Triangles of Soul—Schubert the “Wanderer” and His Music Explained by Neo-Riemannian Graphs

In Schubert’s music, the theme “wandering” is used frequently, closely related to human life and death. I presume that, being stricken by serious illness and facing challenging relationships, Schubert lived his short life with agony and dismay, confronting the life theme “death.” In that sense, Schu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ishihama, Kanako
Other Authors: Boss, Jack
Language:en_US
Published: University of Oregon 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23148
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spelling ndltd-uoregon.edu-oai-scholarsbank.uoregon.edu-1794-231482019-01-23T17:20:28Z Triangles of Soul—Schubert the “Wanderer” and His Music Explained by Neo-Riemannian Graphs Ishihama, Kanako Boss, Jack Music theory Neo-Riemannian analysis Performance Piano music Schenkerian analysis Schubert In Schubert’s music, the theme “wandering” is used frequently, closely related to human life and death. I presume that, being stricken by serious illness and facing challenging relationships, Schubert lived his short life with agony and dismay, confronting the life theme “death.” In that sense, Schubert himself was probably the wanderer who kept trudging throughout his life journey. In 1822, Schubert composed the allegorical tale “My Dream,” and in that tale, he writes as follows; “when I attempted to sing of love, it turned to pain. And again, when I tried to sing of pain, it turned to love. Thus were love and pain divided in me” (Deutsch 1977, 227). Schubert lived his life, struggling between love and pain, and between life and death. Human life and death conflict with each other, but exist together in the same place. In other words, death is a root of life. If one can perceive that life and death both exist at the root of one’s life, the form of life should be represented by a circular path, not by a linear formation. This notion accords with Schubert’s musical style, where the same material comes back again and again in a circular formation. I assume that the notion—death as a root of life—is the essential conception of “wandering” that Schubert’s music expresses. In this dissertation, I would like to offer several Neo-Riemannian analyses and graphs of Schubert’s piano compositions; Impromptus D. 899, Moments Musical D. 780, Sonata in C-minor D. 958, and the “Wanderer” Fantasy D. 760. For each work and movement, I will map out the harmonic structure and key progressions on a Tonnetz graph, and suggest a new way to comprehend the nature of “wandering” that Schubert’s music portrays. Through the configurations and harmonic motions on the Tonnetz graphs, I will establish a way to comprehend Schubert’s concept of circular “wandering” visually and geometrically. 2018-04-10T15:03:15Z 2018-04-10T15:03:15Z 2018-04-10 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23148 en_US All Rights Reserved. University of Oregon
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Music theory
Neo-Riemannian analysis
Performance
Piano music
Schenkerian analysis
Schubert
spellingShingle Music theory
Neo-Riemannian analysis
Performance
Piano music
Schenkerian analysis
Schubert
Ishihama, Kanako
Triangles of Soul—Schubert the “Wanderer” and His Music Explained by Neo-Riemannian Graphs
description In Schubert’s music, the theme “wandering” is used frequently, closely related to human life and death. I presume that, being stricken by serious illness and facing challenging relationships, Schubert lived his short life with agony and dismay, confronting the life theme “death.” In that sense, Schubert himself was probably the wanderer who kept trudging throughout his life journey. In 1822, Schubert composed the allegorical tale “My Dream,” and in that tale, he writes as follows; “when I attempted to sing of love, it turned to pain. And again, when I tried to sing of pain, it turned to love. Thus were love and pain divided in me” (Deutsch 1977, 227). Schubert lived his life, struggling between love and pain, and between life and death. Human life and death conflict with each other, but exist together in the same place. In other words, death is a root of life. If one can perceive that life and death both exist at the root of one’s life, the form of life should be represented by a circular path, not by a linear formation. This notion accords with Schubert’s musical style, where the same material comes back again and again in a circular formation. I assume that the notion—death as a root of life—is the essential conception of “wandering” that Schubert’s music expresses. In this dissertation, I would like to offer several Neo-Riemannian analyses and graphs of Schubert’s piano compositions; Impromptus D. 899, Moments Musical D. 780, Sonata in C-minor D. 958, and the “Wanderer” Fantasy D. 760. For each work and movement, I will map out the harmonic structure and key progressions on a Tonnetz graph, and suggest a new way to comprehend the nature of “wandering” that Schubert’s music portrays. Through the configurations and harmonic motions on the Tonnetz graphs, I will establish a way to comprehend Schubert’s concept of circular “wandering” visually and geometrically.
author2 Boss, Jack
author_facet Boss, Jack
Ishihama, Kanako
author Ishihama, Kanako
author_sort Ishihama, Kanako
title Triangles of Soul—Schubert the “Wanderer” and His Music Explained by Neo-Riemannian Graphs
title_short Triangles of Soul—Schubert the “Wanderer” and His Music Explained by Neo-Riemannian Graphs
title_full Triangles of Soul—Schubert the “Wanderer” and His Music Explained by Neo-Riemannian Graphs
title_fullStr Triangles of Soul—Schubert the “Wanderer” and His Music Explained by Neo-Riemannian Graphs
title_full_unstemmed Triangles of Soul—Schubert the “Wanderer” and His Music Explained by Neo-Riemannian Graphs
title_sort triangles of soul—schubert the “wanderer” and his music explained by neo-riemannian graphs
publisher University of Oregon
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23148
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