对打赋格托:心灵作曲的第一步

IF 1.6 1区 艺术学 0 MUSIC
Peter Schubert
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引用次数: 2

摘要

杰西·安·欧文斯收集了文艺复兴时期一个不使用写作的阶段的证据;Julie Cumming认为,正是作曲家作为唱诗班男孩的训练,包括即兴创作,使他们能够做到这一点;我认为他们所做的是针对pensado,Lusitano的“深思熟虑”对位法,这是一个介于现场即兴创作和作曲之间的类别。这篇文章详细介绍了“在脑海中作曲”的策略,因为它可能适用于歌手/即兴演奏者早期学习的一种特殊技术(在音符名称、音程和节奏符号之后),称为“对位符”。它包括演唱一句自由创作的台词,其中包含对长时间相等的坚定旋律(CF)的动机的重复。尽管这种技巧很容易描述,但没有人研究过重复针对CF的动机所涉及的困难。我将展示需要事先思考的内容(pensado)和需要牢记的内容,以便立即演唱或稍后记下结果。我从卢西塔诺的例子中“逆向工程”的策略为这种短暂的实践提供了具体的现实,并为我们自己的教育学、思考文艺复兴时期的音乐以及完善我们的即兴创作概念提供了有用的工具。Banchieri和Ortiz的例子补充了Lusitano的例子。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Contrapunto Fugato: A First Step Toward Composing in the Mind
Jessie Ann Owens marshaled evidence of a stage in Renaissance compositional process that did not use writing; Julie Cumming believes it was composers’ training as choirboys, which included improvisation, that enabled them to do this; and I propose that what they were doing was contrapunto pensado, Lusitano’s “thought-out” counterpoint, a category lying between on-the-spot improvisation and composition. This article details strategies for “composing in the mind” as it might have applied to a particular technique that singer/improvisers learned early on (after note-names, intervals, and rhythmic notation), called contrapunto fugato. It consists of singing a freely invented line containing repetitions of a motive against a cantus firmus (CF) in long equal values. Although this technique is easy to describe, no one has investigated the difficulties that are involved in repeating a motive against a CF. I will show what needs to be thought out beforehand (pensado) and what needs to be held in the mind so that the result can be sung immediately or written down later. The strategies that I “reverse engineer” from Lusitano’s examples give concrete reality to this ephemeral practice and offer a useful tool for our own pedagogy, for thinking about Renaissance music, and for refining our concept of improvisation. Lusitano’s examples are supplemented by examples by Banchieri and Ortiz.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
20.00%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: A leading journal in the field and an official publication of the Society for Music Theory, Music Theory Spectrum features articles on a wide range of topics in music theory and analysis, including aesthetics, critical theory and hermeneutics, history of theory, post-tonal theory, linear analysis, rhythm, music cognition, and the analysis of popular musics. The journal welcomes interdisciplinary articles revealing intersections with topics in other fields such as ethnomusicology, mathematics, musicology, philosophy, psychology, and performance. For further information about Music Theory Spectrum, please visit the Society for Music Theory homepage.
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