Tag: John Adams

  • Mapping Music 11. TEXTURE

    Imagine a piece of music exploring texture in time, made of single sounds and sonorities occurring one at a time in sustained resonance. Then imagine the points of sound are separated by rests, silence. As the texture drifts in and out of a resonant cloud, the sound events remain unconnected. Suddenly, their pace explodes into a torrent of notes. That describes the following powerful piece by my UNT colleague, Joseph Klein.

    Joseph Klein – Pathways IV: Rhymes & Spirals (2024)

    Sound color

    Our next music map shows a simple color-coding graphic system for classifying most musical timbres, informally the tone quality of sounds. The map intuitively chooses colors of the rainbow. While the color spectrum orders the frequencies of light (another manifestation of periodicity), our sound-color classifying map does not imply any ordered quantification of timbral complexity.

    instrumental color rainbow

    Though we think first of an orchestra for a rainbow of color, chamber music can incorporate a variety of instrumental colors, each produced in vivid isolation by one instrument, standing out or changeably mixed with other colors.

    Augusta Read Thomas wrote Dance Mobile in 2021, scored for 13 instruments: Woodwind quartet (Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon); Trombone; String quintet: (2 Violins, Viola, Cello, Contrabass); Piano; 2 Percussion (vibraphone/metal, marimba/wood, drums).

    The piece starts with a single pitch, blending several colors that swell in intensity. Then ensues a kaleidoscopic dance of at least seven distinct color combinations, of two basic types:

    Sustained sounds – strings; high woodwinds; lone brass of the trombone

    Sparks – pizzicato strings; ringing metal sounds; drum strokes; staccato piano

    Augusta Read Thomas – Dance Mobile (2021)

    Though the piece is dedicated “in memoriam Oliver Knussen,” the memory is a joyous dance of color.

    Symmetry

    In the exposition of Webern’s Symphony, Op. 21, we saw that each contrapuntal line duplicates the exact rhythm of the lead line, with each entrance one bar later — a classic canon. But each contrapuntal line presents a different succession of instrumental colors:

    Horn . . . . . . . . . Clar. . . . Cello
          . . . Harp . . . Cello pizz. . . . Cello arco . . . Violin . . . Harp . . . Horn . . . Harp
          . . . . . . Horn . . . . . . . . . Bass Clar. . . . Viola
           . . . . . . . . . Harp . . . Viola pizz . . . Viola arco . . . Violin . . . Harp . . . Horn . . . Harp

    The German term for this is so elegant, we’ll use it here:

    KLANGFARBENMELODIE — melodic or contrapuntal line expressed by a string of changing tone colors

    Webern placed each pitch in every line in a particular fixed octave, except Eb that appears in two different octaves. This makes a striking, symmetrical 13-pitch constellation with a palindromic array, the same array going down as going up.

    Webern 13-pitch constellation

    Not only was he obsessed with symmetry in this piece, but this constellation’s symmetry also proves that he was thinking specifically about the chord voicing in what I have identified in successive interval array form.

    We can use this constellation as a Y-axis for a graph mapping the timbres as they appear in the various parts in canonic lines in pitch space for the first 9 bars. This farben color map looks like one of the later geometric paintings of Piet Mondrian.

    Op. 21 color map

    Pointillism

    Though we often share musical terms and concepts with visual art, we sometimes mean different things by the same term. In painting, a technique developed in the Impressionist style period of the late 19th century that became known as pointillism. The most famous example is Georges Seurat’s “A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte” at the Chicago Art Institute. Instead of sweeping brush strokes and palette-blended colors, it used small separate spots of subtly varied colors to make a texture that, when viewed from a distance, seems to merge into a color cloud, giving the impression of animated light.

    Musical pointillism, unlike painting, separates sounds in time and pitch space, not to blend them into a texture so much as to highlight the different qualities of each unique sound event. Webern was a pioneer of musical pointillism in works such as Op. 21. Let’s graph the first 10 bars of this fabric using our timbre color-coding (BLUE = wind, ORANGE = percussion, VIOLET = plucked string) on a broadly distinguished 6-octave pitch range. We get something as colorful as a Mondrian painting!

    Andromeda sound color map

    As a musical fabric, isolation — using the vast available range of pitch and the empty time of rests and silence — is a fitting analog for the vast, mostly empty space of a galaxy. Let’s use it for a demonstration etude.

