Early Seventeenth-Century Harmonic Practice: A Corpus Study of Tonality, Modality, and Harmonic Function in Italian Secular Song with Baroque Guitar Accompaniment in Alfabeto Tablature
This dissertation investigates harmonic propeties of Italian secular songs with Baroque guitar accompaniment in alfabeto tablature, which was a system of letters and other symbols that represented a chord shape to be strummed using all five courses. All of the resulting chords form major or minor tr...
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ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_5077312020-06-24T03:08:41Z Early Seventeenth-Century Harmonic Practice: A Corpus Study of Tonality, Modality, and Harmonic Function in Italian Secular Song with Baroque Guitar Accompaniment in Alfabeto Tablature Tompkins, Daniel C. (authoraut) Jones, Evan Allan (professor directing dissertation) Brewer, Charles E. (Charles Everett) (university representative) Callender, Clifton (committee member) Clendinning, Jane Piper (committee member) Florida State University (degree granting institution) College of Music (degree granting college) Text text doctoral thesis Florida State University Florida State University English eng 1 online resource (187 pages) computer application/pdf This dissertation investigates harmonic propeties of Italian secular songs with Baroque guitar accompaniment in alfabeto tablature, which was a system of letters and other symbols that represented a chord shape to be strummed using all five courses. All of the resulting chords form major or minor triads. These letters were printed in songbooks for guitarists to accompany secular songs. This triadic accompaniment has significant implications for understanding harmonic practices during the seventeenth century. The purpose of this dissertation is to use computational methods to better understand the harmonic features of the alfabeto song repertoire, which can perhaps be a window through which we can understand the broader harmonic practices of secular genres in the early seventeenth century. Machine learning algorithms are employed to understand the modal framework and harmonic function of the alfabeto corpus. K-means clustering is used to determine how many modes are present within the corpus, building upon the recent work of Albrecht and Huron. To understand the harmonic function within the alfabeto corpus, hidden Markov models analyze the number of functions and which chords belong to each of those functions using a similar methodology to Quinn and White. The analyses also compare the alfabeto corpus to corpora of other genres and eras such as J.S. Bach, Palestrina, and Franco-Flemish composers. The alfabeto corpus is also compared with itself to better understand its style and any changes over time. This dissertation provides a fresh look at harmonic practice in the seventeenth century by using statistical models that are informed by historical performance practice. A Dissertation submitted to the College of Music in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Spring Semester 2017. March 6, 2017. Baroque, Early Music, Guitar, Machine Learning, Music Theory, Tablature Includes bibliographical references. Evan A. Jones, Professor Directing Dissertation; Charles E. Brewer, University Representative; Clifton Callender, Committee Member; Jane Piper Clendinning, Committee Member. Music FSU_2017SP_Tompkins_fsu_0071E_13798 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_2017SP_Tompkins_fsu_0071E_13798 This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). The copyright in theses and dissertations completed at Florida State University is held by the students who author them. http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A507731/datastream/TN/view/Early%20Seventeenth-Century%20Harmonic%20Practice.jpg |
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Music Early Seventeenth-Century Harmonic Practice: A Corpus Study of Tonality, Modality, and Harmonic Function in Italian Secular Song with Baroque Guitar Accompaniment in Alfabeto Tablature |
description |
This dissertation investigates harmonic propeties of Italian secular songs with Baroque guitar accompaniment in alfabeto tablature, which was a system of letters and other symbols that represented a chord shape to be strummed using all five courses. All of the resulting chords form major or minor triads. These letters were printed in songbooks for guitarists to accompany secular songs. This triadic accompaniment has significant implications for understanding harmonic practices during the seventeenth century. The purpose of this dissertation is to use computational methods to better understand the harmonic features of the alfabeto song repertoire, which can perhaps be a window through which we can understand the broader harmonic practices of secular genres in the early seventeenth century. Machine learning algorithms are employed to understand the modal framework and harmonic function of the alfabeto corpus. K-means clustering is used to determine how many modes are present within the corpus, building upon the recent work of Albrecht and Huron. To understand the harmonic function within the alfabeto corpus, hidden Markov models analyze the number of functions and which chords belong to each of those functions using a similar methodology to Quinn and White. The analyses also compare the alfabeto corpus to corpora of other genres and eras such as J.S. Bach, Palestrina, and Franco-Flemish composers. The alfabeto corpus is also compared with itself to better understand its style and any changes over time. This dissertation provides a fresh look at harmonic practice in the seventeenth century by using statistical models that are informed by historical performance practice. === A Dissertation submitted to the College of Music in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. === Spring Semester 2017. === March 6, 2017. === Baroque, Early Music, Guitar, Machine Learning, Music Theory, Tablature === Includes bibliographical references. === Evan A. Jones, Professor Directing Dissertation; Charles E. Brewer, University Representative; Clifton Callender, Committee Member; Jane Piper Clendinning, Committee Member. |
author2 |
Tompkins, Daniel C. (authoraut) |
author_facet |
Tompkins, Daniel C. (authoraut) |
title |
Early Seventeenth-Century Harmonic Practice: A Corpus Study of Tonality, Modality, and Harmonic Function in Italian Secular Song with Baroque Guitar Accompaniment in Alfabeto Tablature |
title_short |
Early Seventeenth-Century Harmonic Practice: A Corpus Study of Tonality, Modality, and Harmonic Function in Italian Secular Song with Baroque Guitar Accompaniment in Alfabeto Tablature |
title_full |
Early Seventeenth-Century Harmonic Practice: A Corpus Study of Tonality, Modality, and Harmonic Function in Italian Secular Song with Baroque Guitar Accompaniment in Alfabeto Tablature |
title_fullStr |
Early Seventeenth-Century Harmonic Practice: A Corpus Study of Tonality, Modality, and Harmonic Function in Italian Secular Song with Baroque Guitar Accompaniment in Alfabeto Tablature |
title_full_unstemmed |
Early Seventeenth-Century Harmonic Practice: A Corpus Study of Tonality, Modality, and Harmonic Function in Italian Secular Song with Baroque Guitar Accompaniment in Alfabeto Tablature |
title_sort |
early seventeenth-century harmonic practice: a corpus study of tonality, modality, and harmonic function in italian secular song with baroque guitar accompaniment in alfabeto tablature |
publisher |
Florida State University |
url |
http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_2017SP_Tompkins_fsu_0071E_13798 |
_version_ |
1719323379605962752 |