Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviated references to Schenker's writings
- Preface
- ARCHIVAL STUDIES
- ANALYTICAL STUDIES
- C. P. E. Bach and the fine art of transposition
- Comedy and structure in Haydn's symphonies
- “Symphonic breadth”: structural style in Mozart's symphonies
- “Structural momentum” and closure in Chopin's Nocturne Op. 9, No. 2
- On the first movement of Sibelius's Fourth Symphony: a Schenkerian view
- Voice leading as drama in Wozzeck
- Sequential expansion and Handelian phrase rhythm
- Strange dimensions: regularity and irregularity in deep levels of rhythmic reduction
- Diachronic transformation in a Schenkerian context: Brahms's Haydn Variations
- Bass-line articulations of the Urlinie
- Structure as foreground: “das Drama des Ursatzes”
- Index
Bass-line articulations of the Urlinie
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviated references to Schenker's writings
- Preface
- ARCHIVAL STUDIES
- ANALYTICAL STUDIES
- C. P. E. Bach and the fine art of transposition
- Comedy and structure in Haydn's symphonies
- “Symphonic breadth”: structural style in Mozart's symphonies
- “Structural momentum” and closure in Chopin's Nocturne Op. 9, No. 2
- On the first movement of Sibelius's Fourth Symphony: a Schenkerian view
- Voice leading as drama in Wozzeck
- Sequential expansion and Handelian phrase rhythm
- Strange dimensions: regularity and irregularity in deep levels of rhythmic reduction
- Diachronic transformation in a Schenkerian context: Brahms's Haydn Variations
- Bass-line articulations of the Urlinie
- Structure as foreground: “das Drama des Ursatzes”
- Index
Summary
One of the poignant moments in Brahms's Intermezzo in A major, Op. 118, No. 2, is the return of the opening theme in inversion (bars 34ff.). The distinctive features of the theme – the double-neighbor pattern and skip of a seventh – are instantly recognizable, despite the changes in their tonal meaning. Even before this point, however, there are several intimations of the opening theme. In bars 30–34 there is a fourfold statement of the initial upbeat figure in the bass. Furthermore, in bar 29 the melodic contour of the top voice is exactly the same as in bar 1. Although this bar is not preceded by a literal repetition of the two-note upbeat (c#2–b1) that begins the piece, the reiterated statements of the upbeat figure in the bass over the course of bars 30–34 would seem to compensate for its omission.
The d2 in bar 29 is preceded by an ascending chromatic line originating from g#1 in bar 25, and a dominant pedal appears in the bass in bars 25–29. In bar 28, where c#2 in the melodic line descends a third to a1, Brahms's notation is significant: the a1 at the end of bar 28 is tied into the next bar where it appears beneath d2 at the beginning of bar 29.
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- Schenker Studies 2 , pp. 276 - 297Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
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