AMSGNY Meetings


Spring Meeting at Hunter College on Saturday, April 13th

The meeting will start at noon in room 407.  Directions to Hunter College may be found here:   http://music.hunter.cuny.edu/about/directions/  In addition to the presentations, on the theme "Composers and Composing," we will have our annual business meeting.  There will be a special performance by cellist John Popham, as well as selections from Winterreise performed by Rufus Hallmark and Sylvia Kahane.  Bring a score of the song cycle if you have one. 

Here are the abstracts for the presentations:

Isaac Hayes' Soul Concept: Analyzing Hot Buttered Soul as a Pioneering Concept Album
Bryan Terry (Hunter College)

While much has been made of early concept albums in rock music, investigation and analysis has been less frequent as it relates to the same by African American artists in the late 1960s. Early 1970s works by Marvin Gaye and Sly and the Family Stone have been referred to as the first examples of concept albums in African American music, yet Isaac Hayes’ 1969 album Hot Buttered Soul has been overlooked in this realm. In this paper, I argue that Hot Buttered Soul indeed falls into this category and that defining it as such is important in recognizing not only Hayes’ place in the history of African American music, but also in demonstrating the growth of the concept album in soul music in the late 1960s. The characterization of the album in this regard is dependent on three main criteria: historical, lyrical, and musical. The 1960s served as a highly influential decade in the development of album-centric musical writing and production, stimulated by the innovation of the LP. The combination of this developing technology and the environment at Stax Records—the record label with which Hayes was affiliated—created the conditions in which Hayes would produce Hot Buttered Soul. I argue that the album, consisting of just four songs—one original and three covers—is built around a common theme. Additionally, Hayes gave each of the four songs one distinctive “sound” via instrumentation, style, form and tonality, creating unity among the four disparate songs in order to solidify the work’s place as a pioneering concept album of the late 1960s.

The Beatles’ “White Album" as the Beginning of a Theory of Musical Intertextuality
Christopher Doll (Rutgers University)

Broad studies of popular-music intertextuality (Burns and Lacasse 2018, Lacasse 2000, Matson 2016) and genre/style (Brackett 2016, Holt 2017, Horn and Tagg 1982, Moore 2001) have yet to yield a widely adopted, coherent vocabulary and method of analysis. In this paper, I engage a selection of songs from the Beatles’ “White Album,” perhaps the most famous collection of juxtaposed musical styles and genres to emerge from the twentieth century, in order to pin down three conceptual distinctions useful for a general theory of and analytical method for popular-music intertextuality: 1) the in/out distinction, regarding whether we understand a song as being inside a genre/style or whether that song is alluding to it from the outside; 2) the borrowing/reference distinction, recognizing a difference between music that takes something from some specific earlier music, versus music that refers to earlier music irrespective of actual borrowing; 3) and the similarity/imitation distinction, separating more general stylistic, generic, and coincidental resemblance from deliberate mimicry. All these categories interact in complex ways in real music; I savor these complexities in “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Di,” “Helter Skelter,” “Happiness is a Warm Gun,” “Blackbird,” “Piggies,” and “Honey Pie.” The result of this work, I argue, is a clearer (if still incomplete) picture of intertextual music like the “White Album,” and of its relation to music preceding it, contemporaneous with it, and subsequent to it.

Near and Far: How I Write Away from Inspiration
Suzanne Farrin (Hunter College)

In this paper, I will discuss how one of my works, Corpo di terra for solo cello, engages with outside materials. The two impetuses for the work were the 22nd poem of Petrarch’s Canzoniere and the Allemande from Bach’s C minor cello suite BWV 1011.

Rescued from Obscurity: Classical Form and Diegetic Music in Puccini's Operas
Karen Messina (Duke University)

Despite his popularity in opera houses around the world, Puccini’s academic respectability has only solidified in the twenty-first century. Even with a deluge of studies in the last decade, the Puccini problem yet remains: should he be regarded as a traditional or modern composer? While various scholars acknowledge Puccini’s work as reflecting both styles, I propose a rationale for why this duality exists.

In this paper, I argue that when Puccini writes diegetic music – that is, music which exists within a portrayed world – he steps inside the drama itself, adopting the persona of a composing character. Assuming such characters to be less refined in the art of musical composition than Puccini himself, these moments rationalize the presence of a more traditional idiom, especially discernible through tight-knit Classical forms described by William Caplin. Three increasingly obscure examples of diegetic music illustrate this premise. The textual and musical features of “Ave, sera gentile” from Manon Lescaut (1893) that mark it as quintessentially diegetic are subsequently undermined in its nondiegetic repeat. The diegetic status of “Quando me’n vo’” from La bohème (1896) is complicated by textual features that typically align with nondiegetic music while its very precise periodic structures suggest the opposite. And a diegetic reading of “L’alba vindice appar” from Tosca (1900) hinges upon an interpretation that also resolves musical and dramatic deficiencies. Together, these analyses alleviate three levels of obscurity, revealing a hidden diegetic status, a purpose for Classical forms in late Romantic opera, and Puccini’s dedication to drama.

