William E. Caplin (born 1948) is an American music theorist who lives and works in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, where he is a James McGill Professor at the Schulich School of Music of McGill University. Caplin served as president of the Society for Music Theory from 2005 to 2007 and was its vice-president from 2001 to 2003.[1] His earlier work concentrated on the history of music theory,[2] but he is best known for a series of articles and two books on musical form in European music around 1800. The first of those books, Classical Form: A Theory of Formal Functions for the Music of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven[3] has been widely influential and was a major factor in the revival of interest in musical form in North-American music theory.[4]
Theory of formal functions
editClassical Form, along with a more recently published, lengthy textbook intended for both undergraduate and graduate levels,[5] expounds a theory and analytical method for the music of the "high Classical" era (roughly, the two decades before and after 1800). The theory is grounded in eighteenth-century compositional pedagogy[6] and in work by Arnold Schoenberg and his pupil Erwin Ratz.[7] Broadly, the theory can be understood as "a generalized taxonomy of Classical form gleaned from a large repertory of works rather than the description of the organic wholeness or the uniqueness of events in any one work."[8]
Schoenberg’s concept of the "basic idea" (here understood as a two-measure unit)[12] and his distinction between period and sentence—two models for themes—are the foundation for a theory based on a dichotomy between "tight-knit" and "loose" designs and on "beginning," "middle," and "end" functions. The core figure is the theme (understood paradigmatically as eight bars in length), but formal functions can be extended outward to form sections and entire movements. "Tight-knit" themes and small forms are the sentence, period, hybrid, and compound (16-bar) themes, small ternary, and small binary. "Looser formal regions" are the subordinate theme, transition, development, recapitulation, and coda.[13]
The period is the symmetrical or balanced design familiar from traditional form theory: an antecedent phrase with two contrasting ideas is followed by a consequent phrase that repeats (or slightly varies) the initial two-bar idea and adds a cadential idea to close. The sentence is a progressive or developmental design, where a presentation phrase consists of an idea and its repetition (often varied or transposed) followed by a continuation phrase that, ideally, fragments the initial idea by breaking it into one-bar motives and thereby accelerating movement toward the cadence. The less common hybrid themes mix the components in variously different ways (for example, the antecedent + continuation theme).
The theme types:
- Sentence
- Period
- Hybrid 1: antecedent + continuation
- Hybrid 2: antecedent + cadential
- Hybrid 3: compound basic idea + continuation
- Hybrid 4: compound basic idea + consequent[14]
For hybrid 2: "cadential" refers to a phrase where a typical progression in a cadence (usually just two bars) is stretched over the entire phrase. Often this function is filled by the Expanded Cadential Progression (ECP) or I 6–ii 6–V–I. For hybrids 3 and 4: the compound basic idea is itself a hybrid: it has the antecedent's basic idea & contrasting idea pair, but it has the presentation's (usually) simple tonic prolongation. From these examples it can be seen that harmony has a powerful, often determining, role in Caplin's theory.
Compound themes are of two types: the 16-measure period, which is the same as the traditional double period, and the 16-measure sentence. The 16-measure period opens with an antecedent consisting of any eight-bar theme, which ends with a half cadence (HC) rather than a perfect authentic cadence (PAC). The eight-bar consequent repeats the opening but adjusts the cadence to a PAC. The 16-measure sentence is paradigmatically an eight-bar presentation, consisting of a compound basic idea and its repetition, followed by an eight-bar continuation with the typical features of fragmentation and sequence.
In larger contexts in Classical-era music, passages of tight-knit and loose-knit functions tend to alternate, the tight-knit units being represented by the themes above, the loose knit units by isolated phrases, model-sequence groups, "standing on the dominant," and other entities.
