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    </ItemID><ItemTitle>Voice-leading analysis of music 3: the background</ItemTitle><FrontMatter><Imprint><Standard><GeneralInfo><Paragraph>
                        <b>About this free course</b>
                    </Paragraph><Paragraph>This free course provides a sample of Level 3 study in Arts and Humanities: <a href="http://www.open.ac.uk/courses/find/arts-and-humanities?utm_source=openlearn&amp;utm_campaign=ol&amp;utm_medium=ebook">http://www.open.ac.uk/courses/find/arts-and-humanities</a>.</Paragraph><Paragraph>This version of the content may include video, images and interactive content that may not be optimised for your device. </Paragraph><Paragraph>You can experience this free course as it was originally designed on OpenLearn, the home of free learning from The Open University - <a href="http://www.open.edu/openlearn/history-the-arts/culture/music/voice-leading-analysis-music-3-the-background/content-section-0?utm_source=openlearn&amp;utm_campaign=ol&amp;utm_medium=ebook">www.open.edu/openlearn/history-the-arts/culture/music/voice-leading-analysis-music-3-the-background/content-section-0</a>.</Paragraph><!--[course name] hyperlink to page URL make sure href includes http:// with trackingcode added <Paragraph><a href="http://www.open.edu/openlearn/money-management/introduction-bookkeeping-and-accounting/content-section-0?utm_source=openlearn&amp;utm_campaign=ol&amp;utm_medium=ebook">www.open.edu/openlearn/money-management/introduction-bookkeeping-and-accounting/content-section-0</a>. </Paragraph>--><Paragraph>There you’ll also be able to track your progress via your activity record, which you can use to demonstrate your learning.</Paragraph></GeneralInfo><Address><AddressLine>The Open University, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes, MK7 6AA</AddressLine></Address><FirstPublished><Paragraph/></FirstPublished><Copyright><Paragraph>Copyright © 2016 The Open University</Paragraph></Copyright><Rights><Paragraph/><Paragraph>
                        <b>Intellectual property</b>
                    </Paragraph><Paragraph>Unless otherwise stated, this resource is released under the terms of the Creative Commons Licence v4.0 <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/deed.en_GB">http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/deed.en_GB</a>. Within that The Open University interprets this licence in the following way: <a href="http://www.open.edu/openlearn/about-openlearn/frequently-asked-questions-on-openlearn">www.open.edu/openlearn/about-openlearn/frequently-asked-questions-on-openlearn</a>. Copyright and rights falling outside the terms of the Creative Commons Licence are retained or controlled by The Open University. Please read the full text before using any of the content. </Paragraph><Paragraph>We believe the primary barrier to accessing high-quality educational experiences is cost, which is why we aim to publish as much free content as possible under an open licence. If it proves difficult to release content under our preferred Creative Commons licence (e.g. because we can’t afford or gain the clearances or find suitable alternatives), we will still release the materials for free under a personal end-user licence. </Paragraph><Paragraph>This is because the learning experience will always be the same high quality offering and that should always be seen as positive – even if at times the licensing is different to Creative Commons. </Paragraph><Paragraph>When using the content you must attribute us (The Open University) (the OU) and any identified author in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Licence.</Paragraph><Paragraph>The Acknowledgements section is used to list, amongst other things, third party (Proprietary), licensed content which is not subject to Creative Commons licensing. Proprietary content must be used (retained) intact and in context to the content at all times.</Paragraph><Paragraph>The Acknowledgements section is also used to bring to your attention any other Special Restrictions which may apply to the content. For example there may be times when the Creative Commons Non-Commercial Sharealike licence does not apply to any of the content even if owned by us (The Open University). In these instances, unless stated otherwise, the content may be used for personal and non-commercial use.</Paragraph><Paragraph>We have also identified as Proprietary other material included in the content which is not subject to Creative Commons Licence. These are OU logos, trading names and may extend to certain photographic and video images and sound recordings and any other material as may be brought to your attention.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Unauthorised use of any of the content may constitute a breach of the terms and conditions and/or intellectual property laws.</Paragraph><Paragraph>We reserve the right to alter, amend or bring to an end any terms and conditions provided here without notice.</Paragraph><Paragraph>All rights falling outside the terms of the Creative Commons licence are retained or controlled by The Open University.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Head of Intellectual Property, The Open University</Paragraph></Rights><Edited><Paragraph>Designed and edited by The Open University</Paragraph></Edited><Printed><Paragraph/></Printed><ISBN>978-1-4730-1080-2 (.epub)<br/>978-1-4730-1848-8 (.kdl)</ISBN><Edition/></Standard></Imprint><Introduction><Title>Introduction</Title><Paragraph>This course analyses the ‘voice leading’ of the harmony. The method of going about this kind of analysis is applicable to any piece of tonal music. Just as Mozart's piano sonatas are an excellent source of examples for studying the voice leading at the foreground and middleground of the harmony, so Beethoven's Eighth Symphony is also an ideal work in which to start to consider the largest-scale stage of voice-leading analysis.</Paragraph><Paragraph>This course requires you to switch between several different formats of material. This reflects the particular nature of analysis, where you are constantly comparing what you write out, or see in the score or analytical graph, with what you can hear – a difficult job! So make every effort to work through these materials in the manner and order suggested.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Please note that you should have studied OpenLearn courses <a href="http://www.open.edu/openlearn/history-the-arts/culture/music/voice-leading-analysis-music-1-the-foreground/content-section-0?utm_source=openlearn&amp;utm_campaign=ol&amp;utm_medium=ebook" target="_blank">AA314_1 <i>Voice-leading analysis of music 1: the foreground</i></a> and <a href="http://www.open.edu/openlearn/history-the-arts/culture/music/voice-leading-analysis-music-2-the-middleground/content-section-0?utm_source=openlearn&amp;utm_campaign=ol&amp;utm_medium=ebook" target="_blank">AA314_2 <i>Voice-leading analysis of music 2: the middleground</i></a>
                      <b>before</b> attempting this course.</Paragraph><Paragraph>This OpenLearn course provides a sample of Level 3 study in <a href="http://www.open.ac.uk/courses/find/arts-and-humanities?utm_source=openlearn&amp;utm_campaign=ol&amp;utm_medium=ebook">Arts and Humanities</a>.</Paragraph><Paragraph>The materials upon which this course is based have been authored by Robert Samuels.</Paragraph></Introduction><LearningOutcomes><Paragraph>After studying this course, you should be able to:</Paragraph><LearningOutcome>describe the nature of the background structure of a piece of tonal music</LearningOutcome><LearningOutcome>understand the difference between analysis which is definitely right or wrong and that which is dependent on individual judgement</LearningOutcome><LearningOutcome>relate the notes of a background graph and the indications of bar numbers to specific events in the musical score</LearningOutcome><LearningOutcome>understand the sorts of decisions and observations that go towards analysing the background structure of a piece of music</LearningOutcome><LearningOutcome>recognise the analytical statements about the various parts of a piece of music that are contained in a background graph.</LearningOutcome></LearningOutcomes><Covers><Cover template="false" type="ebook" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/Voice_leading_analysis_of_music_3_the_background_ebook_cover.jpg"/><Cover template="false" type="A4" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/Voice_leading_analysis_of_music_3_the_background_ebook_cover_pdf.jpg"/></Covers></FrontMatter><Unit><UnitID/><UnitTitle/><!--<ByLine>Prepared for the course team by Robert Samuels</ByLine>--><!--<Paragraph>
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<Title>AIMS AND OBJECTIVES</Title>

<Paragraph>By the end of this free course, you should:</Paragraph>
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</Section>--><Session id="sec001"><Title>1 Voice-leading analysis of form</Title><Section id="sec001_001"><Title>1.1 Identifying the background level of the harmony</Title><Paragraph>If you have studied OpenLearn course <a href="http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=4508" target="_blank">AA314_2</a>
  <i>Harmonic analysis: the middleground</i> you will already have been introduced to the general topic of the background, after the foreground and the middleground levels that you studied in your analysis of Mozart (OpenLearn course <a href="http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=4507" target="_blank">AA314_1</a>). This is what one might equally call analysis of ‘form’. The present course, though, will focus on the way that musical form is created from the harmony of the music.</Paragraph><Paragraph>For the time being, I don't want you to think about how to divide up each movement into sections such as ‘exposition’, ‘development’, and so forth. These sorts of labels are important in studying a piece of music, and I will discuss how they relate to harmonic structure at the end of this free course. But first, I want to look at harmony on its own.</Paragraph><Paragraph>In the earlier courses, you saw that the rules that govern how one chord leads to another at the foreground of the music can also be seen to work over longer spans. These voice-leading rules prolong main harmonies as middleground structures. In this course I am going to consider how certain harmonies – that is, certain chords and melodic lines – similarly become the main harmonies for much longer spans of time, ultimately covering the whole of a movement.</Paragraph><Paragraph>I'll begin with the passage of music that was analysed more often than any other in OpenLearn course <a href="http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=4507" target="_blank">AA314_1</a>.</Paragraph><Figure id="example1"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex001i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex001i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="ca02be04" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex001i.jpg" x_imagewidth="480" x_imageheight="259"/><Caption>Example 1 Mozart, K333, third movement, bars 1–8</Caption></Figure><Paragraph>OpenLearn course <a href="http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=4507" target="_blank">AA314_1</a> began by comparing the first eight bars of the last movement of Mozart's Sonata K333 (<CrossRef idref="example1">Example 1</CrossRef>) with a pastiche of this style which was musically similar, but artistically awful. Already, it was clear that Mozart's beautifully balanced theme is made up of repeating patterns of notes in an overall downwards shape. This melodic feature – conjunct linear motion in the voice leading – became more prominent in the analysis of these bars in OpenLearn course <a href="http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=4508" target="_blank">AA314_2</a>. <CrossRef idref="example2">Examples 2</CrossRef> and <CrossRef idref="example3">3</CrossRef> reproduce two of the analytical graphs of the first four bars of this theme from OpenLearn courses AA314_1 and AA314_2 respectively.</Paragraph><Figure id="example2"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex002i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex002i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="6fde7eab" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex002i.jpg" x_imagewidth="480" x_imageheight="132"/><Caption>Example 2 Mozart, K333, third movement, bars 1–4: foreground voice leading</Caption><Description/></Figure><Figure id="example3"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex003i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex003i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="56d9c95b" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex003i.jpg" x_imagewidth="436" x_imageheight="129"/><Caption> Example 3 Mozart, K333, third movement, bars 1–4: middleground voice leading</Caption><Description/></Figure><Activity id="act001_001"><Heading>Activity 1</Heading><Question><Paragraph>Look again at the analyses of bars 1–4 of Mozart's theme<!-- from course 3 and course 6--> (Examples 2 and 3). How do these two analyses show features of the foreground and middleground of the music respectively?</Paragraph></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><Paragraph>
