one
prefers the words of literature specialist Ernst Curtius: The historical disciplines will
progress wherever specialization and contemplation of the whole are combined and
interpenetrate. The two require each other and stand in a complementary relation.
To further argue that the approach to this document must take other artistic
disciplines into account, let us imagine the converse in which they are not taken into
consideration. In such a document, the focus would be both narrow and specific:
5
John Shearman, Mannerism (London: Penguin, 1967), 32.
6
Ernst Curtius, European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1967), xxv.
5
Mannerism is a recurring stylistic phenomenon in music history. This would deprive
the reader of valuable historical and stylistic context. Indeed, only a Mannerism expert
could possibly understand writing on such a narrow topic. This necessitates a full
accounting of Mannerism that discusses the style from its intellectual origins with
Three pieces of keyboard music are subjected to analysis using the criteria for
recurring Mannerism developed by Maniates. The three pieces are J.S. Bachs
Theme of Bach, Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen. As will be explained, all three pieces
these pieces represent late examples from the three phases of the common practice
period: the Baroque, the Classical, and the Romantic. While these limitations are
somewhat arbitrary, they will help to facilitate clear comparisons and deductions.
Following the introductory chapter, the second chapter presents an historical overview
of Mannerism. This discussion begins with artist and historian Giorgio Vasaris writing
in the sixteenth century and progresses chronologically until the present day. In
addition, this chapter surveys important ideas about Mannerism by examining the
writing of art historians and musicologists. This discussion culminates with the
6
particular, the writing of Maniates is integral to the following analyses. Maniates
asserts five criteria for the recurrence of Mannerism. These criteria are as follows:
styles and manners, artificial intricacy, expressionistic ecstasy and demonic surrealism,
and refinement and preciosity.7 Chapters three through five present analyses of the
works mentioned above using the criteria developed by Maniates. Chapter six consists
Related Literature
century. Giorgio Vasari, often considered one of the first art historians, is quoted and
analyzed in most works on the subject.8 In particular, the prefaces to the three parts of
his Lives of the Artists are useful for their general information and frequent use of the
Italian word maniera, from which Mannerism gets its name.9 Art historian Liana
Baroque art historian, Giovan Pietro Bellori, wrote a similar work that reflects the
7
Maniates, Musical Mannerism: Effeteness or Virility?, 278-9.
8
Julian Kliemann and Antonio Manno. "Vasari." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online.
Oxford University Press, accessed May 16, 2016.
9
Giorgio Vasari, Lives of the Artists, trans. by Julia and Peter Bondanella (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1991), 1.
10
Liana Cheney, Giorgio Vasaris Prefaces (New York: Peter Lang, 2012), 1.
11 Giovan Pietro Bellori, The Lives of the Modern Painters, Sculptors and Architects,
trans. Alice Wohl, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), 1.
7
As Mannerism was initially used as a term in art history, the writing of various
art historians is pertinent to this document. It is often mentioned that the early twentieth
essay, The Anti-Classical Style, argued that Mannerism was a reactionary movement
against the Classicism of the High Renaissance.12 Sydney Freedberg, in his article
Observations on the Painting of the Maniera, argues that the distinction between the
High Renaissance and Early Mannerism is less distinct than the break that occurs
around 1540.13 Freedberg refers to this mature Mannerist style as the Maniera. Arnold
Hausers book, Mannerism, argues that the stylistic break that happened in 1520 was
caused by a series of historical, religious, and economic crises.14 He calls this break the
crisis of the Renaissance. John Shearmans book, also named Mannerism, finds fault
with Friedlaender and Hauser.15 Shearman argues that Mannerism was neither
reactionary nor born out of crisis. Craig Hugh Smyths essay Mannerism and
classical.16 This is because Mannerist artists frequently copied the most available
ancient (hence Classical) art available to them, Roman sarcophagi from the second to
fourth century. He also points to the similarity between the Maniera style and that of the
late Gothic, suggesting cyclicity. Another work, compiled by Liana Cheney, entitled
Readings in Italian Mannerism, presents the viewpoints of notable scholars (such as the
12
Walter Friedlaender, Mannerism and Anti-Mannerism in Italian Painting (New York:
Schocken Books, 1965), 1.
13
Sydney Freedberg, Observations on the Painting of the Maniera. In Readings in
Italian Mannerism, edited by Liana Cheney, (New York: Peter Lang, 1997), 113-135.
14
Arnold Hauser, Mannerism: The Crisis of the Renaissance and the Origin of Modern
Art (New York: Alfred Knopf, 1965), 1.
15
Shearman, Mannerism, 49.
16
Craig Hugh Smyth, Mannerism and Maniera (Locust Valley: J.J. Augustin Publisher,
1960), 14.
8
ones mentioned above) through a series of essays.17 Her own contribution, Stylistic
Problems in Mannerism and Maniera, provides the reader with a succinct list of
From the field of literature, Curtius European Literature and the Latin Middle
Ages provides a view of Mannerism consistent with this study. The following quote
Curtius writes:
Mannerism has not been given the attention it deserves in the global musical
community. In fact, most of the attention has come from German writers. Yet, several
James Haars essay Classicism and Mannerism in Sixteenth Century Music argues
that Josquin, rather than Palestrina, is the model of High Renaissance Classicism in
music.19 He also examines the purely musical Mannerisms that can be found in Italian
from this chapter are pertinent to the analyses of the later chapters in this document.
17
Liana Cheney, Readings in Italian Mannerism (New York: Peter Lang, 1997), 1.
18
Curtius, European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages, 273.
19
James Haar, Classicism and Mannerism in 16th Century Music. International
Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music 25 (1994): 5-18.
20
Glenn Watkins, Gesualdo: The Man and His Music (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1991), 1.
9
Musicologist Willi Apels article, French Secular Music of the Late Fourteenth-
Century, uses the term Mannerism to describe the rhythmic complexities that
developed toward the end of the Middle Ages.21 Musicologist Douglas Seatons
textbook, Ideas and Styles in the Western Musical Tradition, defines Mannerism as a
recurring stylistic phenomenon that occurs (as Apel also notes) towards the end of a
style period.22 The most prolific writer on the subject of musical Mannerism is Maria
Rika Maniates. Her book, Mannerism in Italian Music and Culture, 1530-1630,23 seeks
to provide a total picture of Mannerism, one that includes art, literature and music. In
21
Willi Apel, French Secular Music of the Late Fourteenth Century. Medieval
Academy of America 55, (1950): 1-39.
22
Douglas Seaton, Ideas and Styles in the Western Musical Tradition (New York:
McGraw-Hill, 2007), 1.
23
Maniates, Mannerism in Italian Music and Culture, 1530-1630, 1.
24
Maria Rika Maniates, Mannerist Composition in Franco-Flemish Polyphony. The
Music Quarterly 52, no. 1 (1966): 17-36.
25
Maniates, Musical Mannerism: Effeteness or Virility?, 270-293.
10
CHAPTER II: OVERVIEW OF MANNERISM
The reader will benefit from a detailed analysis of Mannerism. A context for
understanding Mannerism can be developed through a discussion of the term and its use
in scholarly literature. The problematic nature of the term Mannerism necessitates such
an analysis. Indeed, every contemporary source on the topic contains such a discussion
and references to the primary sources that gave the term its origin. This document
should be no different.
the term was used pejoratively for roughly three hundred years. While viewed more
favorably by twentieth and twenty first century critics, it has yet to completely shed the
negative connotations associated with it. Aside from the changing connotations
initially associated with art history. In the twentieth century, it has been applied to
literature and music. In addition, Mannerism has begun to be used to describe what
some see as a recurring stylistic phenomenon that is not necessarily isolated to the
sixteenth century style that flourished between the High Renaissance and the Baroque
periods.
To address these problems, Chapter II will analyze the term Mannerism and its
use in scholarly sources from the sixteenth century until the present. This analysis will
begin with the most important primary source on the topic, Giorgio Vasaris The Lives
of the Artists. The analysis will continue with Belloris work, reflecting the change in
connotations associated with the term. The writings of twentieth century critics and
historians will then be reviewed to show the changing attitudes towards Mannerism by
11
contemporary audiences. The disciplinary problem will then be examined in the works
of pertinent musicologists. Lastly, works that advocate the use of the term Mannerism
often considered the first important art historian, Vasari was a prominent painter and
architect of the sixteenth century, who lived from 1511-1574 and worked mostly in
Florence and Rome, the centers of Mannerism. His contribution to art history is his
book, The Lives of the Artists, where the origins of Mannerism as a term are found.
Vasaris Lives is divided into three sections, each preceded by a preface. Vasari
states in the preface to the second section: I have divided the artists into three sections
or, shall we say, periods, each with its own recognizably distinct character, running
from the time of the rebirth of the arts to our own times.26 Vasari likens these three
adolescence and maturity. The infancy stage corresponds to the beginning of the
Renaissance and the painting of Giotto, Cimabue and others. The adolescent stage is
represented by later fifteenth century artists like Masaccio, Botticelli, and Donatello.
The mature stage begins with Leonardo and reaches a climax with Michelangelo. Each
section contains biographies of the individual artists that represent each stage, including
26
Vasari, The Lives of the Artists, 48.
12
Each of the three sections of Lives begins with a preface. It is in these prefaces
that the most salient writing concerning Mannerism can be found.27 This is because the
information in the prefaces is more general than the specific biographies given later. As
Vasari writes: in my biographies I have spent enough time discussing methods, skills,
particular styles, and the reasons for good, superior, or preeminent workmanship so here
I shall discuss the matter in general terms, paying more attention to the nature of the
In an important passage from the preface to the third section of Lives, Vasari
The last of these stylistic qualities, style or maniera, and Vasaris use of the term is of
particular importance to this document as it provides the term still used, Mannerism.
The Italian word that Vasari uses is maniera. Vasari uses the term in three ways:
as a qualitative judgment. For example, the following statement uses the term both as a
27
Cheney, Readings in Italian Mannerism, 11.
28
Vasari, The Lives of the Artists, 48.
29
Ibid., 277.
13
And then the most beautiful style (maniera) comes from constantly
copying the most beautiful things, combining the most beautiful hands,
heads, bodies, or legs together to create from all these beautiful qualities
the most perfect figure possible, and using it as a model for all the
figures in each of ones works; and on account of this, it is said to be the
beautiful style (bella maniera).30
was the first to express the emotions, so that in his pictures one can discern
organism, his use of maniera suggests chronological progress. For example, Vasari does
not use the word in the preface to the first section on the earliest artists of the
Renaissance. The term is used more and more frequently in the prefaces to the second
and third sections as his conception of maniera becomes more evident in the evolving
style. Here, Vasari describes the emergence of Renaissance art as progressing from the
Gothic style: Thus the old Byzantine (Gothic) style was completely abandonedthe
first steps being taken by Cimabue and followed by Giotto and a new manner took its
place: I like to call this Giottos own style, since it was discovered by him and his pupils
and was then generally admired and imitated by everybody He evolved a delicate
style from one which had been rough and harsh.32 The transition from the first period
to the second exhibited a similar progression: Then, in the second period there was
better style (maniera), and a more careful finish and as a result artists cleaned away the
30
Vasari, The Lives of the Artists, 277-278.
31
Ibid., 52-53.
32
Ibid., 53.
14
rust of the old style, along with the stiffness and disproportion characteristic of the
ineptitude of the first period.33 Likewise, in the preface to the third section, Vasari
writes glowingly of his favorite artist, Michelangelo, showing the mature stage of
stylistic development: If their work were put side by side, the heads, hands, arms, and
feet carved by Michelangelo being compared with those made by the ancients, his
would be seen to be fashioned on sounder principles and executed with more grace and
perfection: the effortless intensity of his graceful style (maniera) defies comparison.34
These quotes show that Vasari conceived of stylistic development as improving through
history. Cimabue and Giotto began the rebirth of art from the depths of the Middle
continued to progress through Leonardo and Raphael until a climax was reached with
fundamental problem that Mannerist artists must face: how can art continue to progress
Renaissance art becomes more realistic in its depiction of nature, particularly the human
form, as times moves forward. Vasari excoriates Gothic art for lacking maniera, instead
depicting the human figure with staring eyes, feet on tiptoe, sharp hands, and absence
Renaissance artists improved on this depiction of the human form though there was not
the perfection of finish, because, although they made an arm round and a leg straight,
33
Vasari, The Lives of the Artists, 49.
34
Ibid., 282.
35
Ibid., 52.
