Onset asynchrony in Western art music

J. Dunsby, Yannis Rammos
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Abstract

Melodic onset asynchrony, whereby the upper or some component of a musical simultaneity may strike the ear ahead of other sounds, is a common feature in the performance of Western art music. It seems to be of high aesthetic value in the history of pianism, often harnessed to the seemingly contradictory “bass lead” that prevailed in the early 20th century, though in fact the two are far from exclusive. Departing from an application of Brent Yorgason’s taxonomy of “hand-breaking” (2009) to canonical, composed examples of onset asynchrony from Beethoven, Schumann, and Liszt, we examine timbral, organological, and aesthetic continuities that underly distinct practices of asynchrony. We consider the physical nature of such normally non-notated “microtiming”, ranging in performance from a few ms of melodic onset asynchrony to about 100ms, above which it is generally agreed that even the casual listener may perceive it. A piano-roll recording by Claude Debussy, of “The Little Shepherd”, illustrates the mix of melodic onset asynchrony, bass lead, and apparent simultaneity that may be applied in a single interpretation. We then discuss the concept of “audibility” and the question of to what extent, and in what ways, the combined transients of piano attacks may interact. We consider with reference to 20th century Russian piano pedagogy why onset asynchrony seems to have been a little documented, rather than an explicit playing technique, even though certain sources, such as a 1973 treatise by Nadezhda Golubovskaya, show it to be ubiquitous and well theorised. Finally, regarding the thinking that has predominated in musical performance studies in recent decades, with its emphasis on average practices and “ordinary” listeners, we suggest that a new emphasis will be fruitful, that is, research on what is particular about the embodied creativity of expert musicians.
西方艺术音乐中的起音不同步
在西方艺术音乐的演奏中,旋律的开始是不同步的,即音乐同时性的上部或某些部分可能先于其他声音到达耳朵,这是一个共同的特征。在钢琴史上,它似乎具有很高的美学价值,经常被用于20世纪初盛行的看似矛盾的“低音导音”,尽管事实上这两者远非独家。从布伦特·约格森(Brent Yorgason)的“断手”分类(2009)到贝多芬、舒曼和李斯特的典型的、作曲的开始异步的例子的应用出发,我们研究了在不同的异步实践之下的音质、器官和美学的连续性。我们考虑了这种通常不记谱的“微计时”的物理性质,其表现范围从几毫秒的旋律开始异步到大约100毫秒,通常认为即使是偶然的听众也可能察觉到它。克劳德·德彪西(Claude Debussy)的《小牧羊人》(The Little Shepherd)的钢琴卷录音,说明了旋律开始时的非同步、低音引导和明显的同时性的混合,这些可能应用于单一的解释。然后我们讨论了“可听性”的概念,以及钢琴攻击的组合瞬态可能相互作用的程度和方式。我们参考20世纪的俄罗斯钢琴教育学来考虑为什么开始的异步似乎已经有了一点记录,而不是明确的演奏技术,尽管某些来源,如Nadezhda Golubovskaya的1973年论文,表明它无处不在,并且理论化得很好。最后,关于近几十年来在音乐表演研究中占主导地位的思想,它强调平均实践和“普通”听众,我们建议一个新的重点将是富有成效的,即研究专家音乐家的具体创造力是什么。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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