A Workshop of Musical Art

~ towards a dynamic and open way of
thinking about form in music ~

by Archer Endrich




The basic idea

This paper is written as a synopsis of the ideas being developed in my book-in-progress, Pattern & Relationship in Music. The process of 'working your material' is a primary activity in any workshop of art. It takes more than a splash of colour, a purple patch, an arresting sound to make a good composition. It takes the formation of relationships between component ingredients, from the micro to the macro level. This paper focuses on the micro level of form, and outlines a simple but effective analytical method with which to build up a deeper understanding of musical relationships. This method can be employed on an aural non-technical level, respecting as it does the natural musicality that most people possess. It may also be pursued to any level of technical depth, as may be required by the musical creator. With a small number of specific examples, I try to provide a window on a way of thinking that can both stimulate and nourish creativity.

Introduction Closing Observations
Working your material Analytical method
Micro-form
Pattern & Relationship Micro- & Macro-form
Special Example: Analytical method applied to a folk tune

Introduction

There are two key milestones in a composer's development:

When these two processes start to weave together, a new composition is underway, the overall form guiding the evolution of, 'motivating' the micro-forms, the micro-forms evolving in their richness and variety in service to, and often taking specific features from, the overall form. One recent example of this can be seen in a work produced by that genius of community music, Barry Russell: Opening Doors, written for the opening of the Michael Tippett Centre at Bath Spa University College. The "opening doors" idea was everywhere in evidence, beautifully realised in an astonishing variety of ways, with contributions from several community groups, dancers, artists, and professional musicians.

This paper discusses these issues and is therefore concerned with developing a practical creative methodology. It outlines a way of thinking about creative work – with special care to emphasise the dynamic, evolving, open-ended aspect of form-building. The principles outlined are, I believe, universal in nature, but implied throughout are the challenges facing the development of electroacoustic and algorithmic music. The text is oriented towards practical compositional issues. At the same time, the approach can help to deepen musical understanding for those musicians who enjoy and make music in an aural, non-technical context.

On 'working your material'

We are all familiar with Picasso's 'blue' period and with the concept of exploring a restricted palette of colours and shapes. This is an example of 'working your material'. In music we find a number of ways to evolve and extend material, such as:

One of Bernard Rands' favourite composition exercises for his students was to have them write a minute or two of music for unaccompanied flute, an exercise which forces the composer to 'do a lot with a little'. One is soon concerned with variation techniques as one seeks to evolve the initial ideas – I don't mean variations on the grand scale, but variation on the micro level.

The result of such 'working of material' is an overall sense of integration of material, an 'organic' quality as if it had all grown naturally from the initial seeds. Another important result is the creation of 'sameness' against which different materials and shapes will perceptibly stand out, thus enabling the ability for the listener to follow developments and perceive contrasts. From the composer's point of view, this is the ability to create forms. It is technique indivisibly interwoven with a sense of form.

Even forms that emphasise contrast and a mélange of materials draw upon the more intimate working of material in order to make the contrasts perceptible and effective. A great game of artists is to create apparent contrast that is in fact rooted in a similarity on a deeper level: to evolve material beyond conscious perceptible link, while subconsciously there remains a sense of belonging.

Micro-form

In this paper, I would like to focus on 'working your material', which is, I believe, a core compositional discipline that can be enhanced by thinking of the various possibilities as 'micro-forms'. To illustrate this we can consider the general musical idea, expansion/compression, sometimes also called augmentation/diminution. (Note the simple way in which the figures and relationships are outlined and diagrammed. The analysis method being used is described in detail later.)

You will notice that these illustrations concern very short musical fragments, and yet contain a wealth of musical patterning. Vertical diminution is an interesting case because it weaves ornament out of structure. In his profound and endlessly illuminating A History of Melody, Bence Szabolsci identifies one of the forms of ornamentation as 'structural', meaning that the embellishing figures in a melodic line are drawn from the shape of the line itself or create the shape of the line: "The Oriental ornament, on the other hand, not only acts as a stimulant and a unifier, but weaves the very fabric of which the music is made." (Szabolsci 1965: 261). This leads us directly towards all the many opportunities for self-similarity, i.e., folding the same shape inside itself.

