Owens Douglas A 200905 Dma
Owens Douglas A 200905 Dma
Owens Douglas A 200905 Dma
by
ABSTRACT
Jean Françaix’s compositional contributions to the woodwind repertory, filled with charm
and compositional wit, are substantial. Françaix’s Quatuor pour Flûte, Hautbois, Clarinette et
Basson of 1933 and the Petit Quatuor pour Saxophones of 1935, both examples of his very
earliest mature compositional output, have become staples for the respective quartets of
compare and contrast aspects of both pieces’ composition and performance considerations.
INDEX WORDS: Françaix, Quartet, Quatuor, Woodwind, Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon,
Saxophone
A STYLISTIC ANALYSIS AND PERFORMANCE GUIDE TO JEAN FRANÇAIX’S
POUR SAXOPHONES
by
ATHENS, GEORGIA
2009
© 2009
by
Maureen Grasso
Dean of the Graduate School
The University of Georgia
May 2009
iv
DEDICATION
In my junior year of high school, I began clarinet lessons with Dr. Robert Chesebro,
months of private tutelage that he felt my hands were too large to successfully play clarinet on a
highly refined level. What I did not realize at the time was that, even though he momentarily
crushed my 16 year-old spirit, he was about to open the door to the rest of my musical life. By
suggesting I switch to bassoon, he created opportunities and experiences that I now realize were
far beyond those of most of my peers. Perhaps more importantly though, I was captivated by Dr.
Chesebro’s knowledge about the whole of the woodwind family and his abilities to command
each instrument as if it were his primary performance tool. Eventually, I made this knowledge
and ability my career goal. I cannot fathom dedicating this document to anyone other than Dr.
Chesebro, who instilled in me a sense of wonder about the world of expression attainable when
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
First and foremost, I thank the Creator - the source of all of our gifts, and to whom they
eventually return. Secondly, I would not be where I am today without the assistance, love, and
friendship of my father and mother, Douglas and Mary Owens. To say I have been blessed with
My warmest gratitude and best wishes belong with my colleagues Richard Maltz at the
University of South Carolina – Aiken, as well as Porter Stokes and Tim Kintzinger at
Presbyterian College for the teaching opportunities they provided while I was a student at the
University of Georgia. I extend a very special thanks to Lisa Campi, Tim Farrell, Andrew
Homburg, Katherine Jetter, Jonathan Latta, Linda Mack, Kasia Sokol, and Mark Walters – my
wonderful colleagues at Fort Lewis College. Your encouragement in the finishing of my degree
Douglas Graham, and Rebecca Nagel for the foundations they provided in their respective areas
work with Angela Jones-Reus and D. Ray McClellan, both of whom are gifted artists as well as
master teachers. My most sincere thanks belongs to my committee members Leonard Ball,
William Davis, Kenneth Fischer, and Stephen Valdez for their dedication to providing the
highest quality of education not only for me, but also for each student with whom they interact
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
DEDCATION…………………………………………………………………………………… .iv
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .............................................................................................................v
CHAPTER
Allegro .......................................................................................................................8
Andante ....................................................................................................................28
3 An Overview of the Petit Quatuor pour Saxophones from a Stylistic, Theoretical, and
Performance Perspective.............................................................................................71
Gaguenardise ..........................................................................................................72
Cantilène .................................................................................................................92
Sérénade comique..................................................................................................100
4 A Comparison of the Quatuor pour Flûte, Hautbois, Clarinette et Bassoon and Petit
Quatuor pour Saxophones from an Ensemble and Analytical Perspective ...............119
Sound .....................................................................................................................119
Harmony ................................................................................................................126
Melody...................................................................................................................129
vii
Rhythm ..................................................................................................................133
Growth ...................................................................................................................134
5 Conclusions ................................................................................................................139
REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................143
1
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
Jean Françaix (born Le Mans, 23 May, 1912; deceased Paris, 25 September, 1997) was a
precocious child, having his first composition published at the age of ten. His mother, a singer
and teacher, and his father, Director of the Le Mans Conservatoire, were his first music teachers.
His early achievements as a composer allowed him to study composition with Nadia Boulanger.1
Françaix also became an accomplished pianist at an early age, studying at the Paris
Françaix’s compositional output was traditional in his use of genres such as symphony,
concerto, sonata, and opera, as well as his sense of form, melody, harmony, and rhythmic drive.
It is in this approach that he established himself among the French Neoclassical composers of the
day.2 By the end of his life, Françaix had composed more than 200 pieces; he said of himself that
he was constantly composing, writing new pieces immediately after finishing another.3
Françaix’s sense of wit and ingenuity often came across in his choice of instrumentation for a
work. For example, one might consider his Sonata for Recorder and Guitar, Concerto for
Accordion, and an opera for three singers and saxophone quartet. It is in this witty compositional
style that the woodwind world finds a high concentration of quality literature in Françaix’s
output.
By 1935, Françaix had composed not only a saxophone quartet, but also a quartet for
traditional orchestral woodwinds – flute, oboe, clarinet, and bassoon. Both of these compositions
capture the charm, wit, and excitement of the young composer. In the words of Françaix himself,
1
Muriel Bellier, “Françaix, Jean (René Désiré),” Grove Music Online, http://www.grovemusic.com.proxy-remote.galib.uga.edu:2048 (accessed
April 21, 2008).
2
Muriel Bellier, “Françaix, Jean (René Désiré),” Grove Music Online, http://www.grovemusic.com.proxy-remote.galib.uga.edu:2048 (accessed
April 21, 2008).
3
James Jeter, “The Composer Speaks: Jean Françaix on His Divertissement for Bassoon and String Quintet,” International Double Reed Society,
http://idrs.colorado.edu/Publications/Journal/JNL9/composer.html (accessed April 21, 2008).
2
these compositions “do something that can be called ‘Français’, with both an S and an X, that is,
to be jolly most of the time – even comical … To avoid the premeditated wrong note and
Purpose
The purpose of this document is to examine the stylistic and performance aspects of Jean
Françaix’s Quatuor pour Flûte, Hautbois, Clarinette et Basson of 1933 and the Petit Quatuor
pour Saxophones of 1935. Since many works in the standard repertory for woodwind
instruments come out of the French Neoclassical tradition, it is of interest to examine the ways in
which Françaix utilized these instruments in a chamber quartet setting. The primary goals of this
document are to explore the similarities and differences between Françaix’s treatments of voices
within each respective ensemble, as well as to compare his treatment of the traditional “soprano-
Review of Literature
Several studies have been written involving the use of a particular woodwind instrument
in Françaix’s chamber music – especially concerning the Quintette pour Flûte, Hautbois,
Clarinette, Horn et Basson of 1948. “Excerpts of Woodwind Quintet Music for Bassoon:
Selections, Pedagogy, and Practice” by Lori Lynn Wooden, as well as Ann Adams’s “Jean
Françaix: His Life and Selected Chamber Works that Include the Oboe in a Primary Role”
explore the Quintette from a single-instrument perspective. Margaret Donaghue’s “The Chamber
Music of Jean Françaix: A Clarinet's Perspective” is one of the few documents that specifically
studies the Quatuor from a single-instrument perspective. Elizabeth Ambler Ruppe’s “Form and
Muriel Bellier, “Françaix, Jean (René Désiré),” Grove Music Online, http://www.grovemusic.com.proxy-remote.galib.uga.edu:2048 (accessed
4
Tonality as Elements of Neoclassicism in Two Works of Jean Françaix: Divertimento pour Flûte
et Piano (1955) and Suite pour Flûte Seule (1963), with Three Recitals of Selected Works of
Mozart, Widor, Feld, Muczynski and Others” examines Françaix’s Neoclassical approach to
Sound recordings hold vital information about the particular works they present. This
document considers several recordings for this purpose: Ensemble Wien-Berlin and Aulos-
Bläserquintett have recorded the Quatuor on all-Françaix chamber music sets, and Selandia has
also recorded the Quatuor on Wind Chamber Music 1. It is of interest to note that, along with
more modern recordings, a performance of the Petit Quatuor by Marcel Mule’s saxophone
quartet, the dedicatees of the piece, can be heard on The History of the Saxophone.
Jean Françaix’s mature compositional output spans a large portion of the twentieth
century, running concurrent with changing trends including Neoclassicism, total serialism,
minimalism, post-modernism, and beyond. All the while, Françaix never strayed far from his
early compositional wit, charm, and accessible approach. The accessibility of his output has lent
itself to sustained popularity in the practice room and the concert hall.
A decade after his death, information concerning either Françaix’s Quatuor or the Petit
Quatuor is surprisingly sparse in published literature. As Françaix composed the two early
quartets with a particular instrumentation based on the SATB of vocal music, it is interesting to
compare the way both the Quatuor and Petit Quatuor lend themselves to parallels in the
corresponding voices of each piece. The Petit Quatuor, the more widely performed of the two,
has become a staple of the saxophone quartet literature. The Quatuor, though less often
4
performed, demonstrates Françaix’s idiomatic writing, and invites comparison with the Petit
It is in this comparison that this document sets itself apart from other studies of
Françaix’s works for woodwind instruments. Some studies discuss Françaix’s approaches to
writing for particular instruments in his chamber works, but no studies have yet examined
works.
Delimitations
This document examines Jean Françaix’s Quatuor pour Flûte, Hautbois, Clarinette et
Basson and his Petit Quatuor pour Saxophones – both available from Edition Schott. A stylistic
analysis has been executed according to basic musical components, including melody, harmony,
form, texture, rhythm, and instrumentation. Both works are compared and contrasted by these
criteria. It is strongly recommended that the reader have access to these scores while reading this
In regard to pitch notation, this document uses the system in which “middle C” is referred
to as C4, with one octave higher being C5, one octave lower being C3, and so forth. It is important
to note that unless otherwise mentioned, all pitches are referred to by their sounding frequency:
for example, a written C4 in the E-flat alto saxophone part would actually sound as E-flat3, and is
Research Problems
1. The specific titles, composition dates, and publishers of Françaix’s Quatuor and Petit
Quatuor.
5
Methodology
Plan, and Review of Literature,” Chapter II – “An Overview of the Quatuor pour Flûte,
Chapter III – “An Overview of the Petit Quatuor pour Saxophones from a Stylistic, Theoretical,
Hautbois, Clarinette et Bassoon and Petit Quatuor pour Saxophones from an Ensemble
pertaining to the compositions discussed in this document. Analyses of the works are approached
according to the method outlined by Jan LaRue in his 2001 article “Fundamental Considerations
in Style Analysis.” References at the end include publisher information for these two pieces, as
well as a discography of the works. Chapters dedicated specifically to each quartet are organized
as follows:
1. Title
2. Year of composition
3. Dedication/commission information
CHAPTER 2
The woodwind quintet has been a standard chamber ensemble since the early nineteenth
century, with the compositions of Franz Danzi, Anton Reicha, and Giuseppe Cambini cementing
the flute-oboe-clarinet-bassoon-horn voicing of the group. Nevertheless, it was less common for
composers to write for this ensemble in the latter half of the 1800s. It was with the woodwind
quintets of Carl Nielsen, Paul Hindemith, and Arnold Schoenberg in the early 1920s that the
The idea of writing for only the four woodwind instruments and omitting the horn was
even less frequently explored by composers. One of few twentieth-century composers of note to
explore this ensemble before Françaix was Hector Villa-Lobos with his Quatuor of 1928. The
ensemble was even more rarely written for in a nineteenth-century style, although one work, the
Wind Quartet of Karl Goepfart, has been successful enough to be published in Albert Andraud’s
popular collection of Twenty-Two Wind Quintets. The rarity of music for this ensemble may have
been because composers overlooked woodwind ensembles for the more homogeneous-sounding
string quartet, or for the wider timbral spectrum of the full orchestra. Nevertheless, Jean Françaix
composed for the quartet of orchestral woodwinds not once, but twice in the 1930s: the Quatuor
of 1933, with which this document is concerned, and the similarly scored Quadruple Concerto of
1935.
It is unfortunate that the circumstances of the dedication of the Quatuor are not well
documented. The opening dedication merely states the piece is “Pour Messieurs Roger Cordet,
Louis Gromer, André Vacellier, Gabriel Grandmaison du ‘Quintette à vent de Paris.’” Suite
8
sans prétention pour M. de Molière, pour flûte, hautbois, clarinette et basson by Jacques
Chailley (1910-1999) bears a dedication to this ensemble as well, but no date of composition is
indicated.5 The Quintette à vent de Paris is listed on composer André Amellér’s (1912-1990)
website as having given the premier performance of his op. 14, A la française, though
Françaix’s Quatuor harkens back to the practice of the Classical symphony cycle: a fast
first movement, followed by a slow second, succeeded by a dance-like third, and closing with a
quick finale. Using traditional symphonic form with the four traditional orchestral woodwinds
accessible tonality. Though Françaix writes with a distinct understanding of early twentieth-
century extended harmonies, his tonal relations between movements are tied with common
practice expectations – the first movement is in C, the second in a minor mode on the submediant
A, the third in the dominant G, and the closing movement returns to the original C tonality.
There are no changes of instrumentation in the quartet – the flute, oboe, clarinet, and bassoon
Allegro
A striking feature of the Allegro movement of Françaix’s Quatuor is its apparent clarity
and conservative compositional approach. Tonal centricity around C is well defined at the
movement’s outset as well as its close. The rhythmic drive is straightforward and phrases are
mostly defined in clear four-measure groupings. It is in this apparent simplicity that the piece
presents its initial charm. Nevertheless, further examination of the movement reveals Françaix’s
5
Allen B. Skei, review of Suite sans prétention pour M. de Molière, pour flûte, hautbois, clarinette et basson, by Jacques Chailley, Notes, Second
Series, vol. 40, no. 2 (December 1983): 397, http://www.jstor.org.proxy-remote.galib.uga.edu:2048/stable/941325 (accessed June 15, 2008).
6
Jean-Hervé Ameller, “Wind Instrument Groups,” Andre AMELLER, http://www.ameller.org/amaa/cataa05e.htm (accessed June 15, 2008).
9
The Allegro movement contains elements of sonata form, though lacks the proper tonal
expectation and resolution of themes. The primary theme of what may be viewed as an
exposition begins in the first measure with the melody stated in the oboe and flute parts in C,
the two themes from the exposition are again heard: the second theme is presented at rehearsal 9,
There are several problems that arise from analyzing the Allegro movement as a sonata
form, however. The traditional tonal goal of the secondary theme in the exposition is to modulate
into another key area to set up a development section. Though the secondary theme is, in fact, in
a contrasting key area, Françaix writes a return of the first theme in its original tonality following
the end of the second theme beginning at rehearsal 5. Therefore, what would be viewed as an
exposition has tonal closure in the initially presented tonic key of the first theme. The
development section, though presenting alterations of previously existing themes and introducing
a new Andante con moto section, is arguably the most tonally stable section of the movement,
with a clear A-flat tonality. Both themes in what would be considered a recapitulation are
presented in reverse order in their original keys, offering no large-scale resolution of the tonal
Even though a listener may hear a clear tripartite movement reminiscent of the classic
sonata form, this document approaches the first movement as an alteration of “arch” form.7
Standard arch forms are viewed as an elaboration on the following formal scheme: ABCBA.
Since the B theme presents itself at rehearsal 9 before the A theme appears at rehearsal 12, the
7
Frank Cooper, liner notes from A Tour D’Anches: French Music for Wind Ensemble, performed by Luiz Fernando Benedini, Margaret
Donaghue, Luciano Magnanini, Christine Nield, and Robert Weiner, Altarus AIR-CD-9028, 2000.
10
basic definition of the arch form works well to describe the overall formal structure of the
movement. Both themes are restated at the end of the movement in their original key areas.
Nevertheless, since the A theme of the movement presents itself twice in the opening of the
Allegro, the movement may alternatively be seen as a hybrid of both arch form and rondo, with
The opening of the movement consists of a two-measure tradeoff between the oboe and
flute parts. Françaix defines his primary usage of each of the individual woodwinds in the
Quatuor: in this piece, the flute and oboe parts usually contain melodic activity, and the clarinet
and bassoon parts are generally accompanimental in nature. Françaix’s alternating statement in
the upper two voices also enables the listener to identify the particular character of each melodic
instrument. In the flute response at measure 3, Françaix presents his sensitivity to dynamic
balance for these woodwind instruments. The flute part, marked forte in the middle of the treble
staff, is supported by bassoon and clarinet parts marked piano. This is a sharp contrast to the
forte dynamic used in the clarinet and bassoon parts when Françaix writes the oboe part in a
register in which the instrument can project well. Up to rehearsal 1, Françaix maintains interest
by using a constant alternation of soft and loud dynamics through the ensemble.
The aforementioned “call-and-response” tradeoff in the flute and oboe parts presents an
antiphonal pattern that will be revisited between voices throughout the movement. The initial
descent of the opening two-measure motive creates a sense of falling that is immediately
balanced by the more arched melody in the third and fourth measures in the flute part.
Throughout most of the movement, phrases break into clear four-measure sections; the initial
descending motive in the oboe part is again presented in the fifth measure, followed as in the
11
beginning by an answer in the flute part which has been altered to end on a quarter note for the
Françaix composes a phrase with new melodic and rhythmic material four measures
before rehearsal 1 – a short, leggiero eighth-note melody that foreshadows the light and
effortless grace notes of the secondary theme at rehearsals 2 and 3. The four measures before
rehearsal 1 eventually culminate with a run to a cadential C6 in the flute part, presenting a three-
phrase A theme.
motive, with its light sixteenth-note passing tones, entices the listener’s ear with a sense of
perpetually leading to the next beat. The leggiero eighth-note motive four measures before
rehearsal 1 creates a sense of rhythmic relaxation, and is then brought to a climactic head in the
articulated sixteenth-note sextuplet in the flute part in the measure before rehearsal 1.
Though Françaix presents an arpeggiation of an F-major triad in the bassoon part over the
movement’s first three beats and an A4 in the clarinet part through the first measure, he implies a
C-major tonality in the flute and oboe parts. Nevertheless, the composer only eventually
establishes the tonality by way of a cadence in the tonic key in the beat before rehearsal 1.
Françaix closes the first four-measure phrase with an F major-minor seventh chord on beat two
of the fourth measure; the closing chord at the end of measure eight is a D-minor triad in first
inversion. When a C-major cadence is reached, these cadences can be seen retrospectively as
interest to note here that the first resolution to a C-major triad occurs only at the end of the
measure before rehearsal 1, with the flute part ascending to C6, accompanied by G3 in the clarinet
part, and E4 in the bassoon part. Though there is an aural closure to the phrase at this point, the
12
second inversion statement of the C-major triad makes for a weakened presentation of the key in
functional terms. Regarding functional harmony, the cadence is further weakened because the C-
major triad is approached by way of an open tritone between the A-flat3 in the clarinet part and
D4 in the bassoon part on the downbeat of the measure before rehearsal 1. Nevertheless, the
stepwise motion in the clarinet and bassoon parts creates a strong linear cadence that still aurally
At rehearsal 1, the oboe part contains a new melody closely related to the rhythm of the
opening motive. For the first time, Françaix assigns full phrases and phrase groups for each of
his upper voices – an idea that will be more pronounced later in the movement. For the written
oboe solo, the bassoon and clarinet accompanimental parts switch from the bass and chordal
accompaniment of the opening theme to an Alberti-like bass figure. Though the rhythmic drive
of the melody at rehearsal 1 is closely related to the opening, here the oboe part centers on B4
instead of creating an immediate sense of fall and recovery as in the beginning. The activity of
the Alberti figure in the bassoon and clarinet parts is structurally important as well – this is the
first point in the movement in which Françaix has provided a constant subdivision of sixteenth
notes. The notes E3, D3, and B2 in the bassoon part in the measures after rehearsal 1 function as
the tonic, subtonic, and dominant of the E Phrygian scale – the centricity around B4 in the oboe
part further strengthens this perception of a momentary excursion into minor modality. By the
brief centricity around the mediant E, this transition serves an important structural purpose in
At rehearsal 2, the flute part introduces the second expository theme in the instrument’s
high register. Though the flute part is marked mezzo forte in a soloistic register, the rest of the
13
ensemble is marked at a quieter dynamic. We observe that Françaix has moved to a new tonal
centricity around A6, the submediant, by writing the flute part constantly falling away from and
returning to that pitch through the end of rehearsal 2. This idea is further strengthened by the A4
in the bassoon part at the downbeat of rehearsal 2, and in the C5-B4-B-flat4 chromatic quarter-
note triplet in the clarinet part in the fourth measure after rehearsal 2 that leads to A in both the
flute and clarinet parts on the downbeat four measures before rehearsal 3.
Two measures before rehearsal 3, Françaix begins a chromatic scale in the flute part at
the downbeat on an E6. This scale ultimately ascends to a B-flat6 on the downbeat of rehearsal 3.
The grace-note B-flat6 resolves to a C6 a seventh down, and is then followed by a G6 and E-flat6.
The apparent result of this resolution to the ear is a brief tonicization of E-flat, the lowered
mediant – the E-flat4 in the bassoon part, the accompanying B-flat4 in the clarinet part, and the
G5 in the oboe part strengthen this perception. Françaix also begins a melodic variation of the
secondary theme at rehearsal 3, using the eighth-note portions found in most measures of the
melody in rehearsal 2. Though the melodic rhythm has slowed a bit, Françaix maintains
excitement by adding grace notes, and ultimately decreasing the dynamic in the melody to a
At rehearsal 4, the piano flute and oboe parts take turns trading melodic fragments –
reminiscent of the four measures before rehearsal 1. Françaix writes a series of legato eighth
notes in the oboe part at rehearsal 4 in sharp contrast to the pointed articulations of the flute part
in the previous phrases. Following the brief oboe solo, the flute part, and then the clarinet part
contain a melody with grace-note figures, both alluding back to the previous flute solo at
rehearsal 2 and 3 and in the four measures before rehearsal 1. The new lyrical theme in the oboe
part at rehearsal 4, followed by the quarter-note based statements beginning in the fifth measure
14
in the flute and clarinet parts are ultimately concluded with the two-measure cadence before
rehearsal 5: a rhythmic slowing that will be revisited several times throughout the piece. Here
Françaix makes his first departure from four-measure phrase structure. This moment of ppp
homorhythm, though in every traditional sense a rhythmic relaxation, signals tension with its
shortened phrase structure and its cadence to the F3-G4-D5-G5 dominant-seventh chord in third
At rehearsal 5, Françaix reintroduces the A theme in its original key. This point of arrival
is heard as a moment of clarity and repose. Nevertheless, Françaix will soon have the ensemble
In the measure before rehearsal 6, Françaix scores a loud surprise to the flute sextuplet in
the clarinet and bassoon parts – both parts contain a fast descending scale in octaves in the low
register of each instrument, settling on A-flat2 in the bassoon part and A-flat3 in the clarinet part,
thus signaling the beginning of a development section. Françaix begins an alteration of the initial
thematic statement – perhaps the most noticeable aspect of this alteration is that the first
statement of the development is in the clarinet part, which has not yet contributed to the overall
melodic context of the movement. The developing solo ascends through the instrumentation,
moving between parts from clarinet to oboe to flute and back again through rehearsal 6 to
rehearsal 7. After altering the solo rhythmically with syncopation, and texturally between voices,
Françaix composes one final statement of the melody in the flute part in the instrument’s middle
register beginning at rehearsal 7, marked mezzo forte with accompanying ppp in the remaining
voices. The movement’s intensity is slowing, and literally does so with a ritardando four
As previously mentioned, Françaix begins not only a textural development of the main
theme, but extends its melodic importance in this section. Though Françaix changes some of the
inner rhythm of the theme, he always retains the opening eighth-note, two sixteenth-note, eighth-
note rhythm. This development of the opening melodic motive is the longest presentation of a
single melodic idea so far in the Quatuor. Françaix retains the melodic restatements until the
fifth measure of rehearsal 7. This statement is marked where the melody gives way to a slowing
of rhythm that will ultimately lead to a surprising and entirely new melodic and rhythmic idea at
rehearsal 6, the clarinet part contains a four-measure melody, with the first and third measures
derived exactly from the rhythm of the corresponding measures of the opening statement.
Nonetheless, unlike the opening melody, the second measure is filled with sixteenth notes. The
next four measures present the oboe part repeating the rhythmic idea – only displacing the
melody by an eighth note. The phrase actually begins with the oboe part on B-flat4 on the pick-
up to the fifth measure of rehearsal 6. This rhythmic instability is continued and expanded upon
when the meter changes, for the first time in the Allegro movement, to 3/4 in the ninth measure
after rehearsal 6. Four measures before rehearsal 7, the clarinet part returns to the original
rhythm and meter. At rehearsal 7, the offbeat melody resumes, this time in the flute part. Two
measures before the Andante con moto, Françaix ceases using sixteenth-note subdivision
Surprisingly enough, Françaix’s development section in this hybrid form, at least through
the beginning of the Andante con moto, is the most harmonically stable section of the work so
far. Upon descent in the bassoon and clarinet parts to each instrument’s respective lowest A-flats,
16
the development begins in A-flat, with comparatively little chromatic alteration. The section ends
in the measure before Tempo I subito on open fifths between E-flat2 and B-flat3, implying a half-
cadence in A-flat.
In the Andante con moto, Françaix surprises his listeners with new rhythmic and melodic
material – here the duple meter of the Allegro is replaced by a slower waltz tempo. Françaix
maintains the A-flat tonal centricity he had established at rehearsal 6, but with a little more
flexibility demonstrated by dissonant harmonies in the accompanimental oboe and clarinet parts.
Françaix presents a new melodic idea in the flute part at the beginning of the Andante con
moto. Françaix retains his traditional four-measure phrase groupings in the melody, adding a
two-measure extension in the tonally ambiguous two measures before rehearsal 8. In the first
four measures of rehearsal 8, the flute part restates a melody similar to the opening of the
section, with the final melody of the twenty two measure Andante con moto section being
presented in the oboe part. Though the flute part is marked mezzo forte, it will be heard as quieter
because of the timbre of the instrument in that register. The melodic contour of the oboe part
beginning five measures after rehearsal 8 is relatively static, orbiting around B-flat4.
First introduced as a grace note six measures before the Tempo I subito, and later used
cadentially two measures before Tempo I, Françaix introduces a C-flat5 to further focus the ear
toward the melodic resolution to B-flat4. This section again reveals a connection with earlier
material by exploiting the half-step interval from C-flat5 to B-flat4, much like the tension between
C5 and B4 in the oboe part at rehearsal 1. The resolution of the melodic C-flat5 two measures
before Tempo I to a B-flat4 framed by E-flats in the remaining three parts creates a strong
17
sensation of a dominant chord that will resolve to A-flat4 on the downbeat of the next measure in
Other than the obvious tempo decrease, the most poignant difference between the
Andante con moto and the remainder of the Allegro movement is the meter change – from the
fast duple meter found in the majority of the Allegro to a slower, dance-like triple time. For the
entire Andante con moto, the rhythmic unit is that of a quarter note. The rhythm of the melody is
characterized by a quarter-note, half-note rhythm in the first, third, and fifth measures of the
section as well as the downbeat of rehearsal 8, then the half note followed by a quarter note when
the oboist takes over in eight, six, and four measures before the Tempo I subito. The downbeats
are almost always accompanied by inner voices of the ensemble moving on counts two and three.
Françaix retains an A-flat centricity throughout the Andante con moto, as is clearly
outlined by both the outer melody and bass line in the flute and bassoon parts, respectively.