  <CrossRef idref="example2">Example 2</CrossRef> shows musical processes at the foreground of the music, because it shows the sequence of consonant harmonies in the score. It omits dissonant notes such as neighbour notes, but preserves the outline of all the ‘vertical’ harmonies between the top line and the bass. This is shown as a simple rhythmic reduction<!--, because you had not yet studied full analytical notation at this stage in course 3-->.</Paragraph><Paragraph>
  <CrossRef idref="example3">Example 3</CrossRef> shows some middleground features of these bars, because it shows that some consonant harmonies are subordinate to others. For instance, the second consonant chord of <CrossRef idref="example2">Example 2</CrossRef>, the G minor harmony in bar 1, with B♭<!--<InlineFigure>
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</InlineFigure> -->chord is prolonged throughout bar 1, subordinating the G minor harmony. The analytical notation represents this hierarchical observation by giving a stem to the B♭ <!--<InlineFigure>
<Image id="fig001_I002" src="AA314_3_I002i.jpg"/>
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</InlineFigure> -->in the bass, but keeping the G as an unstemmed notehead, and indicating that these notes are related to each other with a slur. This process of prolonging one harmony per bar continues throughout the extract.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Other middleground features of the harmony shown in <CrossRef idref="example3">Example 3</CrossRef> are unfoldings in the top line of bars 1 and 2, and a voice exchange in bar 3. These indicate that the melody derives from a two-part structure at this level.</Paragraph></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>If you are unsure of the meaning of any of the symbols used in <CrossRef idref="example3">Example 3</CrossRef>, or of any of the terms used in the discussion above, check them again in the text of OpenLearn courses <a href="http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=4507" target="_blank">AA314_1</a> and <a href="http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=4508" target="_blank">AA314_2</a>, or in the Glossary at the end of this free course<!--, which includes all the entries from the Block 1 Glossary-->.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Now look at the final analysis of this section<!--, which we considered in course 6,--> extending the analysis to bar 8.</Paragraph><Activity id="act001_002"><Heading>Activity 2</Heading><Question><Paragraph>Look again at the final analysis of Mozart's theme <!-- from course 6-->(<CrossRef idref="example4">Example 4</CrossRef> below). Write down answers to the following questions.</Paragraph><NumberedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>What additional feature of the music is analysed in this graph, compared to the previous one (<CrossRef idref="example3">Example 3</CrossRef>)?</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>What notes in the top and bottom lines would you keep in a graph of the next, deeper, level of the harmony?</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></NumberedList><Figure id="example4"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex004i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex004i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="3aded2fa" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex004i.jpg" x_imagewidth="473" x_imageheight="230"/><Caption> Example 4 Mozart, K333, third movement, bars 1–8: background voice leading<!-- &#x0028;from course 6, Example 24&#x0029;--></Caption><Description/></Figure></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><NumberedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>The additional feature of the harmony shown in this graph is the striking linear descent in the melody from the opening F down to the final B♭<!--<InlineFigure>
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</InlineFigure>-->. This feature controls the harmonic movement of the whole eight-bar phrase, making it a complete course, and a miniature example of interrupted form.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>In addition to the notes of this linear descent, I hope that you decided that the most important feature of the harmony in the whole section is that it ends where it began, resting on the tonic chord. In other words, the most important notes in the harmony are the initial tonic chord established at bar 1<sup>1</sup>, and the final tonic chord, reached at bar 8<sup>1</sup> and approached via the dominant chord of bar 7<sup>2−4</sup> (which is decorated by a subordinate chord and a 6/4–5/3 suspension).</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></NumberedList></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>This example<!-- in course 6--> looks forward a little to the sort of analysis that you are going to perform with Beethoven's Eighth Symphony. The complete eight-bar phrase derives its beauty and elegance from the simple and logical structure that underlies the exquisite foreground harmony. This structure makes up the form of the section, and can be called the ‘background’ of the harmony.</Paragraph><Paragraph>In order to analyse the form of sections of movements much longer than these eight bars (or the form of whole movements), a few new analytical notation symbols are needed, to distinguish the deepest level of the harmony from the other levels. These symbols can be used to convert the graph of <CrossRef idref="example4">Example 4</CrossRef> to that in <CrossRef idref="example5">Example 5</CrossRef>.</Paragraph><Activity id="act001_003"><Heading>Activity 3</Heading><Question><Paragraph>Compare <CrossRef idref="example5">Example 5</CrossRef> with <CrossRef idref="example4">Example 4</CrossRef>. What alterations have been made regarding the notes included in the graph? What new analytical symbols have been introduced?</Paragraph><Figure id="example5"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex005i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex005i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="e7d0b497" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex005i.jpg" x_imagewidth="479" x_imageheight="202"/><Caption> Example 5 Mozart, K333, third movement, bars 1–8: graph using notation of the background</Caption><Description/></Figure></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><Paragraph>In <CrossRef idref="example5">Example 5</CrossRef>, the unfoldings and voice exchange are aligned vertically, to show how the melody is based on two independent harmonic voices. This means that the unstemmed notes which unfold each interval have now been omitted.</Paragraph><Paragraph>The new elements of analytical notation are as follows.</Paragraph><BulletedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>The linear descent from F down to the final B♭<!--<InlineFigure>
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</InlineFigure>-->, and the bass movement from tonic to dominant and back to tonic, are each shown using unfilled stemmed noteheads (which look like minims).</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>This overall structure is shown by adding beams to connect these stems (the beams in <CrossRef idref="example4">Example 4</CrossRef> connect filled stemmed noteheads in this way).</Paragraph>
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  <Paragraph>The notes of the interrupted descending line have been numbered, according to their degree of the scale. These numbers are identified with <b>carets</b> (which look like circumflex accents: <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i003i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i003i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="bacb8888" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i003i.gif" x_imagewidth="45" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure>).</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></BulletedList></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>
  <CrossRef idref="example5">Example 5</CrossRef> shows just the same analysis of structure as <CrossRef idref="example4">Example 4</CrossRef>; but the new notation will be very useful later, when we look at graphs of much longer spans of music: ultimately, whole movements are based on the same harmonic structures as short musical phrases.</Paragraph><Paragraph>This section has revised the concepts of foreground and middleground, and the notation that goes with them, in order to emphasise again how tonal harmony works hierarchically, and can be reduced to simpler and simpler underlying shapes. Whenever you are writing or reading an analytical graph, keep firmly in mind the fact that the symbols we use do not have the same meaning as they do in a score. A hierarchy based on rhythmic notation in a score is used to show harmonic importance in an analytical graph. So unfilled noteheads (which look like minims) identify the harmonically most important notes, filled noteheads (which look like crotchets) the next most important, and unstemmed noteheads show the notes which are inessential to the level of harmony that the graph is analysing.</Paragraph></Section><Section id="sec001_002"><Title>1.2 Form in Beethoven's symphonic writing</Title><Paragraph>Now let's look at an example from Beethoven's Eighth Symphony. We will start our analysis of the work with the shortest self-contained formal section, which is the trio from the Minuet and Trio that make up the third movement. The minuet occupies bars 1–44 of the movement, and the trio bars 45–78.</Paragraph><Activity id="act001_004"><Heading>Activity 4</Heading><Question><!--<Paragraph>