These, then, are a few tiny illustrations of what it means to 'work material' at the micro-form level. This is familiar territory for any practicing artist, but important to emphasise nonetheless because it is so crucial for creative work and also so open-ended: one is always finding new ways to shape and relate materials. The study of previous artists' work is a valuable way to learn useful techniques at this level. In music, it is a matter of shaping felt time – what Susanne K. Langer calls 'the sonorous image of passage' (Langer 1953: 113).

Here then is a shortlist of some micro-forms (in no particular order), to offer some more illustrations of this fluid, intermediate area of form-building (I am working on an extensive glossary of micro-forms):

repetition sustaining sustaining + movement
(e.g., pedal points)
vertical diminution
(structural)
horizontal diminution
(temporal)
transition (many
possibilities!)
chordal
horizontalization
layering heterophony interpolation
expansion/
compression
unfolding by
addition
movement towards circling of nodes change of weight
decorations:
UN, LN, APP, PT ..
isorhythm multi-event textures processes of
extension
sonic
transformations
sonic transitions shapes across
parameters
cross-synthesis proportional
durations
skip-fill & v.vs.
stepwise
movement
interlocking
shapes
outlining
(abstraction)
withholding masking
motive-spinning melodic contour
shapes
information flow
density
foreground/
background
emergence

There are several interesting features of this list

  1. These micro-forms have a certain universality: we can identify them in many different kinds of music, and we can realise them with vastly new materials, such as in electroacoustic music, which involves composing with sonic materials. Thus they are open-ended, malleable, shape-shifting 'formal units', as it were.


  2. They occupy a musical terrain between style constraints and random data manipulation. They are not even musical techniques as such – they are musical concepts that need to be realised with some specific technique. And yet they are the grist in the mill of the 'workshop of musical art'.


  3. They are more than a 'datum', a sound, note, chord, or sound transformation technique. They encapsulate relationships. This is why I refer to them as 'micro-forms' rather than simply as 'techniques'. As in the examples: the varied phrases of the Gregorian example, repetition of a motif with rhythmic augmentation or diminution, the same pattern woven into itself as in the Lassus, Ockeghem, Stravinsky and Endrich examples. All the micro-forms in this shortlist enable and invite an aural comparison between component parts – which is why they each encapsulate a relationship. They also occupy a musical terrain between the single datum and the larger passage or overall form.


  4. Also and significantly, they are for the most part directly aural. You don't really have to know anything technical about music in order to recognise these patterns – you just have to listen and observe. This really is very important. Among other things, it helps us to appreciate how music-making can broaden out, how a 'harmonic choir' of non-musicians can, in 'toning' together (singing long, sustained tones) create wonderful music, how a 'scratch orchestra' can realise scores which outline and suggest possibilities (Cardew, Cage etc.), how children and non-musicians in the community can, with guidance, create very effective musical results. On the other hand, the understanding and realisation of these musical components can be studied to any level of technical depth.

Consider this passage from Susanne K. Langer, which many years ago influenced how I began to approach musical studies:

"The traditional preoccupation with the ingredients of music has had a somewhat unhappy effect on theoretical study, connoisseurship and criticism... It has led people to listen for the wrong things, and suppose that to understand music one must know not simply much music, but much about music. Concert-goers try earnestly to recognize chords, and judge key changes, and hear the separate instruments in an ensemble – all technical insights that come of themselves with long familiarity, like the recognition of glazes on pottery or of structural devices in a building – instead of distinguishing musical elements, which may be made out of harmonic or melodic material, shifts of range or of tone colour, rhythms or dynamic accents or simply changes of volume, and yet be in themselves as audible to a child as to a veteran musician (my emphasis). For the elements of music are not tones of such and such a pitch, duration and loudness, nor chords and measured beats; they are, like all artistic elements, something virtual, created only for perception." (Langer 1953: 107)

My own musical journey has been largely concerned with searching for and articulating these 'musical elements', fundamental musical concepts which paradoxically have as much to do with deep structure as with surface flow.