15
the muscles in these were not revealed with that sweet and facile grace which hovers
midway between the seen and the unseen, as is the case with the flesh of living
figures.36 The second generation of Renaissance artists began to show in their works,
at the sight of which people ran like madmen to, this new and more lifelike beauty, for
it seemed to them quite certain that nothing better could ever be done.37 The third
Leonardo. Vasari credits Leonardo with having endowed his figures with motion and
breath and all the minutenesses of nature exactly as they are.38 The zenith of this
progression is reached with Michelangelo. This man surpasses and triumphs over not
only all those artists who have almost surpassed Nature but even those most celebrated
ancient artists, modern artists, and even Nature herself.39 Thus, Michelangelos
The previous quote is revealing of the Mannerist attitude because the timeframe
of Vasaris conception of progress does not begin necessarily with the demise of the
Gothic style and end with the High Renaissance of Michelangelo. Vasari sees the
evolution of the Renaissance as also regaining the qualities of the ancients, especially
concerning the imitation of nature in human forms. In the third preface, Vasari lists a
The artisans who followed them succeeded after seeing the excavation of
some of the most famous antiquities mentioned by Pliny: the Laocoon,
the Hercules, the great torso of Belvedere, the Venus, the Cleopatra, the
Apollo, and countless others, which exhibit in their softness and
harshness the expressions of real flesh copied from the most beautiful
36
Vasari, The Lives of the Artists, 279.
37
Ibid., 280.
38
Ibid.
39
Ibid., 281-282.
16
details of living models and endowed with certain movements which do
not distort them but lend them motion and the utmost grace.40
Vasari often mentions that bella maniera, especially regarding the imitation of
nature, can be attained by artists through imitative practice. The progression of the
Renaissance was reached by constantly copying the most beautiful things, combining
the most beautiful hands, heads, bodies, and legs together to create from all these
beautiful qualities the most perfect figure possible.41 In architecture, the architects
were to take measurements from antiquities and study the ground plans of ancient
edifices for the construction of modern buildings.42 Artists of the Renaissance began
by seeking to make their figures more studied and to display in them a greater sense of
design along with the kind of imitation that would achieve a greater similarity to natural
objects, they did not attain that level of perfection which displays even greater
confidence. However, they were moving in the right direction, and their works might
well have been praised in comparison with the works of the ancients.43 These quotes
show that Vasari and his contemporaries were preoccupied with imitation, progress, and
One last element of Vasaris maniera that will be important to this document
tremendous technical facility in his craftsmanship. Indeed, Vasari saw this development
in technical virtuosity in evolutionary terms as well. Whereas those early masters took
six years to paint one panel, our modern masters can paint six in one year, as I can
testify with the greatest confidence both from seeing and from doing and our pictures
40
Vasari, The Lives of the Artists, 279.
41
Ibid., 277-278.
42
Ibid., 278.
43
Ibid., 279.
17
are clearly much more highly finished and perfect than those executed in former times
And alone he has triumphed over ancient artists, modern artists and even
Nature herself, without ever imagining anything so strange or so difficult
that he could not surpass it by far with the power of his most divine
genius through his diligence, sense of design, artistry, judgment, and
grace. And not only in painting and coloring, categories which include
all the shapes and bodies, straight and curved, tangible and intangible,
visible and invisible, but also in bodies completely in the round.45
and difficult. Yet, he overcomes this difficulty through his genius and technique. He
paints his own reflection as he would see it in a convex mirror. In the foreground of the
painting, his right hand, the instrument through which his amazing technical virtuosity
In summary, Vasari is considered the first art historian. Mannerism, a term first
used to describe the visual arts of the sixteenth century, can be traced to his consistent
use of maniera in his book about Renaissance artists. There are a few conclusions that
can be drawn from his usage. First, to Vasari and his contemporaries, maniera was a
improving towards the bella maniera of the High Renaissance. Third, a key component
of this improving maniera was the imitation and the eventual surpassing of Nature.
Fourth, Vasari and his contemporaries were self-consciously preoccupied with their
44
Vasari, The Lives of the Artists, 281.
45
Ibid., 282.
18
place in the historical canon. And, lastly, Vasari saw art as progressing towards
Vasari died in 1574 and Mannerism as a stylistic period began to wane in the
last decades of the sixteenth century. El Greco, often considered Mannerisms last
exponent, died in 1614. In the meantime, a new style began to emerge in Italy starting
around 1585. The artists associated with this emerging style were Caravaggio and
Annibale Carraci. This style would develop into what is still called Baroque.
As the Baroque style emerged, opinions within the art historical community
changed concerning sixteenth century art after the High Renaissance. Put simply,
Vasaris positive notion of maniera became a negative to Baroque critics. These later
critics saw Mannerist art not as evolving logically from the Renaissance masters that
preceded them. In contrast, Mannerist art was seen as devolving away from Renaissance
ideals. This opinion would continue to thrive amongst artists and art historians
An important figure in art history after Vasari is Giovanni Bellori, who lived
from 1613-1696. Like Vasari, he wrote a book called The Lives of the Modern Painters,
Sculptors and Architects, published in 1672. This work shows the change in attitude
reminiscent of Vasari. He uses lofty speech and an evolutionary conception of style that
It was then that painting attained mens greatest admiration and appeared
to have descended from heaven, when the divine Raphael, with the
19
supreme lineaments of art, increased its beauty to sublime heights,
reinstating it in the ancient majesty of all those graces and enriching it
with those merits that once rendered it glorious among the Greeks and
Romans.46
Renaissance and Michelangelo as the beginning of the decline. The following quote
shows this new conception of the sixteenth century along with the changed connotation
But because things below on earth never maintain one same state, and
those that have reached the heights must perforce revert again to falling,
in perpetual alternation, the art that from Cimabue and Giotto had
advanced gradually over the long course of two hundred and fifty years,
was soon seen to decline, and from a queen it became lowly and
common. And so, that blessed age having come to an end, in a short time
every one of its forms vanished; and artists, abandoning the study of
nature, corrupted art with the maniera, by which we mean the fantastic
idea, based on artistic practice and not on imitation. This vice that
destroyed painting began at first to germinate in masters of honored
repute, and took root in the schools that followed; from there it is
incredible to recount the extent to which they degenerated, not only from
Raphael but from the others who initiated the maniera.47
This conception of Mannerism and maniera would begin to change in the first
few decades of the twentieth century. But until then, the concept of Mannerism that
had prevailed in the nineteenth century had scarcely begun to change. The nineteenth
maniera as a vice that had caused the decline of sixteenth century painting, the view
we find in Bellori.48
46
Bellori, The Lives of the Modern Painters, Sculptors and Architects, 71.
47
Ibid.
48
Smyth, Mannerism and Maniera, 2.
20
Twentieth Century Art Historians on Mannerism
Although ignored for much of the previous three hundred years, there was a
resurgence of interest in Mannerism in the early decades of the twentieth century that
has continued to the present. If there is one common theme amongst more recent
Indeed, ideas and arguments on the subject abound. Here is a list of controversial
break from them? What language should we use to refer to this style? Was the
Mannerist style caused by crisis? When did the Age of Mannerism begin and end? Are
there different chronological phases of Mannerism? What were the positive qualities
that sixteenth century artists saw in the art they created? What is the relationship of
Mannerist art to late Gothic or early twentieth century art? To what extent is Mannerism
applicable to other artistic disciplines, especially literature and music? This section will
address some of these questions in a way that shows how Mannerism underwent a
One of the first art historians to reevaluate Mannerism was Walter Friedlaender.
Friedlaender addressed many of the issues listed above. For example, the first essay was
21
pejorative attitude has occurred even with the word manneristic, just as
happened in the cases of the terms Gothic or Baroquea tendency
which seems to indicate a greater and more general understanding of the
positive values of the style.49
against the classical style of the High Renaissance rather than a continuation. He dates
Mannerism as beginning in 1520, with the death of Raphael. He describes the transition
to the Baroque in similar terms in the second essay, The Anti-Mannerist Style. This
view of history is both negativistic and retrospective in character and looks at stylistic
changes as the tendency of a generation to revolt against the principles and teachings
of its fathers and to take up the ideals of its grandfathers.50 Other art historians disagree
Friedlaender also suggested an idea that is crucial to this study: that stylistic
evolution is cyclical. In his essay, he relates Mannerist style with the late Gothic and
current is similar to the attitudes of the late Gothic. The verticalism, the long
addresses the chronology of Mannerism as well as the terminology associated with it.52
Writing in 1965, Freedberg argued that there are two distinct stylistic phases of
Mannerism. The first, lasting from roughly 1520-1540, could be called Early
49
Friedlaender, Mannerism and Anti-Mannerism in Italian Painting, 5-6.
50
Ibid., xvii.
51
Ibid., 10.
52
Freedberg, Observations on the Painting of the Maniera, 187.
22
Freedberg uses the term Maniera (Vasaris maniera with a capitol letter) to describe the
period from 1540-1585 and is represented by artists like Bronzino, Vasari himself, and
Salviati. Disagreeing with Friedlaender, a main argument in his essay is that the
distinction between the High Renaissance and Early Mannerism is less distinct than that
between the High Renaissance and the Maniera. This change concerns imitation. For
High Renaissance artists, the concept of maniera involved the realistic presentation of
nature within a plausible setting combined with an affecting sense of emotion. Maniera
artists, on the other hand, did not look directly to nature. They looked instead to
idealized precedents of art. They imitated works of art from the historical canon that
seemed to perfectly imitate nature rather than try to observe nature directly. For
instance, they might look to a painting by Raphael for a point of imitation. This led to
an abstraction from how things actually appear to the eye and explains the evolution
towards the purposefully artificial and implausible appearance of much Maniera art.
Freedberg explains the idea thusly: Then, to base ones forms on idealizations already
made by others is to take them one step farther from experience of nature, and nearer to
a realm of aesthetic abstraction. The very principles by which the Maniera artist
professed his allegiance to the classical standards compelled him to betray them. 53
Another point that Freedberg makes about the abstraction and stylization of
Maniera artists concerns detail and surface features. Whereas High Renaissance art was
interested in harmonious unity, artists of the Maniera were concerned with the minute
depiction of detail. These details, scrubbed of their realism and imperfections, are
53
Freedberg, Observations on the Painting of the Maniera, 191.
23
painted with a virtuosic technique. Freedberg uses the verb aestheticized to describe
this:
Freedberg makes a case for the positive virtues of Mannerist art. Whereas High
Renaissance art aimed at the unification of meaning, Mannerism fractured this unity
into many different layers of meanings. Indeed, this sophisticated intellectualization was
intended for the most educated of society, those that patronized Mannerist artists:
54
Freedberg, Observations on the Painting of the Maniera, 193.
24
Maniera, the spectator, not the artist, may be regarded as the agent who
affects a synthesis.55
Arnold Hausers Mannerism contends that the stylistic changes that occurred
around 1520 were caused by the crisis of the Renaissance.56 In his book, Hauser
argues that a historical perspective can explain the emergence of Mannerism. Several
distinct crises affected artists in the early sixteenth century. Hauser further explains that
a similar series of crises occurred at the beginning of the twentieth century, linking
this combination:
The crisis and partial disintegration of humanism in Italy set in with the
Reformation in progress in distant Germany, and at home the Roman
Catholic reform movement, foreign invasion, the sack of Rome and the
ensuing chaos, the preparation and progress of the Council of Trent, the
reorientation of trade routes and economic revolution throughout Europe,
and economic crisis in the Mediterranean area. The good relations
between the Church and the humanists were permanently shattered. The
ideas that they spread became more anti-dogmatic and anti-authoritarian,
and an increasing rationalism and a strong anti-intellectual bias existed
side by side.57
55
Cheney, Readings in Italian Mannerism, 129.
56
Hauser, Mannerism, 1.
57
Ibid., 8.
25
as unnaturalistic features, and its rational elements are no less important
than its irrational elements. A proper understanding of Mannerism can be
obtained only if it is regarded as the product of tension between
Classicism and anti-Classicism, naturalism and formalism, rationalism
and irrationalism, sensualism and spiritualism, traditionalism and
innovation, conventionalism and revolt against conformism; for its
essence lies in this tension, this union of apparently irreconcilable
opposites.58
However, John Shearman disagrees both with the notion that Mannerism is
reactionary and also that it was a style born from crisis. Specifically, Shearman
argues that the use of the term Mannerism has become too broad and its definition too
unfocused. For Shearman, maniera, as it was used by Vasari, simply meant style. Here
is Shearmans explanation:
Similarly, Shearman also disputes Hausers claim that Mannerism was caused
flourished in Rome and Florence but never developed in Venice. Yet, Venice was
collapse, and other crises-inducing factors as its two neighbors. Why were Venetian
58
Hauser, Mannerism, 12.
59
Shearman, Mannerism, 22.
60
Ibid., 40.
26
artists immune to the circumstances compelling other artists to embrace Mannerism?
Shearman would answer that crisis had nothing to do with the matter.
Other scholars agree with Shearman and disagree with the conception of
Mannerism as a sudden anti-classical break from the High Renaissance. Craig Hugh
Smyth is one such scholar. Rather than seeing an abrupt break with the Renaissance
tradition around the time of Raphaels death in 1520, Smyth argues there is
particular, Smyth argues that Mannerism could not be a break from High Renaissance
Classicism because the conventions of maniera were influenced by antique (that is,
Classical) relief sculpture. His book Mannerism and Maniera describes in detail how
paintings. These sarcophagi were the most available antique art to artists of the
Renaissance who, in turn, copied and imitated them in their own artworks. Smyth lists
several ways that these ancient relief sculptures prefigured the characteristics of
maniera:
61
Smyth, Mannerism and Maniera, 14.