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</Paragraph>--><Paragraph>Listen twice to <!--CD 4, Tracks 56&#x2013;63 &#x0028;-->Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, third movement, bars 45–78. First, follow the music in the<!--your set book--> full score attached below. Then listen to it again whilst following the piano score (<!--Scores 2, Item 22-->also attached below). Place a cross in the piano score underneath the first main tonic chord, and underneath the dominant and tonic chords that make up the final main cadence (remember that this movement is in F major). What similarities can you find between the opening and the close of the section?</Paragraph><!--Insert audio here--><MediaContent height="" id="mp3001" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_001s.mp3" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="audio" width="" x_manifest="aa314_3_001s_1_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="ad4a7200"><Caption>Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, third movement, bars 45–78</Caption><Description>Click to listen to the extract from Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, third movement, bars 45–78. (2 minutes) </Description></MediaContent><!--Insert Beethoven full score as pdf here--><Paragraph>Click to open the full score of <a href="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/mod/resource/view.php?id=26793">Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, third movement</a>.</Paragraph><!--<MediaContent id="pdf001" src="\\DCTM_FSS\content\Teaching and curriculum\Modules\Shared Resources\OpenLearn\AA314_3\1.0\aa314_3_beethoven_fullscore.pdf" type="file"><Caption>View full score</Caption></MediaContent>--><!--Insert piano score here Scores book 2 Item 22 on Portfolio--><Paragraph>Click to open the <a href="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/mod/resource/view.php?id=25886">piano score</a>.</Paragraph><!--<MediaContent id="pdf002" src="\\DCTM_FSS\content\Teaching and curriculum\Modules\Shared Resources\OpenLearn\AA314_3\1.0\aa314_3_score2_item22.pdf" type="file"><Caption>View the piano score.</Caption></MediaContent>--></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><Paragraph>You should have placed a cross underneath the F major chord in the first bar (bar 45), beneath the C major chord in bar 73, and the F major chord in bar 74 (which is prolonged to the end of the section). You probably noticed that the accompaniment in the lower strings is almost identical at the beginning and end of the section (and indeed this texture is maintained throughout), and you may have noted the three-note motive, C–D–E, which acts as an upbeat to bar 45 and to bars 72 and 74 (it is in the horn line; it is also found in bars 73 and 75, but turned upside down).</Paragraph></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>The task is to analyse how the music is structured between these opening and closing gestures, which look so similar on paper and yet have such different effects in performance. This analytical method is presented on video.</Paragraph><Activity id="act001_005"><Heading>Activity 5</Heading><Question><!--<Paragraph>
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</Paragraph>--><Paragraph>Watch the video clips below<!--Video 1, Band 4 and return to this course text when the video instructs you to do so-->.</Paragraph><!--Insert video clip here--><MediaContent src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_001v.mp4" type="video" x_manifest="aa314_3_001v_1_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="8af56731"><Caption>Part 1</Caption><Description>Click to view first video, part 1.</Description></MediaContent><Paragraph>The first part of the video has built up a preliminary graph of the trio (<CrossRef idref="example6">Example 6</CrossRef>). You should now add to this graph by printing it out using the link below the example, following the instructions below.</Paragraph><NumberedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>Identify two or three moments in the trio which you think are structurally important; in other words, moments which cannot be missed out of an analysis of the form of the section.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>Indicate these moments by adding a note to the top line of the graph. Select the note which you think is most prominent, structurally, in the music at that point.</Paragraph>
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  <Paragraph>Add the note (or notes, if the harmony changes) in the bass which you think will indicate the harmonisation of these notes in the top line.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>Identify these moments by putting the bar number over each note you have added.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></NumberedList><Figure id="example6"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex006i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex006i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="e310a53f" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex006i.jpg" x_imagewidth="480" x_imageheight="163"/><Caption> Example 6 Beethoven, Symphony No.8, third movement, bars 45–78: preliminary background graph</Caption><Description/></Figure><Paragraph>Click to open <a href="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/mod/resource/view.php?id=25886">graph (Example 6)</a>.</Paragraph><!--<MediaContent id="pdf003" src="\\DCTM_FSS\content\Teaching and curriculum\Modules\Shared Resources\OpenLearn\AA314_3\1.0\aa314_3_ex006i.pdf" type="file"><Caption>Open graph (Example 6).</Caption></MediaContent>--><Paragraph>You may wish to listen through to the trio a couple of times before you do this activity<!--, using the recording on CD 4, Tracks 56&#x2013;63-->.</Paragraph><!--Repeat audio of CD 4 tracks 56-63--><MediaContent height="" id="mp3002" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_001s.mp3" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="audio" width="" x_manifest="aa314_3_001s_2_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="ad4a7200"><Caption>Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, third movement, bars 45–78</Caption><Description>Click to listen to the extract from Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, third movement, bars 45-78. (2 minutes) </Description></MediaContent></Question></Activity><Activity id="act001_006"><Heading>Activity 6</Heading><Question><!--<Paragraph>
<InlineFigure>
<Image id="fig001_I006" src="AA314_3_I006i.jpg"/>
<Description>DESCRIPTION REQUIRED</Description>
</InlineFigure>
</Paragraph>--><Paragraph>When you have enlarged the graph in <CrossRef idref="example6">Example 6</CrossRef>, watch the video below and follow my discussion of this activity.<!-- Come back to the course text when the video next instructs you to do so.--></Paragraph></Question><!--<MediaContent id="VID002" type="videoboth" src="AA314_3_002v" supportDoc="AA314_3_002v_TRA">
<Description>Click to view second video, part 1.</Description>
	</MediaContent>--><MediaContent id="vid002" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_001vb.mp4" supportDoc="" type="video" x_manifest="aa314_3_001vb_1_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="b7fa5398"><Caption>Part 2</Caption><Description>Click to view first video, part 2.</Description></MediaContent></Activity><Paragraph>The above video clips build up a complete background graph of the trio. This shows the fundamental structure, and some additional detail.</Paragraph><Paragraph><!--The audio CD recording of this movement has been divided into tracks which follow the moments selected by this analysis. --><CrossRef idref="example7">Example 7</CrossRef> gives the final graph of the trio<!--, with the CD track numbers &#x0028;CD 4, Tracks 56&#x2013;63&#x0029; indicated in circles above the bar numbers. If your CD player displays these track numbers, you may want to refer to them to help you to follow the music alongside the analysis-->.</Paragraph><Figure id="example7"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex007i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex007i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="89e5f2a2" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex007i.jpg" x_imagewidth="479" x_imageheight="191"/><Caption> Example 7 Beethoven, Symphony No.8, third movement, bars 45–78: complete background graph</Caption><Description/></Figure></Section><Section id="sec001_003"><Title>1.3 The different elements of a background graph</Title><Paragraph>Now I am going to introduce some technical terms which describe different components of the background graph. The new terms introduced in <CrossRef idref="example5">Example 5</CrossRef> become more important when we analyse a more complicated piece of music, and they will enable you to follow the discussions below of other sections of Beethoven's Eighth Symphony.</Paragraph><Paragraph><!--As you know from Block 1, -->The techniques of voice-leading analysis were first developed in German-speaking scholarship. One result is that technical terms exist in both German and English. This course uses the English translations of terms<!--; but in the Glossary at the end of this block, I will give you both, in case you come across the German terms in other books on music-->.</Paragraph><Paragraph>As you saw just now, the form of a tonal piece of music is based on one particular note of the tonic triad, which is prolonged (normally through the bulk of the piece) in the top voice of the harmony. This note is called the <b>primary tone</b> (or the <b>head-note</b>). In <CrossRef idref="example5">Example 5</CrossRef>, A (the third of the tonic chord F major) is the primary tone.</Paragraph><Paragraph>The primary tone is made to descend, step by step, down to the tonic in order to close the form. This step-wise descending shape is called the <b>fundamental line.</b> The notes of the fundamental line are shown in a graph as unfilled noteheads with stems, and their number in the tonic scale is indicated above them with a caret (in <CrossRef idref="example5">Example 5</CrossRef>, as a <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i007i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i007i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="8647ed01" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i007i.gif" x_imagewidth="30" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> descent).</Paragraph><Paragraph>The fundamental line and the bass voice that harmonises it together make a piece of simple two-part counterpoint. The second-to-last note of the fundamental line is always harmonised by the dominant in the bass (so that in a <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i007i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i007i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="8647ed01" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i007i.gif" x_imagewidth="30" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> descent such as <CrossRef idref="example5">Example 5</CrossRef>, the bass always moves tonic-dominant-tonic). The two-part counterpoint which underpins the form of the music is called the <b>fundamental structure.</b>
  </Paragraph><Paragraph>In a voice-leading analysis of form, the background graph can be divided into several phases. At first, the music establishes the primary tone of the form. Sometimes, the primary tone is the first note of the piece; but often, the top voice of the music moves up to it gradually. This initial part of the graph is called the <b>initial ascent.</b>
  </Paragraph><Paragraph>Then, the primary tone remains the point of reference for the middle part of the graph (which is often the bulk of the piece) until it descends to the tonic note. We call this central part of the graph the <b>prolongation</b> of the primary tone, followed by the <b>structural descent.</b> The descent of the fundamental line to the tonic note is often a short, decisive move, though it may be more spread out; but the final move from 2 to 1 is termed the <b>structural cadence</b> or <b>structural close</b> of the form.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Sometimes, the cadence that completes the fundamental structure is the final cadence of the piece; but often (especially in longer pieces) the final tonic degree is prolonged for some time. We can call this last section the <b>structural coda</b>, and it serves to establish the finality of the close of the piece. It is not, of course, the same as the ‘coda’ in a traditional account of form: it may be the same section of music, but it may be much longer or shorter.</Paragraph><Paragraph>You can see that <CrossRef idref="example7">Example 7</CrossRef>, although it describes only a short section of music, contains all the elements identified above. A short initial ascent is followed by a prolongation of the primary tone which covers most of the section, with the last two notes of the fundamental line coming close together in bars 73 and 74, and a brief structural coda, with hunting-horn type arpeggios on the horns and clarinets, emphasises the tonic F major triad at the end.