Cross (1998) Music Analysis and Music Perception PDF
Cross (1998) Music Analysis and Music Perception PDF
Cross (1998) Music Analysis and Music Perception PDF
REFERENCES
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IAN CROSS
MUSICANALYSISANDMUSIC PERCEPTION
Introduction
In his articleon analysisin TheNew Grove,Ian Bent assertsthat'Underlyingall
aspectsof analysisas an activityis the fundamentalpoint of contact between
mind and musicalsound, namely,musicalperception'(Bent 1980, p. 341). If
this assertionis accepted (and it does seem fairlyplausible),it appearsthat
considerationof the natureof musicalperceptionshouldbe of centralconcern
to the music-analyticcommunity.However,it seems that only a smallnumber
of analystshave devotedmuch attentionto perceptualissues, most analytical
and theoreticalliteratureyieldingonly infrequentand ratherdiversereferences
to such topics. Nevertheless,the referencesthat do exist enable somethingto
be inferredabout the notion of musicalperceptionas it may appearfrom the
standpointof the majorityof analysts.
A common set of assumptionsor beliefs seems to run throughstatements
such as:
[i] Onlythe recognitionof an a prioridecisionto hearcertainpatternsin a piece
can accountfor the sense of directednessand culminationwhen those pat-
terns areactuallyheard.(Smith1981, p. 157)
[ii] Weshouldtry to heara twelve-tonepiece, then, not only in itselfbllt also in
referenceto its basic set and to the operationsof the twelve-tonesystem.
(Hyde 1993, p. 63)
[iii] The whole questionof deciding'whatone hears'is problematical. ARerall,I
can 'hear'the most preposterousanalyticalrelationshipsif I choose to; it is a
questionof decidingwhatI wantto hear.(Cook 1987a, p. 57)
The commonality here is the idea of musical perception as something that
is essentially conscious and volitional, indeed, more or less untrammelled by
anything other than acts of individual will guided by analytical insight.
Referring back to the quotation that opens this article, I should now admit
that it was presented in incomplete form. In full, it reads:
Underlyingall aspectsof analysisas an activityis the fundamentalpoint of
contactbetweenmind and musicalsound,namely,musicalpercepiion(see
PSYCHOLOGY OFMUSIC).
In other words, the implication is that to provide an adequate account of musi-
cal perception, reference must necessarily be made to the empirical and scien-
MusicAnalysis,17/i (1998) 3
o BlaclcwellPublishersLtd. 1998. Published by BlaclcwellPublishers, 108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JF,UK
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4 IAN CROSS
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MUSICANALYSISANDMUSIC PERCEPTION 5
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MUSICANALYSISANDMUSIC PERCEPTION 7
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'2 # X f C: Wf , v: 2 r r
8 CROSS
IAN
+#i5
* -
* * *
* -
(b) Prolongationalanalysis
Strong
prolongations
Weak o<
o BlackwellPublishersLtd. 1998
MusicAnalysis,17/i (1998)
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MUSICANALYSISANDMUSIC PERCEPTION 9
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10 IAN CROSS
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MUSICANALYSISANDMUSIC PERCEPTION ll
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CROSS
IAN
12
be broughtto bearon
Rhythmic,metrical,harmonicand stylisticfactorscan
so as to suppresseither
theseclassificationsof consecutiveintervalstructures qualitiesthat
the'non-closural'(implicative)orthe 'closural'(non-implicative) musicalsurface
patterns may bear,thus leadingto patternsat the level of the
being sepa-
combining or chainingwith their predecessorsand successorsor are
or combined patterns
rated fromthem.Theterminalelementsof individual theory
Narmour's
deemedto functionat a higherhierarchicallevel, enablingbasisto constructa
that
todepictrelationsbetweennon-adjacentnotes and on
representation of musical ongoingness. It shouldbe noted that
multi-levelled
Narmour'stheory;it is
theconstrualof patternis not alwaysprospectivein the identityof a pat-
possiblefor local contextualambiguityto operateso that
analyticalnotation by
ternemerges only retrospectively(representedin his
patterns).
placingin parenthesesthe symbolsfor such retrospective (slightlyadapted
Bearingall this in mind, let us turn to Narmour's analysis
of K. 311. Letters
here,Fig. 2) of the firstfour bars of the second movement involved,while
patterns
(IP,P, etc.) withinthe 'grouping'bracketsidentifythe the influenceof
above the top system indicate
the(b)'s and (d)'s in parentheses arethe separate
metreand durationrespectively.Most notableat first,perhaps, that scale-step
voice, and the fact
andindependentanalysesprovidedfor each
regardedas a variable
functionis not privilegedwithin the analysis (being 'transformation'of
stylisticfactor).The three systems show the progressive that the steps in-
noted
pitchesto higherhierarchicallevels, and it shouldbe
neatly nested hierarchy of the sort that Lerdahland
volveddo not producea
arise from the fact that
Jackendoff'stheory provides.This could be said to of factors that
Narmour's'single-domain'analysis conflates the operation
Jackendoff'stheory.
wouldfunctionin independentdomainsin Lerdahland
analyses is Narmour'somis-
A majorpoint of divergencebetween the two
the highest level.The
sion of any event within the last beat of bar two from - are subsumedinto
melodicsemiquaversB and G- both possiblecandidates Reversal'chain,
Registral
the 'IntervallicDuplication-Process-Retrospective
pattern element and henceboth remainingat
neitherfunctioningas a terminal
one tiny addition:I have
the lowestlevel.Narmour'sanalysishas here suffered B of bar two to
added the letters 'fm' in parenthesesabove the semiquaver but not actually
indicate something permitted within Narmour's theory that a note may act
present in his analysisof this passage- the possibility portenda trans-
that is, may
'formationally'as opposedto 'transformationally', this.
achieve
formationto a higherhierarchicallevelbut not in fact
Narmour'sanalysisthus construes the passage not as a progressionfrom
has it) but as a I-IV-V
tonic to dominant (as the analysisby Salzer (1962) takesto be archetyp-
structure.As he states:'Salzer'sanalysis[whichNarmour and confirmation
allySchenkerian]showsthe phrase as one more instantiation
of tonality,whereasthe implication-realization model shows it as an example
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MUSICANALYSISANDMUSIC PERCEPTION 13
1 Pl j *4Pn p¢45 l
"r Lr lLrr LF F r :
I IP | 3 1 IRyR) I
yR) * I (h, m)
(xs) ID
4 la b* ai
31 P " | 5 1
3 | P ! 2 1
R :
5 1 .
ID * n
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14 IAN CROSS
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ANDMUSICPERCEPTION
MUSICANALYSIS 15
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IAN CROSS
16
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MUSICANALYSISANDMUSIC PERCEPTION 17
Conclusions
In this articleI havepostulatedthe existenceof a music-analytic'folkpsychol-
ogy' of musical perception.I have proposed that such a 'folk psychology'
shouldbe replacedby a scientificpsychology,a cognitive-scientificaccountof
perception.I havereviewedtwo recenttheoriesof musicanalysisthatappearto
be intended to carry out just such a project.I have concluded that neither
systemcan be saidto fulfilcomprehensivelythe projectof replacingthe music-
analytic'folk psychology'of musicalperceptionwith a scientificallyfounded
one, and suggestedthatsuch a projectmightbe misconceived- one taskof the
cognitivescience of music being not to replace folk-psychologicalaccountsof
musicalperceptionbut to explain them.
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18 IAN CROSS
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