However, he adds dissonance to this section through the inner voices. For example, while the
outer voices outline a D-flat-major chord in the second measure of the Andante, the clarinetist
and oboist respectively play a major sixth from F3 to D4 moving in parallel descent to D3 to B3 –
intervals that cause dissonance when played in the context of a D-flat-major chord. Regardless of
Françaix’s interjection of occasional dissonance, the section constantly affirms the key of A-flat,
with dominant-tonic motion occurring in the third and fourth measures of the section, the
measure before and the measure of rehearsal 8, and recurring every other measure from four
At Tempo I, Françaix uses a chromatic scale in the flute part to span from A-flat4, the
resolution to the final E-flat dominant chord of the Andante con moto, to an A6 on the downbeat
18
of rehearsal 9 – thereby returning to the A centricity and theme first heard at rehearsal 2. From
rehearsal 9 until rehearsal 12, Françaix writes a repetition of rehearsal 2 through rehearsal 5,
thereby cementing the return of the B theme. The opening A theme arrives again at rehearsal 12
At rehearsal 12, the return of the A theme, Françaix restates material from the opening of
the movement. This material lasts until the eighth measure after rehearsal 12. At this point,
instead of having the flute part continue the melody, he switches back to the oboe part and writes
the clarinet and bassoon parts at mezzo forte instead of piano. The next measure finds the oboe
and the flute parts with a sixteenth-note ascending scale ending with a trill from A5-B5 in the
oboe part. The clarinet part follows the oboe part with a surprising trill from B-flat5 to C-flat6 –
After the trill in the clarinet part in the 11th measure of rehearsal 12, Françaix writes a
short restatement of the Andante con moto section. This restatement occurs in C like in the
recapitulation instead of the A-flat centricity of the first Andante con moto. After only four
measures, the Andante returns to Tempo I for the Coda, with the clarinet part providing the
rhythmic drive in the first two measures, followed by the short eighth notes and sixteenth notes
of the flute and oboe parts. The phrase begins to freely repeat itself until two measures before
rehearsal 13. Here the bassoon begins on a D2, outlining a bass ascent to G2 under a V7 chord
which is filled out by other parts on beat two of the measure before rehearsal 13. Rehearsal 13
concludes the movement, with all four winds making a chromatic ascent to their final note – each
taking turn with C7 in the flute part, B5 in the oboe part, B-flat4 in the clarinet part, and C2 in the
bassoon part for a finale that reaffirms the C tonality of the movement as a whole.
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Françaix’s inclusion of both martellato accents and staccato markings in the entrance of
the flute part at measure three indicate sensitivity to the difficulties of the instrument’s middle
register. He likely intended the flute part to be heard with a sound equal to the oboe part, which
is marked with fewer martellato accents. Françaix likely understood the difficulty of lower
articulation definition on the flute, and therefore requests a shorter articulation in the third
measure to compensate. The same applies in the seventh measure. Here, as presented by the oboe
part in the second measure, the accent implies a momentary leaning into the articulated pitch,
and a more fully sustained pitch than any of the short eighth notes or sixteenth notes heard in the
beats before. The leggiero eighth notes two measures before rehearsal 1 should be played with a
light and seemingly effortless articulation style. The sixteenth-note triplets that follow may be
played with a light multiple tongue, and crescendo into a C6 in the beat before rehearsal 1. This
crescendo and arrival is important, as the beat before rehearsal 1 serves as the most defined C-
At rehearsal 2, Françaix writes the flute part in the instrument’s high register. Though
marked mezzo forte, the timbre alone will result in the flute projecting at a loud dynamic. For this
reason, the flute part will be heard without any special effort by the performer. Here martellato
accents and other performance markings should be strictly followed. The rhythmic accuracy of
the quintuplet of the third measure must be communicated. The C7 in the fourth measure of
rehearsal 2 is important to the sonority, but may be prone to sharpness. Two measures before
rehearsal 3, it is important for the flute part to be heard at a pianissimo to set up the contrasting
At rehearsal 3, Françaix writes a transitional section, led by the flute part’s foreground
melodic material. Again, the performer must display an accurate multiple tongue and finger
coordination four measures after rehearsal 3, just like before rehearsal 1. The subito piano
required in the fifth measure of rehearsal 3 is difficult to execute, mainly because of the inherent
tonal and pitch problems with G-sharp6. Nevertheless, the two eighth notes on the second beat of
the previous measure must be heard at a loud dynamic, and then immediately played at a soft
dynamic.
Françaix again shows his sensitivity to the dynamic difficulties of the middle and low
ranges of the flute at rehearsal 4, where he writes syncopated eighth notes at a piano dynamic.
Though the clarinet and bassoon parts are marked pianissimo, the flute part’s piano dynamic
should blend equally with the other two accompanimental voices here to support the oboe part’s
legato melody. In the fifth measure of rehearsal 4, the flutist has a short two-measure solo, again
with grace notes. The piano here should be taken literally to set up the proper dynamic for the
clarinetist to answer two measures later. The two measures before rehearsal 5 are a
homorhythmic cadence; though not written, the remainder of the ensemble should be subservient
At rehearsal 6, Françaix writes pianissimo eighth notes for the flute part in the
instrument’s lowest octave. Frequently throughout the Quatuor, Françaix writes for the low
register of the instrument in accompanimental figures. Though not to the fore, the performer
should present a refined, full sound with the remainder of the ensemble throughout this section,
and others like it. Nine measures after rehearsal 6, Françaix writes a bit of melody in the flute
part; here the mezzo forte should be taken literally and performed at a slightly softer dynamic
level than the clarinet part’s subito forte in the proceeding beat. The next entrance, a one-beat
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pickup into the four measures before rehearsal 7, should be played at a loud dynamic – though
care must be taken not to overplay the fff due to the soloistic range of the instrument. Françaix
intends this statement, along with the bassoon part’s fortissimo subito eighth notes, as a stark
contrast to the pianissimo oboe part five measures before rehearsal 7. At rehearsal 7, Françaix
writes another mezzo forte statement for the flute part. The flute part should be heard at a bit
louder dynamic than mezzo forte because of the less-prominent middle range of the instrument.
Beginning at the end of the third measure, Françaix writes a ritardando; ultimate control of this
slowing is perhaps best left to the clarinetist’s rhythmic sixteenth notes in the fourth measure.
The first twelve measures of the Andante con moto serve as a flute solo with the rest of
the ensemble playing accompanimental roles. Françaix is clear about his intended dynamics; the
first measure, marked mezzo forte, is immediately followed with a pianissimo in the second
measure. On the whole, the flute part should be allowed melodic prominence until the fifth
measure after rehearsal 8. At this point, though the flute part is più forte, melodic interest is
delegated to the oboe part marked un poco espressivo. The flute part remains on E-flat5 in the
eight measures before Tempo I subito. Even though unwritten, the perdendosi may also serve as
a slight ritardando of tempo, and should be lead by the melodically prominent oboe part.
At Tempo I subito, Françaix writes a chromatic scale in the flute part from A-flat4 to A6 at
rehearsal 9, where the B theme is again presented. The crescendo marked two measures before
rehearsal 9 must be clearly executed to signal the arrival of the restatement of themes from the
Most of the material from rehearsal 9 to the Andante con moto after rehearsal 12 serves as
a repetition of the first and second themes from the beginning of the Allegro. In the measure
before the Andante con moto, Françaix writes a trill in the clarinet part. Upon release of the trill,
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the flutist’s entrance may be slightly delayed for the four-measure espressivo solo. Eight
measures before rehearsal 13, the flutist should cue the entrance into Tempo I. The difficult low
B3 in the second and sixth measures are supported by the same pitch written for the oboe, which
tends to be much more resonant in that register. The high C7 at rehearsal 13 is unaccompanied,
and must be timed precisely on the second beat of the measure to ensure a jocular ending.
To match articulation with the cylindrical bored flute and clarinet, the articulations in the
oboe solos at the beginning cannot be too dry and short. In between the first and second
measures – and subsequently, the fifth and sixth measures – Françaix writes a short crescendo
between the slurred fifth C5 to G5. This helps to maintain energy throughout the brief statement
in the oboe part. Four measures before rehearsal 1, the pianissimo leggiero eighth-note statement
in the oboe part should contrast the heaviness of the martellato accents and forte dynamic of the
Upon the arrival of the B theme at rehearsal 2, the oboe part returns to an
accompanimental role, supporting the flute solo through the section. In the third measure, the
oboe part, marked pianissimo, must execute a slur on sixteenth notes, serving as a simultaneous
contrast to the flute’s higher register articulations. The sixteenth notes and sixteenth-note triplet
in the third measure need to be timed precisely, as the oboe part is taking over foreground
interest from the clarinet part, which begins the sixteenth-note figures on the downbeat. The
same shifting of sixteenth-note subdivision between voices recurs two and three measures before
rehearsal 4, where the oboe part contains sixteenth notes and sixteenth-note triplets on the second
beat of each measure. The oboe part includes a four-measure solo of moving and smoothly
23
flowing eighth notes at rehearsal 4. The first two measures are marked piano; the second two are
marked pianissimo. This slight difference serves to assist in the dying away of the B theme.
At rehearsal 6, Françaix requires the oboe part to be heard in the instrument’s low register
at a pianissimo dynamic level. Though difficult, the oboe part must blend with the flute part here
and be heard under the solo clarinet. In the pickup to the fifth measure, the oboe part returns to
melodic prominence, taking over the A-flat melody from the clarinet part. Though a solo, the
oboe part needs to maintain a soft dynamic, for the timbre of the instrument will project well
even at a quiet dynamic. In the eighth measure, the oboe part is written to play a subito forte
dynamic – this sudden loudness sets up the new 3/4 meter of the ninth measure. At the end of the
ninth measure, the oboe part returns with a piano solo; the pickup into the twelfth measure is
marked with a pianissimo. These sudden contrasts are vital to the developmental nature of this
section, and help set apart the individual instrumental solos throughout. Though the flute part is
marked mezzo forte at rehearsal 7, the accompanimental bottom voices need to stay at a very
quiet dynamic; this is exceptionally challenging for the low-register oboe part, which is written
In the Andante con moto, the clarinet and oboe parts present dissonances on the third beat
of each measure. Since Françaix has written for the low register of the oboe, pitch may be
problematic here. In the final eight measures of the Andante con moto, the oboe part is marked
un poco espressivo, noting a soloistic melody. Similar to the melody at rehearsal 1, the oboe part
is written in a very small range – a minor third from A-flat4 to C-flat5. Françaix has assisted the
musical interpretation with clear crescendo and diminuendo marks. In the third and fifth
measures of this solo, Françaix has written a grace-note C-flat5. This grace note should not be
accented, as the melodic contour is actually pointing toward the B-flat4 in the next measure. The
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C-flat5 two measures before Tempo I subito needs to be performed with a weighted accent,
however, as this half-step dissonance helps to solidify the final E-flat cadence before Tempo I
In the ninth measure after rehearsal 12, the oboe part is given a crescendo on sixteenth
notes that resolves on a très serré, very fast, trill two measures before the Andante con moto.
Though the ending of the final eighth note before the trill is marked sec, or short, the intensity of
the crescendo should lead directly into the downbeat of the trill, and then immediately
diminuendo to ppp. After the restatement of the Andante con moto, the oboe part is marked ppp
at Tempo I. This is to enable a proper balance between the often difficult low register of the oboe
and the quiet low register of the flute. In the third and fourth measures of Tempo I, Françaix
writes martellato accents in the flute part, but an explicit staccatissimo in the oboe part. As
articulations, if played as written and according to the natural tendencies of their respective
instruments, should match in duration. Rehearsal 13 has each instrument playing a grace-note
run up to its final pitch of the movement; in the case of the oboe part, Françaix writes up to B5, a
half step from tonic. The release of this note should be dry rather than resonating, for the clarinet
plays a sounding B-flat4 next, one half step further still from tonic, prior to the final statement of
from the beginning; in the third measure, he composes a piano dynamic for the clarinet part in
accompaniment of the middle register flutist’s statement of the opening theme. In general,
Françaix uses the clarinet and bassoon parts as an accompaniment. In the two measures before
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rehearsal 1, Françaix composes a leggiero eighth-note passage for the flute part, while the
clarinet part contains sustained quarter notes. Though strictly an accompanimental passage, these
four beats before rehearsal 1 become the first instance of a sustained line in the Quatuor: it is in
this sustained chromatic descent from written C4 to A3 that the clarinet part helps set up the C-
major triad in the beat before rehearsal 1 that establishes the tonic chord for the first time.
Throughout rehearsal 1, the clarinet part contains sixteenth notes beginning on the second
sixteenth note of each beat. Coordination with the bassoon part on the downbeat here is
imperative. The low range, quiet dynamic and fast tempo of the movement are conducive to the
clarinet part being played with one breath, waiting for the downbeat at rehearsal 2 to breathe
again.
Françaix seems to enjoy giving lower pitched instruments moments of almost humorous
soloistic projection. For example, the clarinet part includes a descending quarter-note triplet in
the fourth measure of rehearsal 2 joined only by a short downbeat played in the oboe part and
high-register eighth notes in the flute part. Five measures before rehearsal 5, Françaix writes the
first instance of the clarinet part continuing a solo melodic passage. Here the clarinet part takes
over a grace-note figure that was first heard in the flute part two measures prior. Though the
dynamic level is still marked ppp, the clarinet part contains the primary melodic interest for a
few measures.
In the measure before rehearsal 6, Françaix writes a descending quintuplet in the clarinet
and bassoon parts to reach the new tonic of A-flat. This subito fff should be played very
deliberately and should be almost shocking to a listener. At rehearsal 6, the clarinet part initiates
the melody for the first time in the movement. The melody last four measures and is similar in
contour and articulation to that in the flute and oboe parts in the beginning of the movement. The
26
clarinet is once again given the melody in the pickups to six measures before rehearsal 7, but is
temporarily interrupted by the oboe and flute. The articulation should remain precise through this
section. In the pickup to the fifth measure after rehearsal 7, the clarinet is given one last
statement of sixteenth notes. Because this is in a ritardando, the clarinetist needs to lead the
ensemble’s slowing; the clarinet is also the only voice in the ensemble to play on each eighth
note of the fifth measure. The bassoon and clarinet sound on both the downbeat and final eighth
The next section is not only peculiar because of its slow tempo, but because of the
harmonies created by the oboe and the clarinet parts. The third beat of each measure results in a
dissonance which may be heard as humorous and should be performed with clarity that will
confirm Françaix’s intent. As Françaix approaches the Tempo I subito before rehearsal 9, tonality
becomes clearer once again, and the clarinet part’s accompaniment is more traditional.
At the end of the second presentation of the B and A themes, the clarinet part includes a
trill from written C6 to D-flat6 eleven measures after rehearsal 12. Marked at ppp, there is also
another style indication here – très serré. This trill should be intense, but still very quiet. It is
with this trill beginning a half step lower than the trill in the oboe part in the proceeding measure
that signals another change in the form. Indeed, Françaix revisits the Andante con moto tempo
for four measures before ending the movement with a Tempo I. Here the clarinet part is given a
repeating pattern of slurring sixteenth-note pick-ups into beats on the first, second, fifth, and
sixth measures. Though marked piano, this is the voice of most interest. The bassoon part is
marked pianissimo, the oboe part is marked ppp, and the flute part – marked piano leggierissimo
– is in a register of the instrument that will be heard less than the clarinet part. The third, fourth,
seventh, and eighth measures have the clarinet join the bassoon again in a more
27
accompanimental role. At rehearsal 13, each instrument is given a fortissimo grace-note run up to
its last note in reverse score order. The clarinet part’s written final C5, sounding a B-flat4,
For a large part of the Quatuor, the bassoon functions as the bass voice of the quartet.
The opening staccato marks and martellato accents should be performed with a resonance
emulating the style of a low string pizzicato. The short ppp pitches at rehearsal 1 suggest this as
well; the bassoonist should play pitches on the beat in a manner that connects with the clarinet
part, which is providing Alberti-like arpeggiations to fill in the beat. The articulations at
rehearsal 2 should be a bit fuller still, as they are written as short eighth notes rather than the
opening sixteenth notes. Here the high tenor tessitura of the bassoon contributes to the lightness
of the ensemble. In the four measures before rehearsal 5, the longer eighth notes and sustained
quarter notes should be played at full value to blend with the articulations of the ensemble.
Throughout the Quatuor, the bassoonist must display an adept flexibility in shifting registers; a
strong flicking technique is vital to ensure that all large leaps to pitches between A3 and D4 speak
The first scalar passage in the bassoon part occurs in the measure before rehearsal 6. With
the clarinet part, the bassoon part is written with a quick descending quintuplet down to A-flat2
to set up the move to the A-flat tonality of the development. Throughout the development, the
bassoon part frequently descends to E-flat2 in agile skips. At the end of the eighth measure after
rehearsal 6, the bassoonist is required to slur down to B-flat2 from E-flat2 – this is facilitated by
The bassoonist begins the Andante con moto, seven measures after rehearsal 7, frequently
slurring down to D-flat2 and E-flat2. The overall dynamic should remain quiet, but the performer
is cautioned to ensure security rather than risking poor response by playing too quietly. In the
three measures before the Tempo I subito, the bassoonist plays an E-flat2, E-flat3, and an A-flat2
in a hemiola rhythm. Since the flute and oboe parts contain sustained pitches, the performer
The remainder of the first movement is mostly a restatement of previously heard material.
However, the bassoonist is given a very important task three measures after rehearsal 13: the
bassoon part provides the final pitch of the movement. Françaix requires the performer to give a
quick grace-note slur from B-flat1 through B1 to low C2 at fff. Attention should be given to the
dynamic level, articulation and intonation to provide a confirmation of the tonic note and a
humorous effect.
Andante
The Andante movement begins with a lyrical solo in the oboe part outlining A Dorian.
This is a logical choice of mode since gravitation to a minor mode located on the submediant is
common in a Classical formal structure when the first movement is in a major key. Immediately
noticeable is the comparatively low tessitura of the orchestration of this movement – the flute
part is written in the low register of the instrument, allowing the middle range of the oboe to
project in soloistic fashion. After cadencing on a C major-minor seventh chord before rehearsal
2, the melody is expanded upon by the bassoon and clarinet parts for a contrasting and tonally
ambiguous middle section. The oboe solo returns in a similar but modally and melodically
concludes with a somewhat tonally ambiguous coda, ultimately ending on a chord consisting of
A2, B3, E4, and A5, reaffirming the A modality established in the beginning.
Françaix establishes the overall serenity of the movement at the outset, marking all voices
pianissimo. The lower register flute part blends under the middle register oboe and clarinet parts,
while the bassoon part contains a bass line in the sonorous register between A2 and A3. The first
four measures begin with the oboe presenting a simple two-measure melody, answered by the
flute and clarinet parts’ countermelody in the third and fourth measures as the oboe continues the
melody from the previous consequent phrase. The melody is repeated in the oboe at the
beginning of the next phrase, and is once again answered by the clarinet and flute. In the first
eight measures of the oboe part, Françaix seems to follow a similar melodic contour for every
two-measure set – he composes an initial descent, followed by an ascent to the second measure,
Beginning at rehearsal 1, Françaix writes the solo oboe and accompanimental bassoon to
play più forte thereby bringing out new melodic material in the oboe’s second octave and the
descending A3-D3-G2-C2 bass line. Over the course of the third and fourth measures after
rehearsal 1, Françaix uses a diminuendo to release the tension of the first two measures of the
phrase. The melodic contour in these measures changes from that of the beginning of the
movement; the initial interval is an ascent followed by descent in the succeeding note. Four
measures before rehearsal 2, Françaix writes the oboe and bassoon parts at forte; by the pickup to
the third measure of this phrase, the oboe part returns to piano. The bassoon and clarinet parts
are written with an even diminuendo across the two measures before rehearsal 2. Four measures
30
before rehearsal 2, Françaix writes suivre le hautbois – or, “under the oboe” – in the flute part,
implying a supportive role and following the contour and dynamic indications of the oboe solo.
Through the entirety of the movement, Françaix never uses a rhythmic value smaller than
a quarter note. This slow overall rhythm adds a vital component to the lyrical and tranquil
content of the movement. Françaix begins the piece on the downbeat in oboe and bassoon parts,
but waits until the second quarter note to bring in a gently accented accompaniment, with a half
note resolving to a quarter note at the end of the measure. The answering of the oboe melody in
the countermelodic flute and clarinet parts follows suit in the third and fourth measures of the
first two phrases. Here the voices enter with their answer on the second quarter note. Rhythm
The presence of F-sharp4 in the flute part from the outset and of F-sharp5 in the oboe part
shift into C major. The quintal motion in the bassoon part beginning at rehearsal 1 sets up an
obvious open-ended tonality at the end of the phrase, with the C major-minor seventh chord on
At rehearsal 2, beginning the “B” section of the movement, bassoon and clarinet take the
melodic lead from the oboe. Through both phrases of the section, the oboe part is noticeably
absent, perhaps with the intent of giving the instrumentalist a moment to rest the embouchure or
providing the listener a varied timbre.8 The bassoon solo at rehearsal 2, one of the few melodies
for the bassoon throughout the Quatuor, is written in the instrument’s tenor tessitura.
Accompaniment is noticeably sparser at rehearsal 2, with the flute part written at the top of the
8
The slow Cantilène movement of the Petit Quatuor, which will be discussed in the next chapter, omits the soprano saxophone entirely, similarly
achieving a darkened timbral effect.
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treble clef staff, but in long sustained note values. The clarinet part adds to the sustained
accompaniment – as does the bassoon part during the clarinet solo. Françaix explicitly marks
performance expressions such as perdendosi and dolcissimo in the three active voices to covey
The bassoon solo at rehearsal 2 is of interest – though its melodic contour is similar to the
solo lines that have been stated earlier in the movement, Françaix writes a more disjunct melody
than anything heard so far in the movement. The melody begins in a stepwise fashion, but leaps a
perfect fourth from A3 to D4 then a perfect fifth from C4 to G4. Other than the oboe part leaping a
perfect fifth two measures before rehearsal 2, this is the only melodic leap larger than a third so
far. By the end of the second measure of rehearsal 2, Françaix makes the disjunct motion more
apparent. Beginning with a leap of a perfect fifth from C4 to G4, Françaix composes a series of
descending fourths and fifths in the bassoon part that will lead to the instrument’s lowest pitch,
B-flat1. Here Françaix has managed to incorporate a nearly three octave range for a solo voice
within the third and fourth measures after rehearsal 2. This display of tonal agility is rare in the
Quatuor, especially from an instrument to which Françaix has not given much melodic activity.
By contrast, the clarinet solo at rehearsal 3 is much more conjunct, and centers on the
instrument’s throat register – the entire melody spans only a minor sixth from D4 to B-flat4.
In this middle section, Françaix further magnifies the rhythmic serenity set forth at the
beginning of the movement. Rhythmic drive is almost totally derived from the quarter-note
motion of the solo lines; half notes and whole notes are present in the accompaniment and serve
a more textural than rhythmic purpose. Nevertheless, Françaix’s use of rhythmic and melodic
suspension in the bassoon accompanimental part at rehearsal 3 creates a sense of unrest and
tension. Throughout rehearsal 3, he writes tied half notes across the bar-line in the bassoon part
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and once in the clarinet part two measures before rehearsal 4, creating harmonic tension, which
Rehearsal 2 and Rehearsal 3 are more tonally ambiguous than the opening and closing
sections of the Andante, due mainly to the chromaticism between each of the four-measure
phrases. For example, Françaix writes F-sharp5 for the flute in the first measure after rehearsal 2
as opposed to F5 in the third – he writes B4 for the clarinet part in the first measure as opposed to
B-flat4 in the third. The bassoon part heightens the harmonic instability at the end of the “B”
section with a slow descending whole-tone scale, beginning on B-flat3, and ending on an E3, a
voices play subservient roles to the return of the oboe solo. As Françaix has written no new
dynamics since the bassoon part’s pianissimo after rehearsal 2, it is safe to assume he intends to
resume the delicate and quiet character of the beginning of the movement. The oboe solo,
marked dolcissimo, returns to the fore for eight measures at rehearsal 4. It is of interest to note
the introduction of a C-sharp5 in the oboe solo, creating a sense of Mixolydian major mode as
opposed to the minor modal oboe melody in the opening. At rehearsal 4, Françaix further
heightens a serenity of rhythm; only in the second and sixth measures does a voice other than the
The delicate and serene character of the movement stays the same into the final coda of
the piece at rehearsal 5. Françaix begins the coda with a lone sustained A4 in the oboe part
followed by middle register entrances in the clarinet and bassoon parts on beat three of the
measure. The third measure begins, as well, with the clarinet and bassoon parts resting on the
33
first two beats of the measure, but the entrance on beat three fills out the ensemble by
introducing the flute. For the final four measures, all voices are in homorhythm, giving a final
confirmation to the musical serenity Françaix has written. Françaix has the melody reduced to
whole- and half-note values at rehearsal 5. Though the final four measures of the movement
introduce the flute as a soprano voice in the sonority for the first time in the movement, the
homophonic texture portrays this as more of a series of chords with flute carrying the soprano
voice rather than a clear melodic statement. Françaix’s rhythmic drive here is reduced even
further with slow moving whole and half notes in the oboe voice. The coda’s serenity is
unbalanced by its tonally evasive harmonies and chromatic alterations. The first three sonorities
after rehearsal 5 are a D-major triad on beat three, followed by a C-sharp-augmented triad on
beat one of the next measure (F4 in the clarinet part enharmonically equivalent to E-sharp4, A4 in
With the introduction of a chord built on two sets of perfect fourths – F3-B-flat3-G4-C5 –
at the pickup to the fourth measure, the harmonies become non-functional in a traditional sense,
but driven by linear motion as each voice moves to its final pitch. The penultimate chord
functions as a substitution for the dominant, and finally resolves to a chord reflective of the A
tonality, but with a quintal inflection – A2-B3-E4-A5. The penultimate chord is repeated in the
Françaix makes effective use of the flute’s lower register in the Andante movement. The
whole character of the movement is dark and somber, and the characteristic darkness of the
lower register of the flute fits the movement well. In the first two measures, the flute part fulfils
34
an accompanimental role. Measures three and four are more melodically based, with the flutist
and the clarinetist playing moving quarter notes in parallel thirds. The next four measures repeat
the pattern of accompaniment and melody. The entire eight measures of rehearsal 1 are a
statement of melody in the oboe part – though the flute part is marked suivre le hautbois in the
fifth measure of rehearsal 1, the flutist needs to be heard under and in support of the oboist
throughout.
At rehearsal 2, the bassoon part is marked un peu en dehors. Regardless, the flute’s
higher tessitura here is important to the sonority; overall, the added brilliance of the flute’s
second octave works well with the fullness and sweetness of the bassoon’s tone. At rehearsal 4,
the flute part returns to a darker lower register, with the exception of the D5 found on the
downbeat of every other measure. Though supporting the oboist’s dolcissimo melody, the flutist
begins each D5 a minor third above the oboist’s B4; the higher pitch of the flute part must still
The short movement concludes with a coda at rehearsal 5. Beginning with a C5 in the
third measure, the flute part ascends to the melodic apex of the instrument’s range in this
movement – ultimately ending on a ppp A5 fermata. Through the last six measures of the piece,
rhythm is limited to half-note values, and the flutist should be responsible for the release of the
dotted half note in the penultimate measure, as well as the final ppp fermata.
Throughout the Andante movement, the oboe carries most of the melodic material.
Though not written, the oboist should follow the melodic contour of the first two measures for
dynamic expression. Even though more rhythmic interest is found in the flute and clarinet part in
the third measure, the oboe part should be heard as a contrapuntal statement and continue to play
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the melody expressively. The same approach applies over the next four measures. For contrast,
the oboist should execute the differences between the marked pianissimo and ppp rather literally.