27
Smyth also argues that Mannerism was not the result of a definitive break from
relief sculpture, had begun to develop much earlier but appeared with increasing
frequency starting around 1520 and culminating at mid-century. Smyth finds Neo-
Gothic and antique elements in Botticelli, a new vocabulary of posture, gesture, and
are the flatness of the figure and its difficult contrapposto. Seen from the maniera
standpoint, the Lazarus was a ground-breaking figure and a perfect model to other
Though Smyth differs with others on the extent that Mannerism deviates from
Classicism, he agrees that there are problems with the term. Smyth argues that
Mannerism should only be used for artworks that demonstrate the fundamentals of
appropriate for one work and not another. He states, maniera is not equally in evidence
in all works, even by the same master. The less so, the less appropriate the term
published in 1997, begins with the assertion that the period called Mannerism has been
62
Smyth, Mannerism and Maniera, 18-19.
63
Ibid., 19.
64
Ibid., 30.
28
and Pre-Baroque in the past. She asserts that the resurgence in interest in sixteenth
century Italian art was likely provoked by trends in early twentieth century art, namely
Expressionism, Cubism, and Surrealism. Studies on these styles indicate the radical
changes that occur in form and content in terms of the use of color for emotional
moods, abstraction and decomposition of the form for artificiality, and esoteric subject
Cheneys essay also ends with perhaps the clearest and shortest description of
and others shows, opinions on Mannerism are numerous and often contradictory.
However, there are a few generalities that can be agreed upon. First, Mannerism as a
historical style developed after the High Renaissance in Rome and Florence and spread
65
Cheney, Readings in Italian Mannerism, 1.
66
Ibid., 7.
29
throughout Europe during the sixteenth century. Maniera, the Italian word for style, was
used by contemporary writers like Vasari to describe a positive quality of this art. From
the Baroque era to the early twentieth century, maniera evolved into a derogatory usage
to describe sixteenth century art after the High Renaissance. In the early twentieth
century, scholars have reexamined Mannerism in terms of its positive qualities yielding
a wide range of views. Some of these conflicting views have been presented here. As
This book will have at least one feature in common with all those already
published on Mannerism; it will appear to describe something quite different
from what all the rest describe. It is as well to be frank about this from the start.
Such is the confusion in our present usage of the term that one perfectly natural
reaction, to be found even among art historians, is that Mannerism does not
exist.67
Mannerism in Music
As a term, Mannerism was first applied to the visual arts by art historians. In the
being applied to other fields. Shearman believes that though problematic, this
transference is not artificial, for equivalents really do exist; and a study of sixteenth
century literature and music not only provides illustrations of such similarities but also
reflects a little light back on to the concept of Mannerism in the visual arts.68
music similarly to the previous discussion of Vasaris writing. Tinctoris, writing in the
the 15th century. After Tinctoris, almost all theorists wrote of the music of their time as
67
Shearman, Mannerism, 15.
68
Ibid., 32.
30
part of a renaissance.69 In general and like Vasari, fifteenth and sixteenth century
musicians and critics viewed the most recently written music as being the best. In the
1550s, Zarlino wrote of Willaert, and later in the 1570s, Vincento Galilei wrote of
Cipriano de Rore as being the greatest living composer. This shows a similar historical
consciousness and linear progression that their contemporary Vasari did in writing of
visual artists.
Mannerism can also be found in the music of the sixteenth century. A prerequisite for
Mannerism is that it must follow a high style. Shearman and Haar write about this
phenomenon in similar terms. Shearman says: True Mannerism was such a thing, and,
since the meaning of the word is that it is extravagantly accomplished, it must have fed
there was a generally recognized moment of classical balance in the early sixteenth
(which) seems clear both from the nature of the music itself and from what
contemporaries thought of it.71 The music itself could be called classically balanced
because of these features: rounded melodic lines, smooth counterpoint with carefully
regulated dissonance, equal melodic interest in all four voices, balanced phrases with
clear points of articulation, and careful attention to the accents and meaning of the text.
As Vasari had Michelangelo, musicians of the sixteenth century also had their
69
Haar, Classicism and Mannerism in 16th Century Music, 9.
70
Shearman, Mannerism, 35.
71
Haar, Classicism and Mannerism in 16th Century Music, 8.
31
writing in 1547, referred to Josquins music as the ars perfecta. In other words, Josquin
represented the High Renaissance for musicians as Michelangelo had for artists.
Art music of the sixteenth century was predominantly vocal. Thus, it is not
surprising that trying to define Mannerism in music would involve the relationship
between text and music. The vehicle for the expression of sixteenth century musical
Mannerism is the madrigal. The Italian madrigal originated in the 1520s (the same time
the first generation of Mannerist painters were flourishing in Rome and Florence). The
madrigal was a secular, vocal composition, usually written for performance by three to
six voices. The poetry of madrigals was written in the Italian vernacular, Petrarch being
the favorite poet of madrigal composers. Haar describes the interdependence of text and
music as a literary Mannerism: the creation of a Manneristic rhetoric in music has been
seen as the result of attempts to give greater verisimilitude and greater expressiveness to
madrigalian verse. Behind these attempts lay a widespread belief in the applicability of
a concept enormously popular in the sixteenth century: imitazione della natura. Music
imitates nature through the medium of words.72 This concept was equally important in
Aside from what he calls a literary Mannerism, the relation of text to music,
Mannerism, even referring to them as painterly. One of these features is the use of
Josquins music, points of imitation often occur at the beginning of important phrases
with the four voices balanced in pairs of two. In the music of Gombert and other later
madrigal composers, these points of imitation are more frequent, more closely spaced,
72
Haar, Classicism and Mannerism in 16th Century Music, 11.
32
and the paired voices disappear in favor of fuller textures. This is a purposeful
ars perfecta .The comparison with the self-conscious elegance, deliberate distortions,
and artifice of painters like Pontormo and Parmigianino in the generation after the death
Haar finds other examples of purely musical Mannerism as well. In the 1530s
and 1540s, there existed in rhythm a tendency to mix shorter values with longer values
producing a fussy declamatory and ornamental style that was inconsistent with the
rhythmic balance of classical polyphony. This was often combined with syncopated
imitative entries. Another musical Mannerism was the development of triadic, almost
chordal writing. The last musical Mannerism that he examines is the use of
chromaticism. Whereas other writers connect this chromaticism with text declamation
and expression, Haar argues that there are examples that are unrelated to the text. He
He concedes that Lassos settings contain some madrigalisms, but on the whole they
Curiously, until the twentieth century, Palestrina was regarded as the standard
bearer of Renaissance polyphonic Classicism. Revisionists like Haar have argued more
Palestrina to Josquin, there are numerous features that suggest a virtuosically rendered
stylization of the earlier style. For example, melodic lines are more predictable and
73
Haar, Classicism and Mannerism in 16th Century Music, 11.
74
Ibid., 12.
33
emphasize chord tones in a way that is tonally cast (as if they were in the major mode).
Palestrina is more pervasive. Phrases are articulated with more overlap and dovetailing.
Text setting is perfect, nearly pedantic as Haar sees it. In other words, Palestrinas
Classicism is based on that of Josquin but includes, in moderate form, all the extensions
Glenn Watkins devotes a whole chapter of his book on Gesualdo to answer The
addresses chronology and labels first. Feeling it overly broad to label the whole of
1400-1600 as the Renaissance, Watkins argues that the period from 1520-1620
(accounting for some years of stylistic overlaps) are sufficiently rich to have inspired
an abundant and diverse literature and possess a clearly perceivable orientation and an
objection to the term and embraces it. He argues that the pejorative connotations of
Mannerism are no different and represent the same stylistic judgments as either
high or late would suggest. Furthermore, it is not the fault of present-day historians
that Renaissance theorists viewed art in terms of a pattern of progress toward an ideal
Watkins explains that the original association of style with the word maniera
75
Haar, Classicism and Mannerism in 16th Century Music, 15.
76
Watkins, Gesualdo, 95-110.
77
Ibid., 95.
78
Ibid., 101.
34
usage, means basically taste and elegance. But as the sixteenth century progresses,
Watkins sees this sense of style as becoming more and more contrived. This progressive
contrivance suggests the characterization often associated with Mannerism, the stylish
These words will figure strongly in the analysis of the variation sets to follow.
In the pages recounting the relationship between nature and genius, Watkins
elucidates another idea related to the following analyses. The Age of Mannerism was
the first to view certain individuals as artistic geniuses, exercising a complete mastery
of their craft. Through the High Renaissance, the artistic goal was to faithfully imitate
decline once that perfection is reached. Rather than conceding to this inevitable decline,
Mannerist theorists (like Vasari) argued that nature could be surpassed. The way to
surpass nature was to imitate the best examples from ancient Greece and Rome. In the
79
Watkins, Gesualdo,102.
35
and the ancient precedents with his artwork. Watkins argues that during this time
period, the value placed on the creative personality intensified, even exaggerated, the
creators individuality and power. The composer no longer needed to fear a so-called
ars perfecta or the historical canon. The composer could devise a new ideal and surpass
The composer as genius, an idea originating in the sixteenth century, is pertinent to the
for performance at court and were performed by the finest performers of the time. As he
states, the Mannerist composer writes not only new music, incorporating the most
recent speculative advances of the theorists, but also virtuoso musicmusic for
virtuoso listeners as much as for virtuoso performers.81 Again, this idea will apply later
in this document.
those of Gesualdo. The first concerns the choice of text. The most important part of the
text is that there are key words that necessitate a musical response, often referred to as a
80
Watkins, Gesualdo, 105.
81
Ibid., 107.
36
madrigalism. Aside from this, texts are often ambiguous and abound in oxymora and
other imagery which are capable of contrasting musical treatment. Secondly, the style
Thirdly, the chromaticism employed is both rational and irrational. Some parts can be
reconciled with traditional modal harmony (or even a developing tonal harmony) while
some parts defy any explanation at all. The fourth feature is related: portions of works
vacillate tonally, and clearly defined cadences are lacking for considerable stretches of
time. Floating tonality, or key drifting, sometimes replaces true modulation. Thus, the
tonal situation, too, has a characteristically Mannerist ambiguity.82 The fifth feature of
the Mannerist madrigal concerns the totality of the finished product (again, similar to
The finished product, the madrigal, though brief and limited in subject, is
marked by a density of idea, complexity of relationship, and persistent
diversity born of a reflection of attendant literary meraviglie. The result
is an overload. Precisely because abundant gesture and allusion is
accompanied by compactness of form, the clarity and precision of
countless details are ultimately rendered obscure by their very profusion
in so tight a space. Yet the fascination resides not only in the labyrinthine
dimension of such a tiny cosmos but also in its flickering iridescence and
tentative stability.83
In the most encompassing work on the subject, Maria Rika Maniates analyzes
Mannerism as a major style period rather than a transitional phase between the High
Renaissance and the Baroque period. Mannerism in Italian Music and Culture, 1530-
1630 is the most comprehensive book on the subject as it seeks to draw together
scholarship from art history, literary criticism, music theory and musicology. Maniates
82
Watkins, Gesualdo, 108.
83
Ibid.
37
brings together phenomena noted by historians into a network of factors contributing
to a Mannerist outlook. Because specialists work in isolated fields, few have made such
In arguing for Mannerism as a major style period, Maniates identifies four fluid
stages of development in the polyphonic madrigal. The first stage is restrained in its use
of current and new features. The second stage is marked by harmonic audacities. The
third stage of madrigal development is characterized by what she calls the mosaic
madrigal. In this stage, the harmonic audacity of the second stage is absorbed into the
invention of more novel techniques. The solo and concerted madrigal begin to appear in
this stage, pointing the way towards monody, opera, and the Baroque era.
Like other scholars, Maniates reminds the reader that Mannerism stems from the
word maniera, a term extensively used in the sixteenth century. She makes clear that
Mannerism and mannered must be kept separate; the latter indicates an aesthetic
literary, and musical) into a cohesive thesis: the Age of Mannerism presents us with
some of the most original, unique and boldest creations of the human spirit and
84
Maniates, Mannerism in Italian Music and Culture, xv.
85
Ibid., 9.
38
Mannerism as a Recurring Stylistic Phenomenon
The last section of this chapter will discuss an idea related to Mannerism that
will be directly pertinent to the following analyses. The existence of such an idea would
not be possible if not for the rediscovery of Mannerism in the first decades of the
twentieth century by art historians. As nearly every author on the subject admits, the
profusion of interest in Mannerism has caused a flurry of new and sometimes voguish
ideas on the subject. As the previous sections suggest, scholars disagree on many
aspects of Mannerism. Indeed, terminology and even whether Mannerism exists are still
evolution of styles.
