Expanded Tonality in Quartal Space: Back to Debussy's Étude pour les Quartes

Considering the hypothesis that intervals of fourths work in Debussy's Étude pour les Quartes as an every-level structuring cell, this article proposes a harmonic analysis where all chords are drawn from a twelve-tone quartal space. The hypothesis is that Debussy tests the capacity of the quar...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Didier Guigue
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: Associação Nacional de Pesquisa e Pós-Graduação em Música 2013-05-01
Series:Opus
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.anppom.com.br/revista/index.php/opus/article/view/147
Description
Summary:Considering the hypothesis that intervals of fourths work in Debussy's Étude pour les Quartes as an every-level structuring cell, this article proposes a harmonic analysis where all chords are drawn from a twelve-tone quartal space. The hypothesis is that Debussy tests the capacity of the quartal matrix to supersede conventional triadic harmony. On another hand, because of this novel networking, the high-level formal articulation demands complementary resources to be more effective, especially concerning perception. For this reason, in a second phase, an analysis of secondary dimensions, such as density and relative range, is attempted to highlight their function. The conclusion points to "unsolved" interactions between the lower- level harmonic system, which recycles some aspects of the tonal rhetoric, although in an experimental quartal space, and a surface that avoids sensation of both continuity and causality.
ISSN:0103-7412
1517-7017