The New Music. Theodor W. Adorno
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Название: The New Music

Автор: Theodor W. Adorno

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Философия

Серия:

isbn: 9781509538096

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СКАЧАТЬ appear, which, if you wanted, you might consider a sonata-like codetta. That appears here [plays], and only at the very end of this development does the actual main theme return [plays]. And now we have the cadence again [plays]. So here, in the development, we find the order of thematic components from the exposition more or less exactly reversed, but those components themselves all return. So one might say that the development has already become a sort of reversed reprise. In a very free and variational sense, of course, for it goes without saying that the thematic elements become far more compressed in such a development-like section, and that there is above all a far more combinatorial approach than was possible at the beginning.

      But I actually wanted to show you something else. So, after opening with a brief, urgent passage – the whole of the development consists of relatively short little sections [plays] – after this, there is a […] musical-dramatic [plays]. And then this passage [plays]. So you have a sonic moment that seems to be resolved in a very impressionist manner, with things like this [plays]. And the order of the notes found here, which do not emerge as themes at all, is truly identical to the main theme, as with a note row [plays]. So this is the main theme in its authentic, its final form [plays]. And here amid the variety, the sonic confusion [plays], without being recognizable, and the pitches are exactly the same as before, as in a note row. Now, I am only pointing this out because Schoenberg himself, in ‘Style and Idea’, I think, wrote in some detail about a very complicated combinatorial passage in which the quintuplet motif is combined with this theme [plays] and is extremely contrapuntal, because here, as he writes, he had great problems bringing the themes together.4 And then there is a first reprise of the introduction in all its main elements, which also acts as the major formal caesura, and then the second part begins.

      But I wanted to say something about performance. I think it is very important that, with a theme like this one, which bears the marking ‘Very broadly and slowly’, one should still be clear that the theme is intended in minims, that it is an alla breve theme and should not be played in crotchets, for heaven’s sake, that one should not make it excessively definitive, but that one truly conveys through the presentation that this is not one of those wretched codas but genuinely the second part of the whole form. So I would say that the performance of such works should precisely reflect the formal relations within them, and naturally people generally forget that entirely.