The idea that Mannerism is not a distinctly sixteenth century phenomenon and
could be perceived at various points throughout history had its origins in literary
criticism. Ernst Curtius wrote a book in 1953 called European Literature and the Latin
Middle Ages. Using the term borrowed from art history, Curtius defines moments of
Mannerism. Shearman, who was discussed previously, believes this idea is widely
applicable:
This is a valuable concept, for all the arts are prone to such tendencies. In
music, for example, there exist a number of compositions from the end
of the Gothic period, around 1400, of a highly complex notation and
rhythm that can scarcely have been performable but were, rather,
intellectual caprices. Similarly there was a moment, around 1200, of
extreme sophistication in the evolution of the Byzantine icon. To such
things the application of our term is legitimate.86
86
Shearman, Mannerism, 35.
39
The idea of recurring Mannerism in stylistic evolution has gained traction in the
years since. As such, the idea has found mainstream acceptance to the extent that it is
even included in undergraduate music history textbooks (this is where the author first
learned of the idea). Douglas Seaton, in his textbook Ideas and Styles in the Western
Musical Tradition, first describes the term in connection with the ars subtilior
movement of the late fourteenth century. Seaton defines Mannerism as a stage that
occurs toward the end of the life span of a style, when creative artists seem to have
attained such great facility with the techniques of the style that indulgence of technique
becomes an end in itself.87 The following analysis will rely partly on Seatons
One of the first musicologists to use the term Mannerism in reference to stylistic
evolution outside the sixteenth century was Willi Apel. Apel is the scholar to which
Seaton is certainly referring in his textbook. His article French Secular Music of the
Late Fourteenth Century sought to explain the dynamic stylistic changes that took
place between Machaut and Dufay. Apel divides the years 1350-1400 into three periods
allowing for some overlap. The period from 1350-1370 he calls the Machaut style,
from 1370-1390 the Manneristic style, and from 1390-1400 the modern style. The
Machaut style and Manneristic style differ in ways that resemble the break from the
High Renaissance that occurred around 1520. In terms of rhythm, Apel describes
Machauts rhythmic style as wholly integrated and unified. In this respect, Machaut
is the last representative of the development which started, in the late twelfth century,
with Leonin and Perotin.88 In describing the difference between the Machaut style
87
Seaton, Ideas and Styles in the Western Musical Tradition, 93-94.
88
Apel, French Secular Music of the Late Fourteenth Century, 10.
40
and that of the Manneristic style, the former is wholly integrated while the latter is a
continues: The result of all these rhythmic complexities is a most peculiar texture, such
refinement.89 The reader should be reminded that art historians have often found such
similarities in the visual arts between the late Gothic style and Mannerism, much like
Apel.
Another similarity between Apels use of Mannerism and that of art historians
Again one cannot help noticing the similarity of this method to present-
day practice. Stravinsky has used the term polar attraction in order to
describe a phenomenon characteristic of his own style, and essentially
identical with that to be observed in the style of the late fourteenth
century. While it goes without saying that he and other living composers
go much beyond the old masters in the field of dissonance, the opposite
statement is true in regard to the rhythmic aspect. Indeed, if rhythmic
independence of the single line is considered the main prerequisite for
true polyphony, one will have to concede that the polyphonic ideal was
never more fully approximated than in the late fourteenth century.90
If the conclusions of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance were marked by
Mannerism, subsequent phases of musical history must have as well. Perhaps the only
composer of the Baroque age that could possibly be labeled a Mannerist is J.S. Bach.
Seaton and Maniates agree that the late works of Bach represent such delight in the
techniques of the style that technique becomes an end in itself,91 an idea consistent
with Mannerism. The Art of the Fugue, The Musical Offering, and The Goldberg
Variations are such pieces. It could be argued that numerous works by Beethoven and
89
Apel, French Secular Music of the Late Fourteenth Century, 11.
90
Ibid.
91
Seaton, Ideas and Styles in the Western Musical Tradition, 237.
41
Schubert are examples of a Mannerist phase in the Classical era. The late string quartets
of Beethoven are probably the most obvious examples. The Romantic era abounds with
though seemingly in decline after Wagners Tristan und Isolde all the way through
Rachmaninoffs conservative style in the twentieth century. Works that might represent
a Mannerist phase of Romanticism are the operas of Wagner and Strauss, Mahlers
style, it should follow that a piece of music could be analyzed as containing features
consistent with such a phenomenon. So, the question that this document proposes to
answer is: what are the features that a piece of music would need to exhibit to qualify as
late stages of stylistic evolution, Glenn Watkins and Maria Maniates, both mentioned
an anti-classic reaction, yet dependent in part upon selectivity and reliance upon its
immediate past, prizing difficulty and preciosity as well as artificiality, affection, and
anti-classic, must rely on the immediate past, and must exhibit a few qualities typically
Maniates lists the qualifications for recurring Mannerism in five bullet points:
42
1. domination of formulas and intellectual constructivism
3. artificial intricacy
These qualifications account for the stylistic grounds of analysis given in Chapter 1 and
The following three chapters will analyze keyboard music that can be
phase in the three recognized styles of the common practice period: Baroque, Classical,
Watkins, Seaton, and Maniates for recurring Mannerism. The pieces to be analyzed are
92
Maniates, Musical Mannerism: Effeteness or Virility?, 278-9.
43
CHAPTER III: ANALYSIS OF BACHS GOLDBERG VARIATIONS
Chapters III through V present analyses of three variation sets for keyboard that
section that makes a chronological argument. Specifically, it will be shown that the
composer was writing at a time after the height of their particular style and was thus
the five criteria for recurring Mannerism given by Maniates. These five criteria are as
follows: formulas and intellectual constructivism, imitation of past styles and manners,
Bach as Mannerist
The Middle Ages concluded with a stage of stylistic evolution that has been
described as Mannerist. Likewise, the end of the Renaissance developed into sixteenth
century Mannerism. Because the Baroque style began as a reaction against sixteenth
century Mannerism, it should not be surprising that a Mannerist stage toward the end of
the Baroque era would be less pronounced than in previous or subsequent styles.
Both Seaton and Maniates make the same concession: little Baroque music can
be classified as Mannerist. However, both also agree that many of the late works of J.S.
93
Friedlaender, Mannerism and Anti-Mannerism in Italian Painting, 47.
44
Bach are the exception to this rule. During the 1730s and 1740s, Bach produced a
of the styles of Baroque music, laid out according to clear governing plans.94 In 1731,
the six partitas for harpsichord were published as the first volume of the Clavierbung,
essentially cataloguing the possibilities within the Baroque keyboard suite. The second
volume was published in 1735 and exemplified works in contrasting national styles (the
Italian Concerto and the French Overture). The third volume represented the German
fugue.95 The fourth part of the Clavierbung is the subject of this chapter, the
Aside from these works for keyboard, Bach wrote other pieces during this
period that could serve as compositional paradigms as well. Compiled between 1747-
49, the Mass in B minor codifies the possibilities for writing sacred vocal music within
the Baroque style. As a Lutheran, it is inconceivable that Bach intended the work for
94
Seaton, Ideas and Styles in the Western Musical Tradition, 253.
95
Ibid.
96
Christoph Wolff, Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician (New York:
Norton, 2000), 375-6.
45
performance as the Mass is part of the Catholic liturgy. Instead, it was an intellectual,
compositional exercise. The same can be said for The Musical Offering and The Art of
the Fugue, both conceived in the late 1740s. Maniates points to these works and the
The contrapuntal and canonic artifices in Bachs late works, The Musical
Offering and The Art of the Fugue, as well as the earlier Goldberg
Variations, are examples of constructivism in its highest sense. And the
late works were written at a time when counterpoint was already frowned
upon by the young upstarts of the style galant.97
fulfill the criteria for recurring Mannerism. As per the limitations given by Seaton and
Haar, the Goldberg Variations are sufficiently late within the Baroque era and were
written well after an integrated high style had been achieved. Allowing for some
overlap, the High Baroque could be considered as lasting for roughly two decades at
the beginning of the eighteenth century. The years 1705-1725 are a reasonable
Goldberg Variations exemplify a chronologically late stage in Baroque style that can be
considered Mannerist.
wrote numerous variation sets, many of which could suffice as a Baroque model for
variation sets. Bach, on the other hand, wrote few sets of variations that seem typical of
46
complex variations of an unusual kind, clearly models in some sense and
yet hardly imitable. One could not make such points about other
variations then in print, by Handel, Couperin and Rameau, to name only
the best. Though the polished work of gifted composers, their variations
could conceivably have been matched by other sets of a similar kind, and
Handel alone included nine examples in the seventeen suites of his first
two books.98
typical Baroque variation set. Thus, the Goldberg Variations are an example of
recurring Mannerism.
The late works of J.S. Bach, particularly the Goldberg Variations (as well as the
Art of the Fugue and the Musical Offering) are dominated by formulas and intellectual
Peter Williams sees formulas at work on two different levels, one conceptual and one
perceptual. The following analysis will focus on the conceptual plan as it is the one
perceivable only through analysis of the score (but not perceptible to the listener). On
the other hand, the perceptual plan can be perceived by the listener (but not by the
analyst). He writes of this duality: There was really no precedent for the overall plan,
which can be found to be more complex than perhaps the composer intended, for so
often what Bach wittingly plans can also unwittingly create various levels of pattern.
Thus one can speak of two shapes for the Goldberg Variations.99 The conceptual plan
98
Peter Williams, Bach: The Goldberg Variations (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2001), 29-30.
99
Williams, Bach: The Goldberg Variations, 39-40.
47
for the Goldberg Variations is dominated by formulas and perfectly illustrates
The conceptual plan of the Goldberg Variations has at least three formulaic
thirty variations, with the Aria to be repeated at the end. Thus, there are thirty-two
The first formulaic layer to the conceptual plan concerns the thirty variations.
These variations are arranged into ten groups of three variations. The first variation in
each group of three is a dance or genre piece.100 An example of such a dance or genre
piece is a passepied (Var. 4), fughetta (Var. 10), or French overture (Var. 16). The
group of three is a bright, virtuosic variation making use of hand crossing technique on
two manuals of the harpsichord. The third variation in a group of three utilizes canon.
The second formulaic layer to the conceptual plan concerns the third piece in
each group of three, those with canonic imitation. The canonic variations are arranged
in order by the interval of canonic imitation starting from the smallest interval. Thus,
a canon at the third, and so on. The pattern continues through Variation 27, a canon at
the ninth.
A third formulaic layer to the conceptual plan concerns the overall design of the
whole set. Variation 16 is marked Overture and is written in the French Overture
style (consistent with its status as a genre piece). This is significant as Variation 16
100
Williams, Bach: The Goldberg Variations, 40.
48
marks the beginning of the second half of the work if it were split evenly into two.
Williams also finds the division of the Goldberg Variations at Variation 16 important.
It creates a large design similar to an arch form with the biggest movement in the
more aurally recognizable than the conceptual plan discussed above. In particular, the
formulaic harmonic scheme of the Aria is held intact throughout all of the variations.
The Aria is 32 measures long and is in binary form. Each half of the binary form is
sixteen measures long. Again, each sixteen-measure section can be divided into eight
measure phrases ending with a cadence. The first and last eight-measure phrases end
with cadences to the tonic, G major. The second eight-measure phrase ends by
modulating to the dominant, D major. The third eight-measure phrase (beginning the B
section) ends with a cadence to the relative minor, E minor. This tonal scheme or
tonal scheme featuring a strong internal cadence first to the dominant then a second
101
Donald Francis Tovey, Essays in Musical Analysis (London: Oxford University
Press, 1944), 56.
102
Williams, Bach: The Goldberg Variations, 40.
49
Williams describes this eight-measure formula as follows: the plan could hardly be
simpler and is easily preserved even when for three variations it moves to minor,
This conceptual plan perfectly illustrates Maniates first criteria for recurring
the conceptual plan is not aurally recognizable. While a sophisticated listener could
conceivably perceive the formulaic modulatory scheme at work within the recurring
binary forms, the other layers of the formula are essentially inaudible. Or, to put it
another way, it is unlikely that a listener could perceive that every third variation is a
canon at an interval one step larger than the previous canon. These compositional
details can only be perceived by the analyst studying the score. Schulenberg describes
it this way: perhaps the threefold pattern, like the series of widening intervals of
satisfying but largely irrelevant to the way in which one plays or hears the work.104
Thus, the conceptual plan for the Goldberg Variations is an example of intellectual
103
Williams, Bach: The Goldberg Variations, 38.
104
David Schulenberg, The Keyboard Music of J.S. Bach (New York: Schirmer, 1992),
321.