The più forte at rehearsal 1 should be played a little stronger than the proceeding dynamic – but
not at all loudly. The higher tessitura and addition of the F-sharp5 in the oboe part will add
tension to the movement. In the third measure, the oboist needs to return to a literal piano
dynamic, followed by a pianissimo in the fourth. The oboist may play a true forte, the loudest
dynamic in the movement yet, in the fifth measure, but must return to piano for contrast in the
Upon the return of the oboe part’s role as solo voice at rehearsal 4, Françaix writes a
change of mode. Here the melodic contour is reversed in comparison to the opening of the
movement. Though the oboe part begins with a solo A4 on the downbeat of rehearsal 5, the oboe
solo that has governed the melodic shape of the movement quickly gives way to a more
homophonic texture; by the final four measures, the oboe has been supplanted by the flute as the
treble voice.
In the beginning of the Andante movement, the clarinet and flute parts have a similar role;
for the first two measures, both voices are accompanimental. In the third and fourth measures as
well as in the seventh and eighth measures, the moving quarter notes in each voice provide an
answer to the alternating melodic statement in the oboe part. The clarinet part, though marked
pianissimo, must be balanced considering the pianissimo dynamic in the low-register flute part.
At rehearsal 1, the flute and clarinet parts move even further into the background. At
rehearsal 2, the clarinet and flute parts are still accompanimental to the tenor register bassoon. At
rehearsal 3, Françaix writes a lyrical solo for the clarinetist. With the exception of a written C5,
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the other pitches from written E4 to B-flat4 are all in a challenging register of the clarinet.
Fortunately, the dolcissimo style-marking and the quiet dynamic make playing in this register
At rehearsal 4, and for the remainder of the piece, rhythmic values slow even further.
With the exception of the oboe melody at rehearsal 4, the only quarter-note division of a measure
is found in the clarinet part. As the oboist sustains a half note on the third and fourth beats of the
second and sixth measures of rehearsal 4, the clarinetist plays a quarter note on beat four.
Though this note should not be accented at all, it needs to be heard, as it is playing a unique
Once again in the Andante movement, the bassoon part is given a bass voice role. This
time, the bassoon part contains primarily sustained pitches, most often not descending lower than
E2. The first example of the bassoon part extending into the lowest range of the instrument is in
the second measure of rehearsal 1, where Françaix writes to low C2. Here the più forte dynamic
is important for the bassoon part; not only is the performer descending into the lowest register of
the instrument, but it is also outlining a quintal bass progression from A3 to D3 to G2 to C2.
Along with the oboe melody, this bass progression should be heard at the fore. The progression
repeats itself in the four measures before rehearsal 2, where the bassoon part is written to
diminuendo to pianissimo. This time, the performer should make every effort to play a true
pianissimo.
At rehearsal 2, the bassoon part is given one of few lyrical solos in the Quatuor. Françaix
writes a cantabile crescendo-diminuendo in the first and second measures, and a perdendosi in
the third and fourth measures. With the bassoon part descending all the way down to the
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instrument’s lowest B-flat1, the perdendosi should not die away too soon so as not to risk
response. At rehearsal 3, the clarinet takes over the solo line, but the bass line in the bassoon part
is still of great interest: beginning on a B-flat3, Françaix writes a descending whole tone scale in
tied half notes down to E3 in the beat before rehearsal 4. Even though marked pianissimo, this
Allegro molto
The Allegro molto is a fast, lighthearted scherzo and trio form in G major, beginning with
a low-register duet in the bassoon and clarinet parts. At rehearsal 1, the oboe takes over the
dance-like theme from the clarinet introduction, passing it back and forth with the flute before
the trio nine measures after rehearsal 7. As in a previous movement, a return to the theme two
measures after rehearsal 5 creates clearer tonality, with succeeding closing themes at rehearsal 6
and 7 never allowing the movement to lose its overriding tonal center. The middle B-flat major
trio section begins with another humorous low-register duet between the bassoon and clarinet
parts. Françaix’s trio section leads through several phrases up to a comical climax – a calliope-
like section of awkward phrase structure utilizing extreme registers of each instrument in the
quartet. Proper to scherzo and trio form, Françaix has the ensemble repeat the opening scherzo
Beginning to Rehearsal 4
The humorous scherzo character of the movement is introduced with the quiet dynamic
duet in the bassoon and low-register clarinet parts. Though seemingly only introductory, the duet
motive in the initial eight measures will be revisited throughout the course of the Allegro molto
movement. The agogic accent of the second eighth note of the measure in the clarinet part
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indicates that, although the movement is in straightforward triple meter, Françaix will alter the
Françaix brings the upper two voices in at rehearsal 1, where the oboe continues to
develops the melody; the dynamic level here is marked at least fortissimo in each part, with the
low-register clarinet part marked fff. The oboe melody at rehearsal 1 is constructed as an often-
descending stepwise line with ties across the bar line that end up creating a humorous
syncopation. The oboe motive begins the same way as the clarinet part in the beginning, but slurs
across the bar line to the next downbeat to set up a brief chain of syncopations that continues
throughout the phrase. Harmonically, the opening phrases of the third movement are
straightforward, and remain within the expected key areas related to the tonic. Françaix begins in
G major and maintains the tonic key throughout the opening. To further clarify this tonality,
there is never any scale degree other than the tonic, supertonic, or dominant in the bassoon part
until rehearsal 4.
The oboe part contains a piano subito pickup into rehearsal 2. Here the dynamic drops
throughout the ensemble – with the exception of the return of the previously resting flute part
with a fortissimo burst of thirty-second notes in the fourth bar. Since this is mostly in the first
octave of the instrument’s register, the fortissimo dynamic is needed to cut through the ensemble
in addition to being a brief moment of contrasting sonority. The jocular character of the oboe
melody continues through this section, this time with an ascending melodic line that peaks on a
D6 in the measure before rehearsal 3. Françaix writes a straightforward articulation of the triple
meter through this phrase, with only occasional slurring across the bar line to momentarily
Rehearsal 3 continues the oboe solo another eight measures at a pianissimo dynamic.
Rather than continuing the conjunct melodies of the first two phrases, the oboe part is written in
a much more disjunct fashion, outlining series of perfect fifth intervals in eighth notes.
Rehearsal 3 is the most rhythmically straightforward passage in the movement so far; here the
oboe part has no syncopated figures to blur metric clarity. Two measures before rehearsal 4; the
bassoon and the clarinet parts punctuate a four eighth-note cadence in octaves on G, signaling a
release to the rhythmic tension of the proceeding two phrases and foretelling new material.
At rehearsal 4, Françaix changes the light and detached character of the movement by
introducing a prominent piano espressivo melody in the flute part with a pianissimo
leggierissimo sustained accompaniment. The introduction of a C-sharp4 in the bassoon part and
C-sharp6 in the flute part, combined with the prevalence of D4 in the bassoon part signal that
Françaix is now writing in D, or the dominant of the original key. The quiet dynamic remains
throughout the ensemble over the two eight-measure phrases of rehearsal 4. The slurred
articulation makes for a connection in the melody in the flute part at rehearsal 4 that stands apart
from any other melodic statement in the movement so far. In the final two measures of each of
the two eight-measure phrases after rehearsal 4, Françaix surprises with crisp leggiero subito
articulations in each voice. From rehearsal 4 through the first two measures of rehearsal 5,
Françaix composes straightforward compound meter with little rhythmic ambiguity. At rehearsal
4, tonal stability is somewhat more difficult to ascertain than in the opening phrases of the
movement – the flute part orbits around an A5. The inclusion of a C-sharp6 in the flute part and
D4 alternating with C-sharp4 in the bassoon part implies D major, the dominant key area.
Cadences at the end of each eight-measure phrase before rehearsal 5 further tonicize D; the chord
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in the eighth measure, spelled A2-B4-G5-A5, and the chord in the measure before rehearsal 5
spelled the same only with a B5 in the flute part function as incomplete dominant ninths.
tonic G-major triad in second inversion containing a C4-to-B3 suspension in the clarinet part. The
activity, and prepares the restatement of the opening theme that is to come. The third measure
after rehearsal 5 returns to G major in order to present the restatement of the main melodic
theme. Here, Françaix repeats rehearsal 1 through the first six measures of rehearsal 3 with some
variation. The pianissimo character of rehearsal 3 contains a final two measures of a fff cadence.
Though shortened from ten measures of rehearsal 3, Françaix still ends rehearsal 6 with a fff
subito cadence, this time in all four voices two measures before rehearsal 7. Here Françaix
chord, serving as link between the lowered mediant and the dominant chord in G major, sets up
Following the cadence before rehearsal 7, Françaix restates the opening rhythmic motive,
now in the flute part at a mezzo forte dynamic transformed melodically to emphasize G, with all
other voices dropping to pianissimo subito. The final measures before the Fine find the bassoon
part answering the brief flute solo with ppp pickups on the second and third eighth notes of the
fourth measure after rehearsal 7, followed similarly by the oboe part in the fifth measure, and
finally leading to the G-major cadence with a crescendo molto chromatic scale in the clarinet
part. At rehearsal 7, Françaix expands the pitch range of a single melody by passing it between
instruments. The melody in the flute part concludes on a G4 on the downbeat of the fourth
measure and is then immediately shifted to a C3 by the bassoon part on the second eighth note.
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The bassoon part contains C3-G3-C4 in eighth notes, which are then immediately connected to the
oboe part’s G4-B-flat4-B4 in the same rhythm. The clarinet part’s chromatic scale begins on the
B4 in unison with the oboe part’s final note, and leads up to the oboe part’s F-sharp5 on the
second eighth note of the measure before the Fine. Françaix has composed an ever-continuous
melody passed between instruments from rehearsal 7 to the final cadence before the Fine.
Françaix signals the ending of the section by what he composes under the flute solo in the
accompanimental voices. The second, third, and fourth measures of rehearsal 7 are a clear and
explicit hemiola in the oboe, clarinet, and bassoon parts. Though Françaix has provided moments
of hemiola and syncopation in the movement so far, this is more striking because of the extra
syncopation involved. Although this is marked pianissimo subito, this rhythmic instability is very
noticeable to the listener. After a brief visit through a series of seventh chords in the first four
measures of rehearsal 7, Françaix resolves the section – and ultimately the movement upon
repeat – with a fortissimo V-I cadence in G major. It is worth mentioning here that, not
surprisingly in scherzo and trio form, the scherzo section itself is in ternary form. The first
section ends in the measure before rehearsal 4 with a tonal closure on G, the second section in
the key of D ends at rehearsal 5, and is followed by a return to the opening themes in G at the
The trio begins with an allusion to the movement’s introduction as the clarinet and
bassoon parts trade off mezzo forte figures in their low registers. The opening melodic character
of the movement, with equally appropriate comic effect, has been retained by Françaix, but
expanded upon by augmenting the duration of the duet as well as the harmonies of the
introduction’s V to I chord progressions. The bassoon and clarinet parts trade off four short
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eighth-note figures twice, followed by a quiet concluding cadence in the seventh and eighth
measure of each of the two phrases presented before rehearsal 8. At rehearsal 8, Françaix
presents a four-measure transitional crescendo in the duet. The crescendo is made even more
striking by the clarinet part’s pitches. F3 to B3 is followed by G-flat3 to C4, which is then
followed by G3 to C-sharp4, and finally A-flat3 to D4 – each of the four intervals in parallel
motion is a tritone, resulting in a sense of instability and expectancy. This instability is fitting;
the trio section contains few prolonged periods of a specific tonal center other than the opening,
which establishes a new tonality in the movement’s minor mediant B-flat, and later at rehearsal
The melodic tension of the opening measures in the clarinet and bassoon parts peaks with
the entrance of the oboe part and the fortissimo dynamic level five measures after rehearsal 8,
and is followed by the fff articulations of the reed trio four measures before rehearsal 9. The
bassoon and clarinet part’s punctuation of eighth-note division sets the rhythmic pace of the trio
The ensemble soon returns to a softer dynamic with the entrance of the flute part at
rehearsal 9. Rehearsal 9 reintroduces the flute part at a mezzo forte at the top of the instrument’s
lowest octave and drops the dynamic of the reed trio to piano. Françaix writes a tradeoff between
flute and oboe parts of two measures each, returning to the flute part for two, and finally ending
the phrase with an ascending scale to the downbeat of rehearsal 10 in the oboe part. Perhaps the
most outstanding timbral effect here is the flute part’s sudden fortissimo jump to C7 three
measures before rehearsal 10 – this is a significant aural contrast to the accompanying piano in
the bassoon part and mezzo forte in the low-register clarinet part. Françaix drops the dynamic at
rehearsal 10 back to pianissimo and changes the character to leggierissimo instead of the
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previously marked articulation. Though still marked pianissimo, the flute part utilizes the
instrument’s brilliant high register, frequently demanding large octave leaps to A6 and G6. At
rehearsal 10, the melody is created by flute and oboe working in tandem. Françaix composes a
two eighth-note octave jump in the flute part, followed by the oboe part on all three eighth notes
of the next measure. This tradeoff between flute and oboe parts continues until rehearsal 11.
At rehearsal 11, Françaix thins the sonority to two measures of middle register mezzo
forte flute part and piano bassoon part, followed by a loud two-measure answer in the oboe and
clarinet parts. He repeats the textural change over the next four measures, but begins four
measures before rehearsal 12 with a softer dynamic than before. At rehearsal 11 Françaix writes
a melody in the flute part with sixteenth-note and sixteenth-note triplet values on the downbeat
of each measure, followed by rests on the third eighth note which are then filled by the bassoon
For the next four phrases – rehearsals 12 through the measure before rehearsal 16,
Françaix keeps the ensemble’s dynamic generally quiet continuing the developmental
anticipation of the section. Rehearsal 15, though still marked ppp, brings a significant change in
the rhythmic and melodic drive of the section, which will be discussed later. Though there has
been a change in the rhythmic drive at this point, the confines of a soft dynamic range keep the
new rhythmic motive from rising to the foreground as a new theme in earnest. Rehearsals 12, 13,
With the exception of the two measures before rehearsal 14, where Françaix brings back
the hemiola in the oboe and clarinet parts used several times before, the developmental trio
section finds no significant thematic change until rehearsal 15. As alluded to in the previous
paragraph, rehearsal 15 brings a change in the melodic drive of the section; here the flute part
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contains accents on the first and third eighth notes of each measure that will be brought to aural
The four measures before rehearsal 16 suddenly shift rhythmic character to the more
straightforward eighth notes of the clarinet and bassoon parts in the opening of the trio. Now the
bassoon part is left out of the orchestration as Françaix enhances the anticipation of what is to
come. The complete homophony of these measures is also coupled with a perdendo, or slight
slowing of tempo. Rehearsal 16 springs back to life with a comical and seemingly new theme at
fff subito. In retrospect, we find that Françaix wrote a quiet foreshadowing of this rhythmic
motive back at rehearsal 15. Rehearsal 16 returns to a clear B-flat centricity, as evidenced by the
recurring B-flat6 in the flute part and B-flat1 in the bassoon part, thereby reaching a point of
harmonic stability not heard since the opening duet in the clarinet and bassoon parts before
rehearsal 8.The instrumentation of low bassoon and clarinet parts, middle-range oboe part, and
high-register flute part give this section an effect comparable to a circus calliope. The liveliness
of this section continues through rehearsal 19 – the final three-measure cadence that instructs
first phrase at rehearsal 16 is only seven measures long, followed by another nine-measure
phrase – set forth by a scale in sixteenth notes in the flute part at rehearsal 17. This rhythmic
character continues throughout the remainder of the section, closing the trio with a jovial and
quirky dance.
dynamic and the low E4 in the flute part. Françaix assists the flutist with the addition of a grace-
45
note figure beginning on the fifth measure of rehearsal 1. The performer must work to project the
At rehearsal 2, the ensemble drops to a piano dynamic, with the exception of the flute
part’s thirty-second note run up to the fifth measure. Since the only other instrument present on
the final eighth note of measure four is the bassoon part, the fortissimo statement played by the
The ritmico and secco style of rehearsal 3 is quickly replaced by a more lyrical statement
in the flute’s second octave. The piano espressivo marking here may be accepted literally, since
the remainder of the ensemble is playing a pianissimo. Beginning two measures after rehearsal 5,
Françaix restates the opening theme, and repeats other previously heard material. At rehearsal 7,
Françaix writes a short four-measure solo in the flute part. Here it is important for the performer
to be aware that the meter is, in effect, compound, for the other accompanimental voices are
Following 28 measures of rest, the performer again resumes playing at rehearsal 9 in the
trio section with a two-measure mezzo forte statement, primarily at the top of the instrument’s
lowest octave. Françaix has scored a delicate accompaniment here, with the remainder of the
ensemble playing piano or pianissimo. Throughout the trio, Françaix’s melodic writing becomes
fragmented, with rare instances of extended melodies. In the fourth measure before rehearsal 10,
Françaix writes a crescendo from piano to fortissimo back to piano over the course of three
At rehearsal 10, Françaix writes an interesting melody between flute and the oboe; as the
oboe rests, the flute interjects high A6 and G6. Timing is crucial here. At rehearsal 11, the flute
part sets up a call-and-response between voices; measures one, two, five, and six of the phrase
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are marked with fast-note values in the flute part followed with eighth notes in the remaining
parts. A deliberate contrast must be made between the first four measures, marked mezzo forte,
At rehearsal 15, Françaix provides a bit of foreshadowing of rehearsal 16 in the flute part.
Though still marked ppp, the performer must be deliberate in the presentation of rhythm to
enable an astute listener to catch the reference to the upcoming new theme. Rehearsal 16 is the
performer ensure B-flat6 be articulated clearly and on time to exploit the ensemble’s wide five
octave range at this point. This theme takes precedence through the remainder of the section. The
rhythm here is stable and easily felt, so the members of the ensemble may enjoy the delightful
musical humor.
Similar to the first movement, the oboe splits melodic duties rather evenly with the flute
in the Allegro molto movement. The oboist’s entrance at rehearsal 1 is a fortissimo mimicking
the clarinet part at the beginning of the movement. As in the clarinet part, the oboe line is
articulated with a short martellato accent on the first note followed by an agogic accent over a
sustained pitch on the second. The sff articulation on the third eighth note of the fourth measure
2, the performer must immediately drop back to piano. Tonal and intervallic stability must be
maintained as well, as the oboe part ascends softly to high C6 and D6 in the measure before
rehearsal 3.
The ritmico secco section at rehearsal 3 maintains the predominance of the oboe solo.
However, this time, the oboe part is written with a much more disjunct line. As shown with the
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explicit crescendo and diminuendo in the third and fourth measure, the performer should shape
these measures accordingly. Here, the performer is advised to avoid any tendency to rush the two
At rehearsal 7, the final phrase of the scherzo opening of the Allegro molto movement,
the oboe joins the clarinet and bassoon in providing a brief hemiola accompaniment for the flute
solo. In the fifth measure, the oboe part has a lone ppp statement that serves as a continuation of
the brief bassoon line in the fourth measure of the section, which in turn serves as a continuation
of the flute line begun at rehearsal 7. In the last two measures, all parts are marked with loud
In the fifth measure after rehearsal 8, the oboe, clarinet, and bassoon parts all contain
rhythmic eight-measure melodic passages. In the sixth measure, the oboe part alone has a
martellato accent on the third eighth note; the performer must make this leap to the B-flat5
apparent. One measure and five measures before rehearsal 9, the oboe is the only instrument on
the second and third eighth notes of each measure – the fortissimo dynamic must be kept loud
and soloistic, even without the supporting voices. In the third measure of rehearsal 9 the oboe
part has a rhythmic counter to the proceeding two-measure flute solo; Françaix has the performer
crescendo to a mezzo forte downbeat on the fourth measure, and then diminuendo to pianissimo.
The melody at rehearsal 10 is the most fragmented melodic idea in the movement so far.
Here the oboe part leaves out eighth notes in the first, third, and fourth measures that are filled in
by the high-register flute. It is vital that the oboist and the flutist match style, articulation, and
timing to present this melodic idea as Françaix intended. Two measures before rehearsal 12,
Françaix begins a short hemiola idea with the oboe part grouping two sets of two eighth notes
together. Though only marked mezzo forte, the performer needs to be both soloistic and highly
48
accurate at this spot to confirm the rhythmic effect of connecting the unaccented second eighth
note in oboe and clarinet parts to the accented third eighth note in flute and oboe parts. At
rehearsal 15, the oboe and the flute part contain a similar articulation pattern to foreshadow the
In the beginning of the Allegro molto, the clarinet part foreshadows some of Françaix’s
rhythmic jest found throughout the movement. Though marked pianissimo, the clarinet part has
an accent on the second eighth note of the first and fifth measures of the phrase to shift the
agogic accent. This accent is important to play with weight, for the bassoon has clearly accented
downbeats through this section. It is with reference to this opening theme that Françaix sets up
the humorous character of the clarinet and the bassoon parts throughout this movement.
Other than an occasional reiteration of the articulated theme at the beginning, the clarinet
part is largely an accompanimental voice. After rehearsal 7, the pickup to the second measure
initiates a hemiola in all three accompanimental voices – a stark rhythmic contrast to the flute
melody above. In the sixth measure of rehearsal 7, Françaix writes a sixteenth-note passage in
the clarinet part. This passage is actually a climactic conclusion to the flute line beginning at
rehearsal 7 that was taken over by the bassoon part in the fourth measure, the oboe part in the
fifth measure, and ultimately passed to the clarinet part in the sixth measure. Therefore, it is of
vital importance that all members of the ensemble apply great rhythmic precision. To execute the
climax to the conclusion, the performer must play a molto crescendo from pianissimo to
The opening sixteen measures of the trio section are a humorous duet between the
bassoon and the clarinet parts. Marked mezzo forte in each voice, both instrumentalists must
49
retreat to pianissimo when they play their rhythmic unison in the pickups to the eighth and
sixteenth measures of the duet. At rehearsal 8, the clarinet part adds to the tension of the section
with a written set of chromatically ascending tritones – beginning on a written G3 and C-sharp4
in the first measure, the second measure follows with written A-flat3 and D4, the third includes
written A3 and D-sharp4, and the fourth concludes with written B-flat3 and E4.
Through the trio section, the sporadic nature of the music lends itself to a few more
exposed passages for the clarinet part. The subito mezzo forte eighth notes in the third measure of
rehearsal 9 are unique in the ensemble. Françaix often uses the clarinet part to fill out the
division of a measure. The clarinet adds to the hemiola effect in the two measures before
rehearsal 12 by playing on the first and second eighth notes of the penultimate measure, and the
second and third eighth notes of the final measure before rehearsal 12. A similar effect is
achieved in both the clarinet and oboe parts in the two measures before rehearsal 14, this time
with both instruments articulating on every other eighth-note division. The clarinet also
contributes to equal division of each measure. The first two measures of rehearsal 13 are fully
divided by the eighth notes. The same idea occurs again in the third and fourth measures after
The pianissimo duet for the bassoon and the clarinet at the beginning of the Allegro molto
sets the scherzo character for the remainder of the movement. Here, the bassoonist establishes
the articulation style for the other instrumentalists when they enter at rehearsal 1 with the
martellato accents on downbeats. It is of great importance, as well, that both the bassoonist’s and
the clarinetist’s duet sound pianissimo to set up the fortissimo contrast at rehearsal 1.
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At rehearsal 2, Françaix includes the performance instruction sans pressez in the bassoon
part. Considering the bassoon line has an empty downbeat and is the only voice to play on the
second and third eighth note of each of the first four measures, the performer needs to be
In the two measures before rehearsal 4, the bassoon and clarinet parts make a brief
allusion to the introductory rhythmic solo. Coming from a ppp in the third measure before
rehearsal 4, both instrumentalists need to ensure that their fff dynamic ensures a significant
contrast. At rehearsal 4, Françaix writes different performance instructions in all four voices:
espressivo in the melodic flute line, leggierissimo in the oboe part’s large skips, and legatissimo
for the largely linear clarinet part. He writes pianissimo dolce for the bassoon part. The playing
of large descending leaps at a soft dynamic level will be challenging to the performer. Françaix
was conscious of this difficulty and writes for the performer to play as sweetly and as connected
as possible.
The hemiola in the lowest three accompanimental voices at rehearsal 7 was discussed
above. Immediately after resolving the hemiola on the downbeat of the fourth measure, the
bassoonist articulates the next eighth note of the measure continuing the line initiated in the flute
part. Here the shortness of the martellato accent on the downbeat must be taken literally so as to
facilitate the pristine timing required to articulate the C2 on the second eighth note of the fourth
Sixteen measures before rehearsal 8, the bassoon and the clarinet parts immediately set
the B-flat major tonality of the trio section of the Allegro molto movement. This time, the duet is
written at mezzo forte; a dynamic that will facilitate the response of the low B-flat1 in the
bassoon part. As stated in the clarinet performance considerations, the pickups to the eighth and
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sixteenth measures of this section must be played at a pianissimo dynamic to ensure a contrast.
At rehearsal 8, Francaix writes a four measure crescendo on a low B-flat1; this crescendo molto,
coordinated with the clarinet part, is vital to set up the fortissimo in the ensemble beginning in
Beginning in the third measure of rehearsal 11, the performer plays a two-measure
crescendo from fortissimo in the instrument’s high tenor register. Immediately on the downbeat
of the fifth measure, the bassoonist must return to a B-flat2 at a pianissimo dynamic level. Abrupt
changes of dynamics are rarely easy and are made substantially more difficult by registral shifts.
With the clarinet sounding a D-flat5 on the third eighth note of the fourth measure after rehearsal
11, and with the oboe sounding E5 in the same place, the bassoonist must release the high A4 so
as to assure the radical register and dynamic change at the next downbeat.
At rehearsal 12, the bassoon part contains accents on each quarter-note downbeat. Few
quarter-note values have appeared in the bassoon part since rehearsal 4 where they are slurred
but also at pianissimo. This section of accented quarter-note downbeats climaxes in the bassoon
part four measures before rehearsal 14, where Francaix writes F-sharp4 at mezzo forte espressivo.
For two measures, the bassoon is the only voice articulating on the downbeat. At rehearsal 14,
Françaix very briefly brings back his earlier idea of large downward slurs in the bassoon part.
Though marked with a very quiet dynamic, the performer should feel free to let this bass line be
At rehearsal 16 Françaix composed a five-octave span on the downbeat, from the B-flat1
in the bassoon part through the B-flat6 in the flute part. While the flute part contains three
consecutive descending octaves, the bassoon part spans a nearly three-octave jump to an
accented A-flat4 on the third eighth note of the measure, slurring down to A-flat3 on the
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downbeat of the second measure. The fff subito dynamic should facilitate a proper response in
the low register, but a proper half-hole technique is required to ensure that the descent to A-flat3
Allegro vivo
themes are more rhythmically than melodically related, but with a constant allusion to the
driving sixteenth-note theme presented at rehearsal 1 that creates an aural semblance to ritornello
procedure. In the Allegro vivo, Françaix begins with a rapid passing around of sixteenth notes in
the ensemble, and settles on a busy, almost mechanical theme. Françaix creates a sonority that is
often so rhythmically intense that it is difficult to find a unifying principle other than the constant
sixteenth-note subdivision of the beat; the rhythmic similarity between themes gives this
movement the correspondence to ritornello procedure. As the end of the movement approaches,
Françaix noticeably slows down the rhythmic drive, eventually segueing into a chorale-like
section in the final measures of the movement. In the final measure, Françaix surprises the
audience by bringing back the opening sixteenth-note motive for one more measure, with
dramatic effect.