    Andromeda is the nearest large galaxy, 2.5 million light-years from our own Milky Way galaxy. Our sound color demonstration study uses every sound quality on our sound color spectrum except red. Here is a score of the first 10 bars.

    Notice that the green woodwind notes are doubled with a synthesized vocal-type sound. Yellow brass notes are punctuated by orange metallic percussion attacks. Likewise, blue string notes are articulated by the plucked string sounds of harp.

    Here is the whole colorfully pointillistic 3-minute study:

    Sound Mass

    At a time when electronic music was emerging in the 1950s, new instrumental resources were also developing a new style that was all about animating massive layers of sound.

    German experimentalist Karlheinz Stockhausen composed two early, influential sound mass works, Gruppen (1957) for three orchestras, and Carré (1960) for four orchestras and four choirs. The scores were huge, dense, 12-tone, and monolithic in form.

    A 2002 piece by John Adams, On the Transmigration of Souls, harkens back to a mid-century masterpiece of the Avant Garde. In 1961, Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki wrote a piece for a massive score of 52 string instruments. Conceived as an abstract, freeform, dense massing of animated and intense musical fabrics, it represents a pioneer in the genre of sound mass music, winning the UNESCO Prize that year. Only after it was heard in performance, he said, “I was struck by the emotional charge of the work … I searched for associations and decided to dedicate it to the Hiroshima victims” — thus the title, Tren Ofiarom Hiroszimy (translated Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima).

    As a young composer in the ‘70s, I reflected this approach in some pieces titled Animated Landscapes. (The title was inspired by John Cage’s famous Imaginary Landscapes no. 4 for 12 radios.) Beyond referring to the painting genre of landscapes, the title sets the imagination for solid, continuous textures like viewing the shapes of a mountain range, but set into rhythmic motion. (This approach became prevalent in ensemble music, especially of Midwestern composers such as Donald Erb.)

    Considerably predating the music mentioned above, Schoenberg’s Fünf Orchesterstücke, Op. 16 (1909), was originally scored for a large orchestra of 37 parts. It is not thought of as sound mass music, as its five movements each have Expressionist or Impressionist titles: “Vorgefühle” (“Premonitions”); “Vergangenes” (“The Past”); “Farben” (“Summer Morning by a Lake”); ”Peripetie” (“Peripeteia”); “Das obligate Rezitativ”(“The Obligato Recitative”). The third movement, Farben, is of special interest not only for its exquisite mixed-palette painting of orchestral timbres, but also for its thick though delicate fabric of sustained sounds. At the start, nothing moves, the subtle shimmer of instrumental colors fading in and out of a continuous fabric of delicate, faint sounds. (A sound mass can be delicate, not necessarily “massive.”)

    Here is a score of the first page, showing sounding concert pitches for all instruments.

    Schoenberg Farben scoring

    Each measure presents one constellation, recolored with different instruments in the second half of the measure. For the first three bars, the constellation does not change, and then only subtly in the next five bars, maintaining the constant C pedal point in the low strings.

    Farben constellations

    The bass clarinet’s F3 in bar 7 is considered an ornamental non-harmonic pitch. While you can see many recurring smaller constellations imbedded within these changing large constellations, such as 5 5, 3 5 and its inversion 5 3 (which are triads), and some transformations of smaller constituent constellations: 8 3 redistributed to 9 2, 4 7 shrinking to 4 5 (another triad), and 3 4 (also a triad) shrinking to 2 4.

    Though there are many triads embedded in the constellations, the overall quality of the sonorities is complex, as the triads are framed within critical dissonances:

    framing dissonances

    Foreground / background

    Most landscape paintings, distant textures of forest, mountains, sky, waves on the sea, or clouds, have some sharp focal point. Often on the horizon (in itself a focusing anchor of the visual display), it may be a barn, a setting sun, a boat, a farmer and dog. If we consider proportion and symmetry in a visual composition, the focal point is best not dead center. A more interesting balance, according to expert photographers, follows the Rule of Thirds, placed one-third from the left or right, one third from the top, or both. Two-thirds is a ratio of 0.667. The Greeks famously defined the Golden Ratio, an ideal ratio dividing a whole length or height into two parts such that the ratio of the smaller part to the larger is the same as the ratio of the larger part to the whole. The ratio is 1.618:1, the solution to the equation: x2 – x – 1 = 0; a 62% and 38% division.