50
Imitation of Past Styles and Manners
scheme of a passacaglia into a set of discrete variations. The Aria of the Goldberg
Variations and the subsequent variations are organized harmonically around a repeating
ostinato bass line. This is the typical procedure of a passacaglia. Curiously, the
melody of the Aria never returns (except for the repeat of the Aria at the end) in a
variation; only the repeating bass line is used. This has led some analysts to describe
The same repeating bass line of the Goldberg Variations had been used by
several composers in the past. A few of these composers are Muffat, Purcell, and
Handel. Both Purcells Ground in Gamut, Z 645, and Handels Chaconne avec 62
variations, HWV 442, are based on the Goldberg ostinato. The following example
common practice during this time. Yet from the perspective of recurring Mannerism, it
seems important that Bachs variations are quite different stylistically and historically
from these earlier examples. Handels Chaconne dates from 1703-1706 and was
105
Williams, Bach: The Goldberg Variations, 54.
51
published in his Suites de Pieces pour le clavecin of 1733.106 Purcells work was
dialoguing with past music and as a deliberate attempt on the composers part to
In addition to this dialoguing with past music, the Goldberg Variations also
his first book of keyboard sonatas in 1738. Williams points out the coincidence that
Scarlattis pieces are entitled Essercizi, a word synonymous with the German bungen,
and also contains thirty highly characterized pieces, the same number as the Goldberg
Variations. Yet, more importantly, the technical style of Domenico Scarlatti is clearly
the second piece in each group of three variations, the pice croise, were pioneered by
Scarlatti. Williams continues saying it cannot be out of the question that the Goldberg
Variations was in part a response to that book of Scarlatti, whose fabulous musicianship
The Goldberg Variations imitate both past styles and contemporary harpsichord
technique. In particular, the ostinato bass line of the Goldberg Variations was used
106
Wolff, Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician, 378.
107
Williams, Bach: The Goldberg Variations, 37.
108
Ibid., 39.
109
Ibid., 29.
52
extensively by other Baroque composers including Muffat, Purcell, and Handel. As is
typical of Mannerism, Bach sought to improve on this model. In addition, Bach also
imitates the technical writing of Domenico Scarlatii in the recurring arabesques making
use of hand crossing techniques. Wolff even questions whether Schiebes famous attack
on Bach (basically calling him old fashioned) was the catalyst for Bachs assimilation
of Scarlattis contemporary technical idiom in the last few years of his life.110 Along
Artificial Intricacy
work of considerable intricacy. Yet, Bach purposefully breaks these symmetries and
One such example of such a calculated irregularity involves the first and last
group of three variations. The sequence normally is as follows: genre piece, pice
croise, canon. Yet, Variation 1 contains hand crossing and Variation 2 is a genre
piece. Curiously, Variation 2 sounds more canonic than the actual canonic variation,
Variation 3.
110
Wolff, Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician, 1.
53
Figure 2. Bach, Goldberg Variations, Variation 2, mm. 1-9
Even more curiously, the final group of three variations contains similar
Perhaps Bach planned these irregularities to account for the final anomaly,
Variation 30. Variation 30 is a quodlibet (a Baroque mash-up) rather than the expected
canon at the tenth. Thus, even though the groups of variations that begin and end the
set are irregular in comparison to the overall work, these irregularities are still
54
Other curious irregularities are common within the Goldberg Variations.
Another example concerns the canons at the fourth and the fifth, Variations 12 and 15.
Figure 4. Bach, Goldberg Variations, Variation 12, mm. 1-3; Variation 15, mm. 1-3
Both canons are in inversion whereas the previous three had been in similar
motion. Williams points out that the next canon at a perfect interval, the octave, does
not continue with this trend as if the two canons in inversion are a calculated
irregularity. While this is true, perhaps if the first canon at a perfect interval is taken
into consideration, the result is another uniquely calculated symmetry. Thus, Variations
3 and 24 are canons at the unison and the octave in similar motion and Variations 12
and 15 are canons in inversion, creating symmetry amongst the canons at perfect
intervals. Indeed, the idea that a symmetrical construction could be uniquely irregular
seem to confound the symmetrical plan as it was conceived. Variations 15, 21, and 25
55
are in the parallel minor. This placement does not seem to correspond to the division of
variations into groups of threes or with the division of the whole set into two halves.
The same can be said for the placement of the slow variations. The minor variations
and the slow variations intrude upon the symmetrically rather than contribute to it.
surrealism is the least compatible with Baroque aesthetics in general and the Goldberg
fall in the former category of Mannerist art. For example, the Aria adequately portrays
an affect, as Baroque art should. The affect could be described as grace or serenity.
Indeed, the extent that the affect is portrayed is beautiful, perhaps perfect. Yet, it lacks
Perhaps only two variations might qualify under this category. The first is the
final minor variation, Variation 25. This variation is the emotional centerpiece of the
entire set of variations. Bach achieves in Variation 25 a level of pathos that is profound
56
There are several ways that Bach achieves such a heightened level of
emotionality, all concerning chromaticism. The first way is that the ostinato bass line
becomes fully chromaticized. In the major variations, the bass line simply steps down
from G to F# to E to D. In Variation 25, the steps are filled in with chromatic half
Baroque convention often called the sigh or tear drop figure. Indeed, this fully
chromaticized bass line with tear drop motive is reminiscent of Purcells famous aria
minor mode variation. The third phrase, mm. 17-24, modulates to the submediant, E
minor, in the major mode variations. The minor mode requires that this phrase
modulate to E flat major instead. Yet, in Variation 25, the contrapuntal texture is so
overloaded with mode mixture (notice the profusion of G flats, C flats, D flats, and even
F flats) that the modulation appears to be progressing towards the exceedingly distant
key of E flat minor. Tovey calls this modulation a fact that we should refuse to believe
even of Bach, if we had not the passage before us to prove and justify it.111 At ms. 24,
a resolution to G natural (as a Piccardy third) preserves the expected E flat major just in
time.
111
Tovey, Essays in Musical Analysis, 68.
57
Figure 6. Bach, Goldberg Variations, Variation 25, mm. 20-25
greatly to the sense of pathos emanating from Variation 25. As a result, the music
progresses quite naturally through extremely distant tonal regions. For example, as
On the other hand, the concluding variation, the Quodlibet, is a joyous final
climax before the repetition of the Aria. Indeed, this variation might be the only piece
piece of music that combines several melodies, often popular tunes, in counterpoint.
The quodlibet was a centuries old tradition at this point and one that the Bach family
58
particularly enjoyed. Forkel, an early Bach biographer, recounts how the Bach family
As soon as they were assembled a chorale was first struck up. From this
devout beginning they proceeded to jokes which were frequently in strong
contrast. That is, they then sang popular songs partly of comic and also
partly of indecent content, all mixed together on the spur of the moment.
This kind of improvised harmonizing they called a Quodlibet, and not
only could laugh over it quite whole-heartedly themselves, but also
aroused just as hearty and irresistible laughter in all who heard them.112
is as if to say, not only can Bach compose variations using every contrapuntal
variations clearly articulate the nadir and apex of the emotional range.
112
Johann Nicholas Forkel, Johann Sebastian Bach: His Life, Art, and Work (Boston:
Da Capo Press, 1970), 34.
59
Refinement and Preciosity
Mannerist painting. The same can be said of Bachs treatment of the canonic
first way that Bach creates this variety concerns the entry of the canonic voices.
As the bass line must preserve the ostinato, the upper and middle voices contain
the canon. Incidentally, this creates a trio-sonata type of texture amongst the
throughout the Goldberg Variations is the order of the voice entries. Of the nine
canonic variations, four begin with the upper voice (Variations 3, 9, 12, and 24),
four begin with the middle voice (Variations 6, 16, 18, and 21), and one is
exceptional (Variation 27). Another detail that is consistently varied concerns the
time frame of the second voice entry, the answer. Six of the nine canonic
variations feature a canonic answer exactly one measure after the initial
presentation. Two variations (18 and 21) answer a half measure later. Variation
24 answers after two measures. Another detail that is varied amongst the canons
is the time signatures. Indeed, the nine canons utilize eight different time
two variations. The various treatment of these details in the canonic variations
(especially taking into account the directional inversion of two of these variations
60
discussed previously) suggest that Bach was aiming at a survey of canonic
possibilities.113
is the only canon that is not written in three voices (resembling a trio sonata).
Because Variation 27 has only two voices, Bach must overcome the
additional difficulty of incorporating the ostinato bass line into the lower voice of
the canon. Also, Variation 27 is both redundant and isolated. The canons
complete the octave cycle in Variation 24. This has led some to believe that the
rather than thirty. Thus, Variation 27, a canon at the ninth, falls outside the
octave cycle. Also, Bach does not continue with the pattern by writing a canon at
the tenth for the finale, further isolating Variation 27. Furthermore, Variation 27
could be considered redundant as it merely repeats the canon at the second from
The Goldberg Variations are refined to the point of preciosity in ways other than
those concerning the detailed nature of the canonic variations. There is a repeated
emphasis on numerology, especially twos and threes within the variations. Some of
these have been previously mentioned (especially the groups of three variations). There
113
Williams, Bach: The Goldberg Variations, 47.
61
are other levels though, especially concerning the number two. The set begins with an
Aria, played twice (once at the beginning and then again at the end). There are two
halves to the work: Variation 16 begins the second half with a grand French Overture.
Each movement is in exactly two halves, each to be played twice. The phrasing and
cadential pattern consistently divide each section of the binary form into two. Both
modes (major and minor) of the tonic key are utilized. Indeed, with the Italian
Concerto and the partitas, the Goldberg Variations are one of only a few pieces that
Bach wrote specifically for a two-manual harpsichord. The importance of these details
62
CHAPTER IV: ANALYSIS OF BEETHOVENS DIABELLI VARIATIONS
Beethoven as Mannerist
in the turn from Classicism to Romanticism not only has been the subject of some
controversy but has undergone several extreme pendulum swings over the course of
time. The question is by no means settled.114 In The Classical Style, Charles Rosen
argues that with all Beethovens declared independence from preceding influences,
and his evident resentment of Haydn, there was in his career no radical movement away
from the style of Mozart and Haydn comparable to the break with the past made by the
generation of Schumann and Chopin.115 Thus, this document will offer the novel
solution to Solomons question (in partial agreement with Rosen) by arguing that
century Classicism consistent with recurring Mannerism. The Diabelli Variations, op.
120, will be analyzed to further this argument using the criteria for recurring Mannerism
given by Maniates.
Seaton and Haar make concurring points concerning Mannerism that are
relevant to this discussion of Beethoven. For Seaton, Mannerism occurs at the end of a
stylistic cycle. For Haar, Mannerism occurs after a model or a completely integrated
high style has been recognized. These conditions are met with Beethoven, particularly
within the style of his last compositional period. Indeed, it can be argued that the high
114
Maynard Solomon, Late Beethoven: Music, Thought, Imagination (London:
University of California Press, 2003), 27.
115
Charles Rosen, The Classical Style (New York: Norton, 1971), 380.
63
Classical style was achieved for roughly two decades at the end of the eighteenth
century. The dates 1775-1795 seem appropriate as they encompass most of Mozarts
mature writing. Beethoven, completing the Diabelli Variations in 1823, was writing
Mozart wrote at least fourteen sets of piano variations. For the purposes of this
argument, any of these sets could serve as models for high Classical variations.
They represent his more popular side by standards of his own day.
Thus, the themes used as a basis for the variations are quite simple and
melodious. The structures retain a stereotyped pattern, and slow
variations depend upon ingenious melodic ornamentation for effect
rather than profound emotional expression. Most of them are based on
borrowed themes, some operatic, some from lighter theater music, a few
from folk sources or other composers works.116
Beethoven wrote variation sets just like those of Mozart, light, popular, and
career. The Eroica Variations, op. 35 are an example of such experimentation. This
concluding movements of the piano sonatas, op. 109 and op. 111. Kirby writes:
116
Stewart Gordon, A History of Keyboard Literature (Belmont: Schirmer, 1996), 139-
140.
117
F. E. Kirby, A Short History of Keyboard Music (New York: Free Press, 1966), 227.
64
What Kirby calls an important innovation could also be described in terms
consistent with recurring Mannerism. With Mozarts variation sets serving as a model,
Beethoven both imitated and innovated within the style he inherited from Mozart.
Thus, Beethovens late variations sets (and his late style in general) can be seen as an
contributed to the dissolution of the Classicism of the Renaissance and to the arrival of
context of biographical crises (at least in popular culture). The second, or heroic,
period is often dated as beginning with the Heiligenstadt Testament of 1802. His
Third Symphony was written two years later in 1804. Likewise, his late style is often
associated with his complete deafness and increasing social isolation. The Piano Sonata,
op. 101, dates from this period. From a Mannerist perspective, these two stages
fluid. Opinions are always changing. New scholars are revising perceived historical
knowledge. Today, especially amongst pianists, the common wisdom is that Beethoven
was a universally beloved composer throughout the course of the nineteenth century.