As one plays with and shapes these micro-forms, inevitably, consciously or unconsciously (how an artist 'thinks' is an interesting topic), relationships between these micro-forms are formed. Again, I must emphasise the open-ended aspect. Pondering the above shortlist should lead not to repetition of the past but to the imagining of new approaches. For example, in describing the approach taken in the MITA system, Robert Spalding Newcomb writes:

'... an important design component involves implementing the concept of hierarchical linkages within our musical database, or more precisely, within the variables that define our perspective upon this musical database. Several high-level control variables representing conceptual characteristics such as abstraction, density and repetition [NB these are micro-forms – my emphasis (AE)] modify themselves during the assembly process.' And '... providing a capability that allows for customised dynamic models to be constructed from a set of dynamically defined individual model attributes. The attributes themselves are developed by taking the mathematical information present in the source data, creating hierarchical relationships within the attribute space, and yielding an attribute set of potentially infinite size.'

My concern in this paper is to find a way to allow the genius of other composers to leaven our own work, to search for and identify truly musical processes, to avoid forms of data processing which may work in mathematical terms, but do not produce musical results. As we search out the possibilities of a new type of music based on sounds and algorithmic procedures, we have to ask ourselves what is missing when a process is too predictable or formalised in a way which doesn't seem to speak to the human spirit, or when good sounds are made but don't seem to add up to anything or move us very much. Of course, everything must be explored. One cannot prejudge on the basis of existing conceptions. The study of micro-form – that fluid area between sonic material (whether 'notes' or 'sounds') and the large-scale form of a composition – is my own way to seek answers.

In the next section I present a simple and practical approach whereby we can learn from others in a constructive and open-ended way. The emphasis is on micro-form as a practical source of compositional inspiration – specific materials, techniques, and macro-forms are the province of the individual creator.

A simple analytical method

Historical overview

There are many approaches to musical analysis, as befits such a rich and multi-faceted medium. All are useful and valid, in my opinion, and can teach us a great deal about music. To set my own approach into some kind of context, I will briefly summarise and comment on a number of existing approaches:

Suggested approach to analysis for creative purposes

The aim here is to unlock the internal, dynamic, fluid, form-building processes. In the various illustrations above, we have seen this simple analytical method at work. These are the steps:

  1. identify nodes – these are defined as aurally perceptible reference points, and therefore appeal to a common sense, look for what's obvious approach. We are looking for points of emphasis, which can be done aurally or in a more systematic way: duration, accentuation, skipping to or from tones, or any other way by which an event might stand out from its surroundings.


  2. map out the position of these nodes in vertical and temporal space – this mapping reveals both the harmonic and basic durational structure; radically different types of harmonic structure occur. The mapping can be done by direct aural observation as well as by drawing out on paper more detailed meta-structures.


  3. identify shapes – this is pattern recognition, where existing knowledge of micro-form is useful, but with the proviso that one has to take what is given and find hitherto unknown patterns if that is what is there. These shapes may be present in all the different dimensions of the music: linear, vertical, rhythmic, timbral etc.


  4. plot how the shapes relate to each other and to the nodes – here we look beyond individual components to the relationships which exist between components. This completes the study of micro-form and provides the basis for observing how the micro-forms relate to the overall 'commanding form', if indeed they do so. Again, this can be a matter of aural observation of similarities and differences, or a result of detailed workings out.


  5. express in a generic way – this final step is an extra one we take in order to be able to work generatively with what we have found. We need to make an effort to abstract from the immediate stylistic context, such that the patterns become ethereal, free-floating forms ready to take on another garb, to be imaginatively recreated in another context. This step also enables us to observe similar forms in the music of other times and other cultures. It is the purest expression of the 'musical idea'.