    In a simple traditional musical texture, an accompanying harmonic texture is designed as a background for the focal element of a melody. Sound masses may lack such focus, like the forest or sea waves. When there is to be perceived a standout element of the texture, Schoenberg called this focal element of the musical fabric the Hauptstimme. Though that might translate “highest voice,” the melody or other focal events are not necessary to be higher in the pitch range of the fabric than other elements. But there must be some isolation or distinction setting them off from background in at least one of the parameters mentioned above. The Hauptstimme focal line or textural element can be:

    • in a pitch range isolated from background
    • a color isolated as a single timbre, not a mixed diffusion of background colors
    • slower or faster than background
    • more rhythmically elastic, varied than background
    • not synchronized with background
    • loudest line (the most obvious)

    Schoenberg devised a special symbol for the focal Hauptstimme line of a fabric, a boldface stylized capital H, which you see marking the bass clarinet entrance in bar 7 of the Farben example. Here is how that principal Hauptstimme line continues, a Klangfarbenmelodie of changing color, from bass clarinet to clarinet with trombone to three solo contrabasses.

    Hauptstimme handoffs

    Notice the aggressive rhythmic motive, each time stepping down 2 semitones; and the  7 7 7 quintal-chord constellations in the contrabasses. (The rhythmically aligned clarinet and trombone are separated by 14 semitones, 7 + 7.)

    Beyond color isolation, Learning to Compose makes a distinction for a timbre mixed with itself or other colors spread over some pitch register (“diffuse”) or reinforcing itself in a narrow, confined pitch space (“concentrated”). While Farben’sbackground is diffuse, its Hauptstimme color is isolated in the low pitch register of the bass clarinet and then also concentrated with the three solo contrabasses.

    In the first movement of Anthracite Fields (2015) by Julia Wolfe, the bass clarinet emerges as a focal sound by its loudness and singularity of pitch in a cloud mass of softer sound. Then aggressively loud clusters suddenly interrupt the steady-state background, yielding eventually to repetitive sung chords and floating vocal duets. The sound fabric maintains a three-dimensional depth of contrasting intensities.

    Julia Wolfe – Anthracite Fields I: Foundations (2015)  

    Galaxy groups

    Our sample etude composition for sound mass is a thick score of 10 wind parts and harp, with a fabric the opposite of pointillism: everything sustains and overlaps. There are basically no pauses or holes in the continuous 2-minute sound fabric. Its title, Laniakea, is the name of the supercluster of galaxies that includes the Milky Way.

    Laniakea score excerpt

    Having shown the score with all its notational details, to better illustrate the main point of the example, sound mass, here is a graphic rendering of that actual second system of notes. We can reveal its pointillism by increasing the contrast in a negative image of light on dark. That makes the attack beginning of each sound show up but not the staff lines or sustained resonances . . . a fanciful art image of Laniakea, a vast empty part of the universe dotted with millions of galaxies.

    Laniakea score abstracted

    © 2026 – All Rights Reserved

    Thomas S. Clark

    Continue reading Mapping the Music Universe:

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  • Mapping Music 10. COUNTERPOINT

    Two lines woven into a shared time stream — counterpoint — can be relatively more or less independent. How similar or diverse are their rhythmic patterns (congruent or diverse)? How often do their note-initiating time points “line up” (synchronous or independent)?

    In an example of congruent, matching rhythmic material, the upper line’s rhythm is echoed in the trailing lower line in the first five bars below. But the lines are rhythmically independent, sharing only one time point, the downbeat of bar 4. This echo process is known as . . .

    CANON — leading line is echoed after some delay by one or more answering lines of identical rhythmic values and melodic shape (possibly transposed)

    For more on canons, go to BOOK OF CANONS, 14 short 3-part canonic studies.

    example of two-voice counterpoint

    Bars 6-11 show diverse rhythms (the upper line in mostly shorter durations than the lower), and not in canon but synchronized at most of their time points.

    Rhythmic alignment

    Johann Joseph Fux established a theoretical construct for pedagogical purposes in which contrapuntal lines in a 16th-century style progressed from congruent, synchronous rhythms (“First Species”) to one line twice the pace of the other (“Second Species”), and so on. Only in Fourth Species was the relationship reversed, back to matching, congruent rhythmic values but in studied alternation avoiding synchrony.

