Tag: Stravinsky

  • Mapping Music 8. TONALITY

    In traditional tonal music, or for a composer’s personal design, there are four main factors defining a tonal language: source scale (covered in Mapping Music 5); harmonic type; horizontal (voicing) connection; and tonal center, a basic concept for Common-Practice tonal music.

    A diatonic major or minor scale and harmonic structures built from it define a key and “tonic” home-base tonal center. (In the ancient modal music of the monophonic Gregorian chant it was called the “finalis,” as it was the expected final arrival destination of an extended melody.) Triads taken from the scale build a scaffold of harmonies, featuring the dominant chord (scale degrees 5, 7, 2, and sometimes 4) with its scale-degree 7 “leading tone” propelling a progression to resolve back to the tonic chord (scale degrees 1, 3, 5).

    In 20th-century music, some composers (notably Bartók) began to define tonal center contextually rather than by scale-and-key, writing melodic patterns and counterpoint that branched out from and converged back to a core base (but not necessarily bass) pitch. Twelve-tone music, derived from the full chromatic scale, would seem to be avoiding any tonal center, but some composers still built textures whose lines and counterpoint would emphasize one focal pitch-class.

    A matrix of choices

    In forging a tonal language, the composer develops preferences in each of these factors. Choices from each factor column can be mixed in a variety of ways. The composer designs by delving into more specific patterns, especially for the source scale (possibly, say, a six-note pitch-class set) and the harmonic type, establishing a preference for certain harmonic intervals (such as my favoritism for 7-semitone Perfect 5ths and 11-semitone Major 7ths).

    There are, of course, thousands if not millions of possible combinations of all these factors, a universe of tonal possibilities for the individual composer and a particular piece.

    Next, let’s dive more deeply into harmonic types and the factor of horizontal connections between successive harmonies.

    Constellation streams

    A stream of successive constellations, which we might nickname a “constream,” would traditionally be called a chord progression. In the following example, all stacks are 10 semitones tall; no common tones in the transposition choices.

    no common-tone connections

    In the next example, stacks of differing heights, with constellations that reduce to three different scale patterns: scale array 5 2, then 2 3, back to 5 2, then 4 1, and finally 2 5, inversion of 5 2.

    common-tone connection

    Now a longer, more mixed succession of interval stacks of constellations belonging to these same three scale patterns (2 5 or 5 2; 1 4 or 4 1; and 2 3).

    extended constreams

    Back to my constellation friends of Mapping Music 6, we can make some constreams with them.

    diatonic and chromatic successions of symmetrical constellations

    An intriguing example from the literature of great early modern music, an interlude near the beginning of Stravinsky’s L’Histoire du Soldat:

    L’Histoire du Soldat excerpt

    This passage is intriguing in many ways. It looks like counterpoint between two woodwind instruments in high register. But both lines are quite simple and don’t seem to go anywhere. (In our GALAXIES: Structure chapter, we’ll discuss these questions of texture and counterpoint.) Introducing it here raises the question of harmony, of constellations and their arrays, though the passage doesn’t look at all chordal. Here is an array analysis of the constellations formed in the first through fourth bars then jumping to bar 10 and, finally, bar 14.

    L’Histoire du Soldat constellations

    Now you can see and hear more clearly the role played by array interval of 7 semitones (“Perfect 5th” as in above examples) and also 5, and 2 semitones in the harmonic continuity of the passage. (Also note 7 + 7 = 14; 5 + 2 = 7; 5 +5 = 10; 2 + 12 = 14; etc.)

    To illustrate that this is not all just theoretical, here is a simple etude composed using exactly the constellations and successions explored in Examples 12 and 17. It took only about an hour to compose this minute and a half in Sibelius. The title: the constellation Pleiades (“Seven Sisters”) is a tight cluster of 7 stars tagging along in the winter sky with Taurus as the Zodiac sails westward every night.