An example of 'change of weight' enables us to review this approach (also from 'O Sapientia').

What could be simpler? And yet what a wealth of musical activity it contains. Having identified the nodes, we see that D is the tonal centre, with an embellishing E above it. As we map out these nodes, we find that this upper E gains in prominence through increased accentuation and durational compression (3 - 2). At first it is an unaccented upper neighbor. Then it is accented by coming on the accented syllable of the word. Finally, it begins an ascending 2-note figure. The shapes include 'change of weight' in that there is a shift of emphasis towards the E, and 'durational compression'. There are, therefore, relationships between:

Thus, in generic terms we have a sense of emergence from a background, an increase of energy and focus by a combination of durational compression and increased accentuation.

When described in this generic way – and this is the key – we can see how this little micro-form could become a seed ground for new realisations, whether tiny fragments or the central musical idea for a whole composition. This generic description is also a step towards realisation by algorithmic means.

A second example is drawn from electroacoustic music, Klang by Jonty Harrison (Harrison. 1981. CD). This marvelous composition opens with several sounds made by the earthenware casseroles used as part of the source material. If we list and describe these first few sounds, we find a micro-form very similar to the 'change of weight' Gregorian example above, i.e., something which 'leans forward', which evolves with purpose and focus.

  1. ca 3 sec. A sharp attack making a bell-like sound which rings on for about 3 seconds.
  2. ca 3 sec. A softer attack which rings on for 1 sec., followed immediately by a second, which rings on for 2 seconds. The two similar sounds are close enough in time to make a two-note group.
  3. ca 4 sec. A louder, stronger attack after which the resonance is very prominent.
  4. ca 3 sec. A 1 sec, gentle scraping sound ending with a soft bell-like stroke, which then rings on for 2 seconds.
  5. ca 5½ sec. A ½ sec. attack followed immediately by a strong stroke which rings on for about 5 sec., i.e., the climactic event which completes the sequence. A pause concludes the section.

Similar, yet each different, these opening sounds focus on one source sound, and make it very clear that this is what the piece is about. This is thematic material. The variants therefore become very important.

Overall, this opening – as a micro-form – is brimming with intimations of future growth and development. Klang lives up to its promise as each of these features develops into longer sonic passages. In particular, the resonance motif evolves into an extended passage of extraordinary beauty. The growth characteristic of the opening micro-form becomes the overall form of the whole composition, binding everything together into an organic whole.

Special Example: 'sword rapper' tune
I would like to look more deeply into a third example, a tune I heard at the Chippenham folk festival. It was used by the folk dance group 'East Saxon Sword'. It is a good example of a seemingly 'simple' tune which in fact is timeless for very good reasons.

Imagine 8 men in a circle, each with both hands gripping the handles of flexible 2-handled swords, making a complete, unbroken circle. Accompanied by this tune, they begin to weave in and out in all sorts of complicated patterns – never letting go of their swords. The result is a smooth, seamless flow that doesn't seem possible without their getting hopelessly tangled up. What interests us here is how the internal structure of the tune realises this idea of seamless flow.

Here is the tune (as I remember it) with my 'simple analytical method' annotations:

As a result of this simple analysis we can observe a number of interesting features, mostly obvious and easily heard, but nevertheless significant and relevant.

To sum up, then:

Simple, direct, and indeed aural though it is, our analysis has brought to our attention many salient features of the music. The node-set identified reveals the core harmonic structure. Contour is a key gestural feature. Sub-shapes such as interlocking intervals define the inner structural pattern. Durations and rhythmic patterning are also identified. We have thus looked at quite a few salient, generative features of the musical design.

The point of the exercise is not to 'analyse music' as an academic exercise, but to learn how a given passage works so that this understanding can be used in a creative, generative way. These three examples encapsulate simple, perceptible, and yet powerful musical ideas. They variously involve sound qualities, movement, (directional) change of emphasis (and therefore a form of transition or evolving over time), and tonal ambiguity. When understood in a generic way, abstracting somewhat from their immediate stylistic context, they (and all the micro-forms) give insight into musical processes, insight which can be used generatively through original compositional creativity.

