Cage 1944 Flashcards
Context
20th century, avant garde music. Schoenberg challenged tonality and harmony
Cage challenged the idea of timbre of the piano, Aleatoric music
Influenced by Gamelan, Indian tala, African music
Needed a percussion ensemble but only had a piano
Melody
Preparation of piano, lose Western elements of melody Based around ostinati Occasional sense of pitch Note addition, subtraction Range not extensive
Preparation of piano, lose Western elements of melody
Based on African music, more percussive than melodic
Before, The Banshee, Henry Cowell, use of diminished triad, otherwise limited sense of melody
Melody based around ostinati
Short repeated figures
Piano 1 RH, 3 note figure at begining,
(After, Koko, Yiri, dominate piece) African music is also based on short melodic ostinatos
Occasional sense of pitch
Last section, 5 notes of RH, Cage inspired by Gamelan music, gongs and drums are pitched
Note addition, subtraction
Figure 55, 7 note motif, upbeat added to make 8 note motif, metrical shift
Figure 56, 5 motif, repeated, followed by 4, (After, Steve Reich, electric counterpoint) elements of minimalist music
Range not extensive
Some higher notes are used, lower ranges not explored, upper ranges produced drum like sonorities
Harmony
Preparation of piano, lose Western elements of harmony
Preparation of piano, lose Western elements of harmony
Occasionally ‘chords’ are played but do not have a harmonic function, greater focus on sonority and rhythm than harmony, African music does not use Western harmony
(Before, The Banshee, Henry Cowell, no sense of harmony)
Texture
Predominantly 4 part texture but varied constantly Monophony 2 part texture 3 part texture Occasional silence
Predominantly a 4 part texture but varied constantly
Figure 5, texture varied like in Gamelan music
(Gamelan ensembles)
(Before, Concerto for double string orchestra, Sir Micheal Tippett, variety of textures, contrapuntal, melody dominated homophony)
Monophony
Piano 1, F5, contrast
2 part texture
F6, contrast
3 part texture
F7, contrast
Occasional silence
Before final section at F64, F73, extra emphasis to music after rests, marks different sections for dancers
Tonality
Preparation of piano, lose Western elements of tonality
Preparation of piano, lose Western elements of tonality
(Before, The Banshee, Henry Cowell, no sense of tonality)
Greater focus on sonority and rhythm than tonality, African music does not use Western tonalities
Sonority
Used a piano instead of actual African drums
Place mutes within piano strings
Use of pedals
Use of microphones
Used a piano instead of actual African drums
Lack of space and money
Place mutes within piano strings
Very detailed set of instructions, equipment (Screws, rubbers, coins, bolts, plastic, weather strip) and distance from dampers, bridge (Before, Villa Lobos, Chorus No 8, insert paper between strings) , either change the tire but retain some pitch or make it entirely percussive
Use of pedals
Change the resonance of the strings,
(Before, Aeolian Harp, Cowell) aleatoric music, each piano has a different quality, each performance will be unique
Use of microphone
Amplify the sound,
(After, Saariaho, Petals) produce closer sound
Rhythm, tempo and metre
Paramount feature Polyrhythms Strong sense of metre Metrical shift Square note values Use of rests Ornamental groups
Polyrhythms
P1, begining, quavers in 3s, P2, straight crotchets and off beat quavers in 2/2
(Before, Ionisation, Edward Varese, emphasis on a wide variety of rhythms), African music is dominated by polyrhythms
Strong sense of metre
P2, F1 First beats emphasized with accents,
(Messiaen, meter obscured)
End of b5, accents emphasize offbeats, help the dancers find the beat
Metrical shift
F14, Phrases repeated at different positions in bar,
(After, Philip Glass, Night train) minimalistic elements, develop melodic fragments
Square note values
Almost entirely crotchets and quavers
Moto perpetuo throughout, (After, Philip Glass, Metamorphosis) relentless movement and metrical drive
Use of rests
F5, Long rests, notes mark end of section group, helps dancers
Ornamental groups
F20, septuplets, ornaments without rhythmic value, for decoration
Structure
Macro-microcosmic structure
Structure based on tempo
Structure based on rhythm
Macro-microcosmic structure
Part of it is the same as the whole, like a fractal,
9 sections, 30 bars long
Each section broken up into smaller units 252 262 272
End of each section marked by double barline, Cage was influenced by Eastern philosophy and religion, focuses on harmony that exists in nature, fractals
(Before, Cage, 1st Construction in metal)
Structure based on tempo
Tempo marking=88, each 30 bar section takes 40 secs to perform Strongly contrasts against aleatoric chance elements like sonority
Structure based on rhythm
Each smaller group has a different rhythm
P1 RH, continuous quavers in 3s,
(After, Rag Desh, Shankar) related to the Indian tala, however Indian music groups beats than bars