1 / 28

42 Years of Popular Music Analysis Teaching in 21 Minutes [2 years per minute]

42 Years of Popular Music Analysis Teaching in 21 Minutes [2 years per minute]. A short audit of a few problems in the denotation of musical structure, with suggestions for improvement. Presentation at Popular Music Analysis Conference, University of Liverpool, 4 July, 2013.

selah
Download Presentation

42 Years of Popular Music Analysis Teaching in 21 Minutes [2 years per minute]

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 42 Years of Popular Music AnalysisTeaching in 21 Minutes [2 years per minute] A short audit of a few problems in the denotation of musical structure, with suggestions for improvement Presentation at Popular Music Analysis Conference, University of Liverpool, 4 July, 2013 Philip TaggVisiting Professor, Universities of Huddersfield and Salford (UK) www.tagg.org http://tagg.org/Clips/Nantes130531.mp4 or http://youtu.be/GbDG8ApNhRsmust be accessible Previous versions ‘The Trouble with Tonal Terminology', ‘Too Important to Fail', etc. presented in Rome, Glasgow, Århus, Göteborg, Durham, Liverpool (2011); Newcastle, Lancaster, Nottingham, Berlin, Granada, London (City), Manchester, Granada, Cáceres, Huddersfield (2012), Cambridge (Anglia), Naples, Trento, Nantes (2013).

  2. Background and aim Overviewpresentation overview as intended in Liverpool, 4 July 2013 • ‘Tonality’ • ‘Time’ • ‘Totality' or ‘form’ • Que faire?

  3. BACKGROUND

  4. Background [potted CV 1] • 1957-62 Organ, composition, trad. jazz • 1962-65 BA in Music (Cambridge); Scottish country dancing, soul/R&B • 1963 -66 Cert. Ed. (Manchester); mainstream blues/jazz, pop demos • 1966-71 Various gigging combos (Sweden) • 1971 Full time employment as music teacher ‘unusually eclectic’

  5. Background [potted CV 2] • 1968-72 Choir (sing & arr.) • 1971-76 Agitrock band • 1971-78 Keyboard harmony, etc. • 1971- History and analysis (incl.euroclass., pop, jazz, ‘world’, etc.) • 1993- Music & Moving Image courses • 1998-2001 EPMOW articles • 2009 Everyday Tonality • 2012 Music’s Meanings: a musicology for non-musos

  6. Visited 2012-05-03

  7. Sets and subsets (1) Rain Hail ‘popular’ ‘ethno’ ‘world’ ‘dance’ ‘MUSIC’ Snow ‘contemporary’ ‘medieval’ ‘jazz’ etc. ‘avant-garde’ ‘early’ ‘rock’ etc.

  8. TONALITY

  9. Sets and subsets (2) Rain Hail Euroclassical c. 1730 – 1910 ― ‘functional’ (!?)― —‘tonal’ (!?)— ‘modal’ ‘pretonal’ (!) ‘posttonal’ (!?) Snow ‘contemporary’ ‘medieval’ ‘jazz’ etc. ‘atonal’ (!?) ‘primitive’ etc.

  10. Tonal Terminology • Aspects of musical structure compatible with Western notation: • i.e. a system of graphic representation developed to encode mainly monometric music whose pitches conform to the twelve notes of our chromatically divided octave. • (a v. small % of all music at any time anywhere)

  11. Basic definitions PLEASE DISTINGUISH between TONE and TONIC • TONE : note with audible fundamental pitch • TONAL : consisting or characteristic of tones • TONALITY : system of tonal configuration • TONIC : central reference tone in relation to which other tones in a piece or extract of music are audibly related One problem: Tonalité/tonalidad/tonalità, etc. = key/Tonart —idiome tonal for ‘tonality’/‘Tonalität’— ?

  12. ‘ATONAL’ !?

  13. Linguistic derivative pattern 1 — -al -ality Noun Adjective Abstract nounroot derivative derivative brute brutal brutality crime criminal criminality form formal formality mode modal modality TONE TONAL TONALITY

  14. Linguistic derivative pattern 2 -ic -ical (-icality/-icism) ergo: ATONICALor NON-TONICAL, ATONICALITY, etc. Noun Adjective Noun Adjective cleric clerical clinic clinical comic comical critic critical ethic[s] ethical lyric[s] lyrical magic magical music musical mystic mystical physic[s] physical scepticsceptical rhetoric rhetorical tactic[s] tactical topic topical tropic[s] tropical Abstr. n. musicality, physicality, topicality OR criticism, mysticism, scepticism HENCETONICALITYORTONICISM TONIC TONICAL