Beginning to Rehearsal 5
The compositional energy and excitement of the Allegro vivo makes for a brilliant
conclusion to the Quatuor. Françaix begins the movement with a two-measure introduction:
piano and pianissimo sixteenth-notes alternate between bassoon and flute parts in the first
measure, followed by a sudden fortissimo set of four sixteenth notes in the oboe part, succeeded
respectively by the clarinet, bassoon, and flute parts in a dramatic diminuendo. The fragmented
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introductory measures establish the overall rhythmic motive of the movement stressing the
The opening theme, beginning at rehearsal 1, is carried by the flute and oboe parts and
accompanied by the clarinet and bassoon parts. Its sparkle is shown with Françaix’s initial quiet
dynamic and straightforward rhythm between the four voices. After the first two measures, the
music escapes into a decorated chromatic scale in the higher voices, already having modulated
away from C by rehearsal 2. The themes of the Allegro vivo movement, as evidenced by the
opening, are more rhythmically than melodically oriented, for there is not much traditional
melodic growth to speak of. Rather than constructing a singable melody per se, Françaix
generates melodic attention when he writes a change of pitch in the midst of a constant sixteenth-
note subdivision. Often in this movement, the articulations of a particular melodic inflection are
defined by a pair of sixteenth notes on the same pitch, followed by another two-sixteenth-note
pair on a different pitch. For example, the melodic interest at rehearsal 1 is most noticeable in the
oboe part, outlining A4, C5, and D5 on beats one, two, and three of its first two measures. The
initial presentation of the tonality in the first two measures of the theme at rehearsal 1 is
relatively clear – the flute part’s alternation between G5 / C5 and G5 / E5, the C-major triad,
combined with the bassoon part’s octave leaps between C3 and C4 define a C tonality early on.
At rehearsal 2, the quickly rearticulated open perfect fifth – E-flat6 and B-flat6 – between
the flute and oboe parts is answered by another rapidly articulated open perfect fifth – D5 and A5
– in the oboe and clarinet parts. This chromatic descent – from an open fifth on E-flat6 to an open
fifth on D5 – helps establish a transition into the oboe melody in F major four measures before
rehearsal 3. At this point, the oboe part takes the fore with a melody-proper, and the flute part
decorates the oboe melody with a series of arpeggiations and scalar patters in the low register.
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Though marked forte, Françaix may be writing for sonority and coloration here, as it is difficult
for the flute part to project in this register over a solo voice.
At this point it is worthy to note that from the beginning until rehearsal 3 there are only a
few beats not defined by a complete sixteenth-note subdivision: beat four of the first and second
measures of rehearsal 1, the downbeat and third beat of rehearsal 2, and the empty downbeat of
the following measure. Rhythmic syncopation within that constant subdivision plays an
important role – with the first obvious example being the bassoon part’s subito fff sixteenth-note
descending chromatic passage leading into four measures before rehearsal 3, where the
performer is asked to slur the second to third and fourth to first sixteenth notes of each beat. The
oboe melody four measures before rehearsal 3 includes short articulation markings and trills on
offbeats.
At rehearsal 3 Françaix suddenly thins the sonority to a rhythmic clarinet solo with an
accompanimental bassoon part. It is with this solo that the clarinet part ascends to its highest
pitch in the Quatuor thus far – a C6. The clarinet part is allowed a solo role for three measures
until a three-beat chromatic ascent in the upper voices that returns to the opening theme. The
clarinet melody has a more traditional sense of direction than any melody earlier in the
movement, complete with a forward-moving arpeggiated ascent to its high register. Even though
the first beats of the clarinet solo are straight sixteenth notes, the rhythm at rehearsal 3 relaxes
slightly, with several occasions of only two divisions of the beat as opposed to the common four
subdivisions of the previous section. Omitting the flute part at rehearsal 3 not only serves a
textural purpose, but a rhythmic one as well since the instrument had defined the sixteenth-note
subdivision in its accompaniment of the oboe solo of the previous phrase. The chromatically
ascending bass line in the bassoon part blurs tonal centricity at rehearsal 3 in comparison to the
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straightforward F major of rehearsal 2, but creates an effective preparation of the dominant for
After the ascent in the top three voices at rehearsal 4, Françaix begins a restatement of the
opening theme, this time one octave higher in the flute and oboe parts. The extreme tessitura in
both flute and oboe parts combined with a written fff for the entire ensemble make this the most
dramatic point in the movement so far. Upon the higher-pitched restatement of the theme after
rehearsal 4, Françaix allows the melody to once again outline C major: in the third and fourth
measures in the flute part, notes on the beat outline a cadential melody of C6-D6-C6-D6-C6-C6-C6-
C6. The final phrase of the section, the restated main theme beginning in the second measure of
rehearsal 4, finally comes to rest after the ensemble plays a short C-major triad on the fourth beat
of the measure before rehearsal 5 – this is the longest pause from the vivo activity in the
observed at this point. With the restatement of the theme starting in the second measure of
rehearsal 4, Françaix suggests an expectation for further returns of the original theme of the
movement. Nevertheless, the theme is never heard again in the movement – at least melodically.
It may be inferred that similar rhythmic statements that follow are intended by Françaix as
allusions to a ritornello theme. Since the opening theme is brought back in the second measure
of rehearsal 4, Françaix possibly intended it as a point of arrival for the movement to this point.
This compositional procedure suggests a ternary form, ABA, from the beginning of the
movement to rehearsal 5. Either way, Françaix’s rhythmic themes are similar throughout the
Immediately following the tonal closure of the cadence on the beat before rehearsal 5,
Françaix begins a new melodic theme, stating a disjunct and syncopated melody in the oboe part.
The oboe melody immediately commands the attention of the listener because of its wide
intervallic content, beginning with a minor seventh from E4 to D5, and then descending through a
G-minor triad to the B-flat3 over one octave lower. The third and fourth measures after rehearsal
5 are more melodically conjunct, gradually falling from C5 to G4. Françaix’s oboe melody
harkens back to the syncopated nature of the last measures of the same instrument’s solo four
measures before rehearsal 3 – only with an even stronger and more directed syncopated drive.
Though the flute part here is providing constant sixteenth-note subdivision, the oboe line’s
slurring of the B-flat3 across the bar line and playing the next D4 as a syncopated quarter note
momentarily complicates the constant rhythmic direction of the ensemble. The return to
rhythmic regularity in the third and fourth measure of the phrase makes for a resolution of the
contrast between the regular subdivision of the flute part and the syncopation of the oboe part.
Rehearsal 5 has the bassoon part alternating between C3, F2, and B-flat1 to present a quintal bass
line: with the inclusion of the G3 in the clarinet part, the bass line is constructed to represent
three open perfect fifths, creating a sense of unrest that will ultimately resolve as a B-major
tonality at rehearsal 6.
The quiet dynamic of rehearsal 5 continues until rehearsal 6, where the voices are again
marked with a loud dynamic. A figure of driving sixteenth notes, reminiscent of the clarinet
part’s opening two beats at rehearsal 3, begins in the flute part at rehearsal 5 and continues for
four measures. This flow is interrupted for only one beat when the sixteenth notes are shifted to
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the oboe part at the end of the second measure after rehearsal 5. At rehearsal 6, the louder reeds
replace the quiet and low flute part; the clarinet, oboe, and bassoon parts take over the duties of
After only two measures of rehearsal 6, Françaix again changes thematic material – this
sets of sixteenth notes between upper members of the ensemble. The fff dynamic (in all except
the fortissimo oboe part, which is written in a low and resonant part of the instrument’s range)
combined with the bassoon part’s downbeats, three sixteenth notes following in the flute and
clarinet parts, alternating sixteenth notes with the oboe part create a textural blur of pitches and
sonorities. Melody, at least in a traditional sense of a single foreground musical line, is difficult
to ascertain at rehearsal 7. Again, the element of rhythmic texture takes over the primary interest.
For the duration of rehearsal 7, each sixteenth-note subdivision is articulated by at least two
melodic and rhythmic instability of this section, Françaix composes a great deal of harmonic
fluctuation by changing chords from beat to beat – for example, the bassoon part contains a
circle of fifths progression on downbeats throughout the two measures, constantly changing the
tonal implication.
At rehearsal 8, the flurry of sixteenth-note activity continues with a specific tutta forza –
marked in addition to the fortissimo and fff of the previous section. The arpeggiations and scalar
patterns between the flute and oboe parts at rehearsal 8 do little to alleviate the overall lack of
traditional melodic material first heard at rehearsal 7. The tonal instability of rehearsal 7 finds a
brief repose here, arriving at an F-major section at rehearsal 8, outlined by arpeggiated melodies
and scales based on that tonal center in the upper voices. Though B-natural is used in the upper
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three parts here, the frequent use of F, A, and C through all voices still imply an F-major
centricity.
The tutta forza at rehearsal 8 continues through rehearsal 9. The flute part at rehearsal 9
presents octave slurs in the first measure with an F5-E6-F5-E6 procession on each beat. The
octave leaps of the flute part in the next measure suggest a melodic descending arpeggio from F5-
D5-A4, concluding with a diatonic ascent to E-flat5 on the downbeat of rehearsal 10. At rehearsal
9, the rhythmic drive thins a little, with the bassoon and the clarinet parts containing straight
eighth notes, and the flute part containing two sixteenth-note octave slurs per beat in the first
measure, and the oboe part solely responsible for the continuous sixteenth-note subdivision.
Though the second measure of rehearsal 9 is very similar to the first, it continues slowing the
rhythmic drive made more obvious by the flute part’s repetition of notes after octave slurs on the
first and second beats. This section outlines a G-dominant function with further inclusion of B3
On the downbeat of rehearsal 10, a ppp for the ensemble and a gradual reduction of the
rhythmic activity occurs. For the first time in several phrases, only one instrument at a time
carries the sixteenth-note subdivision instead of two or more. Now the concept of a solo
instrumental line returns, with the clarinet part passing off a two-beat solo to the flute part, then
to the oboe part, and back to the flute part again by the second measure of the phrase. The
clarinet part begins by rearticulating an E-flat4 on the second sixteenth note of beat one at
rehearsal 10, reminiscent of its solo at rehearsal 3. The flute part finishes the section with a scalar
approach to rehearsal 11. Rehearsal 10 harkens back to the rhythmic calming of the moments
before the flurry of rehearsal 7, but at ppp instead of the fortissimo of rehearsal 6. Though there
is a release of tension through a return to a noticeable melody and a dynamic quieting in the
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ensemble, the music is still harmonically tense, gravitating toward A-flat as evidenced in the
Though specifically marked en dehors at rehearsal 11, the flute part seems to be
interacting contrapuntally with the oboe part below, as the bassoon and clarinet parts revisit the
idea of Alberti-bass figuration presented at other times throughout the Quatuor. Here all the parts
are marked dolce in a register that may tend to be thin for each instrument. The A-flat tonality of
this section is a logical continuation of the same harmonies outlined in the bassoon part in the
previous two-measure phrase at rehearsal 10. It is through the oboe part’s dolce melody, serving
as a contrast to the flurry of rhythmic activity heard up until this point, as well as the tonal shift
back to the lowered mediant – an important relationship Françaix has used time and time again
throughout the course of the Quatuor – that begins to give the movement a sense of arrival and
conclusion.
The quiet dynamic of the ensemble, first begun at rehearsal 10, continues into rehearsal
12, where a variant of the original theme is presented. This variant on the quasi-ritornello theme
is presented not so much by way of a returning melodic idea, but in the repetition of the upper
three voices of the ensemble playing simultaneous sixteenth notes, as the flute and oboe parts did
at rehearsal 1. This alteration of the original theme, now presented at rehearsal 12 in a key area
that is difficult to discern because of the descending minor triads in the upper three voices,
further confirms ritornello procedure: unlike in a rondo, themes do not always necessarily return
in their original key areas. For one of the few moments in the Quatuor, the bassoon part stands
out from the sonority as a solo voice, beginning in its high tenor register – ascending to its
highest note, B-flat4, in the piece. The second measure of rehearsal 12 has the bassoon and
clarinet parts alternating sixteenth notes while the flute and oboe parts only enter on downbeats.
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Gradually through rehearsal 13 and 14, Françaix reduces rhythmic activity, which will be
discussed momentarily, until a completely homophonic cadence is reached four measures after
arpeggiation, and is then followed by an articulation of a repeated pitch and a two-beat sixteenth-
note ascent to the next downbeat. Melody here further descends to a subservient level as the
ensemble becomes more homorhythmic and homophonic in anticipation of the arriving cadence.
Two measures before rehearsal 14, Françaix slows the rhythmic drive of the work even more,
with all the voices playing staccato eighth notes, and only two sixteenth notes present on the
downbeat of the measure before rehearsal 14. This is the first instance in the movement without
sixteenth-note subdivision. Rehearsal 14 dissolves rhythmically even further; all four voices play
only one short sixteenth note on each beat. The next measure, and the cadence thereafter,
continues this homorhythm with a quarter-note rest, half-note, quarter-note rhythm, followed by
two measures of whole notes – excepting the bassoon part, which moves in half notes two
measures before the fermata. Beginning at rehearsal 12, Françaix has begun shifting through
chords and tonalities quickly. Nevertheless, two measures before the Pas lent, Françaix’s
ultimate destination is clear: he writes a half cadence on the dominant G3-B3-A4-D5 chord in the
After a lunga fermata on the double bar, Françaix surprises the listener by composing
a sixteen-measure chorale, marked at half the tempo of the opening Allegro vivo. Throughout this
section, Françaix once again composes a lyrical melody for the oboe part. The composer outlines
an overriding quintal arpeggiation for the bassoon part, moving from C2-G2-D3 and back again
throughout the first four measures, to F2-C2-F2 in the beats before rehearsal 15. The bassoon part
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two measures before rehearsal 16 implies the dominant of G, outlining D major, then turning to
quintal moving quarter notes between rehearsal 16 and Tempo I subito (Allegro vivo). The final
measure of the piece returns to the rhythmically driving motives heard earlier in the movement,
with a sudden explosive series of repeated sixteenth notes in all three voices, ultimately finishing
Though marked piano and pianissimo, the flutist’s answer to the bassoonist in the first
measure must be oriented to the dynamic that the bassoonist initially presents. Typically not
difficult pitches to control on the flute, the G4 and A4 in the bassoon part are pitches that may
tend to be slightly sharp—a tendency of which the flutist must be aware. The main idea for the
first measure is the contrasting quiet opening measure with the contrastingly louder second
measure, with the exception of the piano one beat before rehearsal 1 in the flute part.
clarity. At quarter note = 120 beats per minute, the single tongue is still feasible, but may lack a
bit of precision. Here, the flutist and oboist play dual lead roles in the texture, and must balance
each other. In the third measure, the flutist begins to elaborate an E-flat major scale with
performer should lead the dynamic growth of the ensemble. At the B-flat6 at rehearsal 2, the
response of the pitch will be facilitated by the fortissimo dynamic and a clear, concise double
tongue.
Throughout the Allegro vivo, Françaix demands that the performer make quick
articulations in the instrument’s lowest register, as exemplified in the third measure after
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rehearsal 2. Though the flutist should aim for a loud dynamic, Françaix has scored the ensemble
Technical control is vital at rehearsal 4, as the septuplet on beat two of the measure
results in parallel major triads between the upper three voices throughout the measure. The
sempre fff articulations beginning in the second measure facilitate the high-register response of
the instrument. The intensity of the oboist’s extreme high register should balance well with the
brilliance of the flutist’s high C7 on the fourth beat of the second and third measures.
Françaix again writes for the flutist to play quickly articulated low pitches at rehearsal 5.
The intent here may be more textural than practical, but the performer should work to constantly
Rehearsals 7 and 8, in all voices, present a flurry of fast, loud notes that may introduce
precise; the flutist’s challenge is perhaps the most intense because of the quick rearticulation in
the lowest octave. The tutta forza at rehearsal 8 is more conducive to clarity of both pitch and
response. The sonority at rehearsal 9 becomes increasingly clearer, but the flute part is not
Perhaps the most exposed spot for low-register articulation in the Allegro vivo is at
rehearsal 10. Françaix has deliberately reduced the constant subdivision of the beat throughout
the ensemble to only one instrument playing sixteenth notes at a time. When Françaix writes
sixteenth notes on beats three and four of the flute part, pitches include a chromatic descent from
E-flat4 to C4 on the downbeat of the second measure. Since the flutist is the only instrument with
this sixteenth-note subdivision here, it is of vital importance that clarity of articulation and
immediacy of response is achieved. Within this movement, Françaix requires a pristine quality of
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articulation not only in the sparkling high register, but in the lowest, least-responsive register of
At rehearsal 11, Françaix writes for the performer to play arpeggios en dehors – or, to the
fore. This is made difficult not only by the middle range of the flute, but also by the distinct oboe
line underneath the flute part. Here the performer is advised to play with greater presence than in
As the piece once again diminishes the amount of subdivisions of the beat from rehearsal
12 to the Pas lent after rehearsal 14, the difficulties in the individual parts become less apparent.
As the highest voice in the ensemble, the flutist is typically responsible for guiding the ensemble
as attacks become sparser, and may wish to lead a slight ritardando in the measures before the
Pas lent. Throughout the final slow section of the Allegro vivo movement, the flute part is once
again subservient to a melody played by the oboist. Nevertheless, the flutist leads the quarter-
note motion in the three accompanimental voices prevalent throughout this section. As rehearsal
16 approaches, Françaix writes slower note values in the flute part; tempo here is left to the
control of the bassoonist who maintains moving quarter notes throughout. The final Tempo I
subito should be cued by the flutist. All musicians here must ensure the proper placement of the
accent on the second sixteenth note of each of the first three beats, and the secco shortness on the
In the second measure of the Allegro vivo, the oboe part contains the initial statement of
sixteenth notes marked fortissimo. Here the contrast between the pianissimo of the previous
measure and the fortissimo of the second measure must be immediately noticeable while still
recommended that the flutist approach articulations using the double-tongue technique common
to flute performance. However, necessity and control of double-tongue technique varies greatly
among individual oboists. The number of repeated notes in the oboe part may alleviate potential
tongue-finger coordination problems and the printed tempo of quarter note = 120 is likely slow
enough for most oboists to articulate well with a light single tongue.
wisely wrote this at a forte dynamic. Any sharp tendency in the high register must be addressed
to ensure that the perfect fifth between the flute and oboe parts sounds in tune, for B-flat6 tends
to be a flat note on some flutes. To add to the challenge, the oboist is asked to play at a sudden
piano dynamic on the second half of the third beat. This is moderated, however, by the shortened
E-flat6 eighth note on the first part of the third beat, allowing time to make the required dynamic
change.
The three eighth-note pickups to four measures before rehearsal 3 are marked forte en
dehors. Though this section may appear virtuosic for the performer, Françaix keeps the range
and trills idiomatic to the oboe. To ensure an engaging performance, the oboist must play a
suddenly quiet trill on the downbeat of the measure before rehearsal 3, followed by a crescendo
to fortissimo. In the second measure of the clarinet solo at rehearsal 3, the oboist has a fff melodic
interjection. Though marked fff, the performer should remain aware that the clarinetist is
The rapid A-flat major septuplet, written in the more difficult G-sharp major, leading into
the second measure of rehearsal 4 is perhaps least idiomatic for the oboist, especially with the
chromatic sixteenth notes on the fourth beat moving from C6 up through E6 on the downbeat of
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the next measure. The sempre fff here helps alleviate any problems of response, but the
performer must again be sensitive to intervallic stability – especially since the flute’s G6 on the
downbeat is a relatively stable pitch. Françaix requires the oboist to ascend to high G6 at the end
of this measure and the next – the penetrating tone of the high-register oboe will blend well with
the brilliance of the flute’s C7. The third, fourth, and fifth measures of the section are less
difficult to control, though they do require a high degree of precision and finger-tongue
coordination.
wide leaps and syncopations. The oboist here is provided ample opportunity for projection as the
passage is marked mezzo forte while the rest of the ensemble is marked either piano or
pianissimo. The opening leap from the quartet note E4 to D5 in the first measure of rehearsal 5 is
marked with a crescendo; the performer is advised to emphasize this, especially since rhythmic
division of the beat has been such an important focus so far in the movement.
At rehearsal 6, the oboist plays sixteenth notes in answer to the clarinetist. Both parts are
marked with martellato accents, so the articulation should be consistent. The flurry of sixteenth
notes at rehearsal 7 between the top three voices must be executed with an extremely high degree
of technical precision. For the oboist this means ensuring that each articulation responds on time,
including low C-sharp4 and C4, found in the pickup to and on the downbeat of the second
measure of rehearsal 7. The fortissimo dynamic and martellato accents will aid in achieving this
goal. The tutta forza at rehearsal 8 is confined to a much more idiomatic register of the
instrument, but great precision of finger-tongue coordination is still required of the performer.
At rehearsal 9, the oboe part is unique in the ensemble; sixteenth notes are written with
slur markings on the second and fourth beat. This contrast must be brought to the fore, along
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with the flute part’s octave slurs. At rehearsal 10, the oboe part is written in the low register of
the instrument at a ppp dynamic. Here, since the bassoonist is playing a rhythmic unison in the
first measure, the oboist must blend as much as possible in this challenging low-register passage.
At rehearsal 11, the flute part is marked en dehors with middle- to low-register
arpeggiated figures. Nevertheless, the oboe part is a more rhythmically complex line. Because of
the timbre in the lowest octave of the oboe’s range and because of the rhythmic interest, the
oboist will likely be clearly heard in the ensemble, even at a quiet dynamic. It is with this
realization that the performer must take care not to overpower the flutist, whom Françaix
Rhythmic parts become more homophonic as the movement approaches the Pas lent after
rehearsal 14. After the lunga fermata, the oboist proceeds with half notes as the remainder of the
ensemble plays quarter notes. Though it may initially seem that the oboe line is
accompanimental, it is the oboe part that is scored to play cantabile sempre. This final statement
of the oboe melody reaffirms Françaix’s affinity for the oboe as a lead melodic instrument in this
work. By the third measure of rehearsal 16, Françaix requires the performer to blend
rhythmically with the upper three voices in half notes. Although the oboist is still the highest
soprano voice, ultimate control of the tempo resides with the bassoonist’s moving line. The final
measure should be cued by the flutist. As indicated earlier, all four instruments must work to
ensure that accents on the second sixteenth note of each beat are apparent to the listener.
Regarding the quick articulations found in the Allegro vivo movement, Françaix again
similar characteristics of the flute and oboe. The clarinet part usually only contains fast
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articulations in short bursts; for instance, on the written B5 sixteenth notes at rehearsal 2.
Françaix seems sensitive to the ease of response on clarinet, as exemplified by the challenging
offbeat entrances on written low A3s in the fifth measure of rehearsal 2. The first extended
melody found in the clarinet part is at rehearsal 3, with an initial fast rearticulation of written B-
flat4s, followed by a written E-flat arpeggio from B-flat3 to G5 on the downbeat of the second
measure. On the fourth beat of this measure, the clarinet part ascends to written D6. Though even
a moderately skilled clarinetist is able to attain at least a G6, Françaix scores only as high as
At rehearsal 6, Françaix requires another passage of quickly repeating notes for the
clarinetist, this time writing an E-sharp4. Through these two measures, the sixteenth notes are
passed between the clarinet part for two beats, then back to the oboe part for another two. The fff
flurry of pitches at rehearsal 7 would likely not pose a great technical challenge for the
clarinetist; rhythmic precision is of paramount importance here to make sense of the section
throughout the ensemble. At rehearsal 10, the clarinet part is brought to the fore on the first two
beats, with an offbeat entrance on written F4. Again, rhythmic precision is vital to the execution
of the brief solo. At rehearsal 11, Françaix revisits the Alberti bass-like motion between the
clarinet and bassoon parts first heard at rehearsal 1 of the first movement. At rehearsal 12, the
quick rearticulations must match between the three upper voices. In the second measure, the
clarinetist must be careful to time the second and fourth beats according to the bassoonist’s first
Through rehearsal 16 of the Pas lent, the clarinetist joins the flutist and bassoonist in
playing moving quarter notes against a melody with some longer note values in the oboe part.
Though moving lines are normally of more interest than longer note values, the three moving
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lines here must play under the solo oboist. By two measures after rehearsal 16, the clarinetist has
joined the flutist in much longer note values. At Tempo I subito, all instrumentalists must agree
on the placement of the accent on the second sixteenth note of each of the three beats. In the final
eighth note, the clarinetist plays written F-sharp3 – sounding an E3. This is the only pitch in the
final chord other than a C – the clarinetist must be encouraged to project on this final secco
attack.
The final movement begins with a quiet burst of sixteenth notes in the bassoon part.
Beginning on a G4, the performer must ensure accurate response of these notes, as well as
accurate pitch since the flutist answers in the next beat with the same pitch. It is with this
outright use of the bassoonist’s capabilities for rapid articulation that Françaix foreshadows some
At rehearsal 1, the bassoon is again assigned to a bass role. Nevertheless, in the measure
before rehearsal 2, Françaix brings out some of the humorous aspects of the bassoonist’s
rhythm for the instrumentalist. This busy and snappy rhythm doesn’t make another appearance in
the remainder of the piece in any instrument, but Françaix has used it early to set the mood of the
movement. Françaix’s use of the bassoonist’s technical prowess also recurs in the measure after
rehearsal 2. Beginning on beat 3 of the measure, the performer here is asked to slur every other
sixteenth note, beginning on the second sixteenth note of the beat. Though this rhythmic
syncopation was seen in the beat before rehearsal 2, and will be seen in beat three of the second
measure of rehearsal 6, this rhythm makes the subito fff both surprising and remarkable.
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At rehearsal 3, Françaix uses the bassoon part to create an interesting harmonic event.
Here he writes the bassoon part ascending by half step on each downbeat, beginning on D-flat2,
and ending on A-flat3 on the fourth beat of the next measure. However, on the offbeats he writes
another ascending chromatic line in the bassoon part with parallel major ninths – this parallelism
is reminiscent of the parallel tritones Françaix composes for the clarinet part at rehearsal 8 of the
third movement. The third measure of rehearsal 3 is even more remarkable, with parallel tenths
Until rehearsal 6, Françaix again uses the bassoon somewhat like a pizzicato string bass,
as prominently emulated in the short bass register articulations of the third movement. However,
Françaix revisits the bassoonist’s fast articulation capabilities in the third and fourth beat of
rehearsal 6. The bassoon part is written with sixteenth-note articulations from F2 chromatically
down to B1 on the downbeat of the second bar. The dynamic level facilitates the execution of
these notes, but the performer must be very attentive to the crispness and timing of response of
this line, for it needs to be exactly in time with the oboist’s simultaneous sixteenth-note rhythmic
passage.
At rehearsal 7, the constant flurry of sixteenth notes across the top three voices may be
destabilized by any one instrumentalist’s poor timing. The bassoon part is marked with staccato
downbeats and martellato accents. Here if the performer hangs on too long to a pitch or has late
response, it will obscure the clarity of attacks between the upper three members of the ensemble.
In the first measure of rehearsal 10, the bassoon part contains a syncopated rhythm with
the oboe part. Both voices are marked ppp; nevertheless, it is much easier for the bassoonist to
play a true pianissimo on most of these written pitches. The performer is advised that the oboist
may struggle to play low C4, B3, and B-flat3 with equal dynamic control.
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At rehearsal 12, while the upper three voices contain straight sixteenth notes, the bassoon
has one of the last true solos in the Quatuor. Beginning on A-flat4, the bassoon part is marked en
dehors for the measure. Because of the tendency of a thinning timbre in the high tenor register of
the bassoon, the performer must project the line over the other parts. In the last two beats of the
measure at rehearsal 13, the bassoon part contains a G-major scale in sixteenth notes; the
bassoon is the only voice in the quartet with such a passage at this point, and should be heard in
the foreground. In the two measures before rehearsal 14, the bassoon part contains the final two
beats of each measure while the upper three voices are heard on the first two beats. To balance
the ensemble, the performer should feel free to play these eighth notes soloistically.