Debussy’s Late-Style Homage to Stravinsky in En blanc et noir’s Third-Movement Scherzando
Sylvia Kahan (CUNY Graduate Center)

Debussy’s 1915 masterwork, En blanc et noir, for two pianos, has received comparatively little exploration in the literature on the composer. The few scholars who have written on this late work have largely concentrated on the connections between Debussy’s reactions to World War I and his compositional output. Analyses of En blanc’s musical content have focused especially on the embedded allusions to German “infiltration” and Debussy’s quest to preserve French culture from bochisme. Accordingly, the second movement, which quotes “La Marseillaise” and Luther’s “Ein feste Burg,” has received the most attention.

With rare exception, En blanc’s outer two movements have been overlooked in analytical studies. The third movement Scherzando, dedicated to Igor Stravinsky, has gotten especially short shrift. I would argue that the movement is a reflection of both the admiration and the anxiety that Debussy experienced in grappling with Stravinsky’s new kind of modernism. For the older composer, Petrushka embodied a “sonorous magic”; the Sacre du printemps “haunted” Debussy “like a beautiful nightmare.” Although feeling himself to be “over the hill,” Debussy also acknowledged to Stravinsky “a special satisfaction in stating how much you have pushed back against the permissible limits of the empire of sounds.” In En blanc et noir’s third movement, which abounds with subtle allusions to The Firebird and Petrushka, Debussy simultaneously renders homage to the Russian composer while moving towards the integrated musical language that reached full flower in his final compositions. 

Redeeming Ralph Vaughan Williams: The Sea Theme in the Ninth and Variations for Brass Band
Stephen Allen (Rider University)

This paper investigates the English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams’ lifelong use of a tune I title the Sea Theme, which morphs in different contexts. For the first time I show how RVW’s use of the Sea Theme in his Variations for Brass Band completely changes the way we would hear this evolution at the end of his life in the Ninth Symphony.

Broadly speaking the paper changes the current view of RVW’s late negative or pessimistic world view into one where issues of optimism, transcendence become possible—thus fulfilling the minor moments of optimism hinted at in the Ninth.




Triple Meter in Schubert's Winterreise: A Quirk
Rufus Hallmark (Rutgers University)

Recently I was invited to contribute a chapter to a “casebook” on Schubert’s Winterreise. I began to notice an intriguing singularity involving five of the eight triple meter songs in this cycle. It is this topic that I want to explore. The first triple meter song, Der Lindenbaum, follows a conventional rhythmic-metric convention for setting a text in triple meter, but five of the others depart from that convention and apply a pattern of their own. The pattern has been observed piecemeal by scholars writing about Winterreise (Feil, Youens, Kramer, Johnson, Bostridge), but no one, I believe, has noted its fairly consistent usage throughout the cycle; it leaves a strong imprint. This paper is open-ended, and I shall invite the audience’s participation to help me conclude it!

Spring Meeting Program - April 13th (Hunter College)

12PM-1PM

20th-Century Popular Composition

Bryan Terry: Isaac Hayes' Soul Concept: Analyzing Hot Buttered Soul as a Pioneering Concept Album

Christopher Doll: The Beatles’ “White Album" as the Beginning of a Theory of Musical Intertextuality

On Composing

Suzanne Farrin: Near and Far: How I Write Away from Inspiration

Break 1:30-2:15

2:15PM-3:15PM

Late 19th-Century and Early 20th-Century Composers

Karen Messina: Rescued from Obscurity: Classical Form and Diegetic Music in Puccini's Operas

Sylvia Kahan: Debussy’s Late-Style Homage to Stravinsky in En blanc et noir’s Third-Movement Scherzando

3:30PM-4:30PM

Changing Views of Composers and Composition

Stephen Allen: Redeeming Ralph Vaughan Williams: The Sea Theme in the Ninth and Variations for Brass Band

Rufus Hallmark: Triple Meter in Schubert's Winterreise: A Quirk




© 2008 American Musicological Society of Greater New York
Blogger Templates by GeckoandFly | Blog customization by Jeff C. Li and Philip D. Reid.
Image © 2008 mawel. Used under Creative Commons license.
No part of the content or the blog may be reproduced without prior written permission.