Structural Functions in Music

Structural Functions in Music by Wallace Berry, published by Courier Corporation in January 1987, is a revised edition comprising 447 pages. This work presents a comprehensive inquiry into tonal, textural, and rhythmic structures in music, emphasizing the importance of logical analysis and objective data in understanding musical experiences. The book systematically explores key elements such as tonality, melody, harmony, and rhythm, supported by analyses of various musical works from early styles to modern compositions.
Readers will find in-depth examinations of how structural elements function expressively across a range of pieces, including Gregorian chants, Bach motets, and Beethoven symphonies. The text delves into the intricacies of texture and rhythm, featuring analyses of works by composers like Gesualdo, Chopin, and Ravel. This edition serves as a valuable resource for scholars and students engaged in music theory, encouraging individual exploration and deeper understanding of musical structures and their interrelations.
Official synopsis Publisher
This brilliant inquiry into tonal, textural, and rhythmic structures in music, filled with original formulations and provocative ideas, has become one of the most widely read and studied works in music theory, frequently adopted in college and university curricula, and often cited in scholarly studies in the field.
Starting from an all-encompassing viewpoint a belief in the importance and necessity of logical analysis of the musical experience, and the study of objective data derived therefrom it moves toward a deeper understanding of musical structure and experience through a systematic exploration of tonality, melody, harmony, and rhythm, and their important interrelations. These are illuminated in penetrating analyses of musical works and extracts ranging from early model styles to modern compositions.
The procedures by which structural elements in nearly all music function expressively are analyzed in depth. Tonality is examined in a Gregorian chant, a Bach motet, a Beethoven symphony, a Bartok string quartet, and other works by Wolf, Ravel, Webern, and Berg. Texture is explored in a Gesualdo madrigal, a Telemann fantasy for violin, and works by Bach, Brahms, and Dallapiccola. Works by Beethoven, Chopin, and Webern are subjects for revealing studies of rhythm and meter.
A model of original thought, this book has now become one of the most influential works in musical analysis, an invaluable resource for musical scholars and students of musical theory, a lively stimulus to individual theoretical exploration.
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