In the Pas lent, the bassoon part is once again assigned to providing the bass line.
Nevertheless, the bass line is of vital importance to the tempo, rhythmic drive, and harmonic
stability of the section. Up until two measures before rehearsal 16, the flute and clarinet parts
generally contain quarter-note rhythms. However, in the second measure before rehearsal 16, the
bassoon becomes the only voice to continue with quarter-note motion. In the third measure after
rehearsal 16, the bassoonist continues playing quarter notes for the remaining four measures of
the section while all other voices are moving in half- or whole-note values. Ultimately,
responsibility for tempo at this point resides with the bassoonist, and the performer may feel at
liberty to slow a little before the Tempo I subito. As with all of the other musicians in the last
measure, the bassoonist is required to articulate three sets of four sixteenth notes, accenting every
second sixteenth note. Ending on a low C2, the bassoon part provides the bass note of the large
five octave range of tone colors that Françaix displays between the low-register bassoon part and
CHAPTER 3
Before 1935, only a few composers had written for what is now known as the standard
saxophone quartet of soprano, alto, tenor, and baritone saxophones. Jean-Baptiste Singelée,
composing contest pieces at the request of Adolphe Sax himself, composed the Premier Quatuor
pour saxophones, Op. 53 in 1857 – a work that is still frequently performed today. Nevertheless,
few examples of literature for the saxophone quartet exist spanning the time of Sax’s departure
from the Conservatoire de Paris in 1870 until the 1930’s, when the saxophone quartet again
came to notice under the guidance of Marcel Mule and his fellow members of Le Quatuor de la
Garde Republicaine, a quartet founded in 1928. Mule and his quartet were responsible for
Variations sur une Ronde Populare of 1930 and Alexander Glazunov’s Quartet, Op. 109 in B-
flat of 1934. Both of these works predate Françaix’s first composition for this ensemble.9
Though there are a few extant works for standard saxophone quartet of soprano, alto, tenor, and
baritone saxophones before the 1930’s, Mule’s Quartet has been widely accepted in the
1935, Françaix was writing for a relatively newly established ensemble – it is a lasting testament
to Françaix’s compositional style that the piece has become a standard in the literature.
conception of the Petit Quatuor. In seeking composers to write for the ensemble, Mule consulted
Nadia Boulanger, one of the most renowned pedagogues of composition in the history of the
9
David Lindsey Clark, Appraisals of Original Wind Music: A Survey and Guide (Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1999), 253.
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modern era. Boulanger decided the task would prove mutually beneficial for both Mule and one
This piece, as with the Quatuor before it, assists in defining Françaix in the context of a
Neoclassical composer, writing as an emerging student of Nadia Boulanger and alongside the
more well-known French composers of the time like Darius Milhaud, Jacques Ibert, and Francis
Poulenc. Françaix’s tonal approach to the Petit Quatuor would have been rather conservative
even in the 1930’s. He never strays far from the initial tonality, B-flat major, an idiomatic
tonality for both saxophones pitched in B-flat and in E-flat. When he does move to other key
Gaguenardise
The first movement, entitled Gaguenardise after the French word goguenard meaning
”mocking,” is appropriately named, for the character of the movement reflects a jocular dance.11
The dance-like rhythms of the opening motives are present throughout Françaix’s development
of the thematic material. Occasional moments of tender lyricism are used to contrast the
punctuated and rhythmic drive of the beginning. The piece is largely constructed with upper
voices usually carrying the melody and lower voices providing accompaniment. It was not
uncommon, however, for Françaix to compose a brief solo passage for one of the lower-pitched
instruments. Françaix loosely structures the first movement after sonata form, with a two-theme
beginning at the a tempo before rehearsal 11, and a coda beginning at rehearsal 14. The primary
10
Eugene Rousseau, Marcel Mule: His Life and the Saxophone (Shell Lake, Wisconsin: Étoile, 1982), 92.
11
New Century Saxophone Quartet, “NCSQ – Drastic Measures,” New Century Saxophone Quartet,
http://www.newcenturysax.com/drasticmeasures.htm (accessed June 15, 2008).
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difference between the Gaguenardise and a traditional sonata form is in the way the key areas of
the exposition resolve in the recapitulation. In the exposition the A theme cadences in B-flat
before rehearsal 3 and the B theme cadences in C eight measures after rehearsal 5. In a
traditional sonata form, the B theme would return in the tonic key in the recapitulation, B-flat in
this movement. The B theme in Gaguenardise returns in what initially sounds like B-flat by the
end of the fourth measure of rehearsal 13. However, it soon dissipates into new melodic material
at rehearsal 14 and ends abruptly on F-sharp in the baritone and alto saxophone parts in the
The baritone saxophone part begins the quartet with a lively but quiet four-measure solo.
The remaining three voices join the sonority in the fifth measure, all maintaining the piano
dynamic. In measures eight, ten, twelve, fourteen, and sixteen, the baritone saxophone
punctuates the quiet dynamic with a set of acrobatic più forte slurred leaps, thereby setting up an
increasing tension to be relieved at the forte giocoso in all voices at rehearsal 2. This forte
dynamic signals the arrival of the first proper theme in the movement.
The initial piano four-measure statement of the baritone saxophone in the beginning of
the movement not only begins a pattern that will be repeated in the bass voice throughout, but
also serves to present the first instance of the movement’s primary melodic motive. Here the
baritone saxophone part introduces a dramatic leap of a major tenth initially and then follows
with short stepwise notes; both of these motivic ideas will be prevalent throughout the
movement. The next few phrases continue with similar melodic material characterized by a leap
The baritone saxophone solo at the beginning of the movement not only sets up the
melodic structure of the movement to follow, but also the rhythmic motion of the eighth notes in
the first measure and the dotted eighth-note, sixteenth-note rhythm of the first beat of the second
measure. Françaix uses these rhythmic ideas throughout the movement, and introduces a longer
quarter-note value in the soprano saxophone voice beginning at measure six. Françaix repeats
rhythmic ideas in the opening, often composing homorhythmic ideas between two or even three
saxophone parts, usually with a constantly moving rhythm in the baritone saxophone part. The
arrival of the A theme at rehearsal 2 in the soprano saxophone part carries a slight relaxation of
rhythm; the third and fourth measures of each subphrase in the soprano and alto parts are
sustained quarter notes while the low saxophone parts supply rhythmic division.
The first movement of Françaix’s Petit Quatuor serves to verify the young composer’s
Neoclassical style through the use of occasionally unusual harmonic progressions and evasive
tonalities – but with the traditional harmonic structure of sonata form. With the baritone
saxophone solo at the beginning of the movement, Françaix outlines the key of B-flat major, but
tonality is already blurred by the fourth measure where the baritone saxophone part ascends to F-
sharp3 on beat two. Upon the entry of the remaining three voices, the phase concludes one
measure before rehearsal 1 with a G-major chord on the downbeat – major VI of B-flat major.
Submediant relationships are important to Françaix’s harmonic language in this piece and also in
his Quatuor discussed in chapter 2. As the giocoso phrase at rehearsal 2 comes to a conclusion, it
resolves to a B-flat-major triad on the beat before rehearsal 3 – the first cadence on a tonic
harmony Françaix has composed in this movement, albeit weakened because it is in second
inversion on the last strong pulse, beat two. It is by a repeat of this phrase and its sense of tonal
arrival that Françaix will begin his recapitulation later in the movement.
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transitory section. Here the ensemble returns to a subito pianissimo with comical sforzando and
più forte interjections at the end of the fourth and sixth measures after rehearsal 3. Though he
begins with a conservative, homorhythmic approach at rehearsal 3, Françaix soon departs from
the stability of the A theme. The phrase ultimately resolves on an A-flat-major triad before
With the baritone saxophone part’s forte pickup into rehearsal 4, Françaix begins adding
splashes of dynamic color to individual instrument statements – the forte tenor saxophone
eighth-note triplet solo in the fourth measure after rehearsal 4, and the più forte solo for the same
instrument five measures before rehearsal 5 are the most notable examples. Françaix uses the
active baritone saxophone part’s pickup into rehearsal 4 to introduce a more rhythmically
independent group of phrases, more tentative and less homorhythmic than the phrases in the
beginning of the movement. Between rehearsal 4 and rehearsal 5, Françaix only rarely has three
voices playing in rhythmic unison, and then for no longer than one or two eighth notes. The
harmonic departure from B-flat major, first begun at rehearsal 3, continues – the soprano
saxophone part’s snippets of melody and tenor saxophone part’s answers all move toward a
new theme begins as a skillfully combined compositional extension of the eighth-note based
motives heard before, this time begun with two eighth notes followed by an octave leap to a
quarter note in the top two voices, and descending to the lower octave in the two lower voices.
The concluding four measures of the B theme, beginning four measures before rehearsal 6, are a
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restatement of the first four measures at rehearsal 5, but with slight variations of rhythm and
articulation. To conclude the section, Françaix uses the dotted eighth-note, sixteenth-note
rhythm, originally heard in the second measure of the work, and across the ensemble on the
Rehearsal 5 begins on a G-dominant ninth chord, and finally resolves to a C-major triad
in first inversion on the last eighth note of the fourth measure of rehearsal 5. This four-measure
harmonic progression is again stated to close the exposition of the Gaguenardise movement, this
time with a root position C-major chord with an added sixth on beat two of the measure before
rehearsal 6. As seen later in the movement’s recapitulation, this second theme of the exposition
will initially return in B-flat but then gravitate to F-sharp by the fourth measure of rehearsal 14.
F-sharp spelled enharmonically is G-flat, or the lowered submediant, a key relationship used
As expected in sonata form, there is a development section that follows the cadence of
the B theme after rehearsal 5. An overall quiet dynamic returns in the ensemble, with three
voices in the first phrase marked ppp. The notable exception is the solo tenor saxophone line. For
the first time in the movement, the baritone saxophone part is written with a sustained bass line
in long note values against the more active upper voices. As found in previous phrases
throughout the movement, the end of each four-measure phrase is marked with a suddenly louder
dynamic. This occurs first with quick note values in the baritone saxophone part, then with short
eighth notes in the soprano, alto, and baritone saxophone parts. To serve as a point of contrast in
this development, Françaix has chosen to compose a more lyrical, conjunct, and connected
melody in the tenor saxophone part as opposed to the dance-like rhythms and detached
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articulations of the opening exposition. Rhythmically, the melodies of the opening of the
development section are reminiscent of the opening dance-like melodies; nevertheless, a slowing
of note values throughout the four parts point to a development that builds tension by relaxing
the overall rhythmic drive of the movement. Tonally, Françaix begins developing his key areas
At rehearsal 7, Françaix writes for the lower two voices to project their eighth notes with
a forte marking, while the upper voices remain in a piano dynamic and take over the melodic
interest from the tenor saxophone part in the previous phrase. Tonally, rehearsal 7 stays very
close to C – the furthest the phrase gravitates is to a D-minor triad in the three eighth notes in the
The ensemble returns to a quiet dynamic at rehearsal 8, with the tenor saxophone line
once again carrying the melody and the other voices containing sustained longer note values. By
rehearsal 8, the driving eighth notes of the first section of the movement have become rare. After
Françaix’s brief departure from C major, he returns to tonicize the key in this phrase, ending in
A sonority of sustained notes continues at rehearsal 9, with the lower three instruments
playing high in their registers at a mezzo-forte dynamic. However, the fortissimo high-register
statement in the soprano saxophone part and the following mezzo-forte high-register alto
saxophone part serve as distinct solo voices against the quieter low voices of the ensemble.
Françaix uses a higher degree of chromaticism than he has used so far in a solo line in the
development to heighten a new tonal instability. After the C-major cadence in the eighth measure
of rehearsal 8, Françaix begins to develop tonally. He achieves interest from an unstable sense of
harmony; the inner cadence on the fourth measure after 9 resolves to an F-sharp-major triad with
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an added 9th, and the final chord in the measure before rehearsal 10 is an enharmonically spelled
diminished triad on F with a 9-8 suspension in the alto saxophone part. Though growing more
rhythmic serenity.
Throughout the measures of rehearsal 10, all of the saxophone parts display a timbral
darkening. To display this change of timbre, the written pitches and their timbre throughout this
section should be considered over sounding pitch. The soprano saxophone part sustains written
F-sharp4 quarter notes in the lower register; the alto saxophone part, beginning on a written C-
sharp6 at rehearsal 10, descends to the range between D5 and B5; the tenor saxophone part
rearticulates a written C5, and the baritone saxophone part descends to written low B-flat3 ten
measures before rehearsal 11. The middle-to-low range of each of the saxophones creates a
calming effect in the ensemble; by avoiding the high soloistic register of each of the saxophones,
A rallentando molto twelve measures before rehearsal 11 further adds respite to the
development section. As the rallentando molto approaches, Françaix limits the melodic scope in
the alto saxophone part; over the last eight measures of rehearsal 10, the alto saxophone part
contains a strong centricity around B-flat4, with C5 and D-flat5 being the only other two pitches
At rehearsal 10, Françaix reintroduces the eighth-note division in the first and fifth
measures with short fortissimo subito eighth notes on downbeats in the soprano saxophone part
and one melodic eighth note in the alto saxophone part. Other voices move in quarter- and half-
note durations. To balance the harmonic instability of rehearsal 9, Françaix begins to regain a
sense of tonal clarity at rehearsal 10; the cadence at the end of the first eight-bar phrase returns to
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a B-flat-major triad in second inversion. It is the next eight bar phrase, however, that reminds the
listener that the movement is still within the development. With a D-flat3 in the baritone
saxophone part two measures before the rallentando and an E4 in the soprano saxophone part
recurring from the first measure of rehearsal 10, Françaix composes both internal and final
Eight measures before rehearsal 11 Françaix returns to the A theme, the melody
originally presented at rehearsal 2 in the exposition. After this initial return, it is repeated at
rehearsal 11with a more punched articulation style and fff dynamic. Tonally, as would be
expected, the beginning of the recapitulation returns to the tonic B-flat major.
this may seem like a strange compositional choice, but the tonal implications are made clear. In
the first movement’s exposition, the secondary theme was in C major – the supertonic of B-flat
major. At rehearsal 13, Françaix brings back the B theme from rehearsal 5 sounding like B-flat
major by the fourth measure of 13 instead of C major as in the exposition. Rather than continuing
in the tonic B-flat, Françaix quickly dissolves the B theme and ends abruptly on F-sharp, the
enharmonic minor submediant G-flat, four measures after rehearsal 14, thereby prolonging the
The first major textural change of the a tempo recapitulation occurs at rehearsal 14, the
movement’s coda. Here Françaix writes a two-measure fff melody in the soprano and tenor
saxophone parts, followed by the alto and baritone saxophone parts answering in tandem. After
these two brief duets, the ensemble continues at a fortissimo dynamic, marked ironico in the
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soprano and tenor saxophone parts. It is notable that the two arpeggiated figures on beats one and
two at rehearsal 14 ultimately lead both voices up to their written high E6 – the highest pitch for
either instrument not only in the movement, but in the entire Petit Quatuor. The alto and baritone
saxophone parts provide a descent of the melody over the next two measures. The melody in the
alto saxophone part five measures after rehearsal 14 continues with melodic material used before
in the piece. However, to assist with the closing of the piece, Françaix composes a simple
melodic idea in the soprano saxophone part. Beginning nine measures after rehearsal 14, over the
course of four measures, the soprano saxophone part introduces and restates a linear cadential
At rehearsal 14, the duet in the soprano and tenor saxophone parts introduces a rhythmic
figure not yet heard in the Petit Quatuor. Here, the dotted sixteenth-note, thirty-second note
rhythm in the first measure clearly signals a break from the recapitulation, and ultimately heralds
the ending of the movement. The simultaneously stated rhythms of the next measure give this
phrase a sense of urgency. In the fifth measure after rehearsal 14, Françaix writes sixteenth notes
in the tenor saxophone part and the low register of the soprano saxophone part. The same sense
of rhythmic urgency and drive carries into the next phrase as well, with the inner voices playing
syncopated quarter notes and the soprano saxophone part resolving the C5 to B-flat4 sixteenth
At the coda, Françaix uses the chromaticism of the melody to gravitate toward a cadence
on F-sharp four measures after rehearsal 14. The coda of the movement explains this key
relationship over the next two measures – the downbeat five measures after rehearsal 14
simultaneously functions as an F-sharp / G-flat dominant seventh chord without a fifth and an
Italian 6th triad in the tonic key, which moves to a first-inversion B-flat-major triad in the next
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measure. Françaix manages this harmonic progression simply by moving the soprano saxophone
voice up a half step, the baritone saxophone down a major third (enharmonically), and keeping
the other voices the same. At the end of the fifth measure before rehearsal 15, Françaix explicitly
writes a senza rallentando in an obvious effort to keep the drive of the ending moving forward.
The final eight measures of the movement are executed with a seven-measure pianissimo
dynamic that resolves on a fff subito cadence in the final measure. Four measures before
rehearsal 15, the baritone saxophone revisits its opening motive, accompanied now by the other
three voices, and concludes with the tenor saxophone part answering with poco marcato notes,
followed by a subito fff final cadence. The final eight measures are a return to more rhythmically
conservative activity. Upon the baritone saxophone’s solo entrance four measures before
rehearsal 15, Françaix again clearly establishes the tonic B-flat-major tonality. The final two
As the lead player in the quartet ensemble, the soprano saxophonist must both lead
stylistically and with rhythmic cueing. The performer must also be sensitive to Françaix’s
tendencies to interject moments of vital interest in the lower pitched saxophone parts of the
quartet. The first examples of such writing come immediately after the first entrance in the
soprano saxophone part; though Françaix writes for the soprano saxophonist to play the lead in
the melodic direction of the piece, he writes a dotted eighth-note, sixteenth-note rhythm in the
alto and tenor saxophone parts in the second and third measure before rehearsal 1. These must be
Françaix tends to use differing rhythms as a vital element in his presentation of contrast,
whether on a large scale, or simply within the same phrase. In the sixth measure after rehearsal 1,
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Françaix writes for the soprano and tenor saxophonists to play an eighth note followed by two
sixteenth notes on beat one, then two sixteenth notes followed by an eighth note on beat two.
This rhythmic activity has precedent in the baritone saxophone part two measures earlier, and
will be heard again in the baritone saxophone part two measures later. As such, the soprano and
tenor saxophonists need to at least balance the più forte of the baritone saxophone part in order to
connect Françaix’s rhythmic ideas. The same rhythm is revisited two measures before rehearsal
4, where Françaix has now written più forte in the soprano saxophone part. By this point, the
intervallic content of the rhythmic figure has become wider – with the crossing between octaves
of the F5 to the B-flat4, the louder dynamic assists in aiding response and smoothness of tone.
The polyphonic texture of rehearsal 4 requires all saxophonists to project their solo
statements, even considering the pianissimo dynamic of the opening of the phrase. The marcato
in the third measure of rehearsal 4 leads toward the eighth-note triplet statement of the tenor
saxophone part in the next measure. The soprano saxophonist once again takes the lead in the
saxophone solo in the instrument’s middle register. The soprano saxophonist must strive to keep
dynamically balanced with the solo tenor saxophone part. Fortunately, the soprano saxophone
part only ascends to a written B5, so difficulties of ensemble balance are kept to a minimum since
the soprano saxophone part never approaches its highest and loudest pitches.
The soprano and alto saxophonists again play the melodic lead at rehearsal 7. Due to the
piano dynamic and the coupling with a second melodic voice, the soprano saxophone part should
be played as lyrically as possible to contrast with the lower, louder, more rhythmic voices in the
ensemble. Françaix’s crescendi and diminuendi in the upper parts aid the musical presentation.
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The soprano saxophone part primarily consists of sustained quarter and half notes at
rehearsal 8. Here it is important again for the performer to be subservient to the tenor
saxophone’s higher degree of melodic interest. The eighth notes in the fourth measure of
rehearsal 8, though vitally important to Françaix’s sonority, must be kept at a soft dynamic –
they will be heard if for no other reason that they are the only presentation of a divided beat in
Françaix writes at a forte dynamic again at rehearsal 9 – this time with an ed espressivo
marking. Here the part ascends near the top – written D6 and D-sharp6 – of the instrument’s
traditional range. As the tessitura of the instrument will project, the soprano saxophonist must be
careful not to overbalance the ensemble. The performer must ensure that the written pitches from
From rehearsal 10 to the end of the development section, the soprano saxophonist has the
only articulated rhythmic value in the ensemble shorter than a quarter note. Here, the part
contains two fortissimo eighth notes on the downbeat, followed immediately by ppp sustained
notes. This pattern repeats itself at the fifth and ninth measures of rehearsal 10. The contrast
Françaix demands here is vital – though the soprano saxophone part captures attention with
moving eighth notes, the main melodic attention belongs to the piano alto saxophone part.
One of the results of the shifting of phrases within themes is the dynamic contrast created by the
fff at rehearsal 11 and the pianissimo at rehearsal 12. This contrast is easily executed in the
bottom three voices, but is made difficult by a half note crescendo in the soprano saxophone part
leading directly into the pianissimo subito downbeat at rehearsal 12. Françaix writes the
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instruction sec in the soprano saxophone part – he explicitly states here that the end of the
crescendo must be dry and abrupt to set up the pianissimo subito in the next measure.
At rehearsal 14, Françaix composes new material to conclude the movement. The fff
arpeggios in the soprano and tenor saxophone parts sound an octave apart, but are written to
ascend nearly to the top – written E6 – of both instruments’ respective traditional registers. To
balance the same dynamic that will be written for the alto and baritone saxophones two measures
later, the soprano saxophonist should not take Françaix’s fff out of context.
In the fifth measure of rehearsal 14, the soprano and tenor saxophone parts have a two
sixteenth-note, two eighth-note articulation marked ironico. Though musical irony is best left to
robotic, antithesis to the dance rhythms of the movement as a whole. Regardless, it is vitally
Five measures before rehearsal 15, Françaix writes a senza rallentando – without slowing
– in the soprano saxophone part. This explicit instruction circumvents the tendency to slow at
this point. At rehearsal 15, Françaix writes another explicit instruction – perdendo ma nettissimo,
or “die away smoothly.” The sustained note values in the soprano saxophone part help with the
gradual execution of this direction. The last two notes, marked fff subito, should be executed with
Françaix’s primary application of the alto saxophone in this and the third movement of
the Petit Quatuor is as a supplemental melodic instrument to the soprano saxophone. As such,
the alto saxophonist needs to balance the soprano saxophonist in the opening phrases of the
movement. A few notable exceptions are in the moving dotted eighth-note, sixteenth-note
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rhythm in the sixth measure; the tenor saxophonist follows the alto saxophonist in the next
measure as the alto saxophonist is playing sustained notes, so an awareness of the counterpoint is
vital. The second measure of rehearsal 1 is marked as a quarter note with an accent – the alto
saxophonist should play this with an initial weight, but again allow the counterpoint of other
lines to emerge. In the sixth measure after rehearsal 1, there is an eighth note on the second half
of beat two – this must be placed exactly in time with the other performers who have been
playing shorter, more divided note values within the measure. In the third measure before
rehearsal 3, the alto saxophonist revisits Françaix’s dotted eighth-note, sixteenth-note rhythm on
the downbeat. Though not explicitly marked by the composer, the alto saxophonist is advised to
present this idea and the following two measures in a soloistic manner. In the two measures
before rehearsal 3, the soprano saxophonist plays slurred quarter notes while the lower voices
play short eighth notes. The alto saxophone part here is the only saxophone part with slurred
divided note values; though the dynamic is loud throughout the ensemble, the performer should
play this statement lyrically to contrast the shorter eighths in the lower voices.
The polyphonic section at rehearsal 4, by its sparser nature, allows each saxophonist to
function as a soloist. The performer frequently plays eighth notes alone, and should play with
conviction even at a pianissimo dynamic. Though again not marked with any solo indications,
the performer should feel free to project the piano eighth notes four measures before rehearsal 5,
as well as the pianissimo eighth notes eight measures before rehearsal 5. The alto saxophonist
should use these soloistic eighth notes to lead the crescendo into rehearsal 5, the last thematic
Like the soprano saxophonist, the alto saxophonist should take care not to overbalance
the solo tenor saxophone part at rehearsal 6 and rehearsal 8. Likewise, the alto and soprano
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saxophonists must set their lyrical melody against the more rhythmic tenor and baritone
similar lyricism in the alto saxophone line. Here the alto saxophone part ascends higher in the
instrument’s written register than the soprano saxophone part at only a mezzo forte dynamic. As
with the soprano saxophonist, it is important for the alto saxophonist to avoid a strident sound in
the upper register. The written E-sharp6 is the highest pitch the alto saxophone part ascends to in
At rehearsal 10, the alto saxophone part should receive primary focus – as indicated by
Françaix’s instructions of mais en dehors et expressif. At the rallentando molto approaches, the
range of the alto saxophone solo becomes limited to G5, A5, and B-flat5 – it is important here for
The recapitulation presents no new challenges for the alto saxophonist. It is at rehearsal
14 where newly-composed material is presented. The third and fourth measures after rehearsal
14 find the alto saxophonist playing a high-register duet with the baritone saxophonist. Here, the
alto saxophone part is written to enter into the high register of the instrument, reaching another
E-sharp6. The performer must be careful not to overbalance the lower-register baritone
saxophone here. As Françaix scores the soprano and tenor saxophone parts at fff in the previous
two measures, dynamics must be matched with the aforementioned instruments’ entrance.
While the soprano and tenor saxophonists are playing Françaix’s ironico marking in the
fifth measure of rehearsal 14, the alto saxophonist returns to the more dance-oriented dotted
ensemble carries this allusion to the primary theme. By the eighth measure before rehearsal 15,
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the alto saxophonist is playing syncopated entrances in tandem with the tenor saxophonist;
attention here should be shifted to the more soloistic statements in the soprano saxophone part.
