Bernhard:For the last couple of weeks I have come across the forum and have been reading several posts and have really enjoyed reading yours. I think it is admirable that you spend the time to respond to all the questions iin detail, on top of all the work you do as a teacher. I have recently gone back to playing the piano after a long hiatus. I have never had good teaching on music theory. But I would like to remedy that. I think that your approach, analyzing the piece to be played makes a lot of sense. I am not sure how to do it, though. I was wondering if you could either direct me to a previous post about an example of analysis of a piece or if one is not available, could you do an analysis on Chopin's Prelude in E minor (no 4, I think) op 28, as an example (or maybe just a portion of it)? Thank you so very much.
However, there is no formal analysis yet on this forum (AFAIK). So, why don't we do this together? That should be fun, and we'll all learn a lot more than having the answer dished out by someone. Let's see how many things we can discover.
I guess one of my questions is: how much do you have to analyze a piece to play it well? And why? Is just being able to read musical notation enough? Does it help me to know how the chord progression of the piece is? I did read one of your posts about your approach to music theory, that you analyze the piece to be played by your student or you make the student analyze it, and that was what got me started.
1) that F sharp in the key signature means it could be either G major or E minor. It is E minor because of 2 things I see: the piece ends with an E minor chord and there are a couple of spots where I see the D sharp, although that does not seem to show up for awhile. How does that knowledge help us? I am not sure. There is the "sad" feeling of the minor sound. The chords in this piece vary so much, that it does not help me memorize, although the repetition and the somewhat chromatic nature of the chords does (at least that it is how it seems to me, without actually knowing too much about chords).
2) Form: I see two types of repetitions, one is the second portion of the piece repeats some of the 1st with variations. The other is the repetition of the theme (B,B,C,B,C,B, etc.. , but with the variation of the chords of the LH ( I am not sure if this is what you and others mean by formal structure). What is the relevance of this? I am not sure.
I am sorry I can't do any better,
but I hope other people will join in, such as nomis did.
Yes, I also see two parts (A: mm 1-12 and A': mm 13-25), but I am not sure how to subdivide them.
The piece not only ends in Em, but also starts out in Em (first inversion Em chord), and the first part ends in a V7 chord (B,D#,A, with the F# omitted), pretty typical. The second part starts and ends on Em, which should firmly establish the tonality as Em.
Bernhard, you are asking for the relevance - geez, as if the analysis in itself wouldn't be difficult enough already
Em gives the piece a sad mood (deemed fit for Chopin's funeral). Em is also the forth key (C-Am-G-Em) when going around the circle of fifth's in a certain way. Chopin arranged his preludes this way. With respect to the form, I guess, the piece starts out fairly simple at first, but is varied a bit in the second half. Not much of a relevance, as one can't really speak of "development", but nevertheless.
2. It is very easy to loose track of why you are analysing the piece in the first place and get caught into ever more complex theoretical edifices that tell you next to nothing. As a parallel, imagine analysing James Joyce’s “Finnegan’s Wake” by counting all the letters and investigating the principles governing their relative distributions in each page. (You may find this preposterous, but some musicologist did just that with the WTC: counted all the notes and how many times each appeared in each prelude & fugue – to what purpose no one knows).
I am sorry I can't do any better, but I hope other people will join in, such as nomis did. I did understand what he said, but I do not think the Prelude is boring at all. It may be repetitive and relatively simple, but I think the use of the variation of the chords of the LH makes it interesting. It is very soulful and sad
Ok, I went through the 1st exercise of writing the melodic notes easily enough (I think). I found 5 notes that do not belong to the E minor scale (B flat, bar 4 (is this bar 4 or 5, you start counting bars on the 1st complete one, correct?); G sharp, bar 8; D natural, bar 12, A sharp bar 16- so far there is a pattern of every 4th bar includes a chromatic note; and D natural again, bar 18). All these seem to me chromatic changes only without going into a new key).
The second, naming the chords, I can't do without help. The first set of cords are (as xvimbi already noted), the 1st inversion of I (I b), but I am alreay stuck in the 2nd. It seem to be II, but what do I do with the top E? and then it seems the E gets diminished , but I do not know how to name it, since I can't name the 2nd set. Help!!! It feels like doing math again....
Is there a suggestion for a simpler piece to tackle that way? But of course keep the thread going for other people that have more advanced knowledge than me.
Thank you guys for the encouragement. I will certainly keep playing it, but analyzing it is more than I can chew. But, why don't you help? I know I started it, but it does not mean I have to finish it. I will keep following it, if anybody else does. So, true musicians: xvimbi, mayla, etc..., let's go!
"SUS actually stands for “suspended”. You get it by raising the major third note of a major chord one half step to the fourth."
I can't see baohui pictures at all (there is an X in stead on each one with a space of several lines) and Bernhard's pictures are gone, each replaced by a single dot (period) . Any reason for that? Thanks
We could go through every single chord doing this type of painstaking analysis. And indeed this is the only type of analysis I've ever really been taught to do. Not that I like it that way. I've analyzed the harmonies of different pieces in my own way plenty of times, and I want to do so with this one, but that would require conceiving of a new type of analytical system. It doesn't have to be complicated - it only needs to explain what's going on.For this piece, I think an analytical system based on the lowering of half-steps and whole-steps will be the most beneficial, at least up to bar 13. If we look at the left hand as three separate voices, every new chord is somehow "lower" than the previous one and it makes the whole section one big "fall" from Em to B7. How exactly to codify such a system, though, I'm not quite sure.
My sentiments exactly. That's what I meant earlier with "over-analyzing". Perhaps it is time for Bernhard to reveal a better approach.
What if the chords were not necessarily harmonizing the melody in relation to the key? And not simply e minor, but any key?
The chords in the LH is actually pretty interesting to analyse by movement, all 3 voices move down in chromatics, however they are out of phase with each other, and this is what causes the suspensions, anticipations etc which creates that tension and dissonance, if they were moving down at the same time in parallel it would be too simple and perhaps a dull, so that is why looking at the intervals like I have mentioned and the movement of them is more important imo. I appreciate the Schenkerian in the sense that it says "most fundamental stratum of musical experience is that of directed motion towards an ending-point", in this piece, that is exactly what it is, perhaps in 2 sections, although the first one isn't resolved so we are interested in the B7 to Em like aerlinndan said. Most of the chords are inversions, which means the resolution "sound" is anticipated and built up, with the help of that descending chordal line in the LH. The E minor chord is never in its root position (even in the cadence in bars 12-13, so nothing is resolved properly, that is probably why amanfang suggested that it isn't e minor we're working with, plus the fact that Chopin chose to work with # accidentals sometimes and b accidentals other times, on specific notes. There are other types of analysis we could look at tooPsychological(analysing music purely from sounds experienced, rather than the sound itself ("phenomenology-study of essential qualities of the experience...gain an immediate awareness of the experience by stripping away everything that is not essential to it" - Meter (patterns in music, and Reti (coding or grouping musical ideas into units)....i know it sounds a bit mechanical, but it is very detailed and interesting to read, because they are concerned with the experience of hearing. These ways of analysing truely breaks music down into its essence and draws out what is important, rather than doing traditional and formal analysis on everything on the page..Just a thought
Also I think Rosana (who started all this) may benefit from it.
Also, Rosana seems to have shied away: "I need to know more before I tackle that sort of work". But my whole point is that one does not need to know more. One learns as one does it (that is the essence of the pragmatic method as opposed to the logical method). So, please do ask questions if there is any step that you do not fully understand.
I hope this thread isn't going to just be forgotten....