</Paragraph><Paragraph>This trio is structured around a <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i007i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i007i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="8647ed01" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i007i.gif" x_imagewidth="30" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> descent in the fundamental line, as we have seen. In other pieces, however, the fundamental structure can be organised around a descent from either of the other two notes of the tonic chord, as a <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i008i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i008i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="aa2e4c50" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i008i.gif" x_imagewidth="57" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> or even an <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i009i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i009i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="935a397d" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i009i.gif" x_imagewidth="95" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> structure. In these cases, the structural cadence still takes place at the end of the fundamental line, elaborating the <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i010i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i010i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="5e383933" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i010i.gif" x_imagewidth="18" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> descent. The three possible forms of the fundamental structure are shown as <CrossRef idref="example8">Example 8</CrossRef>.</Paragraph><Figure id="example8"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex008i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex008i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="bed234ff" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex008i.jpg" x_imagewidth="480" x_imageheight="155"/><Caption> Example 8 Possible forms of the fundamental structure, showing all three descents</Caption><Description/></Figure><Paragraph>There are two important points which are worth bearing in mind at the conclusion of this initial look at background structure.</Paragraph><Paragraph>First, whilst almost any piece of tonal music can be reduced to one of these three fundamental structures, the point of doing this can only be to show how the composer connects this very abstract background structure with the detail at the foreground that makes the piece sound unique. This means that the real value of an analysis of this sort lies in the elements of the graph or graphs which fill in the details of how the fundamental structure holds the piece together. So in <CrossRef idref="example5">Example 5</CrossRef>, the harmonic detail that is extra to that contained in <CrossRef idref="example8">Example 8a</CrossRef>, strictly speaking the middleground detail, is what begins to explore Beethoven's approach to the form of this short section. On its own, after all, <CrossRef idref="example8">Example 8a</CrossRef> could refer to any of thousands of different pieces.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Secondly, the analysis involved in drawing a background graph is rather different from that involved in drawing a foreground graph. At the foreground, there really is very little room for doubt about what is right and what is wrong. Which notes are consonant and which are dissonant, and the difference between main and subsidiary harmonies, are things which only rarely turn out to be ambiguous (even if they can be difficult to track down). This is less true at middleground levels, as you found out in the discussion of three different ways of analysing the structure of the opening theme of Mozart's Sonata in A major K331 (Examples 28, 29 and 30 in OpenLearn course <a href="http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=4508" target="_blank">AA314_2</a>). At the background, even very experienced musicians may have quite different opinions about where the structural cadence of a piece occurs, and which musical events are structurally the most important. But this does not mean that such analysis is pointless. On the contrary, comparing different analyses of the same piece often reveals subtleties and depths to a composer's way of writing music.</Paragraph><Paragraph>With these points in mind, it is now time to look at other parts of Beethoven's Eighth Symphony. We won't be building up background graphs in the sort of detail that we applied to the trio of the third movement. But you should by now be able to follow a background graph alongside listening to the music or reading the score, and understand the description of the form that the graph represents.</Paragraph></Section></Session><Session id="sec002"><Title>2 Analysing the form of the Minuet and Trio</Title><Paragraph>I now want to expand the graph of the trio section of the Minuet and Trio by looking at the form of the whole movement.</Paragraph><Activity id="act001_007"><Heading>Activity 7</Heading><Question><Paragraph>
  <!--<InlineFigure>
<Image id="fig001_I011" src="AA314_3_I011i.jpg"/>
<Description></Description>
</InlineFigure>-->
  </Paragraph><Paragraph>Listen twice to the whole of the Minuet and Trio (<!--CD 4, Tracks 40&#x2013;64-->by clicking the player below), the first time with the <!--set book -->full score and the second time with the piano score<!-- &#x0028;Scores 2, Item 22&#x0029;-->.</Paragraph><!--Add in score of Beethoven and Piano score plus audio from CD 4 tracks 40-64--><Paragraph>Click to open the full score of <a href="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/mod/resource/view.php?id=26793">Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, third movement</a>.</Paragraph><!--<MediaContent height="" id="pdf004" src="\\DCTM_FSS\content\Teaching and curriculum\Modules\Shared Resources\OpenLearn\AA314_3\1.0\aa314_3_beethoven_fullscore.pdf" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="file" width=""><Caption>View full score.</Caption></MediaContent>--><Paragraph>Click to open the <a href="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/mod/resource/view.php?id=25886">piano score</a>.</Paragraph><!--<MediaContent height="" id="pdf005" src="\\DCTM_FSS\content\Teaching and curriculum\Modules\Shared Resources\OpenLearn\AA314_3\1.0\aa314_3_score2_item22.pdf" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="file" width=""><Caption>View the piano score.</Caption></MediaContent>--><MediaContent height="" id="mp3003" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_002s.mp3" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="audio" width="" x_manifest="aa314_3_002s_1_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="1989d1a9"><Caption>The Minuet and Trio</Caption><Description>Click to listen to the extract (5 minutes).</Description></MediaContent><Paragraph>Print out the piano score and at the minuet section, mark the following:</Paragraph><NumberedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>the most prominent note of the tonic triad in the melody line at the opening of the section;</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>the secondary keys to which the music modulates;</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>the most decisive cadence at the end of the section.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></NumberedList></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><NumberedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>Since the minuet begins with an arpeggio in the melody line through the whole tonic triad (bars 1–3), you might have chosen any of the three possibilities as the primary tone! But the A and the C seem the most likely, since the A arrives at the note at the top of the first tonic chord (bars 1–2), and the C is the note that begins the melody proper in bar 3. In fact, it is the C which is most prominent melodically, as the melody winds down from C in bar 3 to C an octave lower in bar 6, and then from the high C in bar 7 down to the tonic F at the double bar line in bar 10.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>After the double bar, there are two modulations, first to C major (bars 11–16) and then B♭<!--<InlineFigure>
<Image id="fig001_I002" src="AA314_3_I002i.jpg"/>
<Description></Description>
</InlineFigure>-->major (bars 17–26) before the return to F major from bar 27 onwards. There is a memorable harmonic progression through both C major and B♭<!--<InlineFigure>
<Image id="fig001_I002" src="AA314_3_I002i.jpg"/>
<Description></Description>
</InlineFigure>-->major at bars 32–5.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>The most decisive cadence is harder to identify; from bar 36, there is a constant alternation between dominant and tonic chords. You may have picked either the first cadence (bar 36), or the last one (bar 44), or the point where the horns stop emphasising the cadences in bars 40–1. Clearly we need to look at these bars in more detail.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></NumberedList></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>In order to take account of the features you have just been thinking about, we need to develop a view of how the whole movement fits together. My view of this is again presented using video.</Paragraph><Activity id="act001_008"><Heading>Activity 8</Heading><Question><Paragraph>
  <!--<InlineFigure>
<Image id="fig001_I012" src="AA314_3_I012i.jpg"/>
<Description></Description>
</InlineFigure>-->
  </Paragraph><Paragraph>Watch the video below which builds up a complete background graph of the minuet section of the Minuet and Trio. Because the minuet is almost twice as long as the trio, this is not done in quite such painstaking, step-by-step detail as in the last video<!-- band-->. Instead, I shall ask you to look at my analysis of the section, and see what you think of it when it is compared with the music.<!-- Follow Video 1, Band 4, Section 2 now and return to the course text when it has finished.--></Paragraph><!--Insert video from video 1, Band 4, Section 2--><MediaContent id="vid003" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_002v.mp4" supportDoc="" type="video" x_manifest="aa314_3_002v_1_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="b4795f03"><Caption>Second Video, Part 1</Caption><Description>Click to view second video, part 1.</Description></MediaContent><MediaContent id="vid003b" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_002vb.mp4" supportDoc="" type="video" x_manifest="aa314_3_002vb_1_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="2e226051"><Caption>Second Video, Part 2</Caption><Description>Click to view second video, part 2.</Description></MediaContent></Question></Activity><Activity id="act001_009"><Heading>Activity 9</Heading><Question><Paragraph>
  <!--<InlineFigure>
<Image id="fig001_I013" src="AA314_3_I013i.jpg"/>
<Description>DESCRIPTION REQUIRED</Description>
</InlineFigure>-->
  </Paragraph><Paragraph>Listen to the minuet again <!--on CD 4, Tracks 40&#x2013;56, -->and follow the analysis in my final graph from the video band you have just watched (<CrossRef idref="example9">Example 9</CrossRef>below).<!-- Once again, the CD recording has been divided up into tracks to help you to follow it if your CD player displays the track numbers.--></Paragraph><!--Insert audio form CD 4 tracks 40-56--><!--<MediaContent id="MP3004" type="audio" src="AA314_3_003s" target="new window" supportDoc="" width="" height="">
<Caption>the minuet.</Caption>
<Description>Click to listen to the extract.</Description>
</MediaContent>--><Figure id="example9"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex009i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex009i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="12d6f72c" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex009i.jpg" x_imagewidth="479" x_imageheight="188"/><Caption> Example 9 Beethoven, Symphony No.8, third movement, bars 1–44: complete background graph</Caption><Description/></Figure></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><Paragraph>You should by now understand the sorts of decisions I made in order to analyse the form of this movement. Whether or not you agree with my decisions (which are my musical opinion), I hope you can see how I have tried to explain the sense of coherence and logic that Beethoven's music gives me when I listen.</Paragraph></Answer></Activity></Session><Session id="sec003"><Title>3 Analysing the form of the first movement</Title><Section id="sec003_001"><Title>3.1 Points to understand</Title><Paragraph>You are now ready to follow an analysis of a much longer and more complex piece of music. We don't have space in a single course to look in any detail at the actual procedure of analysing the harmony of the whole of the rest of the Eighth Symphony, so I will discuss the analysis of only one other movement, the first movement<!--, which is the one you looked at in the most detail in course 8-->. Here I will present you with my own completed analysis, rather than lead you through the steps that went towards creating it.</Paragraph><Activity id="act001_010"><Heading>Activity 10</Heading><Question><Paragraph>
