Transcendental Oscillations in Popular and Classical Music Since the 1800s

dc.contributor.advisor

Stoia, Nicholas

dc.contributor.author

Ramage, Maxwell

dc.date.accessioned

2021-05-19T18:07:40Z

dc.date.available

2021-05-19T18:07:40Z

dc.date.issued

2021

dc.department

Music

dc.description.abstract

In music both popular and classical since the nineteenth century, one finds everywhere chord progressions that alternate between two harmonies in ways that deviate from conventional “textbook” tonality. This thesis aims to answer the following questions: are there meaningful generalizations to be made about these progressions? What is their role in music history? Why have they been so popular with composers of the past two centuries? And how do they operate in specific pieces by particular composers? To answer these questions, I use methods such as Roman-numeral analysis, voice-leading diagrams showing how harmonic phenomena emerge from linear counterpoint, and multi-level readings of entire works. The study has four foci: Claude Debussy, Jean Sibelius, Stephen Sondheim, and modern pop music. I discover that modality has a symbiotic relationship with harmonic oscillation; that neighbor chords constituted important sites of innovation in nineteenth-century harmony; that transcendental oscillations can govern entire works in manifold ways; that the theatrical device known as “vamping” saturates Sondheim’s scores and produces transcendental oscillations; and that correspondences exist between styles that otherwise have little to do with one another, such as Impressionism and rap. This study explores the harmonic theory and analysis of music that is neither traditionally tonal nor atonal.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22968

dc.subject

Music

dc.subject

Music theory

dc.subject

Music history

dc.subject

Claude Debussy

dc.subject

harmony

dc.subject

Jean Sibelius

dc.subject

modality

dc.subject

popular music

dc.subject

Stephen Sondheim

dc.title

Transcendental Oscillations in Popular and Classical Music Since the 1800s

dc.type

Dissertation

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
Ramage_duke_0066D_16019.pdf
Size:
13.3 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format

Collections