The first part of this dissertation is a detailed analysis of the first movement of Lee Hyla’s Concerto for Piano and Chamber Orchestra no. 2 (1991). The second part documents stylistic elements over the course of his compositional output. The Concerto will serve as the focal point of analysis for two reasons. First, Hyla uses a more surface-level and audible musical narrative, a type of narrative he began employing in his music between 1981 and 1983. The Concerto, coming eight to ten years later, is sufficiently removed from the initial works, allowing this technique time to further develop. By 1991, other important facets of his approach emerged, elements employed in many compositions that followed, including some of his most recent. The ...