  <!--<InlineFigure>
<Image id="fig001_I014" src="AA314_3_I014i.jpg"/>
<Description></Description>
</InlineFigure>-->
  </Paragraph><Paragraph>Listen again to the first movement of the Eighth Symphony<!-- &#x0028;CD 4, Tracks 1&#x2013;38&#x0029;-->. Follow it in the<!--your set book-->score<!--, which you annotated as you read the discussion in course 8-->. Then make notes on the following questions.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Click to open the full score of <a href="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/mod/resource/view.php?id=26793">Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, third movement</a>.</Paragraph><!--<MediaContent height="" id="pdf006" src="\\DCTM_FSS\content\Teaching and curriculum\Modules\Shared Resources\OpenLearn\AA314_3\1.0\aa314_3_beethoven_fullscore.pdf" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="file" width=""><Caption>View the full score.</Caption></MediaContent>--><!--Insert audio from CD4 tracks 1-38 --><MediaContent height="" id="mp3005" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_004s.mp3" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="audio" width="" x_manifest="aa314_3_004s_1_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="aa990fcb"><Caption>Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, first movement</Caption><Description>Click to listen to the extract, Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, first movement. (8 minutes)</Description></MediaContent><NumberedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>Which points seem harmonically most puzzling in terms of their place in the form? Try to identify three or four specific points that need to be explained by any analysis of the movement.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>Which note of the tonic chord is most prominent early in the movement (in other words, which note would you choose as the primary tone)?</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>Where is the decisive closure of the tonic key (in other words, where would you place the structural cadence of the movement)?</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></NumberedList><!--<Paragraph>My discussion is overleaf.</Paragraph>--></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><NumberedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>You have already done a lot of work with this piece of music, and your list of points will reflect what you view as particularly important<!--, and also what you thought during the discussion in course 8-->. My list of particular moments which an analysis of the form of the movement has to take into account is as follows<!-- &#x0028;course 8&#x0027;s discussion of each of these is also indicated&#x0029;-->.</Paragraph>
  <BulletedSubsidiaryList>
  <SubListItem>
  <Paragraph>The entry of the second subject, which appears to be in the ‘wrong’ key, D major (bar 37<!-- &#x2013; course 8, Section 2-->).</Paragraph>
  </SubListItem>
  <SubListItem>
  <Paragraph>The beginning of the recapitulation. The start of this section can be placed at bar 190 or at bar 198. The former has impressive texture and dynamics, but the latter has more conclusive harmony<!-- &#x0028;course 8, Section 4&#x0029;-->.</Paragraph>
  </SubListItem>
  <SubListItem>
  <Paragraph>The transposition of the second subject in the recapitulation, where it is presented first in B♭<!--<InlineFigure>
<Image id="fig001_I002" src="AA314_3_I002i.jpg"/>
<Description>DESCRIPTION REQUIRED</Description>
</InlineFigure>-->(bar 234) and then in F major (bar 242).</Paragraph>
  </SubListItem>
  <SubListItem>
  <Paragraph>The place of the coda (bars 301 onwards) in the form of the movement. This more than anything else will affect your answer as to where the main structural cadence is located. The recapitulation ends with an emphatic cadence in the tonic and repeated octave Fs (bars 293–301), but the coda still follows a fair amount of chromatic modulation before the final cadence.</Paragraph>
  </SubListItem>
  </BulletedSubsidiaryList>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>It is difficult to avoid choosing C, the fifth of the scale, as the most prominent note of the tonic triad in the melody, and therefore the primary tone. Two moments which encourage this are the opening of the melodic line in the very first bar, and the thunderously repeated Cs at the end of the exposition (bars 100–104).</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>There are several places towards the end of the movement where Beethoven re-establishes F major with great insistence. Perhaps you chose the end of the recapitulation, where, after dominant and tonic chords are repeated several times to establish the cadence, the tonic chord thunders out <i>fortissimo</i> in arpeggios through almost three octaves in the violins (bars 293–7). This would make the structural coda of the voice leading coincide with the coda section of the sonata form. Or again, perhaps you chose the moment where the tonic reasserts itself (again <i>fortissimo)</i> for the last full statement of the first subject in the coda (bars 323ff.). Or perhaps you chose the final cadence in bars 358–64, where the tonic chord arrives with self-effacing quietness to close the movement. All three passages have competing claims to be the point of true closure of the form, and clearly this is something that requires a deeper analysis.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></NumberedList></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>This is anything but an exhaustive list even of the interesting features to do with form in this movement. I have left out lots of wonderful aspects of Beethoven's harmony which do still feature in my analytical graph; the above list is more a selection of some moments that simply cannot be avoided whatever the method of analysis. Now it is time, though, to consider my thoughts about the movement in the light of all the work you have already done with it.</Paragraph><Activity id="act001_011"><Heading>Activity 11</Heading><Question><Paragraph>
  <!--<InlineFigure>
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  </Paragraph><Paragraph>First, look at my analytical graph of the movement (<CrossRef idref="example10">Example 10</CrossRef><!-- overleaf-->). I have arranged it on two levels for greater clarity, so that <CrossRef idref="example10ab">Example 10a</CrossRef><!--, which you should read across the top of both pages,--> presents only the fundamental structure of the movement, whereas <CrossRef idref="example10ab">Example 10b</CrossRef>, aligned underneath it,<!-- again, across both pages,-->gives a little more detail, still at the background level.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Compare <CrossRef idref="example10">Example 10</CrossRef> with the <!--set book -->score (at link below), using the bar numbers to identify the events in the music represented by each point of my background reduction.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Click to open the full score of <a href="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/mod/resource/view.php?id=26793">Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, third movement</a>.</Paragraph><!--<MediaContent height="" id="pdf007" src="\\DCTM_FSS\content\Teaching and curriculum\Modules\Shared Resources\OpenLearn\AA314_3\1.0\aa314_3_beethoven_fullscore.pdf" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="file" width=""><Caption>View the full score.</Caption></MediaContent>--><Paragraph>Then, try listening through to the movement again<!-- &#x0028;CD 4, Tracks 1&#x2013;38&#x0029;-->, but this time follow the music with the graph rather than the score<!-- &#x0028;the track numbers on the CD are marked above the bar numbers to help you to follow the landmarks, if your CD player can display the track numbers&#x0029;-->.</Paragraph><Paragraph>What does the graph claim about the way Beethoven has structured the movement? Refer especially to the moments listed in the discussion of the previous activity. Do you find this analysis convincing?</Paragraph><!-- insert audio from CD4 tracks 1-38 and score of Beethoven--><MediaContent height="" id="mp3006" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_004s.mp3" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="audio" width="" x_manifest="aa314_3_004s_2_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="aa990fcb"><Caption>Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, first movement</Caption><Description>Click to listen to the extract Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, first movement. (8 minutes)</Description></MediaContent><Figure id="example10"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex010i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex010i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="79ee9776" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex010i.jpg" x_imagewidth="477" x_imageheight="341"/><Caption>
  <b>Example 10</b>: Beethoven, Symphony No.8, first movement: (a) (top) Fundamental structure (b) (bottom) Background level graph (with some middleground detail)</Caption><Description/></Figure><Figure id="example10ab"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex010ai.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex010ai.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="cde7a31a" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex010ai.jpg" x_imagewidth="477" x_imageheight="347"/><Caption> Example 10 continued <b>(a)</b> continued (top) (b) continued (bottom)</Caption><Description/></Figure></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><Paragraph>First, I'll summarise what the graph indicates about the four passages identified in the first question of Activity 10.</Paragraph><BulletedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>The harmonic importance of the second subject in the exposition is analysed as its eventual establishment of the dominant, C major, at bar 46. The apparently ‘wrong’ key of D major (bar 37) is seen as part of the approach to C major, since at a background level it moves to a G major harmony which is the dominant of the dominant (this happens in bars 44–5).</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>I have analysed the harmonic importance at the beginning of the recapitulation as being located in bar 198. This is shown in both <CrossRef idref="example10ab">Example 10a</CrossRef> and <CrossRef idref="example10ab">Example 10b</CrossRef>, because this is a crucial moment in the voice leading of the movement, where the prolonged tonic harmony supporting the <InlineFigure>
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  </InlineFigure> of the fundamental line is re-established.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></BulletedList><BulletedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>The transposition of the second subject in the recapitulation (bars 234–43) is analysed in <CrossRef idref="example10ab">Example 10b</CrossRef>similarly to the appearance of this theme in the exposition, so that the key of B♭<!--<InlineFigure>