The ending perdendo ma nettissimo presents a challenge for the alto saxophonist – the
third measure, while still marked ppp, includes an eighth-note, sixteenth-rest, sixteenth-note
rhythm beginning on a written low D4. The performer must be conscious of the challenges of ppp
articulations in the low register of the conical bore saxophone. Musically, the alto saxophonist
has the challenge of leading the aforementioned rhythm to an empty downbeat – the direction of
The role of the tenor saxophone in the Petit Quatuor is similar to the role of a tenor voice
the other voices, Françaix sometimes varies the supporting role to give the tenor saxophone part
The tenor saxophonist’s first entrance is one measure later than the soprano and alto
saxophonists’ entrances before rehearsal 1. Here the delayed tenor saxophone entrance on the
primary rhythmic theme must be heard. By duplicating the small crescendo used in the first beat
of the soprano and alto saxophone entrances, Françaix seems to encourage the tenor saxophonist
to make the most of this imitative opening statement. In the second measure after the entrance of
the tenor saxophone part, as with the alto saxophone part in the measure before and in the second
measure of the movement in the baritone saxophone part, Françaix composes a dotted eighth-
note, sixteenth-note rhythm that serves as the only presentation of the subdivided beat in that
particular measure. Like the alto and soprano saxophonists’ entrance in the previous measure, the
tenor saxophonist must ensure this entrance is heard through the sonority of the ensemble. A
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similar rhythm, this time played with the soprano saxophonist, is presented in the second
measure of rehearsal 1. The sixteenth notes played with the soprano saxophonist three measures
before rehearsal 2 must be matched stylistically to the same rhythm in the baritone saxophone
part two measure prior, and foreshadow the baritone saxophonist’s più forte statement in the
Françaix writes several times for the tenor saxophonist to come to the fore with a short
burst of notes while one or two voices are resting. The sixteenth-note to eighth-note pickup in the
fifth measure of rehearsal 2 is the first of such entrances – Françaix actually rewrites the giocoso
instruction at this point, further encouraging the performer to play out. Similarly, the eighth-note
triplets four measures after rehearsal 4 are of a marked articulation and a forte dynamic against a
pianissimo dynamic in the soprano saxophone part. Françaix again uses the tenor saxophone part
five measures before rehearsal 5 in a sixteenth-note pattern to add excitement to the slower-
At rehearsal 6, the tenor saxophone part has its first true melody. With the part marked
pianissimo, mais en dehors, the performer must be heard as the lead voice in the texture while
still maintaining a quiet dynamic. At rehearsal 7, the tenor and baritone saxophonists are once
again heard as accompanimental instruments; nevertheless, Françaix writes a brief solo statement
in the tenor saxophone part with the chromatic quarter-note triplets in the fourth measure. The
tenor saxophone part returns to a melodic presentation at rehearsal 8, this time with a flowing
quarter-note melody marked ppp. Here there is no indication that the tenor saxophone part
should be heard as lead, but the part is the only one in the quartet with moving notes. The
From rehearsal 10 to the end of the exposition, the tenor saxophone part is written to
sustain written C5. Even so, this is a very important rhythmic figure as the tenor saxophonist is
playing in tandem with the soprano saxophonist in placing a tenuto marking on every second
measure’s second beat. Even with the limited melodic range, the performer must be conscious of
the vital rhythmic role of the part in the ensemble at this point.
Two measures before rehearsal 14, Françaix writes the quartet in homorhythm, with the
notable exception of the tenor saxophone part’s triple division of the second beat. Beginning on
written C-sharp4, Françaix intends for the performer to lead the ensemble into rehearsal 14.
Rehearsal 14 begins the coda of the movement, and it is here that the soprano and tenor
saxophonists play a two-measure duet, ascending into their high registers. Both instrumentalists
must be aware that because of their high register, they may present a loud dynamic that the two
Five measures after rehearsal 14, the tenor saxophonist joins the soprano saxophonist in
an ironico duet. In the ninth measure of rehearsal 14, the tenor saxophonist accents offbeats
together with the alto saxophonist. The driving syncopation is relieved four measures before
rehearsal 15 with flowing quarter notes. At rehearsal 15, the tenor saxophonist plays one last
passage of driving eighth notes. Here, the dynamic is pianissimo, but the middle register of the
tenor saxophone is conducive to the quiet marcato articulations. In the penultimate measure, the
tenor saxophonist is asked to play a series of short eighth notes, resolving to a pianissimo written
C4 on the downbeat of the final measure. Since the only other accompanimental instrument here
is the baritone saxophone in its middle register, the execution of a true ensemble pianissimo is
possible even considering the potentially difficult written C4 on the tenor saxophone.
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Françaix begins the Gaguenardise movement with the baritone saxophonist playing an
ascending major tenth in a jocular dance-like rhythm. Though marked piano, the performer may
feel free to play with a soloistic dynamic. The accent in the second measure, as well as the
sforzando in the fourth measure should be played with exaggeration, so as to set a clear
The acrobatic bass lines demanded by Françaix are generally idiomatic for the baritone
saxophone. Four and eight measures after rehearsal 1, Françaix writes an eighth-note, two
sixteenth-note, two sixteenth-note, eighth-note rhythm with a più forte dynamic indication. The
performer must project this quirky statement, as well as the eighth-note, sixteenth-rest, sixteenth-
note rhythm on the downbeat of rehearsal 2 – for the baritone saxophone is the only voice in the
ensemble to present these rhythms in their respective places. In the measure before rehearsal 4,
the driving sixteenth notes intensify the contrast between the ensemble’s più forte three measures
before rehearsal 4 and the pianissimo at rehearsal 4. To execute the humorous contrast that
Françaix intends, the performer must keep the sixteenth notes forte until the release on the
downbeat of rehearsal 4.
At rehearsal 6, the baritone saxophonist must take care to maintain the ppp dynamic level
allowing the tenor saxophonist to project the pianissimo solo. Nevertheless, the sixteenth notes in
the fourth measure are to be played out at a forte dynamic – again for humorous contrast. The
meno forte dynamic marking at rehearsal 7 is in contrast to the fff dynamic in the final measure
of rehearsal 6. However, the baritone saxophonist and tenor saxophonist must project their bass
register statements freely and at a forte dynamic – otherwise, the contrast between the lyrical
Four measures after rehearsal 9, the baritone saxophone part contains a series of disjunct
quarter notes, marked diminuendo from a mezzo forte dynamic. This disjunct bass line is highly
important due to the harmonic instability of the section. The performer should project here
In the fifteenth measure of rehearsal 10, Françaix presents a sustained written B-flat3 in
the baritone saxophone part. This pitch is vital to the sound of the ensemble here, as the
performers at this point have reached the conclusion of the development section. The performer
must have excellent control of the response and tone quality of this low note. In order to
maximize the chances for tonal quality, the performer may consider breathing after the written
B-flat4 in the twelfth measure after rehearsal 10 to match the phrasing of the soprano and alto
saxophone parts.
Through the recapitulation, the same performance ideas discussed in the exposition
remain relevant. In the third measure of rehearsal 14, Françaix writes a duet between alto and
baritone saxophones. Considering the duet at rehearsal 14 between the B-flat saxophones and
this duet in the third measure with the E-flat alto saxophone, the baritone saxophone is the only
voice in the ensemble not required to play in the highest register of the instrument. The baritone
saxophonist must take care to balance the instrument’s middle register to what will likely be the
In the four measures before rehearsal 15, the baritone saxophonist presents a short
restatement very similar to the opening solo. Though marked pianissimo, Françaix adds mais en
dehors. By default, the performer will be heard here because of the longer note values in the
upper three voices. The final four measures of the movement find the baritone saxophone part
Cantilène
The Cantilène, the second movement, is notable for its lack of a high tessitura; in fact,
Françaix omits the soprano saxophone part from the quartet for this movement, composing the
primary solo voice for the alto saxophone. Françaix has written a straightforward ternary form in
B-flat Aeolian – with a harmonically closed A section cadencing in the measure before rehearsal
17, followed by a developmental B section, and returning at rehearsal 18 to the A theme in the
The tenor and baritone saxophone parts begin with an introductory eight bar phrase in
which the tenor saxophone part rests on the first beat of every other measure, then accents the
second beat with its entrance – a meter and rhythm reminiscent of a Baroque Sarabande. At
rehearsal 16 the alto saxophone part takes up the melody, playing four equal four-measure
phrases in B-flat Aeolian mode – Françaix’s Neoclassical equivalent of moving to the parallel
minor in a movement from the common practice era. A traditional tonic-dominant-tonic chord
progression is avoided until the end of the A section by the Aeolian mode’s lack of an A-natural
in the first 22 measures (with the exception of the A3 in the tenor saxophone part two measures
before rehearsal 17). The avoidance of a leading tone supports the modal character of the
melody. Nevertheless, the A section ends with a perfect authentic cadence before rehearsal 17,
complete with a leading tone in the tenor saxophone part. The B section, beginning at rehearsal
17 is modal as well, this time moving to a Dorian mode centering on B-flat, with tonic to
subdominant harmonic motion in the baritone saxophone part in the second, fourth, tenth, and
twelfth measures of rehearsal 17. The phrase grouping of the B section gradually becomes
asymmetrical in the measures before rehearsal 18. Tonal development carries to the end of the B
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section, but the alto saxophone part presents the opening melody again at rehearsal 18. A short
Musically and technically speaking, Françaix’s middle movement, the Cantilène, is the
simplest and most straightforward movement in the Petit Quatuor. Nonetheless, the simplicity
does not detract at all from its aesthetic beauty. This simplicity also manages to raise one of the
biggest questions in the Petit Quatuor – why has the soprano saxophone part been temporarily
omitted from the instrumentation? Françaix wrote this piece at the invitation of Marcel Mule,
who was the leader and soprano saxophonist in Le Quatuor de la Garde Republicaine. Why
would Françaix compose a movement that left Mule out? Perhaps the young composer simply
wanted to give Mule and subsequent performers a moment of repose. Perhaps he wanted to
showcase the alto saxophonist, who carries the primary melody in this movement. Perhaps
performer or listener may undertake in answering this interesting issue of instrumentation, there
is a correlation to be drawn from a comparison of the timbral qualities of the slow movements of
both the Petit Quatuor and the earlier Quatuor of 1933; this will be discussed further in the next
chapter.
The eight-measure introduction sets the timbral tone of the Cantilène; the baritone
saxophone part is written between D4 and D5, as the tenor saxophone part answers between
written G4 and E-flat5. Both instruments are marked ppp. This combination results in a dark
overall sound – especially coupled with the minor modality. The alto saxophone part, entering in
its lower octave, is heard for the first time at rehearsal 16 with a flowing ma espressivo melody
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marked with crescendi and diminuendi according to melodic contour. Here the alto saxophone
part is marked pianissimo and contributes to the dark and somber tone of the movement.
The alto saxophone solo melody at rehearsal 16 is lovely and flowing. Rather than the
more idiomatically instrumental melodies of the first or third movement, the alto saxophone part
is consistently written with a very vocal character throughout – that is to say, the writing for the
alto saxophone is highly stepwise in shape. The first measure of rehearsal 16 rises in pitch to the
downbeat of the second measure where a fall begins; this is repeated in the next two measures.
The final four bars of the phrase are marked as a two-measure melodic ascent, followed by
In keeping with the vocal style of the movement, Françaix uses a simple rhythmic
scheme. In the beginning, he writes sustained dotted half notes in the baritone saxophone part
while the tenor saxophone part enters on the second beat of each measure. The alto saxophone
melody is marked with long note values as well; each of the eight-measure statements of the
melody after rehearsal 16 begins with a half note proceeding to a quarter note and followed by a
rhythmic division to signal a closure in the phrase – the eighth notes here bring a release of
The tonality of the movement is clearly defined in the opening – the first four measures
have the baritone saxophone part outlining a tonic-dominant progression in B-flat minor in the
bass voice: the parallel minor of the key of the opening movement. The tenor saxophone part
begins on a D-flat5, and restates this note throughout the opening. The opening measures of the
melody at rehearsal 16 are two four-measure phrases. The first phrase ends four measures after
rehearsal 16 on the dominant F-minor chord, and the second phrase ends in the eighth measure
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after rehearsal 16 on the subdominant E-flat-minor triad. The next eight measures return to B-flat
minor, and close the section with a V-I cadence in the two measures before rehearsal 17.
The middle section of the movement is similar to the beginning in many regards. Phrases
here are four measures long. The largest degree of change in sonority from the beginning of the
movement to the B section is in the use of the alto saxophone. Here melodies tend to be played
above written D5, instead of below – as in the preceding A section. Françaix subtly changes
dynamic by writing a più forte for the alto saxophone part, but keeps the other voices at a
pianissimo. Before the restatement of the opening material at rehearsal 18, Françaix has the alto
saxophone part return to the lower register of the instrument as well as execute a diminuendo in
order to return to the more subdued character of the beginning. Other aural effects in the middle
section contribute to the execution of musical development. Five measures before rehearsal 18,
the tenor saxophone part is written with several relatively large interval slurs; until this point, the
tenor voice has had no interval wider than a third. Seven measures before rehearsal 18, the
baritone saxophone part descends to its lowest written B-flat3 (sounding D-flat2) – a note so far
not found in this movement, and found only one more time in the entire Petit Quatuor.
Françaix begins a new melodic theme in the B section. Instead of the half-note, quarter-
note motive of the opening measure of the melody heard in rehearsal 16, he now has the alto
saxophone part sustain a dotted half note through the first measure. The fourth measure similarly
takes a rhythmically augmented approach when compared to the alto saxophone part in the A
section, and much of the quarter-note motion found in the A section is now replaced by longer
note values. Though it may be more obscure due to the less rhythmically active nature of this
melody, the shaping direction within each phrase is reversed in comparison to the opening. The
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overall melodic contour descends into the second measure, and ascends again into the third. At
measures before rehearsal 18, Françaix begins his retransition to the opening theme. Here the
final eight measures of the B section function as an elongated phrase to conclude the middle
section.
As expected in a ternary form, Françaix harmonically separates the B section from the
opening material. By introducing a written E-natural5 in the alto saxophone part at the second bar
after rehearsal 17, Françaix changes the tonal implication from B-flat Aeolian to B-flat Dorian
mode. This sounding G4 is maintained over the next twelve measures, only to revert back to the
G-flat (written E-flat5 in the alto saxophone part) of B-flat Aeolian eight measures before
rehearsal 18. It is also at this point that the tenor saxophone part changes from sounding C4 to C-
flat4, signaling both a harmonic shift and a change in the phrase direction. With an abrupt change
to A-flat Dorian mode eight measures before rehearsal 18, Françaix alters what would be
transitional five-measure phrase follows five measures before rehearsal 18. Here Françaix returns
from A-flat Dorian to B-flat Aeolian by simple chromatic motion in the outer voices – the alto
saxophone part moves up two chromatic steps from A-flat3, to A3, to B-flat3, while the baritone
saxophone part moves down by half step from C-flat3 to B-flat2 on the downbeat of rehearsal 18.
This chord progression functions like an Italian 6th triad moving to a dominant in common
With the arrival of rehearsal 18, Françaix writes a fifteen-measure repeat of the pitches
and rhythms originally found at rehearsal 16, returning to the quiet dynamic of the opening
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theme. At rehearsal 19, he composes a new ending in which the fourth measure after rehearsal 19
deviates from the analogous place in the A section four measures before rehearsal 17. At the
fourth measure after rehearsal 19, Françaix writes a perdendo ritardando for the last five
measures. Françaix’s ending is dramatic; for his final dyad, he calls for the baritone saxophone
part to drop out for the first time in the movement, and for the alto and tenor saxophones part to
Harmonic alteration of the closing section is limited to the final measures. It is in this
similarity to the A section that Françaix’s intent of closing out the somber movement is made
clear. Instead of closing the movement with a simple restatement of the opening four-measure
phrases, he writes a deceptive cadence on the downbeat of the fourth measure after rehearsal 19,
thus making the final five-bar phrase necessary to conclude the movement.
The second movement of the Petit Quatuor, the Cantilène, is an alto saxophone
showcase. In this movement, the alto saxophonist takes over the primary melodic function from
the soprano saxophonist, who is given a momentary repose. The entrance of the alto saxophone
part at rehearsal 16 is marked pianissimo, while the other voices are marked ppp. This delicate
difference should be taken literally, as Françaix has used a limited dynamic range. Françaix’s
crescendi and diminuendi are helpful in the opening phrases especially; following of the melodic
At rehearsal 17, Françaix changes harmonic mode and shifts the alto saxophone part into
a higher register at più forte. The performer should still be keeping this section fairly quiet,
however. The accents on dotted half notes in the fifth and seventh measures after rehearsal 17
Twelve measures before rehearsal 18, Françaix writes encora più forte in the alto
saxophone part. This is the climax of the movement and should be played with that in mind.
Three measures before rehearsal 18, the alto saxophone part descends to written F4, marked solo.
Since the tenor saxophonist here has a more active part, the alto saxophonist must make sure that
this solo still allows the tenor saxophone part to be heard. In the measure before rehearsal 18,
Françaix writes another accent on a written F-sharp4 (sounding A3). In doing this he uses a
proper leading tone to reinforce the B-flat Aeolian mode of the beginning and, now, the
conclusion.
After the restatement of the main melody at rehearsal 18, Françaix composes a short coda
beginning four measures after rehearsal 19. The last two measures are elegant, with the alto
saxophonist supplying a written G4 in the penultimate measure and a written G5 in the final
measure. Here, though the alto saxophonist is the main melodic interest in the movement, it is
the tenor saxophonist that should cue the downbeat of the final measure following the moving
It is with the outset of the tenor saxophone entrance that Françaix makes a subtle allusion
to a slow dance containing accents on the second beat of a triple meter. Though not specified by
the composer, the performer may wish to gently accent the ppp entrance and movement on the
At rehearsal 17, the tenor saxophonist plays several measures moving from written G5 to
E-flat5 in quarter-note values. This repetitive task confirms one of Françaix’s distinct traits
throughout this movement – a minor mode is kept throughout, but changed in form by the
alteration of scale degrees. A more expressive and more melodic idea is presented beginning in
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the fifth measure, and the performer should feel free to play soloistically. Seven measures before
rehearsal 18, Françaix calls on the tenor saxophonist to play more moving notes in the wake of
the longer notes in the alto saxophone part. The changing accidentals here in the tenor saxophone
part are vital to the harmonic structure; again, the tenor saxophonist must be heard as the lead
In the final two measures of the movement, Françaix again gives the tenor saxophone
part the melodic interest as it resolves to the fifth of the tonic triad. In the penultimate measure of
the movement, the tenor saxophone part is the only part with moving notes; the baritone and alto
saxophone parts are stationary. The tenor saxophonist has the final responsibility to execute the
perdendo ritardando begun in the fourth measure of rehearsal 19, and cues the final chord
In the Cantilène, the baritone saxophonist serves as a sustained harmonic bass voice.
Throughout the duration of the movement, the baritone saxophone part contains no note value
shorter than a half note. Though this may initially seem unchallenging to perform, the part is in
fact very difficult due to endurance. The performer must pay constant attention to dynamic
balance, well-supported long tones, and superb control of the low register – Françaix frequently
scores for the instrument down to its written low C4, and calls for a written a B-flat3 seven
Between four measures before rehearsal 19 and the ending, the baritone saxophone part is
written to sound continuously. In order to execute the appearance of an uninterrupted bass line,
several quick breaths must be taken. An obvious choice for a breath would be immediately
before rehearsal 19. Another suggestion is to sneak a breath after the written E-flat4 – a deceptive
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cadence – in the fourth measure of rehearsal 19. The last two measures offer interesting
implications. The baritone saxophone part is written with an open-ended tie into the lunga
fermata rest in the final measure. By omitting the lowest voice, Françaix intended to emphasize
the open perfect fourth at the end of the movement between the alto and tenor saxophone parts.
Though not necessarily suggesting decay on the baritone saxophonist’s final note, Françaix
intends for the instrumentalist to resonate on the penultimate chord in a way that makes an
Sérénade comique
describe his closing movement – Sérénade comique. The comical nature of the movement is
based on an ever-struggling dichotomy. The main theme, presented at the beginning in the tenor
saxophone part, is then restated an octave higher by the soprano saxophone at rehearsal 21. This
primary theme is offset by a secondary theme of hemiola rhythm and slap jusqu’à – or slap-
tongue – articulation at rehearsal 22, eight measures before rehearsal 27, and again at rehearsal
31. A return of the introductory theme nine measures after rehearsal 24 gradually gives way to
the hemiola theme in a formal dissolution beginning at rehearsal 33, and the movement is
ultimately ended by an active conclusion of a fast chromatic ascent followed by a suddenly quiet
final triad for the ensemble. With the frequent return of the main theme throughout the
movement, the Sérénade comique fits the traditional idea of a rondo in B-flat major, but with a
dynamic shifts, fast-note decorations of the melody, and distortion of traditional rondo procedure
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all help to confirm the movement’s humorous namesake. The movement begins with a ppp
statement of the melody in the tenor saxophone part over the first sixteen measures – the first
two phrases. The ensemble sonority is kept light, with few sustained notes to detract attention
from the tenor saxophone part’s melodic statements in its middle register. With a molto
crescendo before rehearsal 21, the soprano saxophone takes up the melody and the rest of the
ensemble is instructed to play at forte and fortissimo dynamics. The articulation in the baritone
saxophone part becomes more pointed at rehearsal 21, and the tenor and alto saxophone parts are
given occasional slurs crossing bar lines to yield a more sustained nature to the sonority.
The primary rondo melody has a graceful and lively scherzo dance feel. In the soprano
saxophonist’s presentation of the theme at rehearsal 21, the melodic pitches and contours remain
the same. Nonetheless, Françaix alters some of the slurred articulations from the original tenor
solo to articulated notes in the soprano saxophone solo. Beginning with the eighth measure of
rehearsal 21, Françaix again changes the articulation in the soprano saxophone part to more
Rhythmically, the drive of the opening theme is based on a simple dance rhythm in 3/8
meter. Even so, Françaix creates moments of unique effect by adding sixteenth notes to the
accompanimental soprano saxophone part. In the first, fifth, and eighth measures, as the tenor
saxophone part rests on the second eighth note of the measure, the soprano saxophone part
contains sixteenth notes to fill up the rest. At rehearsal 21, Françaix uses the lower voices to fill
in rests, as he did with the soprano saxophone part in the previous phrases. This time, however,
Françaix does so with a subtle syncopation. In the first measure of the phrase at rehearsal 21, the
alto and tenor saxophone parts enter on the second eighth note of the measure, and sustain for
three eighth notes across the bar line, moving again on the second eighth of the next measure. A
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hemiola is first presented here in the baritone saxophone part, where Françaix calls for the
instrument on every other eighth note of the first six measures of the phrase. In the fifth and sixth
measures of rehearsal 21, the tenor saxophone part contains marked duplets within each measure.
These subtle syncopations and duple meter will play a much larger role as the movement
unfolds.
The third movement of the Petit Quatuor is harmonically stable to rehearsal 22. Each
eight-measure phrase cadences on a B-flat-major tonic triad. However, this firm grounding in B-
flat major will soon be disrupted by the instability of the secondary rondo theme.
Secondary Rondo Theme and Further Development – Rehearsal 22 to eight measures after
Rehearsal 24
After sixteen measures of a loud dynamic, the group once again drops to a piano dynamic
at rehearsal 22 with new syncopated motives being presented in the alto and soprano saxophone
parts. It is of great interest to note the performance instruction slap jusqu’à – or “slap-tongue”
articulation – at rehearsal 22. This performance instruction, along with the heightened
syncopation and quiet dynamic, distinguish this secondary theme from the primary rondo theme.
Five measures after rehearsal 22, the soprano saxophone leads a four-measure crescendo in the
ensemble, decorating the line with sustained ascending trills in hemiola rhythm that climax at a
forte dynamic five measures before rehearsal 23. The next two entrances in the soprano
saxophone part in the first and third measures before rehearsal 23 are written with a further
increasing of dynamic to fff. As opposed to the clear melody of the primary rondo theme, rhythm
now overtakes melody as the primary musical focus. This hemiola theme will return throughout
the movement, playing a vital role in balancing the statements of the primary rondo theme.
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Four measures before rehearsal 23, an abrupt thinning of the sonority combined with the
grace notes may result in a moment of surprise and bewilderment for the listener. To which
phrase does this four-measure statement belong? The solution is realized when Françaix
immediately returns the ensemble to a pianissimo dynamic in an answer that completes an eight-
measure phrase. As in the ending of the eight-measure phrase at rehearsal 22, Françaix writes a
crescendo and climaxes on a fortissimo minor sonority at the end of the fourth measure of eighth
The rhythmic confusion of the phrase beginning four measures before rehearsal 23 once
again showcases a quirky sense of humor from Françaix. At rehearsal 23, the rhythm becomes
clearer than in the four measures proceeding, yet still maintains the hemiola feel of the previous
phrases in both accompaniment as well as the soprano saxophone’s lead. By this point in the
movement, Françaix has begun a brief tonal shift away from B-flat major; the measure before
rehearsal 23 cadences on a G-flat-major triad in first inversion. The downbeat of the fifth
measure after rehearsal 23 arrives on an A-flat-minor triad with the addition of a D-flat3 in the
Over the next three phrases beginning in the fifth measure of rehearsal 23, Françaix
continues to score with a lighter sonority. Rarely does anything happen other than a melody with
a sparse accompaniment, and only once does the ensemble rise over a piano dynamic, notably at
the melodic statement in the tenor saxophone part five measures before rehearsal 24. Five
measures after rehearsal 23, Françaix also introduces new rhythmic interest – thirty-second notes
on the second eighth note of the first measure of the phrase in alto and soprano saxophone parts,
and sixteenth notes in the alto saxophone part beginning in the fifth measure of the phrase. The
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next phrase, eight measures before 24, begins again with the thirty-second notes in the upper two
voices. Françaix returns here to a more straightforward triple division in all the voices. Though
Françaix has spent some of this section of the movement avoiding the B-flat tonic, he begins
here to make his way back to the home key. The cadence in the measure before rehearsal 24
returns to a G-flat-major triad. The final resolution of the eighth measure of rehearsal 24 resolves
Restatement of Rondo Themes: Nine measures after rehearsal 24 to the fermata 16 measures
after Rehearsal 29
Nine measures after rehearsal 24, Françaix reintroduces the primary rondo theme in its
original pianissimo form with the melody in the tenor saxophone part. Nonetheless, instead of
recomposing the forte soprano saxophone solo from rehearsal 21, he uses the two measures
before rehearsal 25 to write an ascending duet in the soprano and alto saxophone parts that
moves to a new theme at rehearsal 25. Though marked mezzo forte in the upper two voices, the
sonority at rehearsal 25 is lightened by the initial absence of a bass voice, as well as a high-
register espressivo line in the tenor saxophone part. At the end of this phrase in the measure
before rehearsal 26, the upper two voices resolve downwards to F4 and B-flat4, creating an open
At rehearsal 26, Françaix returns to the main theme, now in minor mode, and
immediately sets up a foreshadowing of the structural dissolution that will occur at the end of the
piece. The original fifteen-measure tenor saxophone solo from the movement’s opening is now
abridged to twelve measures, achieved by the removal of every fourth measure of the opening
phrase. This results in an overall sound that temporarily causes the listener to hear four three-
measure units instead of the usual four-measure sub-phrases. The phrase beginning eight
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measures before rehearsal 27 is a repetition of the secondary rondo theme, originally heard at
rehearsal 22 at its original tonal level. The following phrase, beginning at rehearsal 27, is an
At rehearsal 28, Françaix continues the idea of hemiola across the ensemble, but with
tutta forza marked. He now adds (comme un trombone!) to the tenor and baritone saxophone
parts, creating a heavy sonority in the ensemble. Beginning in the third measure of rehearsal 29,
Françaix returns to a relatively straightforward homophonic texture with all four voices playing
notes in a clear 3/8 meter. At the accelerando six measures before the a tempo, the entire
ensemble plays a set of eight homorhythmic eighth-note attacks, interspersed with seven eighth-
note rests, ending with the fermata measure rest before the a tempo.
Regarding the harmonic development of this section, Françaix immediately jumps back
into tonal development after the restatement of the main theme before rehearsal 25, moving
quickly in and out of B-flat by use of chromatic inflection. He composes a harmonic shift from
the G-diminished closing of the measure before rehearsal 27 to an A-minor cadence in the
measure before rehearsal 28. Through the tutta forza section beginning at rehearsal 28, the
tonality gravitates further away from B-flat major, eventually moving to a series of unison or
octave-displaced tones in the accelerando after rehearsal 29. Before the fermata, Françaix ends
on a D-flat scored in by octaves throughout all four saxophone parts, implying in his harmonic
Rondo Restatement, Dissolution, and Ending: a tempo before rehearsal 30 to end of movement
At the a tempo after rehearsal 29, Françaix gives us the last presentation of the main
rondo theme. The next thirty-two measures, to rehearsal 31, are a repeat of the opening of the
movement. The rhythm continues to parallel the material from beginning of the movement to
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rehearsal 23 with the analogous material from the fermata to the measure before rehearsal 32. At
rehearsal 31, there is a restatement of the secondary rondo theme, with the tonal focus changed to
allow a more closely related harmony than the corresponding section in the beginning. As
opposed to the corresponding material at rehearsal 22, which moves toward A-flat minor at
rehearsal 23, the cadence before 32 moves toward G in the next slap-tongue section.
