Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviated references to Schenker's writings
- Preface
- ARCHIVAL STUDIES
- ANALYTICAL STUDIES
- C. P. E. Bach and the fine art of transposition
- Comedy and structure in Haydn's symphonies
- “Symphonic breadth”: structural style in Mozart's symphonies
- “Structural momentum” and closure in Chopin's Nocturne Op. 9, No. 2
- On the first movement of Sibelius's Fourth Symphony: a Schenkerian view
- Voice leading as drama in Wozzeck
- Sequential expansion and Handelian phrase rhythm
- Strange dimensions: regularity and irregularity in deep levels of rhythmic reduction
- Diachronic transformation in a Schenkerian context: Brahms's Haydn Variations
- Bass-line articulations of the Urlinie
- Structure as foreground: “das Drama des Ursatzes”
- Index
C. P. E. Bach and the fine art of transposition
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviated references to Schenker's writings
- Preface
- ARCHIVAL STUDIES
- ANALYTICAL STUDIES
- C. P. E. Bach and the fine art of transposition
- Comedy and structure in Haydn's symphonies
- “Symphonic breadth”: structural style in Mozart's symphonies
- “Structural momentum” and closure in Chopin's Nocturne Op. 9, No. 2
- On the first movement of Sibelius's Fourth Symphony: a Schenkerian view
- Voice leading as drama in Wozzeck
- Sequential expansion and Handelian phrase rhythm
- Strange dimensions: regularity and irregularity in deep levels of rhythmic reduction
- Diachronic transformation in a Schenkerian context: Brahms's Haydn Variations
- Bass-line articulations of the Urlinie
- Structure as foreground: “das Drama des Ursatzes”
- Index
Summary
In the short autobiography that he wrote in his sixtieth year, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach mentions a feature of his musical style that has long been admired:
Since I have never liked excessive uniformity in composition and taste, since I have heard so many and so many different kinds of good things, and since I have always been of the opinion that, no matter where it might be hidden, and even if we come across it only in the slightest degree, something good can be got from a piece – these, along with my God-given talent, are presumably how the diversity (Verschiedenheit) arose that people have noticed in my music.
This diversity pervades the music of C. P. E. Bach. Not only was Bach the great eclectic, willing to embrace whatever he found good; but also he brought to the art of variation a degree of refinement few composers have matched. An elegant and distinctive variation technique is the cornerstone of his style, both in his celebrated use of the varied reprise and within sections of a work. Rare is the phrase that receives a literal repetition in C. P. E. Bach's music.
Given Bach's inventiveness and his dislike of “excessive uniformity,” one feature of his keyboard sonatas seems curiously out of place: he insists on repetition when it involves transposition in the latter part of a sonata movement.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Schenker Studies 2 , pp. 49 - 66Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999