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  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>The coda's principal function in the movement in terms of voice leading is analysed in both Example 10a and 10b as being the descent of the fundamental line. This means that the beginning of the coda proper (bar 301) is analysed, at this very deep level, as merely a subsidiary stage of the prolongation of the primary tone, C, in the top voice. This is a good example of a place where an event that is very striking at first hearing (the top F in bars 297–301) is of lesser importance to the structure of the whole movement, in my view, than one might at first think. Even after the recapitulation closes, the C is still to be resolved (glance at bar 323 in the score to see its prominence), and this happens over quite a long section from bar 332 to bar 364. The coda is therefore seen as the decisive closure of the form of the movement.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></BulletedList></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>Let's look at this analysis in a little more detail. <!--Several of the things listed above correspond with the detailed discussion of this movement in course 8. The opening descent from C down to F in the top voice in bars 1&#x2013;12, which was pointed out in course 8 Example lb, is shown here too. And -->The structure of the development section<!--, which was discussed at some length in course 8,-->is summarised here as another descent from C down to F, and a lengthy register transfer of this F up an octave between bar 161 and bar 190. The way that a descent from C to F repeatedly forms the unifying structure of a whole section at a very deep level makes it what we might call a ‘structural motive’ in the work.<!-- The different insights of a traditional view of form, and an analysis based on voice leading, are illustrated very effectively by comparing <CrossRef idref="fig001_010">Example 10</CrossRef>b with the discussion in course 8 &#x0028;Section 3&#x0029;.--></Paragraph><Paragraph>Another issue which should be considered is<!--discussed at length in course 8 is the matter of--> where the recapitulation begins.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Using the voice-leading graph <!--presents basically the same analysis of the harmony as the discussion in course 8, and it is worth combining the voice-leading analysis with the observation of the return of the theme in the bass and the <i>fff</i> dynamic at bar 190 &#x0028;course 8, Section 4&#x0029;. The two analyses together suggest-->it is possible to see that the thematic recapitulation and the harmonic recapitulation happen out of synchronisation with each other. This is similar to the way that when the second subject enters, both in the exposition and the recapitulation, it is before the harmony has reached its destination key. In other words, this deliberate lack of synchronisation between theme and tonality is a structural feature shared by the return of the first subject and the entry of the second subject – what we could call another sort of structural motive. Indeed, this ‘correction’ of the key of the second subject is very typical of Beethoven – as opposed to Schubert, who often avoids the dominant key for the whole of the second subject area in an exposition.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Before we consider the fundamental structure analysed in <CrossRef idref="example10">Example 10</CrossRef>, notice that I have been deliberately inconsistent regarding the amount and level of middleground detail I have included in <CrossRef idref="example10ab">Example 10b</CrossRef>. At some points I have included quite local features (such as the harmonic movement in bars 37–46 and 234–43); at others I have taken a much broader sweep of music (as with the descent in bars 116–60); other sections I have more or less omitted altogether (such as the marvellous harmonic detail in bars 160–90). This is always the case with a graph of the background structure of a long and complex piece of music. I have included details which I think are particularly relevant to my personal interpretation of Beethoven's formal thinking, and another analyst might have chosen other details to emphasise. Whilst this analysis is personal, it is not arbitrary. The analysis always aims to interpret and explain the notes in Beethoven's score. Now let's see what other insights into the form can be obtained from this attempt to analyse a fundamental structure.</Paragraph></Section><Section id="sec003_002"><Title>3.2 The fundamental structure and the form</Title><Paragraph>Although <CrossRef idref="example10ab">Example 10a</CrossRef> contains no more than the notes of the fundamental structure with an indication of the bar numbers where I think they occur, it nevertheless identifies some important aspects of the form. The whole of the exposition is seen as a journey from tonic to dominant, with the C maintained as the focus of interest in the melodic lines throughout. Let's look for a moment at the end of the exposition. The structural C is established in bar 90: in the score you can see this note arrive in the violin and flute parts, after a long prolongation of the dominant chord in bars 83–9. The last section of the exposition, from bar 90 onwards, focuses in its melodic line first on E, alternating with its neighbour note F, with alternating C major and G major seventh chords; until this E climbs through the arpeggio in bars 96 to 100 to reach the C again.</Paragraph><Figure id="example11"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_ex011i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_ex011i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="ec2a6979" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_ex011i.jpg" x_imagewidth="314" x_imageheight="289"/><Caption> Example 11 Beethoven, Symphony No.8, first movement, bars 90–103: (a) (top) Background graph (b) (bottom) Middleground graph</Caption><Description/></Figure><Activity id="act001_012"><Heading>Activity 12</Heading><Question><Paragraph>
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  <CrossRef idref="example11">Example 11</CrossRef> above shows an analysis on two levels of the bars just discussed (90–103). Compare <CrossRef idref="example11">Example 11</CrossRef> with the score, and listen to these bars whilst following the graphs<!-- &#x0028;CD 4, Tracks 18&#x2013;20&#x0029;-->. How do these graphs analyse the structure of this final section of the exposition?</Paragraph><!--Insert Beethoven score and audio from CD4 tracks 18-20--><Paragraph>Click to open the full score of <a href="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/mod/resource/view.php?id=26793">Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, third movement</a>.</Paragraph><!--<MediaContent height="" id="pdf008" src="\\DCTM_FSS\content\Teaching and curriculum\Modules\Shared Resources\OpenLearn\AA314_3\1.0\aa314_3_beethoven_fullscore.pdf" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="file" width=""><Caption>View the full score.</Caption></MediaContent>--><MediaContent height="" id="mp3007" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_005s.mp3" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="audio" width="" x_manifest="aa314_3_005s_1_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="e3b9edc1"><Caption>Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, first movement, bars 90-103</Caption><Description>Click to listen to the extract Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, first movement, bars 90-103. (20 seconds)</Description></MediaContent></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><Paragraph>I have analysed these bars as a prolongation of the tonic harmony, with C at the top, and with the intervals from C to E and back again unfolded. The alternation of C major and G major triads is therefore an ‘alto-voice’ feature at this background level – these chords are not true perfect cadences here, but a reinforcement of the C major dominant harmony established at bar 90. <CrossRef idref="example11">Example 11a</CrossRef> shows the background as it is given in <CrossRef idref="example10ab">Example 10b</CrossRef>, and <CrossRef idref="example11">Example 11b</CrossRef> shows the middleground elaboration of this structure.</Paragraph></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>Let's return now to <CrossRef idref="example10">Example 10</CrossRef>a, and look further at what its picture of the fundamental structure means. The graph analyses the whole of the development section as leading up, harmonically speaking, to the re-establishment of the tonic F major at bar 198. This is done through a few modulations to keys not terribly distant from F major, aiming towards the long dominant pedal from bar 176 onwards; even the D flat chords around bar 168 are part of a middleground feature in the bass which forms a neighbour note to the C dominant pedal. When the tonic harmony arrives to inaugurate the recapitulation at bar 198, the <InlineFigure>
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  </InlineFigure> of the fundamental line is re-introduced at the top of the melody. In my graph, the whole recapitulation is then analysed as keeping the <InlineFigure>
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  </InlineFigure> unresolved.</Paragraph><Paragraph>To consider what my analysis means here, look at the end of the recapitulation section, bars 280 to 300, which are parallel to the bars in the exposition that you have just listened to. You can see that this is almost a note-for-note repeat, in fact, transposed from C major to F major. My analysis claims that, despite the very emphatic arrival of the F and the tonic harmony from bar 287 onwards, there is no sense of completion for the movement as a whole here, because there has been no prominent and decisive fall from <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i016i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i016i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="37686228" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i016i.gif" x_imagewidth="6" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> to <InlineFigure>
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  </InlineFigure> in the upper voice. So we are not surprised at bar 301 when the repeated Fs continue in the bassoons, because we are still waiting for this closure.</Paragraph><Activity id="act001_013"><Heading>Activity 13</Heading><Question><Paragraph>
  <!--<InlineFigure>
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  </Paragraph><Paragraph>See if you agree with the way I hear this section (bars 280–300) by listening to it again now. This time just listen, without following the score.</Paragraph><!--Insert audio from CD4 track 32--><MediaContent height="" id="mp3008" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_006s.mp3" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="audio" width="" x_manifest="aa314_3_006s_1_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="272833d9"><Caption>Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, first movement, bars 280-300</Caption><Description>Click to listen to the extract Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, first movement, bars 280-300. (30 seconds)</Description></MediaContent></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><Paragraph>It is rather unfair to ask you whether you agree that something has <i>not</i> been heard in these bars! It is the sense of ‘unfinished business’, rather than restfulness, in the continuation of the music into the coda at bars 301 ff. which leads me to feel that we still need a structural descent to give the whole movement a satisfying closure.</Paragraph></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>The structural descent, when it occurs, seems very prominent to me. The first subject reappears <i>ff</i> at bar 323, where the C is emphasised in the violins, doubled by clarinets and bassoons. The melody then comes to rest in bar 332 on B♭<!--<InlineFigure>
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  <!--<InlineFigure>
