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7 - Details of Bruckner's symphonic waves

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 December 2009

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Summary

Our chapter 7 continues the translations begun in chapter 6, from Bruckner, part 2, chapter 2. As explained in the introductory paragraphs to our chapter 6, part 2 of Bruckner contains a series of preliminary analyses that initiate the reader into Kurth's style of analysis, and provide a framework for understanding the extended discussions of each movement of the symphonies, as well as of Bruckner's other major works, in volume 2 of Bruckner.

In our chapter 6, the discussions of excerpts from the first and last movements of the Sixth Symphony, and from the second movement of the Fourth, gave us the basic idea of Kurth's approach to form. The analytical discussions included below probe further into the details of dynamic formal processes. Kurth addresses reverberatory waves (Nachbebungen, literally “after-tremors”) in a short excerpt from the first movement of the Ninth Symphony (Ex. 7.1). Two passages from the first movement of the Fifth illustrate how Bruckner creates a sense of symphonic space (Exx. 7.2, 7.3), and an excerpt from the second movement of the Seventh shows how formal dynamics affect developmental motives (Ex. 7.4). Finally, the opening of the first movement of the Eighth Symphony illustrates thematic-motivic evolution and the effect of formal dynamics on harmony (Exx. 7.5–7.8). My notes refer to other, perhaps more familiar analyses of the opening of the Eighth in publications by Hugo Leichtentritt, Werner Korte, and Constantin Floros.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1991

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