Briefly yet tantalizingly outlined in his Theory of Harmony, interpretation of Schoenberg’s concept of fluctuating tonality has proved fruitful in the discussion of his late tonal repertoire, leading to scholarship such as Christopher Lewis’s 1987 article “Mirrors and Metaphors: Reflections on Schoenberg and Nineteenth-Century Tonality.” In this paper, I review Schoenberg’s descriptions of fluctuating tonality and of monotonality, and examine the interaction between these concepts through a close reading of Schoenberg’s “Der Wanderer” (Op. 6, no. 8). The analysis features adapted Schenkerian methods used in conjunction with traditional Roman numeral and root/quality analysis. Rather than sug...
Although Schoenberg viewed his twelve-tone method as an extension of the Germanic musical evolution ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 53-54)This paper focuses on the latter phase of Arnold\ud...
This essay investigates the role that a single expression played during the years when Schenker’s id...
This thesis explores Arnold Schoenberg's use of meter in Das Buck der hangenden Garten, Opus 15. Th...
This study describes the integration of harmonic idiom and tonal design in Schoenberg's First Quart...
This study deals with the processes of tonal counterpoint inherent in the songs of Schoenberg's Opus...
The dissertation explores the use of interval cycles and their relationships with the tonal framewo...
"The paths of harmony are tortuous," wrote Arnold Schoenberg in his manuscript on the musical idea. ...
Includes abstract and vita.This dissertation argues that Heinrich Schenker's mature analytical techn...
This essay focusses on the relation between timbre and musical logic. I try to draw a connection bet...
Timbre and orchestration are neglected parameters in analytical writing, partly because analysis tra...
Composition for Arnold Schoenberg is a comprehensible presentation of a musical idea (musikalische G...
Schoenberg's Eight Songs op. 6 and First String Quartet op. 7 give evidence of a new, "functional" c...
The analytical literature posits a dichotomy between Copland’s “popular” and “serious” music. Despi...
By examining conflicting analytical approaches to late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century tonal...
Although Schoenberg viewed his twelve-tone method as an extension of the Germanic musical evolution ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 53-54)This paper focuses on the latter phase of Arnold\ud...
This essay investigates the role that a single expression played during the years when Schenker’s id...
This thesis explores Arnold Schoenberg's use of meter in Das Buck der hangenden Garten, Opus 15. Th...
This study describes the integration of harmonic idiom and tonal design in Schoenberg's First Quart...
This study deals with the processes of tonal counterpoint inherent in the songs of Schoenberg's Opus...
The dissertation explores the use of interval cycles and their relationships with the tonal framewo...
"The paths of harmony are tortuous," wrote Arnold Schoenberg in his manuscript on the musical idea. ...
Includes abstract and vita.This dissertation argues that Heinrich Schenker's mature analytical techn...
This essay focusses on the relation between timbre and musical logic. I try to draw a connection bet...
Timbre and orchestration are neglected parameters in analytical writing, partly because analysis tra...
Composition for Arnold Schoenberg is a comprehensible presentation of a musical idea (musikalische G...
Schoenberg's Eight Songs op. 6 and First String Quartet op. 7 give evidence of a new, "functional" c...
The analytical literature posits a dichotomy between Copland’s “popular” and “serious” music. Despi...
By examining conflicting analytical approaches to late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century tonal...
Although Schoenberg viewed his twelve-tone method as an extension of the Germanic musical evolution ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 53-54)This paper focuses on the latter phase of Arnold\ud...
This essay investigates the role that a single expression played during the years when Schenker’s id...