Pragmatically, the "strict definition of formal categories [is] applied with ‘considerable flexibility’ in analysis."[15] Thus, data for a set of analyses could be read as objective information but could just as easily be taken as a catalogue of the analyst’s choices. The assignment of labels for thematic elements often involves a judgment call.[16] The form-function theory, in other words, is both taxonomic and interpretative; it is from balancing the two that one can learn the most about the repertoires under analysis. The theory has, nevertheless, been criticized for a "zeal for exhaustive theoretical and terminological rigor" that can interfere with that flexibility in analysis, and specifically for its "dogged adherence to a rigidly quadratic conception of grouping structures" [source needed, linked source does not contain any of these quotes]; that is, to ideas defined as two bars and themes defined as eight bars.[17] A related criticism is Caplin's "tendency to substitute [a formal/functional] archetype for the music in question as the point of reference for analytical discussion."[18]
Although intended for, and derived specifically from, the music of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, the theory of formal functions has been extended by various authors, mostly to later repertoires and largely in connection with the sentence paradigm (notably, Schubert, Schumann, Wagner, Schoenberg, and music in film) but occasionally earlier as well (especially J.S. Bach). See "Further reading" below.
In German-speaking discourse, Caplin's understanding of "Formfunktionen" (formal functions) and the coupling of "formal functions" and "loose" designs has been criticized as dogmatic.[19]
References
edit- ^ Society for Music Theory. "SMT Officers". Retrieved 12 February 2018.
- ^ William E. Caplin. (1981). Theories of Harmonic-Metric Relationships from Rameau to Riemann. PhD diss. University of Chicago.
- ^ Caplin, William E. (1998). Classical Form: A Theory of Formal Functions for the Music of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven. Oxford University Press.
- ^ Editors' introduction to Formal Functions in Perspective: Essays on Musical Form from Haydn to Adorno, edited by Steven Vande Moortele and Julie Pedneault-Deslauriers (University of Rochester Press, 2015), p. 1.
- ^ Andrew Aziz, Review of William Caplin, Analyzing Classical Form: An Approach for the Classroom, Music Theory Online 20/1 (2014), par. 1.
- ^ Joel Galand, "'Formenlehre' Revived" (Review of Caplin, Classical Form), Intégral 13 (1999): 147-148.
- ^ Arnold Schoenberg, Fundamentals of Musical Composition, edited by Gerald Strang, with an introduction by Leonard Stein. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1967. Reprinted 1985, London: Faber and Faber; Erwin Ratz, Einführung in die musikalische Formenlehre, Vienna: Österreichische Bundesverlag, 1951; Vienna: Universal Edition, 1968. Second edition 1973. See also Galand, 144-146.
- ^ Severine Neff, review of Caplin Classical Form, Indiana Theory Review 20/2 (1999): 49.
- ^ Benjamin, Thomas; Horvit, Michael; and Nelson, Robert (2003). Techniques and Materials of Music, p. 252. 7th edition. Thomson Schirmer. ISBN 0495500542.
- ^ Cooper, Paul (1973). Perspectives in Music Theory, p. 48. Dodd, Mead, and Co. ISBN 0396067522.
- ^ Kostka, Stefan and Payne, Dorothy (1995). Tonal Harmony, p. 162. Third edition. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0073000566.
- ^ "Basic idea" and "basic shape" are translations of Grundgestalt, Schoenberg's name for a compositional "germ" from which a piece of music develops. See Galand, 144-146.
- ^ Summary from Nicholas Marston, Review of William E. Caplin, Classical Form: A Theory of Formal Functions for the Instrumental Music of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, Music Analysis 20/1 (2001), 143.
- ^ One additional hybrid—the presentation + consequent—is rejected by Caplin as too rare in the Classical repertoire.
- ^ Marston, 145.
- ^ Caplin, Analyzing Classical Form, 117.
- ^ Marston, 146, 148. Warren Darcy also mentions the latter as a problem: Music Theory Spectrum 22/1 (2000): 123.
- ^ Floyd K. Grave, review of Caplin, Classical Form, Music Theory Online 4/6 (1998): par. 16.
