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A Basic Overview of Schenkerian Analysis

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Title: A Basic Overview of Schenkerian Analysis


1
A Basic Overview of Schenkerian Analysis
  • By Eric J. Potter

2
Music in Nature
  • Schenker derives many of his early theories from
    Nature. He constantly refers to nature in Music
  • Tonal Music is man-made
  • Tonal Music is the only art which cannot immitate
    nature as other arts do

3
The other Theory
  • In reading Schenkers treatises, he mentions
    multiple times of a theory which is flawed in
    many was
  • Schenker does not explain this theory in detail
    but Oswald Jonas, his pupil, describes it as
    unpractical

4
The Schenkerian approach
  • Schenker discovered the use of structural pitches
    and essential harmonies
  • He discovered many techniques composers used to
    move within and through a piece

5
The fifth relationship
  • One of these discoveries was the
    fifth-relationship.
  • The fifth-relationship could be used to define
    any progression and was used many a time by the
    Great Composers

6
The Great Composers
  • Schenker mentions the Great Composers many
    times in his books and writings.
  • The composers he is referring to are those who
    could compose fully and completely (within
    tonality) despite any flawed teachings in theory
    or voice leading
  • Some include Mozart, Beethoven, The Bachs, and
    Franz Liszt. There are many others

7
The Use of Music Theory
  • What is the actual point to study Music Theory?
  • Why teach it in college?
  • Why not just perform?

8
Music Theory in Practial Use
  • The most important use for music theory is to
    better ones performance.
  • In using music theory, one can try to understand
    what a composer may have meant when the piece was
    written.
  • This would allow for an effective and outstanding
    performance.

9
Helpful Sources
  • Heinrich Schenker, Annoted by Oswald Jonas,
    translated by Elisabeth Mann Borgese. Harmony
    (Chicago University of Chicago Press, 1954
  • Heinrich Schenker, Translated and edited by Ernst
    Oster. Free Composition (Der Freie Statz) (New
    York Longman Inc.)
  • Oswald Jonas, Translated and Edited by John
    Rothgeb. Introduction to the Theory of
    Heinrich Schenker (New York 1934, 1982)
  • Dr. Donald Watts, Towson University Music Theory
    Staff

10
Some more sources
  • Joseph Lubben, Music Theory Spectrum, Vol. 15,
    No. 1 (Spring, 1993), pp. 59-75
    http//www.jstor.org/stable/view/745909?seq2Sear
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  • 114. Roger Sessions, Critical Inquiry, Vol. 2,
    No. 1 (Autumn, 1975), pp. 113-119
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11
Thank you for your time!
  • Thank you for allowing me to speak a little about
    Schenker and the basics of his theory
  • I will take any questions now and answer them to
    the best of my abilities
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