Abstracts
Abstract
This article investigates the musical language of Brian Cherney, applying the idea of musical topics as a strategy for analyzing the extramusical content of his music. The idea of musical topics, traditionally applied to works from the classical era, is expanded with a collection of topics that are specific to Cherney’s work. Focusing on a set of chamber pieces from throughout Cherney’s compositional output beginning in the 1960s, this article focuses particularly on the topic of “ascending music,” tracing its musical and expressive meaning through these chamber works. The article concludes with a topic-based analysis of Gan Eden, a 1983 piece for violin and piano, providing an example of how topics coexist and interact within a single composition.
Résumé
Cet article explore le langage musical de Brian Cherney, utilisant l’idée de sujets musicaux comme moyen d’analyser le contenu extramusical de la musique. L’auteur élargit l’idée de sujets musicaux, appliquée traditionnellement aux oeuvres de l’époque classique, en recourant à un éventail de sujets propres à l’oeuvre de Cherney. Axé sur un ensemble de pièces de chambre tirées de la production compositionnelle de Cherney commençant dans les années 1960, cet article met tout particulièrement l’accent sur le sujet de la « musique ascendante », traçant le sens musical et expressif dans ces oeuvres de chambre. L’auteur conclut son article par une analyse thématique de Gan Eden, une composition pour violon et piano de 1983, donnant ainsi un exemple de la façon dont les divers sujets coexistent et interagissent dans une même composition.
Download the article in PDF to read it.
Download
Appendices
Biographical note
Taylor Brook is a Canadian composer living in New York, writing and producing music for concert, film, theatre, and dance. Described as “gripping” and “engrossing” by the New York Times, his compositions have won numerous awards and prizes. Brook’s music is often concerned with finely tuned microtonal sonorities, combining his interest in exploring the perceptual qualities of sound with an individual sense of beauty and form.
Bibliography
- Agawu, Kofi. 1991. Playing with Signs. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Albright, Daniel. 2014. Panaesthetics: On the Unity and Diversity of the Arts. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- Brook, Taylor. Interview with Brian Cherney. Montreal, 27 October 2016.
- De La Fuente, Eduardo. 2011. Twentieth-Century Music and the Question of Modernity. New York: Routledge.
- Eshelman, R. 2002. “Performatism, or, What Comes After Postmodernism: New Architecture in Berlin.” ArtMargins (April 2002). http://www.artmargins.com/index.php/archive/322-performatism-or-what-comes-after-postmodernism-new-architecture-in-berlin.
- Heiser, Jörg, ed. 2008. Romantic Conceptualism. Bielefeld: Kerber.
- Knudsen, Stephen. 2013. “Beyond Postmodernism: Putting a Face on Metamodernism without the Easy Clichés.” ArtPulse, Winter. http://artpulsemagazine.com/beyond-postmodernism-putting-a-face-on-metamodernism-without-the-easy-cliches.
- Levinson, Jerrold. 1996. The Pleasures of Aesthetics: Philosophical Essays. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
- Martin, Robert L. 1995. “Musical ‘Topics’ and Expression in Music.” Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 53 (4): 417–24.
- Newcomb, Anthony. 1984. “Sound and Feeling.” Critical Inquiry 10:614–43.
- Ricketts, Matthew. 2017. “Texts—Textures—Intertexts: The Orchestral Worlds of Brian Cherney.” DMus diss., Columbia University.
- Spiteri, Vivienne. 2000. “Déploration: In Memoriam Morton Feldman by Brian Cherney, and in Conversation.” Contemporary Music Review 19 (4): 73–103.
- Vermeulen, Timotheus, and Robin van den Akker. 2010. “Notes on Metamodernism.” Journal of Aesthetics & Culture 2 (1). https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.3402/jac.v2i0.5677.