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Lutoslawski’s twelve-note chords and the renewed exploration of harmony in the twentieth-century

dc.contributor.authorMartins, José Oliveira
dc.date.accessioned2024-07-29T15:56:33Z
dc.date.available2024-07-29T15:56:33Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description.abstractMarking the beginning of Witold Lutosławski’s middle period, the compositional output of the second half of the 1950s—Musique funèbre (1954–58), Five Songs (1956–57), and the Three Postludes (1958–60)—brought about a shift in the composer’s harmonic practice and “sound language” with lasting implications for his work in the ensuing four decades (Nikolska 1994). This compositional path was opened by Lutosławski’s intense explorations of (what he felt were) overlooked potentialities of the chromatic scale, resulting in new sensuous and expressive harmonic possibilities of twelve-note arrangements. Lutosławski rejected dodecaphonic practices and principles, thereby affiliating his own renewed understanding of the dormant harmonic potentialities of the aggregate into the “empirical tradition” of composers as Debussy, Bartók, and Messiaen (Lutosławski 1962) grounding his new harmonic practice on a phenomenology of interval quality of aggregate arrangements.Much of the analytical attention concerning the pitch organization in pieces of this period has focused on inventorying the various intervallic arrangements of individual twelve-note chords, including the use of register and observing structural properties such as inversional symmetries and pattern transpositions, and the preference for certain partitions and interval-class parings (Stucky 1981, Bodman Rae 1999, Homma 1995, 2001). However, because Lutosławski’s sensuous responses to harmony have primarily been examined through individual chordal configurations, we still do not appropriately understand how chordal properties impact inter-chordal relations (including harmonic succession) and underlie processes of global harmonic space. In particular, it is not yet clear how the restriction and ordering of interval qualities, while ensuring the unique character of twelve-note chords, might also shape strategies of chordal progression and principles of harmonic relatedness or self-referential syntax. Building on theoretical work of interlocked interval cycles and pitch nets and fields (Perle 1996, Nauert 2003, Gollin 2007, Martins 2011, 2015), my approach to Lutosławski’s mid-century harmonic explorations argues that twelve-note chords are often inscribed into larger pitch-space orderings or networks framing inter-chordal relations. Specifically, certain “sensuous” properties of individual chordal arrangements provide the structuring impetus for a series of theoretical referential constructions that both efficiently integrate a large number of individual chordal patterns and act as extended fields for chordal possibilities. The constructions are portrayed here as geometrical representations of non-octave repeating cyclic groups or as various types of transpositional networks. The modeling of harmonic relations reconciles chordal construction and chordal succession, and provides a framework for analyzing the interplay between harmony and form in a number of pieces of this transformative period for the composer.pt_PT
dc.description.versioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionpt_PT
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10400.14/45930
dc.language.isoengpt_PT
dc.peerreviewednopt_PT
dc.subjectLutosławskipt_PT
dc.subjectHarmonypt_PT
dc.subjectNetworkspt_PT
dc.subjectMusical Spacept_PT
dc.titleLutoslawski’s twelve-note chords and the renewed exploration of harmony in the twentieth-centurypt_PT
dc.typeconference object
dspace.entity.typePublication
oaire.citation.conferencePlacePortugalpt_PT
oaire.citation.titleNova Contemporary Music Meeting 2018: Composing Music Todaypt_PT
rcaap.rightsopenAccesspt_PT
rcaap.typeconferenceObjectpt_PT

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