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  </Paragraph><Paragraph>Re-read my commentary above, and then listen to the movement's coda (bars 323-end) <!--on CD 4, Tracks 34&#x2013;8-->whilst following the relevant section of <CrossRef idref="example10">Example 10</CrossRef>. Can you hear the notes of the structural descent, as I have analysed it, where they each occur?</Paragraph><!--Insert audio from CD4 tracks 34-38--><MediaContent height="" id="mp3009" src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_007s.mp3" supportDoc="" target="new window" type="audio" width="" x_manifest="aa314_3_007s_1_server_manifest.xml" x_filefolderhash="91efd430" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="9c5fb2c8"><Caption>Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, first movement, bars 323–end</Caption><Description>Click to listen to the extract Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, first movement, bars 323–end. (1 minute)</Description></MediaContent></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><Paragraph>Although it requires very long-range listening to hear this descent spread out over more than forty bars, I hope that the selected bar numbers marked (and the CD track numbers, if you were able to see them on your player) in <CrossRef idref="example10">Example 10</CrossRef> helped you to follow my analysis. I think that it is this deep structure that accounts for why this final section of the movement sounds so satisfying.</Paragraph></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>Whilst this is not the only way to analyse large musical structures, there are some aspects of Beethoven's craft – such as his mastery in creating a sense of achievement and fulfilment at the conclusion of a movement – which are often noted by listeners, but which seem to escape most attempts at analysis. If you have found this section of the course at all convincing, you should feel that we have at least approached one answer to the question of how Beethoven accomplishes his artistic effect.</Paragraph></Section><Section id="sec003_003"><Title>3.3 What is the point to voice-leading analysis of form?</Title><Paragraph>This analytical discussion may have seemed very dry, and it is quite difficult to follow, simply because this is a long and complex piece of music. But the aim behind it is far from dry, nor is it an attempt to plaster a pre-existing model of how music works on to the score come what may. The voice-leading graph in <CrossRef idref="example10">Example 10</CrossRef> becomes meaningful only when it is compared in detail with the score<!--, and with the sort of observations you looked at in the discussion of this movement in course 8-->. <!--There, you looked particularly at -->You may have noted some of the unusual aspects of the movement, especially where it differs from many other examples of sonata form. Here, these features (such as the beginning of the second subject and recapitulation sections) are seen to fit into a much more standard progress between tonic and dominant key areas, and comparing the harmonic analysis in this course with a thematic analysis<!-- in course 8-->should have deepened your appreciation – and respect – for Beethoven's complete mastery of his craft in every detail from the smallest to the largest. My voice-leading graph does not try simply to reduce Beethoven's harmony to a trivial counterpoint exercise, as if that were all that it consists of; rather, it shows how the unusual aspects of the harmony are held in balance by a coherent background form, so that the tension between these perspectives produces the excitement and exhilaration which we feel ever more deeply the better we come to know the music.</Paragraph><Paragraph>There is one further advantage to a voice-leading approach in analysing form, and that is the scope that it gives for identifying large-scale features which recur within the movement – even the whole work – which serve to bind together its different parts as a single course. I have already identified two of these structural motives: the non-synchronisation of thematic and harmonic formal boundaries, and the many small <InlineFigure>
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  </InlineFigure> descents in the movement. This gives a special importance to the note B♭<!--<InlineFigure>
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<Image id="fig001_I002" src="AA314_3_I002i.jpg"/>
<Description>DESCRIPTION REQUIRED</Description>
</InlineFigure>-->which formed part of that movement's structural descent: look again at bars 34–5 of the minuet to see the similarity. In this way, the voice leading of the different movements reveals features which bind together the whole work.</Paragraph><Paragraph>I hope that you have enjoyed this rather intensive look at the sonata form of this first movement. To close this course, I am going to discuss one more topic, and that is how background voice-leading structure relates to the shape of sonata form as we normally describe it.</Paragraph></Section></Session><Session id="sec004"><Title>4 Voice-leading analysis and sonata form</Title><Paragraph><!--In this course so far, you have looked at many different examples of sonata-form movements, and indeed there are more to come&#x0021; -->Sonata form can be divided into sections in several different ways. One of these is to describe it as an expanded version of the binary form of the baroque (<CrossRef idref="figure1">Figure 1</CrossRef>), emphasising the contrast of key areas within the first half.</Paragraph><Figure id="figure1"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_001i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_001i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="a522244d" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_001i.jpg" x_imagewidth="225" x_imageheight="36"/><Caption>Figure 1</Caption><Alternative>Figure 1</Alternative><Description>Figure 1</Description></Figure><Paragraph>Another scheme is to label the sections as a three-part or, sometimes, a four-part sectional form, emphasising the contrast of thematic material. This sort of description was more common in nineteenth-century textbooks, and indeed is better suited to sonata-form movements from the nineteenth century.</Paragraph><Figure id="figure2"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_002i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_002i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="82d3a8e7" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_002i.jpg" x_imagewidth="311" x_imageheight="36"/><Caption>Figure 2</Caption><Alternative>Figure 2</Alternative><Description>Figure 2</Description></Figure><Paragraph><!--These schemes were discussed in some detail in course 1. -->Either way of describing sonata form can be applied to the first movement of Beethoven's Eighth Symphony.</Paragraph><Paragraph>How, then, does this picture of sonata form relate to the fundamental structure of a voice-leading analysis? Are there features of a graph such as the ones we have been looking at which will always map on to sonata form in the same way? It is tempting to assume that there should be. Let's start by looking at how the graph of Beethoven's first movement (<CrossRef idref="example10ab">Example 10a</CrossRef>) might compare with <CrossRef idref="figure1">Figures 1</CrossRef> and <CrossRef idref="figure2">2</CrossRef>. I have put all three of these together in <CrossRef idref="figure3">Figure 3</CrossRef>, and added some of the labels for the fundamental structure which we discussed earlier.</Paragraph><Figure id="figure3"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_003i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_003i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="8b7ff00a" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_003i.jpg" x_imagewidth="511" x_imageheight="101"/><Caption>Figure 3</Caption><Alternative>Figure 3</Alternative><Description>Figure 3</Description></Figure><Activity id="act001_015"><Heading>Activity 15</Heading><Question><Paragraph>Look carefully at <CrossRef idref="figure3">Figure 3</CrossRef>. What does it say about the relationship between sonata form and voice-leading structure?</Paragraph></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><Paragraph>
  <CrossRef idref="figure3">Figure 3</CrossRef> points out several things about the connections between the voice-leading analysis and other ways of describing sonata form.</Paragraph><BulletedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>The divisions between sections (exposition, development, and so on) do correspond to important features in the graph.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>The form works around structural movement in the bass from I to V to I again. This may involve an actual modulation to the dominant (as in the exposition), or it may not (as in the recapitulation).</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>the fact that sonata form is (in one respect) a two-part structure, involving a break (and normally a repeat) at the end of the exposition, means that the fundamental structure of the graph has also to be divided into two, rather like the interruptions we looked at in OpenLearn course <a href="http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=4508" target="_blank">AA314_2</a>.</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></BulletedList></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>There are some features of <CrossRef idref="figure3">Figure 3</CrossRef>, however, which suggest that this cannot be the way that voice-leading works in every sonata-form movement. For one thing, thinking of the description of the fundamental structure at the beginning of this course, there is no place for an initial ascent here (the primary tone is the first note of the symphony), and no structural coda either, since the final tonic chord is simply repeated after bar 364. For another thing, the prolongation of <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i022i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i022i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="d5fec0bf" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i022i.gif" x_imagewidth="6" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> in a <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i007i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i007i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="8647ed01" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i007i.gif" x_imagewidth="30" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> fundamental line could not carry on over the break in the form at the end of the exposition in a major key, because the <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i022i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i022i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="d5fec0bf" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i022i.gif" x_imagewidth="6" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> cannot be harmonised by the dominant chord. And for a third thing, sonata form movements in a minor key, as you know, frequently end the exposition in the relative major and not the dominant, and so in these cases, the bass movement would have to be different.</Paragraph><Paragraph>For these reasons, we need to be aware that there are innumerable different ways in which a voice-leading background graph might fit within a sonata-form movement. And indeed, analysis of many different works shows that different ways of handling the harmonic structure of a sonata-form movement make the principle means by which composers achieve the tremendous variety of approaches to this form that we know from the thousands of different movements that share sonata form. As with Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, significant divisions of the sonata-form scheme nearly always correspond with harmonically important moments. But the exact disposition varies a lot.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Let's look at a few examples. <CrossRef idref="figure4">Figure 4</CrossRef> shows a typical way in which the voice leading of a sonata-form movement may work.</Paragraph><Figure id="figure4"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_004i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_004i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="98812fc8" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_004i.jpg" x_imagewidth="511" x_imageheight="124"/><Caption>Figure 4 A possible major-key voice-leading background</Caption><Alternative>Figure 4</Alternative><Description>Figure 4</Description></Figure><Paragraph>This is a very common scheme, and is perhaps the most obvious way of identifying the background of two of the three major-key first movements from Mozart's piano sonatas which you studied in OpenLearn courses <a href="http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=4507" target="_blank">AA314_1</a> and <a href="http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=4508" target="_blank">AA314_2</a><!