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
Sequential expansion and Handelian phrase rhythm
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
Introduction: the basic pace
In the second part of the Allemande from his Suite in C, K.399, known as the “Suite in the Style of Handel” (an inauthentic but not inaccurate title), Mozart follows the practice of Baroque composers in elaborating on the sequential spinning he had begun in the first part (see Example 1). The early sequence of bars 3 and 4 moves essentially in quarter notes, following what one might call the basic pace of the composition – marked by the even, largely stepwise motion of its outer voices in their normalized, unexpanded state. Just after the central double bar, Mozart complements the first sequence with a slower moving one, advancing in half notes (bars 15 and 16). He then continues with a still slower sequence, one that progresses basically in whole notes, in bars 18, 19, and 20. (The music is quoted in Examples 1a and 1b; the gradual expansion in sequential duration is shown by means of asterisks and rhythmic notation above and below each system. These symbols mark the points at which the underlying motion takes place. The parentheses in each system enclose the ancillary chords that extend the time span of the more structural adjacent chords.)
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- Schenker Studies 2 , pp. 192 - 221Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999