By rehearsal 32 the phrases are becoming shorter and are changing melodically and
harmonically more frequently than earlier in the movement. Melodically, at rehearsal 32, the
baritone saxophone provides interest, alternating back and forth in hemiola between G3 and D3.
Considering the shorter phrases and melodic growth, the four measures before rehearsal 33
function as a transition, with the soprano saxophone part containing short repeated notes.
Two four-measure phrases introduce rehearsal 33 as the beginning of formal and melodic
dissolution. At rehearsal 33, the soprano saxophone part contains a one-measure chromatic scale
introducing the last bits of solo melody in the ensemble. Starting with the second measure of
rehearsal 33 there is a two-measure set of eighth notes in the soprano saxophone part and a one-
measure response in the tenor saxophone part. Following these statements, there is a sudden
transition into a hemiola that obscures rhythm and meter. By rehearsal 34, melodic development
gives way to metric obscurity. This obscurity ends unexpectedly four measures before rehearsal
35, where Françaix provides brief solo statements in the lower three voices – a notable contrast
It is significant that although form and phrasing are blurred in the measures after
rehearsal 33, tonality is gradually becoming clearer. Downbeats of the second and third measures
respectively. On the second eighth note of four measures before rehearsal 34, the three upper
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voices spell G-sharp 4-B4-C-sharp5, a G-sharp minor sonority with an added fourth. The next
measures move through G-sharp minor, and eventually resolve into C minor seventh chords at
rehearsal 34 and the following measure. A G minor seventh chord is heard on the second beat of
the third measure and through the next measure, as well. At this point Françaix has returned to a
Four measures before rehearsal 35, Françaix composes a two-measure trill for the
baritone saxophone, following the trill with a decorated G-major arpeggio in both the tenor and
alto saxophone parts that set up the two-measure chromatic flourish which signals the final
cadence of the piece. The lone trill in the baritone saxophone part three and four measures before
rehearsal 35 sounds rhythmically static in relation to the entire ensemble’s hemiola effect of the
previous measures. The tenor and alto saxophone figures following the resolution of the trill are
interrupted by short fermatas over rests – bringing the rhythmic tension of the movement to a
climax. At rehearsal 35, homorhythm across the ensemble returns for one last chromatic flourish
in all four saxophone parts, increasing in dynamic intensity from pianissimo to fortissimo.
Françaix confirms the comique aspect of this movement again by dropping the dynamic back to
At the ending, Françaix uses his last chance to exploit chordal relationships based on
thirds; the movement ends with a flourish of homophonic chromatic scales in sixteenth-note
enharmonically), E major-minor seventh. This circle of thirds finally winds its way out to a G
minor seventh chord in the penultimate measure. The final cadence resolves to a second
inversion B-flat-major triad on the last eighth-note of the concluding measure. Though not a
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strong cadence in traditional harmony, it works well as an ending for this comical work by a
At the beginning of the Serenade comique, it is important for the performer to realize that
the soprano saxophone part is not foreground melodic material. All four saxophone parts are
marked with the same dynamic, and the projecting timbral nature of the soprano saxophone
necessitates that the performer make every effort to be subservient to the melody in the tenor
saxophone part. Nevertheless, it is equally important for the soprano saxophone part to be heard,
since the occasional sixteenth-note rhythms are of a high degree of textural interest. Beginning
two measures before rehearsal 21, the performer may play soloistically since Françaix has now
At rehearsal 22, all four saxophones are marked “Slap jusqu’à” – slap-tongue
articulation. It is difficult to ascertain what Françaix intended from Mule’s quartet in these
sections. Recordings of groups playing this movement do not reveal any specialized articulation
here.12 In most modern recordings, many saxophone quartets treat this as a very short articulation
instead of a slap tongue. Live performance execution of this direction may vary with different
ensemble interpretations. Perhaps Françaix’s main point here was to propose that the slap tongue
is supposed to emulate a string pizzicato. Later in the movement, he has given special instruction
for lower voices to play “(comme un trombone!).” With this instruction at rehearsal 28, the idea
that Françaix is explicitly writing for this new unfamiliar ensemble to emulate other instruments
is clearly established, so perhaps his intention here may be to emulate string instruments.
12
The most authoritative recording is that by Marcel Mule’s Quatuor itself, available on Steve Cottrell’s
compilation The History of the Saxophone. The recording of the Petit Quatuor by Quatuor Deffayet, led by Mule’s
direct successor at the Conservatoire Daniel Deffayet, also reveals no special articulation.
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As rehearsal 22 continues, the soprano saxophone part remains in the foreground. The
half-step trills five measures after rehearsal 22 require a precision of timing as well as an
efficient finger motion to execute the hemiola Françaix has written. In the measures before
rehearsal 23, the performer may play with full volume on the ascending grace notes, but must be
prepared to immediately come back down in dynamic for the sudden pianissimo at rehearsal 23.
The measures between rehearsal 23 and 24 are filled with sporadic entrances for the
soprano saxophonist; however, a leggiero solo returns four measures before rehearsal 24. Here,
the soprano saxophone part is written piano, but the remainder of the ensemble provides a
pianissimo accompaniment to assist in the soprano saxophone’s projection. The espressivo solo
in the first four measures of rehearsal 24 must be played in stark contrast; here, Françaix has
At rehearsal 25, Françaix has the soprano and alto saxophonists play a homophonic
accompaniment to the tenor saxophone part. Because of the higher tessitura of the instrument,
the performer must be very careful to appropriately balance the espressivo tenor saxophone part
In the four measures before rehearsal 28, the soprano saxophonist is responsible for
leading the transition into the tutta forza section in the measures to come by playing chromatic
sixteenth-note triplets on the second beat of each measure. Fingerings using side C4 and
chromatic F-sharp5 are highly recommended for smoothness of execution. Timing must be
accurate so as to coordinate with the alto saxophonist, who is playing only on the second eighth
end of the movement. In the fifth measure of rehearsal 31, the soprano saxophonist must
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accurately execute the trill with a very specific sffppp articulation. Three measures before
rehearsal 32, Françaix revisits his earlier idea of ascending grace notes in the soprano saxophone
part. This time, Françaix writes for the soprano saxophonist to play the first fortissimo and the
second at pianissimo – in both cases the same pitches, but a thoroughly different sound.
At rehearsal 34, Françaix writes an interesting instruction in the soprano saxophone part –
en dehors le plus possible. Though the dynamic here is ppp across the three top voices and forte
in the baritone saxophone part, Françaix still wishes the soprano saxophonist to be heard. The
written A4 in the soprano saxophone part is approaching the middle register, making for an
triplets. Here, the soprano saxophonist must be precise with the downbeat cue given to the rest of
the ensemble. Additionally, the placement of the second eighth note in the penultimate measure –
again at a pianissimo dynamic – is dependent upon the accuracy of the lead player. Finally, the
soprano saxophonist, along with the baritone saxophonist, plays on the last downbeat. The
soprano saxophonist should ensure that written E6 still maintains the pianissimo dynamic
Though the tenor saxophone part should take the foreground in the beginning, all voices,
and perhaps most of all the soprano and alto saxophones, add to the quiet flurry of activity in the
opening before rehearsal 21. Each non-downbeat articulation should be clear and accurate,
especially those entrances on the second eighth note of a measure. Five measures before
rehearsal 21, Françaix scores a written low B3 for the alto saxophone part on the second eighth
note of the measure. This note belongs less to an alto voice than to a tenor, yet the tenor
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saxophonist is playing the main melodic role here. Regardless, the alto saxophonist must ensure
the response of this note to support the sonority. At rehearsal 21, the alto saxophone and tenor
saxophone parts become more of an accompaniment to the soprano saxophone part, initially
sustaining syncopated longer note values under the dance-like soprano solo. By the fourth
measure, the alto saxophonist is playing constant leggiero eighth notes under the soprano
saxophone line to propel the rhythmic drive along. In the eight measures before rehearsal 22,
syncopated entrances in the alto saxophone part confuse the rhythmic drive, thereby preparing
As mentioned in the soprano saxophone performance guide, the slap jusqu’à articulation
is open to interpretation. Perhaps this section is best felt as an emulation of a pizzicato string
section rather than a percussive articulation. Regardless, the rhythmic dexterity of the ensemble
Beginning in the eighth measure of rehearsal 23, the alto saxophonist has a brief solo.
Though marked pianissimo, the performer may play these measures a little more soloistically. It
is important to note that until now the soprano saxophone part has been the only voice with a
sixteenth-note subdivision of the dotted quarter-note beat, and the previous occurrence was heard
before rehearsal 21. Because of the higher tessitura of the instrument and rhythmic distinction of
the part, the alto saxophonist must maintain an appropriate balance with the pianissimo of other
lines.
As themes recur, many of the same performance considerations carry forward. However,
by rehearsal 28, Françaix has begun to set up a formal dissolution, marking all voices tutta forza.
In the first measure of rehearsal 29, the alto saxophonist takes over a sixteenth-note triplet
rhythm from the tenor saxophonist. Though the triplets – written E5-F-sharp5-A5 leading to C-
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sharp6 – are technically idiomatic, the alto saxophonist must place the timing of these notes
impeccably. On top of the rhythmic challenge, the tenor saxophonist’s written A5 is to be played
at the same time as the alto saxophonist’s written E5; both written pitches sound a G4, but the
written E5 tends to be a sharp note on many alto saxophones. To match pitch, the alto
saxophonist may wish to begin the triplets with the low B or low B-flat key pressed to lower the
pitch to match the more stable intonation of the note played by the tenor saxophonist.
Near the end of the movement, one measure before rehearsal 35, the alto saxophonist
briefly reprises the sixteenth-note triplet rhythmic motive. Here, the alto saxophonist takes over
the rhythm from the tenor saxophonist in the previous measure. The tenor saxophone part is
marked piano with a crescendo two measures before rehearsal 35. Though the alto saxophonist
begins with a mezzo forte, the sound of the ensemble soloists should be related – that is to say,
the alto saxophonist should relate to the dynamic level the tenor saxophonist has established.
Considering both statements end with a fermata rest, the performer should not feel compelled to
cue the measure. Nevertheless, it is important for the alto saxophonist to continue the crescendo
to the release point on the written G-sharp5, perhaps even swelling as loud as a true forte. The
surprising ensemble pianissimo on the second eighth note of rehearsal 35 demands that the
performer facilitate this contrast by keeping the sound intense all the way in to the sec release.
At the outset of the movement, the tenor saxophone presents the primary rondo theme.
Though this is marked ppp, the tenor saxophonist must project while remaining within the
confines of the delicate dynamic level. To establish the style of the primary rondo theme, the
performer needs to strictly observe the accents Françaix has written on the third eighth note two
measures before rehearsal 20, and on the first note of sixteenth-note triplets on the downbeat
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three measures before rehearsal 21. It is with these triplets that the tenor saxophonist also
introduces an important stylistic characteristic of the movement – the frequent usage of triple
Four measures after rehearsal 21, Françaix writes two measures of duple measure
division in the tenor saxophone part. Though not marked with an accent or tenuto, the tenor
saxophonist may use a slight accent on each duple quarter note to ensure that the audience hears
the polyrhythm it creates. Seven measures before rehearsal 22, the tenor saxophone part
introduces another idea of rhythmic interest – a grace note on the second eighth note of the
measure. Françaix writes a sforzando for the tenor saxophone part, complete with an accent.
Since the alto saxophonist is also playing on the second eighth note of the measure, the tenor
saxophonist should execute the sforzando and accent literally to achieve its rhythmic effect.
At rehearsal 22, the tenor saxophone is the first instrument to play on the downbeat of the
slap jusqu’à section. The performer has the difficult role of changing articulation in an eighth
note’s time – Françaix writes a normally executed martellato articulation in the beat before
rehearsal 22. Regardless of the interpretation of the slap jusqu’à, the performer is responsible not
only for presenting this articulation, but also for creating the change of dynamic between the
Eight measures before rehearsal 24, Françaix writes another brief solo in the tenor
saxophone part. Though not marked with any special indication, the tenor saxophonist is the only
member of the ensemble to play in measures two and four of this brief solo, and is again
responsible for a significant dynamic contrast. Beginning on written E-flat4 in the eighth measure
before rehearsal 24, the tenor saxophone part is written with a crescendo to the downbeat of the
next measure, and then a third measure crescendo to forte on the downbeat of the fourth measure
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of the solo. In the fourth measure, Françaix scores a descending arpeggio from written C-sharp5-
A4-E4. Though the melody is descending, the performer must not taper the dynamic level here so
as to ensure the surprising piano contrast four measures before rehearsal 24.
At rehearsal 25, Françaix writes a mezzo forte espressivo line in the tenor saxophone part.
Though the alto and soprano saxophonists start this section with higher register staccato eighth
notes, Françaix intends for the tenor saxophonist to present a more lyrical countermelody that
extends into the downbeat of three measures before rehearsal 26. The performer must balance the
short melody to the higher-pitched saxophonists; likewise, performers of the higher two parts
At rehearsal 28, Françaix writes a tutta forza for the ensemble. In the lower voices, he
also includes the direction “(comme un trombone!).” What does Françaix mean by this?
Appropriately, he writes all four voices with accents, but the type differs from low to high. The
tenor and baritone saxophone parts are marked with articulated accents (>), while the upper two
saxophone parts are written with both martellato accents and staccato marks. Here, it is clear
that Françaix wants a brass-like sound from the tenor and baritone saxophones; a heavy
By the downbeat of rehearsal 29, the baritone and tenor saxophonists complete their
trombone simulation. Immediately following the written A4 downbeat in the tenor saxophone
part, Françaix writes a sixteenth-note triplet. Here, as with the alto saxophonist later in the
measure, rhythmic precision is vital, as is the growth of the dynamic level by way of a
crescendo.
At rehearsal 33, the soprano saxophonist plays a brief three-measure solo. In the fourth
measure, the tenor saxophonist takes over, now with a mezzo forte dynamic and slap-tongue
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articulation. Two measures before rehearsal 34, Françaix again writes for the tenor saxophonist
to lead the ensemble dynamic back to pianissimo. These directions are challenging for a
saxophonist who has been slap tonguing at a louder dynamic, and is asked to execute the new
At rehearsal 34, Françaix writes four measures of straight eighth notes in the tenor
saxophone part. Timing must be accurate to allow a clear foundation for the other three
instrumentalists, who play on every other eighth note, resulting in a hemiola. Initially, it may
seem that the tenor saxophonist is playing in a clear 3/8 while the others are presenting hemiola.
Nevertheless, a more careful examination of the tenor saxophone part reveals groupings of
ascending paired eighth notes. For example, the first two measures of the tenor saxophone part
are written C5-D5-G4, D5-C5-D5 eighth notes. Whether the tenor saxophonist chooses to accent
the lower or the higher note of each pair, it seems that Françaix has decided that melodic
Two measures before rehearsal 35, the tenor saxophone part contains sixteenth-note
triplets after a trill in the baritone saxophone part. It is vital that the tenor saxophonist begin at a
quiet dynamic and execute a crescendo to a mezzo forte – the level at which the alto saxophonist
begins in the next measure. To execute a continuing crescendo, the sec release Françaix writes in
the tenor saxophone part must be dry and without decay or taper. The next entrance on the
second eighth note should be cued clearly by the baritone saxophonist, whose role is discussed
next.
As stated throughout the course of this chapter, Françaix assigns the baritone saxophone
part the role of providing the bass line in the quartet. Nevertheless, consistent with his
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compositional style in the works studied, Françaix always manages to give each performer
something engaging to present. At rehearsal 21, Françaix switches from the soft dynamic of the
introduction to a loud dynamic – it is in the baritone saxophone and soprano saxophone parts that
this is the most obvious, writing a fortissimo subito and a crescendo molto to fortissimo for each
part respectively. He has the baritone saxophonist play a six-measure hemiola under the melody
in the soprano saxophone part. This rhythm, brought out by martellato accents and staccato
markings, should be projected clearly by the performer. A similar hemiola appears in the five
measures before rehearsal 22 with sustained notes in the baritone saxophone part. The performer
must differentiate between the eighth-note martellato articulations and the longer, accented
Because of the larger size of the baritone saxophone mouthpiece and reed, it may be
easier at rehearsal 22 to present an idiomatic “slap tongue.” Nevertheless, the ensemble’s overall
interpretation and presentation of the articulation style here should be uniform; if anything, the
baritone saxophonist must be given the responsibility of having the most sonorous articulation
style.
In the eighth-note pickup to the fifth measure of rehearsal 24, the baritone saxophonist is
given a short lyrical line of moving eighth notes. Françaix has specified un peu en dehors here,
so the performer clearly knows that the line is to be brought to the fore. As the soprano
saxophonist played a similar solo four measures before, the baritone saxophonist must emulate
the established style. Nevertheless, Françaix’s marking of the crescendi and diminuendi in these
soli reveal that the phrase direction of each is different. Whereas the soprano saxophonist’s solo
is two sets of two measures, the baritone saxophonist’s solo is a four-measure phrase including a
three-note crescendo through written D5 followed by a three-note diminuendo from written F#5.
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This may seem a minor point, but this melodic difference brings out an intelligent aspect of
ensemble.
Five measures before rehearsal 26, the baritone saxophonist is given a short espressivo
line. The fact that it is only two measures long may seem to diminish the importance of this
motive. Nevertheless, what Françaix has done here is begin an espressivo sustained line at
rehearsal 25 in the tenor saxophone part, only to hand it off to the baritone saxophonist four
measures later. Here, the performer is advised to listen to the tenor saxophonist for vibrato and
shaping ideas.
At rehearsal 28, the composer writes a tutta forza (comme un trombone!) indication in the
lowest two voices. As with the tenor saxophonist, the performer must be observant of the
difference between full-length accents and the short martellato accents of the upper two voices.
Especially due to the baritone saxophone’s size and resonant sound, attention to a more sustained
At rehearsal 32, Françaix composes a hemiola throughout the ensemble, made even
clearer by the baritone saxophonist’s sustained notes. Here, though the part is marked ppp, the
dolcissimo style marking infers the importance Françaix has placed on this bass line. To counter
the upper three voices’ short homorhythmic eighth notes, the baritone saxophonist may wish to
play out a little over the ppp dynamic, yet retaining the sweetness called for by Françaix. In the
fifth measure of rehearsal 32, Françaix scores the baritone saxophone part descending to written
low B-flat3 on downbeats with slap-tongue articulation. Here it seems that Françaix wanted an
emulation of a low string pizzicato – though marked with a staccato, the performer should
Françaix, having demonstrated a keen sense of humor throughout the Petit Quatuor, ends
the piece with the same sense of surprise and denial of expectation. At rehearsal 34, the baritone
saxophone part is marked with slap-tongue articulations at forte – while the rest of the ensemble
is marked ppp. The soprano saxophone part is actually marked en dehors le plus possible – to the
fore as much as possible. Françaix’s musical goal here is to set up the sforzando pianissimo trill
in the baritone saxophone part four measures before rehearsal 35. This trill must be prepared
energetically, and the sforzando pianissimo must be over-exaggerated to achieve the effect
Françaix desires here. Strangely, Françaix writes what appears to be a grace note at the end of
the trill. This grace note likely signifies that the trill is to stop on written D5 instead of E5.
The last two measures of the piece have the baritone saxophonist articulating more eighth
notes than any of the other saxophonists. In the penultimate measure, Françaix has the performer
articulate on both the second and third eighth note of the measure – something no other
saxophonist does. To place these accurately, the soprano saxophonist must be precise with
cueing to ensure that the baritone saxophonist arrives on the downbeat of the final measure. As a
reminder, the peak of the crescendo is the last sixteenth-note triplet three measures from the end;
the dynamic contrast from fortissimo to pianissimo on the penultimate measure must be executed
flawlessly. This is an exciting and jovial ending, but one that demands the highest level of timing
CHAPTER 4
ANALYTICAL PERSPECTIVE
Analyses and comparisons of the two works in this study are approached according to the
guidelines outlined in Jan LaRue’s 2001 article “Fundamental Considerations in Style Analysis”
in which Sound, Harmony, Melody, Rhythm and Growth are each examined.
Sound
Choice of Instrumentation
The Quatuor of 1933 and the Petit Quatuor of 1935 offer interesting aspects upon
analysis. Each ensemble consists of a logical grouping of instruments according to early twenty-
first century standards; however, Jean Françaix was one of the first composers to group these two
quartets in their now-familiar instrumentation. As noted in Chapter 2, the woodwind quintet has
been a standard ensemble since the early nineteenth century. Nevertheless, the genre fell out of
vogue in the latter half of the century, and did not come back into compositional fashion until the
1920s. The idea of writing for only the four orchestral woodwind instruments was even less
explored by composers, with only a few pieces existing for the woodwind quartet before
Françaix’s Quatuor.
As with the woodwind quartet, few composers had written for the soprano-alto-tenor-
baritone saxophone quartet before Françaix. The Petit Quatuor, as well as several other
examples of the saxophone quartet literature of the time, have a common dedicatee – Le Quatuor
de la Garde Republicaine, founded in 1928 by Marcel Mule and members of the band of the
French Republican Guard. Mule’s Quartet has been widely accepted in the saxophone world as
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standardizing the current instrumentation of the saxophone quartet. It is also important to note
that in 1935, by composing for a quartet of saxophones, Françaix was writing for an ensemble
that lacked establishment in the realm of art music – it is a lasting testament to Françaix’s
distinct compositional style that the piece has become a standard in the literature studied by
saxophonists worldwide.
In the Quatuor, Françaix deals with four instruments that have characteristically been
grouped together in wind quintets and orchestral wind sections, yet have four independent voices
and ranges. This instrumentation yields over a five octave range of pitches. Françaix keeps the
tonal spectrum as open as any other composer before him – he writes across nearly the entirety
of the traditional ranges for the flute and oboe: B3-C7 and B-flat3-G6 respectively. For the
bassoon part, he writes a three octave chromatic range from B-flat1-B-flat4. The clarinet part in
the quartet is the only part with a noticeably limited range; Françaix writes from the lowest
Other than the noticeable lack of altissimo clarinet writing, Françaix utilizes all of the
other woodwind instruments’ wide range of pitches. He commonly writes for the flute part to
ascend to its highest C7, and is encouraging of the lowest register with the flute’s lowest C4
frequently appearing. The pitch B3 is only called for twice in the work – both instances occurring
at the ending of the first movement in a piano dynamic. The oboe part is written to descend into
its lowest register, with B3’s and B-flat3’s used in both solo sections and sections where the reedy
timbre is appropriate – for example, the tonally peculiar accompaniment in the Andante con moto
before rehearsal 8 of the first movement. Françaix writes up to D6 relatively frequently, but
challenges the oboist by writing as high as G6 in a high-register melodic statement after rehearsal
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4 in the final movement. As mentioned above, Françaix rarely scores above a written C6 for the
clarinet part, but fully exploits its lowest register, commonly writing as low as written E3. The
composer fully exploits the bassoon’s characteristic sonorous bass voice, writing as low as C2
regularly throughout the Quatuor. Françaix saves the lowest two pitches on the bassoon, B1 and
B-flat1, for special effect – most notably in the duet in the clarinet and bassoon part before
rehearsal 8 in the Allegro molto, the humorous seven-measure phrase section at rehearsal 16 in
the same movement, and the quiet transitional section at rehearsal 5 in the Allegro vivo. The
bassoon part is frequently written in the instrument’s high tenor register as well: A-flat4’s and
A4’s are quite common, but B-flat4 occurs only once in an en dehors section of the final
movement.
As will be seen in the middle slow movement of the Petit Quatuor Françaix’s tonal
coloration of the slow movement of the Quatuor of 1933 makes for a valuable point of discourse.
In slow movements from both of these early quartets, the range of the instruments has been
extremely limited – with one notable exception. The flute part is written in the instrument’s dark
low register, and never ascends even as high as A5 until the final cadence. The oboe part’s
highest pitch is a G5, with its lowest being an E4. The clarinet part abandons the instrument’s
dark lowest register to descend only to written C-sharp4, and is even further restricted in its
ascent – only to a written E5. The bassoon part is the notable exception to these restrictions. The
characteristic tender, rounded tone in all registers of the bassoon enables Françaix to compose as
high as a tenor G4, and as low as the lowest B-flat1 on the instrument – both of these extremes
come within two measures of each other during the bassoon solo in the middle section of the
movement.
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Unlike the differing timbres found in the woodwind quartet, one of the striking features
of the traditional saxophone quartet is its homogenous blending of sounds – four saxophones,
like the four homogenous instruments of a string quartet, blend extraordinarily well in the hands
of a sensitive ensemble and under the pen of a skilled composer and orchestrator. Each of the
four saxophones at the time the Petit Quatuor was composed had a written range of B-flat3 to F6.
Taking this into consideration, Françaix had a working range of just over four octaves--the
lowest written B-flat3 in the baritone saxophone part sounding a D-flat2 below the bass clef staff,
to the highest written F6 in the soprano saxophone part sounding an E-flat6 three ledger lines
above the treble clef. In the Petit Quatuor, Françaix usually writes within a limited range – and
only infrequently exploits the instruments individually or as an ensemble to the full capacity of
their range. With the exception of the baritone saxophone part, the instruments rarely descend
below written D4 – a major third above the lowest possible pitch. When the instruments do
descend into the lower register, it is almost always in a solo context. The soprano saxophone part
never descends below written D4 except for a solo chromatic scale in the opening theme of the
final movement where written C4 and C-sharp4 are scored. The alto saxophone part rarely
descends below written D4 except in the same opening theme of the third movement –
descending to written B3 only to cover the lower register of the ensemble because the tenor
saxophone part contains melodic material in the middle register of the instrument. The tenor
saxophone part only descends as low as written C4 once, in a brief solo at the ending of the first
movement. Françaix sparingly uses the baritone saxophone’s lowest register, usually for
important structural or sonic effect: he scores a written B-flat3 at the close of the development
section of the first movement ten measures before rehearsal 11. He uses written C4 and B-flat3
more frequently in the second movement to enhance the darkened tessitura of the ensemble, and
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written C-sharp4, B3, and B-flat3 in the closing of the phrase after rehearsal 32 – incidentally
setting up the formal and rhythmic dissolution at the ending of the third movement.