    COMPOSITE RHYTHM — stream of durations between time points marked by an attack of a note in one or more lines of the fabric

    Here is a graphic identification of the composite rhythm of each contrapuntal phrase above.

    composite rhythm

    You can see in the first example that there are 7 notes in the upper line and the same 7 rhythmic values in the lower line. But the composite rhythm shows 12 durational values, due to the non-synchrony of the lines. In the second example, the upper line has 9 notes, but the lower line’s 5 notes all align with them. The “sum” of the two lines is a composite rhythm of only 9 durational values, identical to the upper line.

    Contrapuntal intervals (in number of semitones) are identified between the staves. The time points of the composite rhythm, moments when both lines are starting a note, are contrapuntally accented and emphasize the contrapuntal intervals (boldface) formed at those points. The consistency — in this example the contrapuntally accented intervals of 7, 8, 2 (and 2+octave), and 5 (and 5+octave).

     

    CONTRAPUNTAL ACCENT — prominence of contrapuntal intervals formed by notes starting together on a time-point

    Refraction

    This term refers to the metaphor of light going through a prism or drop of water, revealing a spectrum of colors. In that sense, a musical refraction might refer to a line presented by instruments of changing sound color. (See Klangfarbenmelodie below.) But let’s apply the refraction concept to pitches in a line of consistent color.

    Refraction can also be a simple way to make two lines out of one, splitting up its notes into two lines shared by alternation or some other less strict pattern. The pitch assigned to one line can be sustained to make a companion pitch to the pitch or pitches that come next in the other line. In this way, the vertical intervals can be strategically controlled to generate a coherent contrapuntal harmonic flow.

    To demonstrate, here is the opening theme to Jupiter Rising:

    Jupiter Rising theme

    Now splitting this violin line into two violin parts:

    Jupiter theme refracted

    Identifying the contrapuntal intervals (by number of semitones) that are formed reveals a preference for contrapuntal intervals of 2, 4, and 5 semitones.

    Some might say this is not real counterpoint, but the total rhythmic independence of the lines argues for that distinction. Mandelbrot, pioneer of fractal mathematics, described fractional spatial dimensions. Maybe we can call our refraction one-and-a-half voice counterpoint.

    Canon

    Repeating the definition of this ancient form of Rumpelstiltskin magic, spinning complex counterpoint out of a single melodic line:

    CANON — leading line is echoed after some delay by one or more answering lines of identical rhythmic values and melodic shape (possibly transposed)

    For a collection of 21st-century examples, 14 studies in 3-voice canon, go to BOOK OF CANONS.

    Now let’s look closely at a more famous canon, in four parts scored for seven different instruments. Here is a contrapuntal example of canonic threads expressed through changing instrumental colors, the opening of the first movement of Webern’s Symphonie Op. 21:

    Webern Symphony opening

    Instead of showing each instrument’s part, I have rearranged the score so that each staff line strings together the successive pitches of a 12-tone row:

    • On the top staff, A F# G Ab played by horn; E F B Bb played by clarinet; then D by cello, continuing past this excerpt to complete the 12-tone row with C# C Eb.
    • The second staff answers in canon one bar later, starting on F plucked by harp and proceeding with a mirror inversion of the lead-line row: F Ab G F# Bb A Eb E C C# D B.
    • The third staff is also an inversion of the row starting on A.
    • The fourth staff, entering last, is a transposition of the original lead-line row starting on C#.

    Repetition

    Any musical element can be repeated — a note, an arpeggio, a measure, a phrase, a whole section of a form, as in the baroque rounded-binary model or the exposition of a classical sonata-allegro form. When a melodic motive or molecule is continuously repeated many times, it is called an ostinato, usually forming a background to some changing line or evolving stream of events. We can analyze two critical factors:

    CYCLE — duration length of a repeating pattern

     PHASE — time point at the start of a cyclic repetition

    Some 20th-century composers, especially Americans, started to bring background patterns or structures into the foreground, as primary objects rather than accompaniments. The incessant repetition of an ostinato, often a chord arpeggio, became the basis for simple structures. With a relentless pulse at its rhythmic core, most ostinato music generates simple highly congruent rhythmic lines in simple or no counterpoint.

    Classic works by composer Philip Glass, such as the ‘70s pieces Music in Twelve Parts, are continual repetition of chord arpeggios, with the chord changing gradually and subtly over many repetitions. This has two effects: making a very slow harmonic change rhythm and time flow under an animated surface; and creating a broad time form that is monolithic and metamorphic, rather than a more traditional multi-section recurrence form.

    John Adams brought this relentlessly repetitive approach to appealing prominence in symphonic music. His Fearful Symmetries (1988) has a pulsing persistence reminiscent of the great Stravinsky ballets, such as Le Sacre du Printemps (1913).