The key lies in the process of abstraction, so that the musical features, the micro-forms, are understood in a generic way. What we learn from the sword rapper tune, for example, is something about creating ambiguity, largely by having a structural node-set which is different from the full surface detail of the music and then maintaining a balanced presence of both. This now becomes a (micro-)formal principle which can be realised in many different ways.

Another important observation – In the widest context, we are talking about developing a composing discipline. In presenting the examples, I am not implying that the composer in the heat of the moment thinks about these things in these precise terms, or even verbally at all. Many times composers do not articulate what they have done until some time later. The aim here is to develop a way of looking for and at music and life generally such that the mind becomes increasingly attuned to processes suitable for musical realisation. Studying the music of the past in a creative, generative way as presented in this paper is one way of doing so.

The wealth of musical processes observed provides a soil-enriched seed-bed for innovative work: the ability to work out how to express new and different ideas in a musical way. For example, one may be fascinated by various aspects of the world and era in which we live:

observation possible means of musical expression
the idea of the
subconscious
layering, sieves (control systems), emergence ...
the idea of
relativity
ambiguous harmonies, transitions between stylistic types ...
vagaries of
traffic flow
patterns of movement which condense and expand
the timing of information flow ...
aspects of fluid
mechanics
'turbulent' sound transformations, pitch rotations (eddies), 'pressure' build-up
by harmonic enrichment until it becomes something else ...

Thus I am not at all suggesting that we should seek to recreate the music of the past as a musical objective, but rather that we should seek to learn from master composers in order better to realise relevant contemporary ideas in an inherently musical way.

Pattern and Relationship

'Where is the music?' I like to ask myself, 'What makes music, music?' A plausible and door-opening answer is that the music is in the relationships. And there is a certain intriguing universality in these relationships.

To look at this briefly, relationships form on various levels. Firstly, there are the relationships which exist within the micro-forms: e.g., repetitions, similarities, transformations and transitions etc. that take place in the temporal sequence of events. Then there are relationships that are formed when overlays of materials take place in the vertical dimension. When the components of such overlays have their own horizontal logic, we have various contrapuntal situations, such as fugato (with notes or sounds), or a sustained tone (pedal point) above or around which other materials flow, or more generally, multi-dimensional features. Both serial and electroacoustic music tend towards a series of linear-sequential events, even if textured, and it is a challenge to incorporate a truly structural multi-dimensionality.

A particularly important relationship is that between the horizontal and vertical dimensions generally, i.e., the degree of horizontalization. When a vertical simultaneity is unfurled in horizontal time, we have a 'horizontalization'. The unfurled material can relate to the vertical simultaneity by the degree of matching involved, from complete equivalence to just a few matching points. When there is full or near equivalence, the underlying simultaneity 'shines through' the texture. When there is minimal equivalence, the horizontal patterning predominates. The whole history of (Western) melody can be schematised from this point of view – necessarily the subject of a much more detailed study in which various types of prolongation (radically different types of harmonic structure) are relevant.

When variation technique is viewed from a 'group' point of view, we can consider the relationship between components which remain the same and components which alter: sometimes the chord sequence stays the same, sometimes a linear shape, sometimes a rhythm, sometimes a textural density pattern, sometimes an envelope shape. Then the question can be asked as to whether or not there are any shared features in common at the micro-level.

These few observations show that the types of relationship can vary considerably: some are very much part of the fluid flow of the micro-level; others create passages on a larger scale, moving closer to the realisation of large-scale forms.

Micro- and macro-form

The very concept of 'macro form' can be controversial, with some announcing the end of the 'work of art'. The real issue is, I suggest, a matter of establishing a motivation for the processes which take place. That a given composition or spontaneous event has an overall form is inescapable – the question is, 'what kind of form is it?'. Also, I believe that the macro form is an objective entity that acts on the listener on the basis of what it is, not on the basis of what the artist may want it to be.