--courses 3 and 6--> (K309 and K333). In both cases, the <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i023i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i023i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="ede2e64e" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i023i.gif" x_imagewidth="6" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> of the interrupted descent in the exposition corresponds to the beginning of the second subject. The third work whose first movement we looked at in detail there, K545, is also very similar in design. In this movement, though, the recapitulation has a most unusual beginning, where the first subject returns in the subdominant key (F major). At a background level, this forms part of the structural descent, so that the <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i024i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i024i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="d0346a9a" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i024i.gif" x_imagewidth="7" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> of the fundamental line (F) appears at this point.</Paragraph><Paragraph>One feature of <CrossRef idref="figure4">Figure 4</CrossRef> which deserves comment is the way that the fundamental structure is split into two, so that the movement to the dominant at the end of the exposition corresponds to a move to <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i023i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i023i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="ede2e64e" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i023i.gif" x_imagewidth="6" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> in the fundamental line. The term for this sort of structure is ‘interrupted form’, since the structure is interrupted at the double bar, and so repeated in the second part of the movement. You saw some smaller examples of interruption at the end of OpenLearn course AA314_2, including the first eight bars of the rondo from K333 with which we opened this course (<CrossRef idref="example4">Example 4</CrossRef>). As a background feature, it is frequently used on this very large scale as part of the patterning of an entire sonata-form movement.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Here is another possible way in which voice leading and formal sections may coincide. Let's imagine a descent from <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i022i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i022i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="d5fec0bf" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i022i.gif" x_imagewidth="6" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> to <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i018i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i018i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="f3ad1182" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i018i.gif" x_imagewidth="5" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> this time.</Paragraph><Figure id="figure5"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_005i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_005i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="82fde279" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_005i.jpg" x_imagewidth="511" x_imageheight="106"/><Caption>Figure 5 An alternative major-key voice-leading background</Caption><Alternative>Figure 5</Alternative><Description>Figure 5</Description></Figure><Activity id="act001_016"><Heading>Activity 16</Heading><Question><Paragraph>Consider the three examples of background voice-leading schemes and sonata form (<CrossRef idref="figure3">Figures 3</CrossRef>, <CrossRef idref="figure4">4</CrossRef> and <CrossRef idref="figure5">5</CrossRef>). What do the differences between these schemes imply about different ways of balancing the component parts of a sonata-form movement?</Paragraph></Question><Answer><SubHeading>Discussion</SubHeading><Paragraph>The main difference between <CrossRef idref="figure3">Figures 3</CrossRef>, <CrossRef idref="figure4">4</CrossRef> and <CrossRef idref="figure5">5</CrossRef> is the weight given to the development, recapitulation and coda. In <CrossRef idref="figure3">Figure 3</CrossRef>, it is the coda that gives the balancing closure to the harmonic structure of the movement. The coda is obviously very important, and is quite substantial in length (73 bars out of 373, or 20 per cent of the movement) as is typical of Beethoven. In <CrossRef idref="figure4">Figure 4</CrossRef>, on the other hand, more weight is given to the end of the recapitulation, where the repeat of the second subject in the tonic key leads to the completion of the motion of the harmonic structure. The coda may still be an important section, but its harmonic function is slightly different. Finally, <CrossRef idref="figure5">Figure 5</CrossRef> shows a scheme where the development section is much more important to the structure, and where it closes with a dominant chord (normally a dominant pedal) which has such weight within the form that it decisively moves it on, so that the return of the first subject at the opening of the recapitulation completes the harmonic journey of the movement.</Paragraph><Paragraph>Whilst this is, admittedly, rather an unlikely scheme for a sonata-form movement, there is a famous analysis by Schenker himself of the Finale of Beethoven's ‘Eroica’ symphony (although this particular movement follows a rather different formal plan) in which the decisive structural cadence is placed similarly early on, at bar 277 of a 473-bar movement.</Paragraph></Answer></Activity><Paragraph>Finally, let's look at one more scheme, which describes a typical minor-key movement.</Paragraph><Figure id="figure6"><Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_006i.jpg" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_006i.jpg" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="9128fcd6" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_006i.jpg" x_imagewidth="511" x_imageheight="107"/><Caption> Figure 6 A typical minor-key movement</Caption><Alternative>Figure 6</Alternative><Description>Figure 6</Description></Figure><Paragraph>This outline is different from that in <CrossRef idref="figure4">Figures 4</CrossRef> and <CrossRef idref="figure5">5</CrossRef> in that it does not show an interrupted form, but shows instead how the modulation to the relative major (degree III of the scale) can still support a prolongation of <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i016i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i016i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="37686228" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i016i.gif" x_imagewidth="6" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure> (or <InlineFigure>
  <Image src="https://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/pluginfile.php/59792/mod_oucontent/oucontent/363/aa314_3_i022i.gif" src_uri="https://openuniv.sharepoint.com/sites/informal-lrning/aa314_3/10/aa314_3_i022i.gif" x_folderhash="91efd430" x_contenthash="d5fec0bf" x_imagesrc="aa314_3_i022i.gif" x_imagewidth="6" x_imageheight="15"/>
  </InlineFigure>) in the top voice of the background level of the form. It also shows the importance that the dominant degree, which often forms a pedal at the end of the development section, may have. Although there may not be a modulation to the dominant key area in the whole movement, the dominant degree will still be crucial to the way that the form is constructed.</Paragraph><Paragraph>These four examples, although abstract, indicate some of the huge variety of ways in which composers make the harmonic outline of sonata form work. There are countless other ways in which a voice-leading fundamental structure may correspond to the categories of sonata form. The thing to bear in mind, when you read an analysis of this kind (as of any sort), is that form in music is not a rigid set of procedures that happen the same way in every piece. Although the fundamental structure at the background of the voice leading is a very simple piece of counterpoint, and is indeed shared between almost all tonal pieces, the whole point of an analysis is to show how this simple background structure gives coherence and meaning to the complex and intriguing design at the foreground of the music. Such an investigation should only deepen our appreciation and respect for an expert such as Beethoven.</Paragraph></Session><Session id="sec005"><Title>5 Conclusion</Title><Paragraph>This course completes your introduction to the systematic analysis of voice leading in pieces of tonal music. You have encountered a large number of new technical words and ideas in this course. The following terms are the principal ones that have been discussed.</Paragraph><BulletedList><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>foreground, middleground and background</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>fundamental structure</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>fundamental line</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>primary tone</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>initial ascent, prolongation of the primary tone, structural descent, structural coda</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>structural cadence</Paragraph>
  </ListItem><ListItem>
  <Paragraph>interrupted form</Paragraph>
  </ListItem></BulletedList><Paragraph>This course does not expect you to be able to analyse a whole movement's background structure yourself from scratch. However, you should now understand the sorts of musical observation that go into making such an analysis, and be able to read an analytical graph in relation to the score of the music, and discuss the musical thoughts that it embodies.<!-- As you continue with the course, musical ideas will from time to time be presented using a voice-leading graph, when a graph is the most convenient way to express them. You should now be able to understand the sort of information summarized in these graphs.--></Paragraph><!--<Box id="box00a">
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                </Paragraph></Box></Session></Unit><BackMatter><Acknowledgements><Paragraph>Except for third party materials and otherwise stated (see <a href="http://www.open.ac.uk/conditions">terms and conditions</a>), this content is made available under a <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Licence</a></Paragraph><Paragraph>Grateful acknowledgement is made to the following sources for permission to reproduce material in this course:</Paragraph><Paragraph>Course image: <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/115089924@N02/">Ilmicrofono Oggiono</a> in Flickr made available under <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Licence</a>.</Paragraph><Paragraph>All video extracts are taken from AA314 <i>Studies in Music 1750–2000: Intrepretation and Analysis</i>. Produced by the BBC on behalf of the Open University © 2001 The Open University.</Paragraph><Paragraph>The full score for Beethoven's Eighth Symphony is taken from: Beethoven, L, <i>Symphonies, no. 8, op. 93, F major</i>, edited by Max Unger, foreword by Wilhelm Altmann, available online from the William and Gayle Cook Music Library, Indiana University School of Music at <a href="http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/variations/scores/baj2627/" target="_blank">www.dlib.indiana.edu/variations/scores/baj2627/</a> [accessed 24 April 2008].</Paragraph><!--<Paragraph>Adapted from fdecomite: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/fdecomite/526551927/" target="_blank">http://www.flickr.com/photos/fdecomite/526551927/</a> [Details correct as of 16th January 2008]</Paragraph>--><Paragraph><b>Don't miss out:</b></Paragraph><Paragraph>If reading this text has inspired you to learn more, you may be interested in joining the millions of people who discover our free learning resources and qualifications by visiting The Open University - <a href="http://www.open.edu/openlearn/free-courses?utm_source=openlearn&amp;utm_campaign=ol&amp;utm_medium=ebook">www.open.edu/openlearn/free-courses</a></Paragraph></Acknowledgements></BackMatter><settings>
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