This article supplements, and provides a large amount of additional data for, an article I publisher nearly thirty years ago: "The Ascending Urlinie," Journal of Music Theory 31/2 (1987): 275-303. By Schenker's assertion, an abstract, top-level melody always descends by step to ^1. I demonstrated that at least one rising figure, ^5-^6-^7-^8, was not only possible but could be readily found in the repertory of traditional European tonal music.Musi
Musical examples with rising cadence gestures from John Playford’s Dancing Master (1651). This set w...
This paper briefly illustrates the concepts of tone-lattices, scales, periodicity and notational sys...
In the Romantic period, expanded tonality offers a creative challenge to composers as they explore n...
This article supplements, and provides a large amount of additional data for, an article I publisher...
Before the 20th century, timbre was long ignored for its potential to articulate musical structure i...
Harmony and voice-leading are integrated in the hierarchical networks of Schenkerian analyses: the t...
A series of musical rising two-tone patterns com-prising 13 intervals, from unison to octave, is com...
Author original manuscript (pre-print)Krumhansl and Kessler’s (1982) pioneering experiments on tonal...
This article uses an analogy between "theme" in literary studies and "background" in linear analysis...
Level-analysis in the field of music theory today is rarely hierarchical, at least in the strict sen...
In this article I analyse the context and features of resemantized tonality, historically linked ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 1998The subject of this study is quality of motion in tona...
This research constitutes a detailed study of 5 - 6 voice-leading technique that is often found in m...
During the early twentieth century, art music composers pushed Western tonality to the limits and ev...
The minor key poses obstacles to rising cadence gestures, and the number of compositions with convin...
Musical examples with rising cadence gestures from John Playford’s Dancing Master (1651). This set w...
This paper briefly illustrates the concepts of tone-lattices, scales, periodicity and notational sys...
In the Romantic period, expanded tonality offers a creative challenge to composers as they explore n...
This article supplements, and provides a large amount of additional data for, an article I publisher...
Before the 20th century, timbre was long ignored for its potential to articulate musical structure i...
Harmony and voice-leading are integrated in the hierarchical networks of Schenkerian analyses: the t...
A series of musical rising two-tone patterns com-prising 13 intervals, from unison to octave, is com...
Author original manuscript (pre-print)Krumhansl and Kessler’s (1982) pioneering experiments on tonal...
This article uses an analogy between "theme" in literary studies and "background" in linear analysis...
Level-analysis in the field of music theory today is rarely hierarchical, at least in the strict sen...
In this article I analyse the context and features of resemantized tonality, historically linked ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 1998The subject of this study is quality of motion in tona...
This research constitutes a detailed study of 5 - 6 voice-leading technique that is often found in m...
During the early twentieth century, art music composers pushed Western tonality to the limits and ev...
The minor key poses obstacles to rising cadence gestures, and the number of compositions with convin...
Musical examples with rising cadence gestures from John Playford’s Dancing Master (1651). This set w...
This paper briefly illustrates the concepts of tone-lattices, scales, periodicity and notational sys...
In the Romantic period, expanded tonality offers a creative challenge to composers as they explore n...