Susanne K. Langer writes:

" ... as soon as he recognizes it as an individual symbol and sets forth its outline it becomes the expression of an impersonal idea and opens, to him and to others, a deep mine of musical resource. For the commanding form is not essentially restrictive, but fecund... The great moment of creation is the recognition of the matrix, for in this lie all the motives for the specific work; not all the themes – a theme may be imported if it fits the place – but all the tendencies of the piece, the need for dissonance and consonance, novelty and reiteration, length of phrase and timing of cadences... That is why one may puzzle for a long time over the exact form of an expression, not seeing what is wrong with this or that, and then, when the right form presents itself, feel it going into place almost with a click." (Langer: 1953: 123)
  • Sometimes the macro-form idea comes first, and the micro-workings flesh it out.
  • Sometimes ideas start at the micro-level by playing with material, and only gradually does a larger form emerge.
  • Sometimes the micro-forms provide the main focus, forming a flow with very little in the way of larger-scale design – indeed, such design can be deliberately eschewed, or simply inappropriate for the given composition or situation.
  • Sometimes micro-forms and macro-form integrate closely, the one echoing the other in structure.
  • Sometimes materials contrast wildly and are held together by their own micro-level internal workings and by simple large-scale shapes or continuities.

Forms can relate and give expression to the 'spirit of the age'. Insofar as this is achieved, a case can be made for the role of art as a provider of the conditions in which a civilization can endure.

In the creative process, what is essential is that the micro-forms serve the purposes of the macro-form. An understanding of the micro-form processes helps enable the observer to identify how this is done. It is wide open and the possibilities are endless.

Closing observations

To conclude:

Many in our generation have been focused on the development of new computer tools to manipulate instruments, assemble compositions and work directly with sonic materials to an extent previously not possible. We have many more tools with which to move forward in new ways. The challenge of musicality in using these tools is ever with us. Achieving a rich musical fabric and avoiding the clichés which all too easily accrue are never easy. In striving to attain worthy musical results, I have found that an understanding of processes on the micro-level can help both in craftsmanship and in generating and assessing musical ideas.

These forms/processes benefit from being articulated in a generic, open-ended way, so that all aspects of musical understanding can be reshaped within the context of an ever broader range of sonic materials, sometimes in new types of written or improvised music, and sometimes through an encapsulation of these processes in programmed algorithms, thence to be manipulated by computer-based techniques. No matter what the musical context, the challenge of musicality remains in place.

References

Endrich, T.J. 1980. Time-Span. Zurich: Edition Eulenburg.

Harrison, Jonty. 1981. Klang. on the CD Klang. 1996. London: NMC Recordings Ltd. (Sonic Arts Network Collection 1).

Langer, S.K. 1953. Feeling and Form: A Theory of Art. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.

Lassus, Orlando. 'Beatus Homo'. Sacred Chorus Collection by Old Masters for Equal and Mixed Voices III. New York: Kalmus.

Newcomb, R.S. 1999. Music in the Air: a theoretical model and software system for music analysis and composition. Organised Sound 3: 1.

Ockeghem, Johannes. 'Alma Redemptoris Mater'. Old Netherlands Motets. New York: Kalmus.

Stravinsky, Igor. 1947. Suite from the Firebird (1910). As quoted in Score Reading. 1947. New York: M. Witmark & Sons.

Stravinsky, Igor. 1967. The Rite of Spring (1913). London: Boosey & Hawkes.

Szabolsci, B. 1965. A History of Melody. London: Barrie and Rockliff.

Last updated: 3 May 2002

© 2002 Archer Endrich, Chippenham, Wiltshire  England
Dr. Archer Endrich, Visiting Research Fellow
Dept. of Mathematical Sciences, University of Bath
archerhgm@gmail.com