  15. Tonality v. Modality Which of these modes are tonal and which are modal? ionian (heptatonic/diatonic) phrygian(heptatonic/diatonic) NawaAthar(heptatonic)نوى أثر doh-pentatonic (anhemitonic) ré-pentatonic (anhemitonic) hirajoshi(pos. 4: hemitonic, pentatonic)

  16. Chordal mystery category TERTIAL QUARTAL ‘triadic’? ‘functional’ ? ‘diatonic’? PLEASE DISTINGUISHTETRAD  FOURTH TRIAD THIRD

  17. Tonal terminology conclusions • Don’t confuse TONE with TONIC. Tonal music without a tonic is ATONICAL, not ‘atonal’. • Don’t confuse TRIADs with THIRDS. If harmony based on stacked fourths is quartal, harmony based on stacked thirds is TERTIAL. • Don’t propagate false contradictions like ‘TONAL v. MODAL’. Please conceptualise all modes, including theionian, as modes. Please also consider all modes as tonal. • Don’t use TONAL and TONALITY in a musically, culturally and intellectually restrictive manner. Please consider the MULTIPLICITY of TONALITIES (tonal systems).

  18. TIME SORRY. NO TIME FOR TIME THIS TIME except to mention just a few terms

  19. Time: a few problem terms —under construction— • — only possible in monometric music with unequivocal downbeats • — arises when >1 rhythmic pattern is heard at the same time • — more accurate designation of rhythmictraits in many Subsaharanmusics • — term used by Subsaharan music scholars and practitioners to cover ‘polymetricity’ (a eurocentric term) • — neuroscientifically established concept essential to understanding how batches of ‘now sound’ (syncrisis, groove, etc.) work • syncopation • polyrhythm • polymetricity • cross-rhythm • extendedpresent

  20. FORM “a shape; an arrangement of parts” (Concise Oxford Dictionary, 1995)

  21. Visual “form” (‘composition’, ‘shape’, etc.) vessel formed as a coffee pot bush formed as a mushroom synchronic, intensional form Musical “form” (‘composition’?) Exposition | Exposition | Development | Recapitulation Chorus | Chorus |Middle 8/Bridge| Chorus A | A | B | A diachronic, extensional form

  22. Play video http://tagg.org/Clips/Nantes130531.mp4 or http://youtu.be/GbDG8ApNhRs

  23. QUE FAIRE?

  24. What to do? (1) • Ostrich strategy. ‘Nothing is wrong’. Carry on as usual. ‘We may be in the minority but we’re always right.’ • Defeatist (‘realist’) strategy.Take note but no action: ‘interesting; some valid points but we have to deal with music theory “as is”. You can’t change >100 years of dubiously ethnocentric labelling. Get used to it!’ • Tokenist strategy. ‘We’re broad-minded and modern. We have ethnomusicology and/or popular music studies and/or music technology on the curriculum but we see no need to change the basics of music theory. • Laissez-faire (‘anti-authoritarian’) strategy. New terms are as bad as old ones. You’re forcing everyone to think like you. Let things develop organically, man!

  25. What to do (2)? • Risk alienation from conservative musicology • (both ancient and modern) by making life easier for the popular majority of students through: • - simple reform of a few basic terms; • - recognition of vernacular musical competence; • - reintegration of music as a specific form of • symbolic production on a par with others.

  26. What to do (3) • Establish a forum of interested parties in music education, media education, etc. • Get together to decide on priorities for a reform of music theory terminology. • Involve experts from as many musical territories as possible so as to minimise risks of producing new ethnocentric concepts. • Collaborate across cultural, disciplinary and professional boundaries to produce a music theory primer (max. 100 pp.) to take us into the 21st-century and the age of globalisation.

  27. Further edification Music’s Meanings: a modern musicology for non-musos(2013) tagg.org/mmmsp/publications.htmll [710 pp.] Everyday Tonality (2009) tagg.org/mmmsp/publications.html [334 pp.] Troubles with Tonal Terminology (2011-13) —tagg.org/articles/xpdfs/Aharonian2011.pdf [32 pp.] ‘Not the sort of thing you could photocopy’ (2013)A short idea history of notation with suggestions for reform in music education and research [21 pp.]—tagg.org/articles/xpdfs/Frith1301.pdf Dominants and Dominance Musical Learning & Epistemic Diffraction Scotch Snaps: the big picture

  28. THE END PhilipTagg — tagg.org — MMXIII

More Related