Yet, some argue that this is far from the case. Indeed, Rosen argues that Beethoven was
not an inspiration but a dead weight in the style of those who immediately followed
him.118 In this view, the only work by Beethoven that had any influence on the first
generation of Romantics was the song cycle, An die ferne Geliebte, a truly anomalous
118
Rosen, The Classical Style, 379.
65
part of his oeuvre. Chopin, who made many disparaging comments about Beethoven,
seems to echo Belloris critique of the sixteenth century Mannerists in comparison with
Raphael: Beethoven is obscure and seems lacking in unity the reason is that he
Classical style of Mozart and Haydn. Yet, a clear evolution is evident. This evolution
is consistent with the stylization and abstraction that signifies recurring Mannerism as
are taken as such a model, there is a consistent formula. Each variation is based on a
specific melodic figure or harmonic progression. There is usually one minor variation.
The penultimate variation is slow and lyrical. The final variation is either climactic and
virtuosic or it recapitulates the theme. In the Diabelli Variations, Beethoven takes this
formula for variation sets and essentially stylizes or classicizes the variation form.
Indeed, in Beethovens hands, the variation form begins to resemble the classical form
movements that embrace groups of these variations? This is a question that has
119
Jim Samson, Chopin (New York: Schirmer, 1996), 66.
66
preocuupied numerous critics and analysts, including von Blow, Halm, Geiringer,
Uhde, Porter, Butor, and Mnster.120 There is surprising agreement amongst analysts
concerning the first grouping (or exposition) of variations. The first ten variations
finds the various analyses problematic and proposes his own solution. In his analysis,
Variations 11-24 form a second group.121 He argues that the extreme diversity and
contrast between the successive variations is what unifies them and that this
juxtaposition of extremes provides the kind of internal conflict that one finds in the
Significant in this connection is the fact that very little tonal contrast is
utilized by Beethoven; only the penultimate Fugue leaves the tonality of
the tonic major or minor. In the absence of sustained modulation, this
work still achieves a sense of large-scale contrast through the diversity of
variations in its middle section. The extremity of contrasts can be
gauged by Beethovens juxtaposition of the three slow variations (Nos.
14, 20, 24) with three swift parodies, Vars. 15, 21, and 25. Contrast is
practically axiomatic towards the centre of this immense work.
120
William Kinderman, Beethovens Diabelli Variations (Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1987), 108.
121
Ibid., 110.
67
abstraction, reaffirm the concrete by absorbing a set of external contexts
from the world, still seemingly disjointed.122
recapitulation.
Variations 25-28 differ from the preceding variations of the middle group. If the
Variations 25-28 are unified in their sense of progression towards a goal. This is
achieved through rhythmic diminution. This is consistent with the idea that groups of
variations act as formal structures and represent a stylization of typical variation form.
As Kinderman explains:
122
Kinderman, Beethovens Diabelli Variations, 110.
68
structure, and it has not only formal but dramatic and indeed almost
programmatic implications.123
minor variation into a group of three. This group of minor variations is the emotional
centerpiece of the whole set as they make possible the sense of spiritual transcendence
achieved in the last two variations. This sense of spiritual transcendence is the hallmark
of Beethovens late compositional style. In addition, the historical reference in the first
and last of these variations is unmistakable and will be dealt with in the following
section.
final variations in the Classical style. In typical Mannerist fashion, this variation sets up
Beethoven transforms Diabellis modest theme into three subjects that can be played
simultaneously. After this fitting climax, Variation 33 brings the work as a whole to a
procedure. There are two ways classical variation sets end: with a climactic final
variation or a recapitulation of the theme. Beethovens ending has the emotional effect
the nave waltz with which the set begins is stylized into another dance: a minuet of
that the Diabelli Variations contain all of the elements found in typical variation sets.
123
Kinderman, Beethovens Diabelli Variations, 112.
69
Yet, Beethoven treats them in such a way that they take on features of the sonata form.
In particular, the Diabelli Variations can be organized into three groups that fulfill a
similar psychological progression to that found in sonata form. Thus, Beethoven has
taken the formula given to him in a variation set and subjected it to a classicizing
stylization. Rosen concurs, stating that the variation form loses its additive character,
and conforms to the dramatic and almost spatially conceived figures of sonata
styleWith this movement it is possible at last to say that the variation set has become
a classical form.124
sixteenth century Mannerists. Artists learned their craft by constantly copying artworks
from the historical canon. They measured themselves against the works of the great
plainly evident in the late works of Beethoven, particularly the Diabelli Variations.
But, different kinds of parody are at work within the variations. Mostly, Diabellis
theme is subjected to parody. The opening variation is such an example. This type of
parody is utilized to articulate the form of the variations and to provide an intellectual
narrative that describes their course. But, parody of particular styles and composers is
124
Rosen, The Classical Style, 438-9.
70
also a technique that Beethoven utilizes in the Diabelli Variations. In particular, this
After this variation (No. 21) a new sense of parody is evident, not merely
as caricature of the theme, but as the evocation of styles and idioms that
absorb an almost encyclopedic range of contexts, historical and
contemporary. Towards its close, the subject of the Diabelli Variations
ceases to be merely the waltz, or even its possibilities of formal
transformation, and becomes the entire musical universe as Beethoven
knew it.125
This parody of Mozarts Don Giovanni shares important melodic features with
Diabellis theme, namely the descending fourth and fifth found at mm. 1 and 5 of the
theme. Indeed, the thematic similarity between the two is humorous in itself. Yet, this
called multivalence of meaning. Some biographers have suggested that this quotation
composing the variations as Leporellos words translate Night and day I slave for one
125
Kinderman, Beethovens Diabelli Variations, 103-104.
71
who does not appreciate it.126 On a deeper level, this quotation suggests a
Thus, Variation 22 contains at least three layers of parody. First, Diabelli and
Leporellos theme are aurally similar. Second, there is a biographical element that
connects Beethoven to Leporellos complaint. And third, Beethoven and Leporello both
display the quality of ironic detachment. This layering (especially in a parody of a past
Variation 23 also parodies a specific piece of music, the first study of Johann
Figure 12. Beethoven, Diabelli Variations, Variation 23, mm. 1-2; Cramer,
Pianoforte-Method, No. 1, mm. 1-2
126
Martin Cooper, Beethoven: The Last Decade (London: Oxford University Press,
1970), 208.
127
Kinderman, Beethovens Diabelli Variations, 104.
72
Like the parody of Variation 22, Variation 23 also suggests multiple layers of
meaning. The first and most obvious is that Beethovens variation represents the
propensity for piano etudes to showcase empty technical facility rather than musical
content. Secondly and perhaps without irony, Beethoven was known to admire Cramer
and to use his exercises in his teaching.128 Variation 23 could simply be homage to
fifty variations, how many will be as boring as this one? Or, it could simply be
suggests multiple nuanced meanings and seems artificially placed between variations
consistently throughout the Diabelli Variations (particularly in the middle section). Yet,
they are similar in that both are parodies, this time of J.S. Bachs fugal style.
128
Reginald Gerig, Famous Pianists and Their Technique (Washington: Robert Luce,
1974), 61.
129
Kinderman, Beethovens Diabelli Variations, 105.
73
Figure 13. Beethoven, Diabelli Variations, Variation 24, mm. 1-6
Variation 32, the fugue from the Eroica Variations Op. 35, and the first movement
development of Op. 106 make this clear. One writer described this Fughetta in nearly
religious terms as simultaneously cool and warm; as like a phenomenon of nature and
yet much more than a symbol for that; as consolation, solace; as serious and objective
and full of love.130 Indeed, the contrast that the Fughetta makes with the preceding
variation suggests an important aspect of Mannerist art: discontinuity and the fracturing
of meaning.
Variation 29 and 31 are also imitations of Bachs style and were perhaps even
inspired by specific pieces. Variation 29 treats Diabellis theme differently than most
and noble. The tone and texture of this variation invites comparison to the E flat minor
130
Jurgen Uhde, Beethovens Klaviermusik, vol. 1. (Stuttgart, 1968), 545.
131
Kinderman, Beethovens Diabelli Variations, 118.
74
Figure 14. Beethoven, Diabelli Variations, Variation 29, mm. 1-3; Bach, E-flat
minor Prelude, WTC. I, mm. 12-14
knowledge of the Goldberg Variations, the overwhelming similarity between these two
variations suggests that he most certainly was. Both display a highly ornamented
Figure 15. Beethoven, Diabelli Variations, Variation 31, mm. 3-4; Bach, Goldberg
Variations, Variation 25, mm. 1-3
132
Rosen, The Classical Style, 439.
75
Interestingly, the climactic fugue, Variation 32, is often compared to Handel
rather than J.S. Bach. Indeed, both Kinderman and Rosen make this assertion.
Kinderman writes that the fugue subject is endowed with Handelian breadth and
Beethovenian energy.
The Fugue theme uses the descending fourth and repeated notes from Diabellis
waltz. This is easily apparent from an aural perspective and contributes to the sense of
transcendence in the final group of variations. Kinderman writes the almost constant
presence of these thematic motives in the Fugue provides it with an important synthetic
function in which the head of the waltz melody, although immediately recognizable, is
entirely abstracted from the banality of its original context.133 Not only is Beethoven
writing in a Handelian style, the fugue theme itself is an abstraction of Diabellis waltz.
Imitation of style and abstraction from a model are consistent indicators of Mannerism.
refined and graceful minuet. Rosen explains it thusly: the dance returnsnot
Diabellis simple waltz any longer, but the most delicate and complex of minuets, with
a lavish play of sonorities that Beethoven rarely permitted himself. In the Diabelli,
133
Kinderman, Beethovens Diabelli Variations, 122.
76
Beethoven attained the witty combination of lyricism and irony that was part of
Mozarts natural grace, and that Haydn was too good-humored to imitate.134
Of the various criteria for recurring Mannerism, the Diabelli Variations exhibit
profound historical consciousness. Variations 24, 29, and 31 are allusions to the style
of J.S. Bach. Variations 22 and 33 either imitate Mozart or quote him directly.
Variation 23 parodies the piano etudes of Cramer. Variation 32, the grandiose triple
fugue, recalls Handel. Beethovens absorption of historical styles and the self-
Artificial Intricacy
sufficient degree. But to what extent is that intricacy artificial? The word, artificial,
means that something is created by man rather than found in nature. Beethovens
variations exhibit this kind of artificial intricacy when the chronology of their creation
publisher, Anton Diabelli, composed a waltz and invited fifty composers of the Austrian
134
Rosen, The Classical Style, 439.
77
Empire to write one variation each. The fifty variations would be compiled into a set
Diabelli received his first contribution to the project in May of 1819. The first
contributor was Carl Czerny, Beethovens former pupil. This implies that Beethoven
was probably familiar with Diabellis waltz as early as the first few months of 1819.
Yet, Beethovens Diabelli Variations were not completed until the spring of 1823 over
several biographers that have argued Beethovens initial conception of the set was
small, perhaps as few as six or seven variations and that the scale of the composition
expanded during the process of composition. This conception is incorrect as about two
thirds of the variations, including the penultimate fugue, were conceived in 1819.136
Then, Beethoven stopped working on the set for as long as two years. During this time,
Beethoven worked on other projects such as the Missa Solemnis and the last piano
sonatas, Opp. 110 and 111. Beethoven returned to the Diabelli Variations in 1822 and
important, though, is the way that the variations composed later affect the form of the
set as a whole. Indeed, most of the added variations are those that articulate the form
135
Kinderman, Beethovens Diabelli Variations, 3.
136
Ibid., 4.
78
For example, Variations 1-2 were two of the last written. The sketchbooks from
1819 reveal that Variation 3 was originally intended as the first variation. The problem
with beginning the set with Variation 3 is that it is too far removed from Diabellis
theme. It would set apart Diabellis theme rather than making the theme part of the
fabric pervading the entire work. By preceding Variation 3 with two variations that
directly parody the theme, Beethoven is announcing from the beginning that Diabellis
One of the most curious added variations is Variation 15. The tempo indication
is Presto scherzando. As a result, it is one of the briefest variations in the set. As was
mentioned before, the middle variations increase the dramatic tension of the set through
of the slowest, longest, and most profound while Variation 15 is one of the fastest,
briefest, and most mocking of all the variations. Thus, the added Variation 15
contributes to the sense of juxtaposition in the middle group of variations while also
Most of the variations written after 1819 are found at the end of the set. These
include Variations 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, 31, and 33. Variations 23 and 24, both direct
historical parodies of Cramer and J.S. Bach were added to enlarge the sense of historical
parody begun with the Don Giovanni parody of Variation 22. In particular, Variation
25 shares similarities with Variations 1 and 15. In particular, it initiates the final group
of variations by recapitulating the theme. Variations 29 and 31, both parodies of J.S.
