This article addresses the issue of parametric non-congruence as it affects the articulation of closure in the first movement of Schubert’s String Quartet in C major, D. 46. This movement displays two formal irregularities which render it problematic in relation to sonata theory: first, the presentation of new thematic material in the exposition does not correspond with a modulation to the domi- nant key, and second, the recapitulation of the primary theme commences over an active 64 bass progression. As such, D. 46/i provides an apt setting for an appraisal of how effective sonata theory is in the treatment and understanding of closure when the very elements which ought to express it are ostensibly incom- patible. The distinction I draw be...
Schubert’s Quintet in C major has drawn the attention of a number of Schenkerian analysts. While mos...
This chapter contributes to the growing number of studies that aim to disabuse Schubertian literatu...
This chapter contributes to the growing number of studies that aim to disabuse Schubertian literatu...
This article addresses the issue of parametric non-congruence as it affects the articulation of clos...
Schubert's treatment of the medial caesura differs on many levels from that of the Classical traditi...
This study of large-scale closure in Mozart's sonata-form first movements focusses on the structure ...
The medial caesura (MC) is a mid-expositional break that divides a sonata-form exposition into two p...
The bridge passage of sonata form has generally been considered less attractive to listeners and ana...
The bridge passage of sonata form has generally been considered less attractive to listeners and ana...
The nature of closure is a major topic in modern theoretical discourse, as theorists recognize that ...
This article proposes an alternative way to think about the process of expositional closure. The rec...
This study aims at discussing the role of balance and proportion in the expositional scope within a ...
Modern accounts of sonata form typically discuss the design in terms of the creation and resolution ...
Modern accounts of sonata form typically discuss the design in terms of the creation and resolution ...
Schubert’s Quintet in C major has drawn the attention of a number of Schenkerian analysts. While mos...
Schubert’s Quintet in C major has drawn the attention of a number of Schenkerian analysts. While mos...
This chapter contributes to the growing number of studies that aim to disabuse Schubertian literatu...
This chapter contributes to the growing number of studies that aim to disabuse Schubertian literatu...
This article addresses the issue of parametric non-congruence as it affects the articulation of clos...
Schubert's treatment of the medial caesura differs on many levels from that of the Classical traditi...
This study of large-scale closure in Mozart's sonata-form first movements focusses on the structure ...
The medial caesura (MC) is a mid-expositional break that divides a sonata-form exposition into two p...
The bridge passage of sonata form has generally been considered less attractive to listeners and ana...
The bridge passage of sonata form has generally been considered less attractive to listeners and ana...
The nature of closure is a major topic in modern theoretical discourse, as theorists recognize that ...
This article proposes an alternative way to think about the process of expositional closure. The rec...
This study aims at discussing the role of balance and proportion in the expositional scope within a ...
Modern accounts of sonata form typically discuss the design in terms of the creation and resolution ...
Modern accounts of sonata form typically discuss the design in terms of the creation and resolution ...
Schubert’s Quintet in C major has drawn the attention of a number of Schenkerian analysts. While mos...
Schubert’s Quintet in C major has drawn the attention of a number of Schenkerian analysts. While mos...
This chapter contributes to the growing number of studies that aim to disabuse Schubertian literatu...
This chapter contributes to the growing number of studies that aim to disabuse Schubertian literatu...