Excursions into the higher register are equally sparse in Françaix’s scoring for the
ensemble. The soprano saxophone part frequents as high as a written D6 or E-flat6, but ascends to
written E6 only twice in the work – one of these instances being the penultimate note of the piece
on the downbeat of the final measure. The alto saxophone part frequently ascends as high as
written D6, but ascends to written E-sharp6/F6 on a few rare occasions. The tenor saxophone part
is only rarely above a written C6, with a notable exception being an octave duet between the
soprano and tenor saxophone parts in the first movement at rehearsal 14, where Françaix requires
a written E6. The baritone saxophone part is as high as written D6 in the first movement, and
ascends to a written E-flat6 in the final movement – but on the whole, it is rare to find the
instrument scored above a written B5. The highest pitches called for serve an even more
distinctive function in the middle movement – the alto saxophone part only ascends as high as a
written A-flat5 once, and the tenor saxophone part is only written a whole-tone higher, both
timbres assisting in increasing the harmonic tension at the end of the B section. It is unusual to
find either instrument written higher than their respective written G5 above the staff in this
movement. The baritone saxophone part is only written to play as high as written D5 in the
middle of the staff. Considering this in combination with Françaix’s omission of the soprano
saxophone part in this movement, it seems that the composer’s intent is to express the mellow,
Instrumental Combinations
A common criticism of the popular wind quintet is its lack of homogeneity – however, it
is this absence of sameness between the voices by which its charm potentially arises. The same
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may be said for the woodwind quartet used in Françaix’s Quatuor. A homogenous blend of
sound may not be Françaix’s intent, therefore more flexibility can be taken with individual
timbral possibilities. For example, the flute’s three-octave plus range can be divided into several
unique registers: the lowest is the most difficult to project due to the instrument’s cylindrical
body, the middle is mellow but not without soloistic character, and the higher tones on the
instrument provide soloistic brilliance. Françaix employs his awareness of these possibilities,
composing for the lowest registers of the flute most often in accompanimental figures, and
The oboe tone can be approached with expectations of registral divisions as well: the
lowest is likely to be the least delicate, while the highest register may tend to lose the
characteristic sweetness of tone for which the double-reed is known. With this in mind, Françaix
usually chooses to write for the extreme low register with a humorous effect, and uses the
highest register in accompanimental passages at times when the flute is also in its most brilliant
high register. The dark timbre of the low clarinet is often used in accompanimental figures,
frequently filling out Alberti-bass figurations in tandem with the bassoon part. Françaix’s writing
for the bassoon part is perhaps the most unique as he uses the low register of the instrument to
fill out bass lines and outline harmonies, and uses the higher tenor registers for moments of
To examine questions of Françaix’s compositional choices in the Petit Quatuor, one must
consider the homogenous nature of the saxophone quartet. Françaix’s choices of avoiding the
extreme low registers of the soprano and alto saxophone parts may be explained simply: why
compose in low registers when lower-pitched instruments can play the same sounding pitches in
a more idiomatic register? The same may apply for Françaix’s avoidance of writing much
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material in the high register of the lower-pitched instruments. These choices seem apparent in the
second movement of the Petit Quatuor; here Françaix often avoids much more than a one-octave
upper range for each instrument to achieve a mellow, blend of sound from the saxophone trio.
Approaching the soprano and baritone saxophones from the idea of characteristic sound,
Françaix only rarely scores for the soprano saxophone part above a written D6, and only sparsely
for the baritone saxophone part below a written C4, avoiding extremes in favor of a more secure,
Because of inherent differences between the timbral spectrums of the woodwind quartet
and the saxophone quartet, it is challenging to approach these two pieces through a comparative
analysis of how Françaix manages certain instrumental groupings within each ensemble.
Nevertheless, there are specific similarities and differences to discuss between the works. In the
Quatuor, Françaix begins with an instrumental combination that he will revisit throughout the
work. In the exposition, the first theme is an alternation of sub-phrases between oboe and flute
parts. Here Françaix quickly establishes a practice of dividing the leading melody of a
homophonic texture between the two higher instruments. By doing so, he also implies an
interwoven relationship between the two – on many occasions throughout the piece, he will have
the two instruments playing a simultaneous lead. Françaix immediately delegates the bassoon
and clarinet parts to a supportive role. In the exposition, the bassoon part often includes accented
downbeats, followed by the clarinet part joining on unaccented beats. Françaix will frequently
revisit the practice of having the bassoon and clarinet parts in interwoven accompanimental
roles. When melodies – or at least points of soloistic exposure – are relegated to either the
clarinet or the bassoon parts, frequently the other is also involved. Perhaps the most memorable
example of this is in the introduction to the third movement, where the bassoon and clarinet parts
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set up the jocular nature of the movement with a short duet, which is reprised later in the
movement’s trio.
groupings in the Petit Quatuor. Only a few generalizations may be made in comparison with the
earlier Quatuor: soprano voices in each tend to carry the majority of the melodic material, and
the lowest voice in each is much less frequently exposed other than providing the vital, but more
harmonically structured, bass line. As evidenced in the beginning of the first movement of the
Petit Quatuor, Françaix often scores the soprano and alto saxophone parts with melodies
together in harmony. However, at times Françaix groups like-pitched saxophones together. After
rehearsal 1, for example, he scores a melodic homorhythm for the soprano and tenor saxophone
parts – both instruments pitched in B-flat– for the duration of the phrase. Françaix revisits the
relationship between these two instruments often – the alternating phrases at rehearsal 6, and the
thematic statement in the beginning of the third movement are prime examples. Françaix also
scores the alto and baritone saxophone parts together at times, though on significantly fewer
occasions. The two-measure duet between the two voices after rehearsal 14 in the first movement
Harmony
Françaix’s harmonic language seems rather straightforward for a listener in the early
twenty-first century. Considering that, at the time of Françaix’s composition of these two pieces,
composers in the Second Viennese School were experimenting with serialism, Françaix’s
Neoclassical compositional procedures reveals a sense of wit working around the limitations of a
One of Françaix’s style characteristics in both the Quatuor and the Petit Quatuor is to
delay establishing the tonic key, while still clearly writing with a certain tonal centricity in mind.
In the Allegro movement of the Quatuor, though the bassoon part outlines an F-major triad at the
outset, Françaix begins the piece with an aural centricity around C. Nonetheless, he never
establishes a clear C-major tonic triad until the last beat before rehearsal 1. Even though Françaix
finally presents a tonally closed cadence point, its traditional harmonic function is weakened by
the fact that it is in second inversion. Nevertheless, to the listener or performer, the C tonic is
clearly established.
The Petit Quatuor is equally witty harmonically. As Françaix opens the first movement
with a baritone saxophone solo, he momentarily challenges the firm B-flat grounding with the
addition of an F-sharp in the fourth measure. This pitch anticipates the momentary cadence on G,
the submediant, in the measure before rehearsal 1. Françaix presents another cadence point on C
in the beat before rehearsal 2, but returns to and reaffirms the B-flat tonality one beat before
rehearsal 3.
Françaix takes an interesting approach in his choice of tonalities for his slow movements
in the analyzed works. In the Quatuor Françaix uses relative modes. By beginning in A Dorian,
he revisits the centuries-old idea of major-minor key relationships, but with a distinctly twentieth
century spin. In this movement Françaix’s development of the modal relationship is taken quite
far over a short amount of time. Within the movement he manages to compose in not only the
opening A Dorian, but also A Mixolydian. In the Petit Quatuor Françaix retains the idea of a
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traditional major-minor relationship, but also uses the parallel natural minor – B-flat Aeolian. He
also expands the modal idea here by gravitating to B-flat Dorian in the middle section.
the traditional period of common practice. In the Quatuor the Allegro is in C major, the Andante
is in A Dorian, the Allegro molto is in G major, and the Allegro vivo returns to C major – stated
in terms of traditional functional harmony: tonic, a minor mode based on the submediant (which
may be considered similar to the relative minor), dominant, and tonic. In the Petit Quatuor, the
Gaguenardise is in B-flat major, the Cantilène is in B-flat Aeolian, and the Sérénade comique is
in B-flat major – according to functional harmony: tonic, parallel minor, and tonic.
Françaix departs from this practice in inner-movement relationships. With the exception of using
D major in the second section of a G major ternary form in the scherzo of the Allegro molto,
Françaix does not use the dominant as a structurally important tonal area within movements.
Nevertheless, he does exploit tertian relationships between key areas. In the Quatuor, Françaix’s
first theme of the Allegro is in C major. By way of a connecting bridge in E Phrygian, Françaix
achieves his secondary theme with an A centricity at rehearsal 2. The Andante con moto before
rehearsal 8 is firmly in A-flat: the lowered submediant of the tonic. The G major centricity of the
scherzo in the Allegro molto is balanced by the B-flat major centricity of its trio section.
Similar key relationships exist in the Petit Quatuor. The second theme of the exposition
of the Gaguenardise, first heard at rehearsal 5 in C, returns initially in B-flat when brought back
in the recapitulation at rehearsal 13. It then moves to the enharmonically spelled submediant, F-
sharp, shortly after rehearsal 14. Perhaps Françaix’s use of third relationships is never better
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exploited than in the Sérénade comique. His B-flat major primary theme of the rondo is
constantly embattled by a secondary theme, notable for its D-flat centricity, syncopation and
“Slap jusqu’à” markings. Furthermore, key relationships within certain chord progressions
reiterate Françaix’s penchant to move by thirds. For example, a series of motion in thirds occurs
in the chromatic scale at rehearsal 35, where Françaix writes an E minor seventh chord moving
to a G major-minor seventh chord, then to a B-flat major-minor seventh chord, then to a D-flat
sixteenth division of each eighth note – in other words, a chordal elaboration of the fully
Melody
Alongside his Neoclassical use of harmony and classic formal structures, Françaix is well
remembered for his pleasant melodies. But what of his treatment of melody in ensembles where
there are four possible melodic voices? The answer is, again, traditional at its roots. Françaix
tends to use the higher instruments in these ensembles as vehicles for melodic expression. As
such, it is appropriate to revisit the dedication of the Petit Quatuor to Marcel Mule’s Quartet.
Most of the melodic statements in the Petit Quatuor were originally played by Mule in the
soprano saxophone chair. In the first movement, the vast majority of phrases are carried
melodically by the soprano saxophone part. As may be expected from this, the baritone and tenor
saxophone parts contain mostly bass and accompanimental figures – with a few statements of
melody in the tenor saxophone voice. The alto saxophone part, though melodically important, is
usually scored under the soprano, yielding a more supportive role in the outer movements. An
interesting item to note in the first movement is its melodic flexibility in the development
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section, beginning at rehearsal 6. Throughout this section, Françaix tends to alternate between
the upper three voices when passing the melody. The noticeable exception is the baritone
saxophone, whose only melodic statements are in the movement’s introduction, and in the brief
restatement of the introduction in the last eight measures. As previously noted, the second
movement leaves the soprano saxophone part out entirely – here the alto saxophone part carries
the melody throughout. With the exception of a few moments of soloistic presence in the
baritone saxophone part and the statement of the opening theme in the tenor saxophone voice,
the final movement is a showcase for the soprano saxophonist, with the instrument often playing
grace-note, sixteenth-note, and sixteenth-note triplet flourishes as the other voices accompany.
It is not surprising to find that in his Quatuor of 1933, Françaix writes most melodic
material in the upper voices. It is possibly a little more surprising to find that in this piece,
Françaix is more dependent on the alto voice than in the Petit Quatuor. Even though the soloistic
brilliance of the flute part is something that is utilized often throughout, Françaix is at least
equally dependent upon the oboe part to convey melodic ideas. The first movement clearly
begins this trend by alternating sub-phrases within the initial statement between flute and oboe
parts. Françaix continues this throughout the movement, often trading off between the two
instruments every few bars. Even in the Andante con moto section, he states the first twelve
measures as a flute solo with accompaniment, but finishes out the section with the oboe part
containing an expressive solo under the flute part’s higher, but static tessitura. The second
movement of the Quatuor, like the slow movement of the Petit Quatuor, is primarily a solo for
the second instrument in score order, in this case the oboe. Notable exceptions to this include the
lovely four-measure tenor tessitura melody in the bassoon part at rehearsal 2, and its four-
measure answer in the clarinet part that make up the B section of the movement. In the third
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movement, Françaix again returns to the idea of alternating between oboe and flute parts, with
the dramatic ending of the trio at rehearsal 16 centering on the flute part with its B-flat6 and wide
pitch range in the ensemble creating a calliope effect. The Allegro vivo begins with the flute part
perhaps sounding more in the foreground due to its range, but has the oboe part in support of the
fast-paced sixteenth-note articulations note-for-note. The Pas lent near the end of the movement
returns to the idea of an expressive oboe solo, with the flute part, though higher pitched, in a
mellow accompaniment.
In regards to both instrumentation and melody, Françaix’s Quatuor and his Petit Quatuor
previously noted, the exposition of the first movement of the Quatuor has the oboe and flute
parts trading melodic material every other measure. Even though this is followed immediately by
prolonged melodic phrases in each of the respective instruments, Françaix often returns to the
idea of quickly shifting instrumental colors. For example, the development of the same
movement, beginning at rehearsal 6, shows the flute, oboe, and clarinet parts alternating two- and
four-measure melodies. In the beginning of the second movement the oboe part contains a two-
measure melody, with the flute and clarinet parts providing a melodic answer in the subsequent
measures. The middle section of the second movement at rehearsal 2 includes a bassoon solo
passed on to the clarinet part. The trio of the third movement reveals the same kind of alternation
of melodic interest, occasionally within the same measure – the combination of oboe and flute
parts at rehearsal 10 is the strongest example. The introduction of the fourth movement has a
Composed only two years later, the Petit Quatuor further heightens this idea of shifting
melodic color. The first four measures of the Gaguenardise, presented in the baritone saxophone
part, are answered in earnest in the soprano saxophone part. Nonetheless, within the same phrase,
there are many moments of shifting melodic interest – the dotted eighth-note, sixteenth-note
rhythm of the third measure before rehearsal 1 in the alto is immediately imitated in the tenor
saxophone part; the fourth measure of rehearsal 1 is carried by an exciting and agile series of
leaps in the baritone saxophone part. Four measures after rehearsal 4, the tenor saxophone part
answers the soprano saxophone melody with a seemingly unrelated series of eighth-note triplets.
The development of the first movement from rehearsal 6 to eight measures before rehearsal 11 is
Shape
In both the Quatuor and the later Petit Quatuor, Françaix shows an understanding of
melodic shape idiomatic to woodwind instruments. The Quatuor begins with a primarily
conjunct melody which is then followed by a much more angular melody of octave leaps four
measures before rehearsal 1. It seems that in this movement, though he prefers conjunct melody,
Françaix often interjects wide but idiomatic leaps to remind the listener that a woodwind
ensemble is performing. A good example of this idiomatic instrumental writing is the secondary
exposition theme at rehearsal 2, where Françaix scores the flute part in the instrument’s highest
register. For the most part, the melody is conjunct; nonetheless, leaps of a tritone and an octave
remind us of the flute’s agility. The second movement remains decidedly step-wise in its
contour, with the sole exception being the bassoon part’s wide leaps after rehearsal 2. The third
movement, for all of its scherzo-like qualities, retains the idea of largely conjunct melodies while
interjecting contrasting angular melodies at moments of tension. For example, the opening three
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notes of the final theme in the flute part at rehearsal 16 are each an octave apart. Even the hectic
melodic material of the fourth movement is largely conjunct – it is here that the rapid
articulations of the sixteenth notes display Françaix’s ability to write distinctly for a woodwind
ensemble.
songlike conjunct melodies, especially in the second movement and with the primary theme of
the third movement. The Gaguenardise, however, takes an unmistakably angular approach to its
melodic contour. From the initial leap of a major tenth, the audience hears the agility of the
saxophone quartet. Perhaps Françaix intended to present a motive outright that would catch an
audience’s attention, since at the time the saxophone was not widely considered to share a place
though the melodies become more lyrical, they are still defined by relatively large leaps of
fourths and fifths. The second movement, with its somber character, takes a more conjunct
approach to its melodies. The third movement is perhaps the embodiment of Françaix’s
dichotomy of contrasting conjunct and disjunct. The opening dance-like melody is conjunct –
almost like a folk tune. However, the second theme first presented at rehearsal 22 is quite
Rhythm
Overall, Françaix’s use of rhythm is uncomplicated. Throughout the duration of either the
Quatuor or the Petit Quatuor there are few rhythmic patterns more complex than a hemiola; no
subdivision of the beat is smaller than the occasional sixteenth-note triplet, thirty-second note
short scalar burst, or a grace note. Françaix’s use of rhythm, however, is one of the defining
stylistic means by which he creates a sense of contrast and musical tension. Simply stated,
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syncopation and adherence to a classical idea of metric stability are often heard as contrasting
forces. For example, the Allegro movement of the Quatuor presents a lively, sparkling
exposition. However, rhythmic syncopation is not an aspect that is heard until the development
begins at rehearsal 6. Here Françaix shifts the melody from voice to voice, accenting offbeats
and purposefully obscuring meter changes. Françaix often either syncopates rhythms, or causes
momentary metric confusion by way of hemiola to punctuate the ends of phrases or sections.
Allegro molto movement of the Quatuor. Here Françaix uses the hemiola to set up the conclusion
of the first section of the Allegro molto in preparation for the trio. In the Petit Quatuor Françaix
uses the hemiola effect to help pronounce the difference between the gigue-like primary theme of
Growth
In respect to overall form, the two pieces examined here have distinctive similarities as
well as differences. Both point to Françaix’s Neoclassical style of traditional form and
conservative tonality. The Quatuor of 1933 includes four movements: Allegro, Andante, Allegro
molto, and Allegro vivo. In contrast, note the number and title of movements of the Petit
Quatuor: Gaguenardise, Cantilène, and Sérénade comique. The printed Italian tempo markings
of movements in the Quatuor imply a strong connection to the Classical Era sonata. A brief
examination of the form of each movement reinforces this: the first movement is a hybrid of arch
form and rondo procedure with hints of sonata form, the second movement is a slow and lyrical
three-part ternary form, the third movement is a scherzo and trio, and the fourth movement
procedure. The Petit Quatuor may be likened to an even older form – the sonata da camera. The
programmatic titles, the antithesis of the Italian tempo markings, may allude to the sonata da
camera idea of dance suite movements being named explicitly instead of veiled by general style
or affect. Each movement of the Petit Quatuor has a dance-like feel, perhaps alluding to the
Allemande, Sarabande, and Gigue. Here too the form is traditional; the first movement is in
sonata form, the second is ternary, and the final movement uses rondo procedure.
Françaix’s use of traditional forms may correlate him with Classical composers like
Mozart and Haydn, but his distinct approach to the alteration of these forms ensures his place in
the Neoclassical canon of the first half of the twentieth century. As previously mentioned, the
first movement of the Quatuor is a hybrid between arch and rondo with elements of sonata form,
and the Petit Quatuor begins with an altered sonata form. In both pieces, Françaix establishes a
The A theme arrives outright in the Quatuor. Here, the main theme is established before
rehearsal 1, with a second inversion C-major triad as its cadence. At rehearsal 2, Françaix
introduces the B theme in A. Unlike a Classic sonata form, Françaix returns to the A theme at
rehearsal 5 in the theme’s original key. By doing this, he denies the tonal procedure of sonata
form and creates a hybrid of rondo and arch form – which will be further unveiled as the
The first movement exposition of the Petit Quatuor is equally of interest. Almost
immediately in the ensemble, the B-flat major tonality seemingly established in the first four
measures of the baritone saxophone part modulates toward G in the measure before rehearsal 1,
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toward C in the measure before rehearsal 2, but is resolved with the arrival of the theme-proper
at rehearsal 2. Françaix clearly states an opening a theme, but in retrospect opts to elaborate on it
before it was initially stated. After rehearsal 2, Françaix composes several transitional phrases,
chord on the downbeat – again, an inflection toward the submediant – but closing with a clear C-
major cadence. In the recapitulation the return of this material resolves, as expected, to B-flat.
introduces new melodies and remains in the C major tonality for three full phrases. However,
heightened chromatic alteration occurs at rehearsal 9: cadences in the fourth measure of rehearsal
9, in the measure before rehearsal 10, and in the measure before the a tempo seemingly are ever
more-distantly related to B-flat. Nevertheless, a linear cadence to the a tempo before rehearsal 11
Françaix’s earlier work, the Quatuor, takes more compositional liberty with the
development section. At rehearsal 6 a melody is introduced in the clarinet voice – this is the first
time in the quartet that the clarinet part has been heard as the melodic lead. The melody is
closely related to the opening theme, but with more continuous sixteenth-note motion. As the
section progresses, Françaix passes through several measures of three-four time, and adds a
rhythmic syncopation to the melody at rehearsal 7. He even includes an Andante con moto waltz-
like section in A-flat within the development. The Quatuor development closes with an E-flat
cadence in the measure before Tempo I subito: this approach will be explained in relation to the
recapitulation momentarily, but may be thought of as fulfilling the role of the dominant chord at
A Tempo I subito signals the return to the opening themes of the Quatuor – here Françaix
moves from the half cadence in A-flat of the development back into the B theme at rehearsal 9
by way of a chromatic ascending scale in the flute part. The A theme, first presented in the
opening of the movement, returns at rehearsal 12. This reversal of thematic statements further
The first movement recapitulation of the Petit Quatuor achieves the tonal resolution of
the sonata form, but is still stylistically distinctive in its treatment of compositional material.
Before rehearsal 11, Françaix returns to the A theme, originally stated at rehearsal 2, in the tonic
key of B-flat major. He repeats this again with more punctuated articulation in the next phrase.
The B theme, originally stated at rehearsal 5 in C, now begins in B-flat at rehearsal 13. By
returning to both themes in the movement’s tonic key, Françaix has managed to deliver the large-
For his slow inner movements of each quartet, Françaix chooses three-part forms. After a
brief introduction in the Petit Quatuor, Françaix composes a tonally closed section to constitute
his first A section. From rehearsal 16 to rehearsal 18, he modulates into less harmonically stable
territory, returning to the opening theme at rehearsal 18. In the Quatuor, Françaix modulates to C
by the ending of the first section – thus rendering the beginning tonally open. The middle
section, as with the Petit Quatuor, is less harmonically stable. Instead of returning to the melody
with C-sharp5 prominent in the oboe part. The slow movement of the Petit Quatuor is a
straightforward ternary form; however, the slow movement of the Quatuor more readily
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resembles a rounded binary form of ABA’, with the final A’ section being harmonically similar
Françaix chose either a literal rondo procedure or an allusion to the ritornello procedure
for the concluding movements of both quartets with various deviations from respective
traditional models. In the earlier work, a returning ritornello theme is rarely stated verbatim, but
often alluded to as a series of rhythmic repeating sixteenth notes. The rondo procedure of the
third movement of the Petit Quatuor more closely follows the traditional model than the
allusions to ritornello procedure found in the earlier Quatuor. In the Petit Quatuor, the main
theme is stated in the tenor saxophone voice then carried up an octave and played in the soprano
saxophone part. Through the course of the movement, Françaix regularly revisits the theme,
interjecting statements of new but closely related melodic material in between. Unlike the
Quatuor, Françaix here composes nearly verbatim repeats of the theme throughout, with only
minor – but very effective – variations. Regardless of how Françaix restates his themes in closing
movements, the listener is provided a motivic unification that further illuminates Françaix’s
CHAPTER 5
CONCLUSIONS
The two chamber works for woodwinds from 1933 and 1935 studied here include early
stylistic characteristics of Françaix’s career that helped establish his compositions among
standard chamber repertoire of the 20th and 21st centuries. In both the Quatuor and the Petit
well as in their respective settings – unfamiliar as they were at the time. In the Quatuor, Françaix
is especially sensitive to the particular timbres of instrument ranges – the projection issues of the
flute are always taken into careful consideration, the reedy timbre of the middle register oboe is
often exploited as a solo voice, the clarinet’s middle register is often exploited in solo sections
while its low register blends well for accompaniment, and the resonant low register of the
bassoon is used to provide a solid bass voice while its tenor tessitura is allowed to shine in
moments of pensive beauty. The writing in the Petit Quatuor is equally sensitive to the sounds of
each particular saxophone, as the extreme low and high registers of each instrument are often
avoided except in moments of particular musical tension and drama. Writing for a darkened
timbre in the second movement of the Quatuor and the Petit Quatuor indicates Françaix’s
sensitivity to instrumental tone color. Perhaps this compositional choice in 1933 foreshadowed
his omission of the soprano saxophone part from the second movement of the Petit Quatuor two
years later. The result is an unusual and interesting timbral contrast in the presentation of both
slow movements.
Françaix’s melodies in both pieces are memorable, often jocular, sometimes songlike, but
always thoroughly instrumental in their nature. It was perhaps through his training as a pianist
that Françaix became sensitive to this aspect of instrumental chamber music settings. Though
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Françaix writes idiomatically for each of his instruments in the two chamber pieces studied, he
never strays far from keeping his writing pianistic – or at least distinctively instrumental in the
combination of conjunct and disjunct writing. In these woodwind quartets of the 1930s, Françaix
rarely deviates far from the melodic hierarchy of allowing the soprano voice to carry the melody.
Nevertheless, he is sensitive to the fact that other instruments are at his disposal, occasionally
writing a statement of melodic interest in a voice other than soprano saxophone, alto saxophone,
Françaix’s conservative use of rhythm over the course of both works distinguishes his
style from many of his contemporaries, especially those composing outside of the Neoclassical
style. It may be this rhythmic drive that has allowed Françaix’s works to remain in the repertory
of chamber musicians. Unlike many of his contemporaries, Françaix manages to keep his music
rhythmically and metrically simple, yet always having a great deal of musical charm.
Françaix’s harmonic approach to the composition of the Quatuor and the Petit Quatuor is
perhaps the most unifying stylistic aspect of the two works, and shows a distinctly Neoclassical
approach not only to harmonic language, but traditional structural expectations as well.
Françaix’s reliance on third-based harmonic relationships – notably either the submediant, or less
often the mediant – is apparent throughout both works. In the Quatuor, the A theme of the first
third movement begins in G major, and gravitates to B-flat major in the trio. The Petit Quatuor’s
first movement recapitulation brings the A theme back in B-flat major and the B theme back
initially in B-flat major, but then ends on F-sharp (enharmonically G-flat). The third-
relationships of cadences and even chord progressions in the final movement of the Petit
Quatuor reaffirm this significance to Françaix’s style in these early woodwind chamber works. A
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worthy point for further study of the woodwind chamber music of Jean Françaix would be to
examine whether or not the composer sustained this particular gravitation toward third-related
tonal relationships in his later works, particularly in the Quintettes à vent of 1948 and 1987, and
Françaix’s use of traditional formal structure in both works supports his identification as
a Neoclassical composer. In the Quatuor, his four-movement structure and its key-area
relationships may be seen as a harkening back to the Classical symphonic forms of Mozart,
Haydn, and Beethoven. Likewise, his choice of descriptive movement names for the Petit
Quatuor and their respective dance-like approach may allude to earlier Baroque dance suites.
Perhaps Françaix, well aware of the traditional grouping of woodwinds in an orchestral setting,
chose a symphonic form for his Quatuor. Following the same logic, it must be noted that
scarcely a decade before the composition of the Petit Quatuor, the saxophone was most well
known for its use in jazz, dance and popular music. Perhaps Françaix chose the allusion to the
dance suite to simultaneously enhance the popular connotation of the saxophone while bringing
It is through his use of traditional form that Françaix secures his place alongside his
leaves his distinct mark on the compositional world and woodwind repertory. In the opening
movements of the Quatuor and the Petit Quatuor, Françaix challenges and thwarts our
assumptions concerning expected forms of first movements while still writing music reminiscent
recapitulate introductory themes – whether in their original tonal centers like in the Quatuor, or
in their expected tonal resolutions, even if only in passing, like in the Petit Quatuor. In his slow
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movements, Françaix provides an almost unexpected simplicity, using song forms to deliver
straightforward cantabile melodies. In both closing movements, Françaix alludes to the rondo
and procedures by revisiting an opening theme – whether or not he returns to it verbatim as in the
case of the Petit Quatuor, or reminds the performer of the rhythmic flurry of the quasi-ritornello
In these two works, the performer and listener are made aware of Françaix’s individual
style and simultaneously provided a special insight into the connection of a young composer to
one of the foremost teachers of composition in the twentieth-century, Nadia Boulanger. Now
more than a decade after Françaix’s death, it is valuable to study these two pieces, not only for
their aesthetic charm and compositional distinction, but also with the knowledge that the
composer was still in his early twenties at the time he composed both works. It is a lasting
testament to Françaix’s ingenuity as a composer, and his ability to create music accessible to
both performer and audience, that these two early pieces have survived as standard repertory of
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