Bach, enlarge into a group of minor variations along with the previously written
79
The previous discussion shows that Beethovens conception for the Diabelli
Variations was grand, even in 1819. But more importantly, the added variations
When Beethoven expanded his draft of the whole work in 1822-3, he left
his older variation order internally intact for the most part, but opened
with two new variations (the present Vars.1 and 2), added many more
variations towards the end, and inserted one at the middle of the set. As
we shall see, these added variations contribute substantially to the form
of the whole work, imposing not a symmetrical but an asymmetrical
plan, an overall progression culminating in the last five variations.137
The Diabelli Variations are undeniably different from other sets of classical
variations. Indeed, the compositional process just examined is wholly different than the
genesis of typical variation sets. During that era, variation sets were essentially
extemporaneous improvisations that were then written down. Beethoven and Mozart in
particular were known for their improvisational skills. Yet, the Diabelli Variations
were not conceived through improvisation, the natural genesis of most variation sets.
Rather, the Diabelli Variations were man-made, resulting from a grand conception over
a lengthy four-year time span. That the Diabelli Variations are compositionally
descriptor in reference to Beethoven. Although, one could argue that certain variations,
perhaps Variation 20, evoke timelessness in a way that might be considered surreal.
137
Kinderman, Beethovens Diabelli Variations, xviii.
80
Expressionism, on the other hand, seeks to evoke subjective emotions rather than to
variation. Instead, Beethoven substitutes more dissonant harmonies that fulfill the same
harmonic function. The two harmonies that Beethoven substitutes are a fully
diminished seventh chord, E-G-B flat-D flat, or a full minor-ninth chord, adding a D flat
position in the form considerably increases the musical tension, and some of the most
dramatic passages in the variations depend upon the ambiguity of this diminished
138
Marilyn Stokstad, Art History (Upper Saddle River: Pearson, 2008), 1037.
81
seventh and the C-D flat semitone conflict embodied in the minor ninth chord.139 This
For example, in Variation 5, the dissonance of the minor ninth chord eventually
propels the music into D flat major, briefly tonicizing the Neapolitan harmony.
utilizes the ambiguities of the fully diminished seventh chord with its multiple goals of
In Variation 12, the sense of progression stops as the bass repeats a turn figure
for several measures exploiting the dissonant relationship between C and D flat.
139
Kinderman, Beethovens Diabelli Variations, 79.
82
Figure 21. Beethoven, Diabelli Variations, Variation 12, mm. 25-28
prolonged for two measures. The bass note C surprisingly moves up a half step to C
sharp.
The beginning of the second half of Variation 30 also utilizes the diminished
83
variations is often the point of harmonic climax. This abstraction of Diabellis theme
fundamental aspect of Mannerist art. These details are often executed to such a refined
degree that preciosity is a more appropriate term. In much Mannerist art, this attention
to detail is exhibited in two different ways. In the first way, an object or body part is
executed with such a degree of perfection that it loses its sense of reality. Freedberg
uses the term aestheticized to describe such details. Admittedly, this type of
refinement is more characteristic of J.S. Bachs late music than Beethovens. The other
way that this attention to detail exhibits itself in Mannerist art is in the inclusion of
details that seem best described as bizarre. Bronzinos Portrait of a Young Man is an
example (although these details abound in Mannerist art). The young mans right eye
stares directly at the viewer while his left seems to be focused in an anatomically
impossible direction. Also, two pieces of furniture are exquisitely decorated with
grotesque masks. The effect of these strange details is ponderous. They seem to pose
questions that are not easily answerable. Several details from Beethovens Diabelli
One such example can be found in Variation 20, one of the most emotionally
profound of the set. In this variation, the slow tempo and long note values combined
84
Figure 24. Beethoven, Diabelli Variations, Variation 20, mm. 9-13
They are just as impossible or unreal as many anatomical features of Mannerist art. The
hairpins seem to ask interpretive questions of the performer for which an answer is
difficult to arrive it. From a theoretical perspective, the two measures that follow are
just as opaque. While the A# fully diminished seventh chord and the C major chord
share two common tones, these two chords lack the sense of progression required by
tonal music. The effect is almost coloristic and contributes to the other-worldliness of
the variation. It is a curious detail as the variation, though extremely chromatic, never
Variation 32 to Variation 33. Like Variation 20, the emotional quality seems to be
Through the use of augmented triads, enharmonic reinterpretation, and common tones,
the music arrives at an E minor triad in first inversion. This chord then acts like an
85
altered dominant propelling the music into the C major of the final variation. Like
Variation 20, this short suspension of traditional tonality has a particular emotional
lengthy quote that follows points to one in Variation 4. But, attention should be given
This quote from Solomon is remarkable in its accuracy despite the fact that he is
mistaken in at least one respect. While Solomon states that these anomalies are unlike
similar bewildering techniques by artists, these anomalies or bizarre details are exactly
consistent with Mannerism. He even uses much of the same language needed to define
it. For example, departure from a presumed classical model is nearly a complete
86
and grotesque. Thus, these bizarre details in the Diabelli Variations beg for comparison
to similar details in Mannerist art. Indeed, these details yield an over-refined quality,
87
CHAPTER V: ANALYSIS OF LISZTS VARIATIONS
Liszt as Mannerist
The Romantic era in music poses one problem while solving another problem
analyses of variation sets that are undeniably well known and are staples of the standard
Unfortunately, the Romantic era does not present such an obvious counterpart in piano
literature to the Goldberg and Diabelli Variations. Part of this problem is that variation
sets were composed less frequently by the nineteenth century. The two sets of
Romantic variations for the piano that come most readily to mind, Mendelssohns
Variations Srieuses and Brahms Variations on a Theme by Handel, exhibit few signs
of recurring Mannerism. While there are numerous examples of late Romantic music
marked by Mannerism, little of this music is written for the piano. Though less well
Mannerism while also alleviating a problem. While neither the Goldberg nor the
example.
Romantic composers (Liszt included) came of age in the 1830s, composers like
88
Rachmaninoff and others continued to write in this style well into the twentieth century.
difficult to label such a period with a specific date. This is complicated by the fact that
the functional tonal system that governed harmonic practices began to come apart
during this time. Wagners Prelude to the opera Tristan und Isolde is often associated
with this harmonic phenomenon. Written in the late 1850s and premiered in 1865, it
seems appropriate to reason that a high Romantic style was achieved before that
important work. Thus, it is reasonable to estimate that the high Romantic style was
achieved in the 1840s and first half of the 1850s. Liszts Weinen, Klagen Variations
were written shortly after this period in 1862. From a chronological standpoint, the
Weinen, Klagen Variations are sufficiently past the apex of Romanticism to qualify as a
early or late in his career. Rosen argues that 1850 is the dividing point in Liszts
work between Liszts early and late style. With the first Mephisto Waltz, it is the only
piece to be conceived entirely after 1850 to remain a basic part of the piano repertory
(although at least two beautiful late works merit equal respect: the Weinen, Klagen
of Franz Liszt. Put simply, Liszts output is qualitatively uneven, more so than other
great composers. Another way of saying this is that Liszt wrote masterpieces as well as
141
Charles Rosen, The Romantic Generation (Cambridge: Harvard University Press,
1995), 480.
89
many forgettable works. Indeed, this critical judgment has dogged Liszt since the
The issue (critics) pursued Liszt into old age. During a masterclass held in
June 1885, August Stradal was playing Liszts Weinen, Klagen Variations.
Liszt turned to the class and remarked: If you want a bad criticism, you
must play this. It will then be said: the young artist is not lacking in
talentit remains only to regret that he made such a poor choice of
piece.142
Not only do Liszts own words exemplify the widespread opinion that his output is
consciousness.
emotionalism. The Goldberg Variations are an example of the former. The formulaic
constructivism. On the other hand, Liszts compositions are a better example of the
tendency towards overt emotionalism. The Weinen, Klagen Variations exemplify this
examples of piano technique that are ubiquitous in his oeuvre, becoming formulaic as a
intensity of the work. Indeed, these Lisztian technical formulas could even be
142
Alan Walker, Franz Liszt: The Final Years, 1861-1886 (Ithaca: Cornell University
Press, 1996), 16.
90
described as mannerisms in the lower-case sense of the word. They are habitual
Unison passages between the hands are one of the most common techniques that
Liszt exploits consistently in his piano music. These passages are typically arpeggios
or scales. As they are meant to heighten the emotional expression of the music, fully
diminished seventh chords and chromatic scales are especially common. Measure 195
The Introduction (mm. 1-18) also ends with such a unison passage. The
91
Another common technical formula that Liszt consistently utilizes concerns
octave technique. Perhaps the most idiosyncratic way Liszt writes octaves is to stagger
the hands and play a chromatic scale so that the thumbs of each hand are basically
thumbs.
Perhaps the most ubiquitous feature of Liszts piano music is the tendency for
the momentum to halt and devolve into a lengthy section that imitates the vocal
recitative of opera. This is a habitual gesture in Liszts piano music and the Weinen,
Klagen Variations are no exception. For example, a lengthy section marked Lento
92
A related feature in Liszts piano music is cadenza-like passages. These
passages are typically notated in smaller type and are often performed with rhythmic
abandon. Such an example acts as a transition to the chorale finale of the Weinen,
Klagen Variations.
These examples illustrate a few of the technical and expressive formulas that
Liszt uses consistently in the Weinen, Klagen Variations and his piano music generally.
Numerous additional examples making use of octaves, repeated notes, repeated chords,
double notes, register leaps, and other technical devices abound in Liszts piano music.
93
Imitation of Past Styles and Manners
As the full title suggests, Liszts Weinen, Klagen Variations are indebted to J.S.
Bach and Baroque variation procedures. The Weinen, Klagen Variations, unlike the
other variation sets in this document, is a passacaglia. The variations are continuous
Liszts variations are based on the bass line used by Bach in his cantata by the
same name, Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen, BWV 12. This cantata, one of Bachs
earliest, was first performed in Weimar in 1714. There are seven movements to the
cantata. The bass line used in Liszts variations comes from the second movement, a
chorus marked Lento. Incidentally, the same bass line (transposed) is also used in the
Crucifixus movement of the Mass in B minor. The following example shows the bass
Figure 31. Bach, Cantata: BWV 12, Chorus: Lento, mm. 1-5
The initial presentation of the bass line in Liszts Weinen, Klagen Variations is
subtly altered. While the rhythm and meter are largely preserved, the quarter note is
given the beat rather than the half note. Also, it is played one octave higher and there is
no repetition of notes. Liszt adds accents and slurs as well, accentuating the sighing
94
Figure 32. Liszt, Weinen, Klagen Variations, mm. 18-22
line, Liszts variations end with a triumphant coda. This coda also references Bachs
cantata. The seventh piece of Bachs cantata is a chorale titled Was Gott tut, das ist
wohlgetan, which translates What God does, that is well done. Liszts chorale setting
begins simply, in four-part harmony, but quickly starts to exploit more complex aspects
of piano technique. The score also prints the words to the chorale above the score,
passacaglia, the Weinen, Klagen Variations clearly imitate the Baroque style. Yet,
95
despite these Baroque practices, the Weinen, Klagen Variations are quintessentially
peculiar tendency both to look backwards at previous ages while also remaining current
Artificial Intricacy
The Weinen, Klagen Variations are artificial in that they assimilate specific
aspects of Bachs cantata into the form and texture of the work. Indeed, the two works
share more than a recurring bass line. A close examination of both works shows that
Liszts composition adapts certain formal and textural components of the cantata. This
Mannerist art.
Bachs cantata, written early in his career, contains seven movements. The first
the bass line is appropriated. The third is a recitative. The fourth, fifth, and sixth
Liszts Weinen, Klagen Variations borrow more than just the bass line from the
passacaglia movement of Bachs cantata. In addition, the formal layout of the set is
Variations can be analyzed as dividing into seven sections with a design similar to the
cantata movements.
begin with an introductory section before the passacaglia proper begins. The Andante,
96
mm. 1-18, acts as an introduction to the work. Here, the melody of the introduction,
rather than the bass, utilizes the ostinato bass line. And in true late Romantic fashion,
Liszt uses a series of sequences to explore distant tonal areas from the outset.
C-flat major and B-double flat major before circling back to the submediant, though in
The second section of the Weinen, Klagen Variations is also related to the
formal layout of Bachs cantata. The second movement of Bachs cantata is the
passacaglia. Likewise, the second section of Liszts work begins the passacaglia
proper. Furthermore, the textural addition of voices in the first three iterations of the
recurring bass line imitates the vocal entries in Bachs cantata, causing chains of
dissonant suspensions.