- ^ Ulrich Kaiser, “Formfunktionen der Sonatenform. Ein Beitrag zur Sonatentheorie auf der Grundlage einer Kritik an William E. Caplins Verständnis von Formfunktionen,” Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft für Musiktheorie (=ZGMTH) 15/1 (2018): 29-79. Link
Further reading
edit- Matthew BaileyShea, "Beyond the Beethoven Model: Sentence Types and Limits," Current Musicology 77 (2004): 5-33.
- Matthew BaileyShea, "Wagner's Loosely Knit Sentences and the Drama of Musical Form," Intégral 16-17 (2002): 1-34.
- Pieter Bergé and Ludwig Holtmeier, eds., Musical Form, Forms & Formenlehre: Three Methodological Reflections. Leuven University Press (Belgium), 2009.
- "Contemplating Caplin": Special issue of Intersections: Canadian Journal of Music/Revue canadienne de musique XXXI/n1 (2010).
- David Forrest and Matthew Santa, "A Taxonomy of Sentence Structures," College Music Symposium 54 (2014).
- Peter Franck, "Canon and Its Effect on Tight-Knit Organization within Classical Themes," Intégral (Eastman School of Music) 26 (2012).
- John Y. Lawrence, "Toward a Predictive Theory of Theme Types," Journal of Music Theory 64/1 (2020): 1-36.
- Frank Lehman, "Hollywood Cadences: Music and the Structure of Cinematic Expectation," Music Theory Online 19/4 (2013).Link
- Nathan Martin, "Formenlehre goes to the opera: Examples from Armida and elsewhere," Studia musicologica: An International Journal of Musicology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 51/ns3-4 (2010): 387-404.
- Nathan Martin, "Schumann's Fragment," Indiana Theory Review 28/1-2 (2010): 85-109.
- Eric McKee, "Influences of the Early Eighteenth-century Social Minuet on the Minuets from J.S. Bach's French Suites, BWV 812-17," Music Analysis 18/2 (1999): 235-260.
- David Neumeyer, "The Contredanse, Classical Finales, and Caplin’s Formal Functions," Music Theory Online 12/4 (2006).[1]
- David Neumeyer, Formal Functions in Menuets by Mozart, Part 1: Orchestral Works and Independent Sets, Texas ScholarWorks 2017.Link.
- Michael Oravitz, "The Use of Caplin/Schoenberg Thematic Prototypes in Melodic Dictations," Journal of Music Theory Pedagogy 26 (2012): 101-139.Link
- Mark Richards, "Viennese Classicism and the Sentential Idea: Broadening the Sentence Paradigm," Theory and Practice 36 (2011): 179-224.
- Mark Richards, "Film Music Themes: Analysis and Corpus Study," Music Theory Online 22/1 (2016).Link
- Mark Richards, "Teaching Sonata Expositions Through Their Order of Cadences," Journal of Music Theory Pedagogy 26 (2012): 215-252.Link
- Mark Richards, "Sonata Form and the Problem of Second-theme Beginnings," Music Analysis 32/1 (2013): 3-45.
- Matthew Riley, "Haydn's Missing Middles," Music Analysis 30/1 (2011): 37-57.
- Matthew Riley, "The Sonata Principle Reformulated for Haydn Post-1770 and a Typology of his Recapitulatory Strategies," Journal of the Royal Musical Association 140/1 (2015): 1-39.
- Stephen Rodgers, "Sentences with Words: Text and Theme-Type in Die schöne Müllerin," Music Theory Spectrum 36/1 (2014): 58–85.
- Stephen Rodgers, "Schubert’s Idyllic Periods," Music Theory Spectrum 39/2 (2017): 223–46.
- Steven Vande Moortele, "Sentences, Sentence Chains, and Sentence Replication: Intra- and Interthematic Formal Functions in Liszt's Weimar Symphonic Poems," Intégral 25 (2011): 121-58.
External links
edit- Official website
- William Caplin faculty page at McGill University