    Streams and 12-tone sets

    Let’s keep going. How about designing a succession of three four-pitch constellations, so that all 12 pitch classes of the chromatic scale are included but none repeated? (Traditional terminology calls such a set a 12-tone aggregate.)

    three sets make a row

    Constellations a) and c) are different “chord voicing” of the same scale pattern, 2 4 2 . Both scale patterns and all three interval stacks are symmetrical. And they all contain two 6-semitone “tritones,” giving the whole succession the tritone’s quality of ambiguity and the character of the succession a feeling of mystery.

    Progressive alterations of arrays

    Similarity of interval patterns can build coherence in a stream of constellations. Beyond functional common-practice harmony, this is a kind of process that composers of the 20th century and today can use to create a “new tonality”.

    Possible operations to transform an interval array into a closely related array:

    OPEN — Expand an interval by an octave, adding 12 semitones

    FUSE — Join two adjacent intervals to make a larger interval, the sum of their sizes

    DELETE — Remove an interval, shortening the stack’s height

    SUBDIVIDE — Insert a pitch to divide an interval into two smaller intervals, whose sum equals the original interval

    PROPOGATE — Append or insert an interval of a size already present into the stack

    INVERT — Reverse the registrar order of the stack — turn it upside down

    alteration examples

    There are operations that more significantly alter the character of the interval array.

    REDISTRIBUTE — Fuse two adjacent intervals into one larger interval then re-subdivide it into two different smaller intervals

    SHRINK / STRETCH — Alter one interval size by other than an octave, leaving others unchanged

    COMPRESS / EXPAND — Alter all intervals in the stack by adding or subtracting each by the same number of semitones, or multiplying each by a constant

    These alterations are listed in order, from the mildest alteration producing a similar array (redistribution) to the most dramatic producing a substantially different array, compression or expansion of the whole array (preserving little from the original but its symmetry). Here is an example employing these altering transformations.

    more alterations, with common-tone connections

    The other element of coherence in this example is the many common-tone connections between one chord and the next, establishing a slow-moving stability. Another example of the same interval stacks, same succession of alterations, but choosing transpositional level of each constellation to create as many 1-semitone voicing connections as possible (10 such voicing connections in the following example) makes the con stream’s sense of progressive change stronger.

    more alterations, with semitone connections

    Finally, another example etude, using this last constream . . .

    © 2026 – All Rights Reserved

    Thomas S. Clark

    TClarkArtMusic.com 

  • journal 6. Canticum Terra

    Ann Arbor, 1970 —

    The first Earth Day was April 22, 1970. In the buildup to it, a group of University of Michigan students organized an environmental teach-in on March 11–14, presenting a series of speeches dealing with various environmental problems. Following its lead, 2,000 other universities and colleges ultimately put on events.

    My doctoral composition studies at Michigan began in 1974. Two seminars were mandatory requirements, on the works of the great 20th-century icons, Stravinsky and Bartok. I also took seminars in medieval and Renaissance music. Fifty years later, listening to a stunning recording of ancient choral music, I became re-interested in the rhythmic subtleties of voices executing the unspecified time flow of Gregorian chant.

    Using a variety of similar but slightly different note values, including the ancient semi-minim, minim, dotted-minim, breve, dotted-breve, and lunga, I composed a new plain chant. Beginning with pitches of a Dorian mode, my wordless chant takes chromatic turns, providing tonal color without chords above a motionless deep drone. A high, windblown echo of the chant’s shape appears as prelude and coda to its “singing” deepness.

    In this era facing global crises on our blue planet, Canticum Terra is a musical homage to and prayer for Mother Earth.

    Canticum Terra

    Clark 2023 (TC-136)

    “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters. And God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light. God saw that the light was good, and he separated the light from the darkness. God called the light “day,” and the darkness he called “night.” And there was evening, and there was morning—the first day. And God said, “Let there be a vault between the waters to separate water from water.” So God made the vault and separated the water under the vault from the water above it. And it was so. God called the vault “sky.” And there was evening, and there was morning—the second day. And God said, “Let the water under the sky be gathered to one place, and let dry ground appear.” And it was so. 10 God called the dry ground “land,” and the gathered waters he called “seas.”