    John Adams – Fearful Symmetries (1988)

    Steve Reich continued this energetic vein of repetitive rhythmic construction into the 21st century with works such as Double Sextet (2008).

    Steve Reich – Double Sextet (2008)

    Despite its sometimes lush fabric of harmony and animated rhythmic activity, persistent-repetition music has unfortunately been labeled “Minimalist,” often having no melody, no sense of harmonic progression or tonal modulation, no themes, no sectional cadences and divisions, and no discernable large-scale recurrence form. (A music more truly described as Minimalist can be found in the more radical works of John Cage, with sparse sounds — or no prescribed sounds at all — in a time-space of mostly “silence.”)

    Phasing

    Back to ostinato — what about more than one ostinato layered into a more complex texture? Even if the ostinato patterns are of the same length, it is possible for their repetitions at different times to not synchronize but overlap. We would say their repetitions are out of phase.

    Using Webern’s canon technique to place identical lines out of phase:

    Milky Way score excerpt

    The Milky Way is our own barred spiral galaxy. The musical fabric is adapted closely from Buckingham Fountain, the third movement of my Chicago Sketches for flute choir.

    There is also the potential for each ostinato pattern to have its own cycle length of repetition. And if the lines repeat different cycle lengths, their phase, the start of another repetition, cannot always align in synchrony. This can be described as multi-cycle/multi-phase ostinato music, pioneered among others by American composer Terry Riley.

    Inspired by tape loops continuously replaying recorded sequences of sounds, in 1968 Riley produced a massive (45- to 90-minute length) multi-phase ostinato work, In C. Becoming iconic, it has been recorded commercially more than 36 times and performed by countless new music ensembles, finding its improvisatory freedom and large flexible instrumentation attractive. (A 2006 performance at the Walt Disney Concert Hall featured 124 musicians.) It consists of 53 ordered patterns of specified, notated rhythm and pitch, to be continually repeated against a steady eight-note pulse. The patterns range in length from only 4 eighth-notes to extended phrases sprawling across a part’s entire manuscript line (without bar lines). Thus the variety of repetition cycle lengths is enormous. And because each musician chooses when to start and how many times to repeat each pattern, multiple phases are also guaranteed.

    Rather than analyze this iconic piece, I will show and explore a piece of mine inspired by In C, originally composed in 1984. It employs the canon technique and differing-length patterns to create the constant overlapping of patterns out of phase with other lines, This makes it difficult to express all the patterns in one common meter signature. Riley’s solution, and mine, is to use no meter signature, with all lines (parts) aligning only with a constant eighth-note pulse.

    Effulgence improv score

    Before we dive into its structure, let’s listen to its beginning.

    The surface rhythmic relationship of overlapping patterns is simple, all conforming to a common eighth-note pulse, as in Riley’s In C. The differing bar lengths, however, produce different periodicities, different repetition cycles. Patterns of 2, 4, 6 or 8 eighth-notes relate to each other to establish a common quarter-note based meter, a feel of 2/4, 3/4 or 4/4 meter. But the patterns of a prime number of eighth-notes, 3, 5 or 7, oppose the sense of a quarter-note beat.

    The prime numbers mean also that the repetition cycles will rarely synchronize, creating a more complex, floating or flying fluidity of motion. Three against four is fairly simple, as with Patterns 6 and 7. Repetition of primes seven against five, as in Patterns 19 and 20, make a much more complex composite, taking some 35 eighth-note pulses to return to a synchronous starting point.

    multi-phase combinations

    To control the interaction between successive patterns that will overlap in canonic lines, each pattern’s pitch content must work with the pitches of patterns before and after it. By “work” means that the collective, cumulative constellation should be of an intervallic character, an array, that conforms with the overall harmonic character desired.

     Assuming a performance spread of three patterns, here is a sample analysis of the middle, Patterns 16 through 21, showing the three-pattern collective constellation. Each pattern intersects with common pitches of its neighbor patterns, adding pitches to the sonority that will eventually disappear.

    intersecting pitch collections

    This is the mechanics of a metamorphic harmonic process that gives multi-phase ostinato music its graceful evolving form.

    Now let’s listen to the complete composition from 1984 (revised 1994), one of my personal favorites.

    Effulgence

    © 2026 – All Rights Reserved

    Thomas S. Clark

    Continue reading Mapping the Music Universe:

    TClarkArtMusic.com