97
Figure 35. Liszt, Weinen, Klagen Variations, mm. 18-29
Both Bachs cantata and Liszts Weinen, Klagen Variations contain a section of
recitative. In Bachs cantata, the recitative is the third movement while in Liszts work
the recitative is the fourth section. While these parts do not line up as perfectly as in
the others mentioned, the inclusion of a section of recitative around the midpoint
The last section of Liszts Weinen, Klagen Variations also is clearly related to
Bachs example. The final movement in the cantata is a chorale based on the hymn,
Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan. Liszts Weinen, Klagen Variations also end with a
Thus, Liszts work is structurally based on Bachs cantata. Both works contain
the same number of movements or sections, seven. The first is an introduction. The
second is the passacaglia (or begins the passacaglia in the case of Liszts piece). Both
contain a section of recitative in the middle. And the seventh movement or section is a
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Expressionism and Surrealism
criteria for recurring Mannerism, expressionism and surrealism, than were the other
variation sets analyzed in this document. From a stylistic perspective, Baroque and
Classical works generally are not prone to expressionism. Those styles simply lack the
exaggeration required for expressionism. Romanticism, on the other hand, can be quite
A simple translation of the text from Bachs cantata yields another explanation
for why this particular work is marked by expressionism. Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen,
Zagen means weeping, wailing, mourning, trembling. It is not surprising that such a
text would yield a work of profound expressionism by such a late Romantic composer
as Franz Liszt.
It is also not surprising that the impetus for writing such a work would be
autobiographical. Liszt, a deeply religious man, had just suffered the loss of two of his
children, one in 1859 and another in 1862. Walker writes of the Weinen, Klagen
Variations:
The emergence of such a piece in the second half of 1862 was not
accidental. It is best understood as a symptom of the grieving process, and
like so much else in Liszts output this music is really autobiographical.
Liszt found in the first movement of Bachs cantata Weeping, Wailing,
Mourning, Trembling a wonderful vehicle for his grief. He composed his
own variations on its ground bass.143
Liszt and later composers for the piano were able to achieve such an
technical range of the instrument. Liszt, considered one of the greatest virtuosos of the
143
Walker, Franz Liszt: The Final Years: 1861-1886, 51.
99
nineteenth century, was able to increase the emotional range capable of piano music.
Rosen describes the way Liszt, influenced by Paganini, made expressionism possible:
On a much larger scale, Liszt did for the piano what Paganini had done
only a few years previously for the violin. Listeners were impressed not
only with the beauty of Paganinis tone quality but also with its occasional
ugliness and brutality, with the way he literally attacked his instrument for
such dramatic effect. Liszt made a new range of dramatic piano sound
possible, and in so doing he thoroughly overhauled the technique of
keyboard playing.144
The Weinen, Klagen Variations are similar to many pieces by Liszt in that they
exploit the most difficult and innovative of technical passages to achieve a broader
range of emotion. Indeed, the examples from the Weinen, Klagen Variations are too
arpeggios that sweep across the entire keyboard contribute to the expressionism of the
144
Rosen, The Romantic Generation, 492.
100
Aside from advancements in piano technique, Liszt was also able to expand the
emotional range of his compositions because of the extended tonal harmonic practices
common in the latter part of the nineteenth century. The most obvious example of this
extension is the pervasive chromaticism found in the work. Indeed, this pervasive
chromaticism is suggested by the chromatic descent of the recurring bass line. One
analyst, Michele Tannenbaum, argues that Liszt utilizes the most extreme elements of
Bachs style, in order to arrive at the most extreme elements of his own. She writes:
Thus, the elements of Bachs score that represented the extreme limits of
chromaticism in 1714 come to represent the extreme limits of
chromaticism in 1862. Having formed the germinal material of this
project, Liszt goes on to generate a substantial formal structure with some
similarity to Bachs, yet unique unto itself. For all the remarkable
innovations of both structure and local detail, particularly sonority, Liszt
depends on ancient contrapuntal practices of sequence, imitation,
augmentation and diminution, melodic embellishment, cantus firmus, and
voice exchange to accomplish this.145
Written after the death of two of his children, the Weinen, Klagen Variations are
expressionism. Deeply indebted to Bachs cantata, the piece is built around one of the
most expressive devices from Baroque music, the chromatic descending ostinato. Liszt
imparts his own sense of expressionism through a dramatic increase in the capacities
for technical writing for the piano and a bold extension of tonal harmonic practices.
The Weinen, Klagen Variations are not a typical variation set for the piano. The
most obvious way that they diverge in comparison to others is that they are based on
145
Michele Tannenbaum, Liszt and Bach: Invention and Feeling in the Variations
on a Motive of Bach, Journal of the American Liszt Society 41 (1997): 83.
101
the procedures of the Baroque passacaglia. Indeed, Tannenbaum calls the title a
variation sets in several additional ways. For example, variation sets are not typically
preceded by an introduction. They also are not concluded with a coda, especially a
coda that is musically unrelated to the preceding variations. But aside from these
digressions from typical variation procedures, Tannenbaum further argues that the
Liszt is the composer most associated with the symphonic poem, an orchestral
piece usually consisting of one movement with a programmatic element. For example,
a symphonic poem might evoke the content of a certain poem or painting. Liszt scholar
Liszts Weinen, Klagen Variations are like a symphonic poem in that they are
contained in one continuous movement. They are built almost exclusively from the
descending, chromatic motion borrowed by Bach. But most importantly, like Bachs
cantata, they symbolize the transformation of grief into redemption, as the final section
146
Tannenbaum, Liszt and Bach: Invention and Feeling in the Variations on a
Motive of Bach, 49.
147
Ibid.
148
Humphrey Searle, The Music of Liszt (New York: Dover Publications, 1966), 76-77.
102
achieves a powerful climax in the tonic major. By combining elements of the Baroque
103
CHAPTER VI: SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
As this document shows, the criteria for recurring Mannerism given by Maniates
can be used as the basis for analysis of music. In doing so, the argument can be made
that certain pieces are, therefore, examples of recurring Mannerism. Furthermore, this
and Liszts Weinen, Klagen Variations are examples of such recurring Mannerism by
All style periods are related to both the past and the future, retaining elements of
previous styles and imparting them to subsequent styles. The philosopher Giorgio de
Santillana expressed this idea similarly: All periods are of transition, but some are
some of the disagreements found amongst notable scholars. Friedlaender argues that
Mannerism is anti-Classical and forward looking. On the other hand, Shearman asserts
that Mannerism emerges seamlessly from the past through imitation and stylization.
this document. For example, Bachs Goldberg Variations are based on the chaconne, a
centuries old variation form. Indeed, numerous composers used the same bass line that
Bach used in the Goldberg Variations during the Baroque era. Yet, the Goldberg
Variations are also progressive. In particular, the recurring periodic phrase structure of
149
Giorgio de Santillana, The Age of Adventure: The Renaissance Philosophers (New
York: New American Library, 1964), 19.
150
Hauser, Mannerism, 12.
104
the Aria (eight-measure phrases with conclusive cadences) and its continuous use in the
subsequent variations anticipates the Classical style of Haydn and Mozart. In fact, this
phraseology makes the Goldberg Variations atypical of the Baroque era. Williams
writes: Also by no means as typical of music of the High Baroque as one might
suppose is the conspicuously clear two-, four- and eight-bar phraseology in every
movement. It is very striking throughout the Goldberg, and yet the composer is not
dominated by it, nor is the continuity of each movement ever threatened.151 Thus, the
Goldberg Variations look back on the Baroque era while still anticipating the stylistic
Beethoven imitates the styles and manners of the past and incorporates them into his
own unique late style. Yet, the Diabelli Variations also anticipate the forthcoming
Romantic style in certain respects. For example, the near suspension of tonal
progression that occurs in the transition to the final variation is a harbinger of the
addition, Beethovens stylization of the variation form anticipates the way later
the form of the Diabelli Variations is more asymmetrical than a sonata as the climax
occurs so near the end of the piece (rather than in the central development section).
Rosen uses the term telescoping to describe this shift of the climax from the middle of
the movement to as near the end as possible. Rosen finds this telescoping in all four
105
maximum tension is placed very near the end, and final resolution is powerfully
compressed. . . . This implies that some important aspects of Classical harmony have
been cast aside, along with Classical proportions.152 Beethovens Diabelli Variations
procedures and indebted to the past. Of the three variation sets analyzed in this
document, the Weinen, Klagen Variations are the only one that uses Baroque
assimilation of aspects of the Romantic symphonic poem, and demonic piano technique,
the Weinen, Klagen Variations are quintessentially Romantic. Rosen agrees, writing
that many of these late piano works are experimental, foreshadowing the music of
Mannerism in analysis, this document made no attempt to parse the categories that were
given. In the article these criteria were taken from, Maniates never attempted to define
each criteria precisely.154 A useful future study could do just that: define each of the
and preciosity are quite similar. This makes it difficult to determine under which
152
Rosen, The Romantic Generation, 321.
153
Ibid., 474.
154
Maniates, Musical Mannerism: Effeteness or Virility? 270.
106
category a certain feature should be placed. For example, the canonic pattern in the
The other two categories deserve attention as well. For example, to what extent
does a piece of music need to imitate a past style or manner to be consistent with
Mannerism? A piece like the Diabelli Variations certainly seems an obvious choice.
problematic. Indeed, some art historians, John Shearman in particular, disagree with the
that seem to fulfill the other requirements quite well, like the Goldberg Variations,
express few signs of expressionism and no signs of surrealism. Yet, other pieces,
particularly those written closer to the late nineteenth or early twentieth century seem
consistent with expressionism, like the Weinen, Klagen Variations. Put simply, a future
study could parse the verbiage of Maniates criteria for recurring Mannerism, define
each one precisely, and identify the best examples of each category. This could be a
progressed forward through history until this rediscovery and began with the
scholarship of art historians before proceeding to music. If the intention of the art
historians who rediscovered Mannerism was to imbue Mannerism with positive values
and descriptors, as they claimed, a future study could reverse the flow of the
107
methodology described above. Put simply, the works analyzed in the present study
never suffered from the negative evaluations that sixteenth century Mannerism endured
for centuries. Indeed, the Goldberg and Diabelli Variations have been viewed as
masterworks for much of their existence. Thus, a persevering researcher might be able
to start from a point in the future with a work exhibiting the qualities of recurring
Mannerism (e.g. the Diabelli Variations) and work backwards chronologically to argue
for the positive qualities of sixteenth century Mannerism in the visual arts.
mentioned that many art historians in the early twentieth century became interested in
categorize the analogous musical style, namely Arnold Schoenberg and the Second
techniques abound with rationality, clarity, and order, values antithetical to Mannerism.
Perhaps a researcher could investigate this divergence amongst the sister arts. Is this
divergence real? Does the duality of Classicism and Mannerism break down between
the sister arts in the early twentieth century? The answers to these questions could be
fascinating.
The music of the sixteenth century and the nineteenth century exhibit particular
implode from within. Maniates book chronicles the progression by which the modal
108
tendencies. In a cycle fueled by the rise of the printing press, a composer would
introduce a certain harmonic audacity that would then be imitated and copied by other
composers. Thus, what had begun as an audacity quickly became a clich, necessitating
the need for further audacities. This Mannerist feedback loop eventually destroyed the
centuries old modal system and led to the development of functional tonality. The
Indeed, there are many similarities between sixteenth century Mannerism and
sixteenth and nineteenth century harmonic practices could compare and contrast the
process by which the modal and tonal harmonic systems changed and eventually ended.
Because of the specialization of the author, the focus of this document has been
recurring Mannerism in keyboard literature. Indeed, this focus caused certain problems
that could be alleviated by an analyst capable of taking a broader approach. For the
sake of brevity, an effort was made to facilitate comparisons across the three styles of
the common practice era. This was achieved by analyzing works that exhibited the
criteria for recurring Mannerism, while also being similar in form. This methodology
was problematic in that there are few works written during the Romantic period that are
within the standard keyboard repertory, in the Germanic-Austrian tradition, and exhibit
the features of recurring Mannerism. Liszts Weinen, Klagen Variations fit these
criteria although they lack the reputation of the sets by Bach and Beethoven. Put
simply, there are better examples of Mannerist music within the Romantic style but
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An analyst could reproduce this study without the focus on keyboard music and
certainly show better examples of recurring Mannerism within the Romantic style. For
example, if there is a classic model for the Romantic lied, numerous examples could be
found by Schubert and Schumann. Lieder by Hugo Wolff, written toward the end of the
nineteenth century, certainly seem Mannerist in comparison. Or, the symphonic song
cycles by Richard Strauss or Gustav Mahler would be appropriate. The same could be
said to a lesser extent of the Classical era. While the Diabelli Variations and other late
Beethoven piano works are appropriate examples of recurring Mannerism, the late
To take this idea further, there is no reason to confine this phenomenon to the
common practice era. Certainly, there are examples of recurring Mannerism in the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The avant-garde composers that met in Darmstadt,
Germany in the 1950s and 1960s, particularly Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz
Stockhausen, might represent a Mannerist stage in the development of the style of the
comes to mind deserves comparison to the sets in this study. Frederic Rzewskis The
People United Will Never Be Defeated!, written in 1975, recalls both the Goldberg and
Diabelli Variations in its breadth and scope. Thus, an analyst could replicate this study
with similar conclusions utilizing examples outside of the keyboard repertory or the
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