    Genesis (The Holy Bible, NIV translation)

    Stravinsky’s 1955 masterpiece in three movements, Symphony of Psalms, ends with Psalm 150 “laudate Dominum” in reverent praise of this awesome creation.

    III. Alleluia, laudate Dominum

    Berlin Philharmonic

    LISTEN › YouTube

    Mycology

    I read a fascinating book, Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake (Random House, 2021) about the mostly unseen bizarre world of fungi. Mycelium is the root-like mass of a fungus branching out in soil, forming a colony too small to see or grown to span thousands of acres as in Armillaria. Lichens are complex fungal communities of different organisms, like the black rocky shoreline stripes of Hydropunctaria.

    Mycology

    Clark 2022 (TC-118)

    Branching is a recursive process, with a pitch splitting into two mirroring lines of pitches, then each of those lines mirror splitting again. By powers of 2, the branches eventually build a tone-mass of 8 lines then even massive 16-pitch sonorities.

    Mycelium

    branching, thread-like hyphae

    Pointillistic speckles are set in the dark tonal colors of a Viennese 12-tone pitch series, never random but kaleidoscopically sparkling in a restless texture of overlapping rhythms.

    Hydropunctaria maura

    “water speckled midnight”

    Crystallography

    From the stars and cosmos, we have come down to Earth, the third planet from the sun, to delve into its inner mysteries.

    Very different from the lyric adoration of the Alleluia of Symphony of Psalms, Stravinsky’s later work (1966) explores serial atonality with a dark, dissonant edge. The percussive brilliance of its postlude is evocative of the prodigious granite masses created in Genesis verse 9.

    Requiem Canticles – Postlude

    London Sinfonietta

    LISTEN › YouTube

    In the midst of my recent Impressionistic “Sketches” series, the 2024 piece Folio (TC143) was a throwback to the more abstract sound mass style of the 1960s and ’70s. Its percussive attacks and inert masses of sound were all synthesized, also throwbacks to my early days of electronic tape music. (One of the earliest electronic compositions, Stockhausen’s 1960 Nr. 12 Kontakte, was full of sounds like giant steel beams hitting a concrete floor!) The other retro feature of Folio is suggested in its title: homage to Earle Brown’s 1952 FOLIO, a collection of abstract art scores in stark, proportional graphic notation.

    A wind and percussion transformation of Folio was challenging. It was composed in the abstract avant-garde style of the ’60s, carving sound sculptures of solid, hard-edged sonorities in expansive pitch/time space. Now colored with cool woodwind sounds, radiating brass, and sparkling percussion, GEODES animates Folio‘s solid sound masses in surging and fading rhythmic textures.

    The chaotic boldness of rocks . . . my own collection of many found on beaches and hikes, but also splendid displays at three places: Dick’s Rock Shoppe in Estes Park, Colorado; Lizzadro Museum of Lapidary Art in Elmhurst (now in Oak Brook), Illinois; and a wonderful gallery of geodes at the Permian Basin Petroleum Museum in Midland, Texas. A geode is Nature’s sculpture, an inscrutable gray rock sphere that, when sawed open, reveals a magical world of dazzling-colored crystals. Different minerals make crystals of varied hues of pink, purple, umber, or cream, reflecting new light.

    GEODES

    Clark 2025 (TC-143)

    Pyrite

    Calcite

    Amethyst

    Quartz

    Geology

    In CANYON SKETCHES (Clark 2024 TC-141), three sound sketches explore the timeless qualities of three magnificent canyons: Black Canyon of the Gunnison (Colorado); Glacier Gorge in Rocky Mountain National Park; and Palo Duro Canyon (Texas).

    Actually, each sketch began fundamentally based not so much on the canyons as on musical techniques. For example, in “Black Canyon,” a complex three-part canon of meandering 12-tone lines musically sketches the colorful streaks of pegmatite dikes in the Black Canyon’s cliff walls of Precambrian gneiss.

    Black Canyon

    ___________