Analysis of musemes 1-4
Transcription
Analysis of musemes 1-4
Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) 53 Frn03-MusemAnal.fm. 2016-02-01, 03:00 3. Musemes 1‐4 m1: instant altiplano Ex. 2. Fernando, bars 1-6 The recording starts with a long, held A major chord with no bass reg‐ ister but with sustained notes in the treble, melodic interest in the up‐ per middle register, etc. Bars 1‐6 contain three accompanying and one foreground museme. Apart from the ‘string wallpaper stasis’ function of the violin pad (m1b2),1 these musemes, set out in Figure 6 (p. 48), are referred to as MASSED CHARANGOS (m1b1) and IN PARADISUM (m3a) while the melodic museme, listed as m1a, is variously named QUENA, THE HISPANIC FLOURISH, THE MAÑANA TURN, etc. 1. The Swedish expressions stråkskog (= string forest) and stråktapet (= string wallpa‐ per) cover both types of string pad (‘filling’). The ‘string halo’ (‘silver strings’ or Streichenglorienschein) is used by Bach in the Matthew Passion to accompany and enclose the figure of Jesus in an glittering aura of otherworldliness. For further dis‐ cussion of string pads, see The Dream of Olwen analysis in Tagg & Clarida (2003). 54 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 m1a: quena Fig. 8. Museme 1a: ‘quena motif’, ‘mañana turn’, ‘Spanish twirl’, etc.2 As shown in the Table of Musematic Occurrence (Fig. 7, p. 49), m1a ap‐ pears in the introduction, as m1a1 and m1a2 (b. 1‐6, 9‐10; pp. 22‐23), and as m1a3 in verses 2 and 3 (b. 29, p. 28; b. 67‐69, p. 36).3 This melodic museme is called QUENA because it’s played either on quena or on a similarly sounding end‐blown flute. At least its timbre is not that of, say, a transverse Western concert flute, or of an Irish tin whistle, or of a ney, bansuri, kaval, shakuhachi, spilåpipa or panpipes (zampoñas). Museme 1a1 has also been called SPANISH TWIRL or FLOURISH, for reasons that will shortly become evident, and the MAÑANA TURN due not only to its per‐ ceived hispanicity but also to a fortuitous visual resemblance beween the tilde (~), seen in common Spanish words like señor, niño, mañana, and the symbol in Western notation for the turn as a melodic ornament closely resembling the of m1a (see end of example 3, p. 55). Recorders (flûte à bec, flauto dolce, Blockflöte), quenas and other types of end‐blown flutes (with studio reverb in Fernando) playing melodic fig‐ ures similar to m1a can be heard on La Flûte Indienne (1968) and in li‐ , brary music pieces like Spanish Autumn , Exotic Flute Inca Flute , Cordigliera and Wine Festival (examples 3 through 7). Sung or played on other instruments, similar rhythmic‐me‐ lodic patterns can be found in tunes like Lady of Spain (ex. 8: b. 3, 7), the two Granadas (ex. 9‐10) and the seguidilla aria from Bizet’s Carmen ( for ‘Séville’, ex. 11: b. 3), as well as in the parlando rubato opening to Simon and Garfunkel’s appropriation of the Los Incas ver‐ sion of El Condor Pasa ( , ex. 12). Common PMFCs (paramusical fields of connotation) for the pieces of interobjective comparison mate‐ rial (IOCM) in examples 3 through 12 (pp. 55‐56) seem to be southern climes, with particular reference to Spain, or to South America, an An‐ dean‐Indian region being the most likely bet in the latter case. 2. 3. Quena [MGPC]: Andean end‐blown flute (Fig. 8; Fig. 12, p. 65). The in m1a3 is replaced by over Bm in bar 69. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 55 Ex. 3. Hans Haider: Spanish Autumn (Selected Sounds) —‘Spain, South America, country + people’ Ex. 4. Gerhard Trede: Exotic Flute (Selected Sounds) —‘impression,’....‘journey over exotic landscape’ Ex. 5. Inca Flute (CAM) —‘quena’.... ‘Bolivia, Peru, N. Argentina, sadness and melancholy, valley’ Ex. 6. Cordigliera (CAM) —‘Carnival, festivity in the valley’ Ex. 7. Trevor Duncan: Wine Festival, part (c) (Boosey & Hawkes) —‘gay, exotic, Mediterranean’ Ex. 8. T. Evans: Lady of Spain (1931) 56 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 Ex. 9. Albeniz: Granada (1886) Ex. 10. Lara: Granada (1932) Ex. 11. Bizet: ‘Près des remparts de Séville’, Carmen Act 1 (1875) Ex. 12. Simon & Garfunkel with Los Incas (1970): El Condor Pasa – introduction The PMFCs mentioned on page 54, just before example 3, are reasona‐ bly unequivocal in their ‘Spanishness’ but the Fernando quena museme is connotatively more precise than that. Let’s narrow down the IOCM to correspond more exactly with m1a, focusing on examples with a tempo giusto no faster than moderato and a quasi‐pentatonic melodic profile.4 4. With the exception of momentarily altered ( ) to just once in verse 3 (b. 69), the lead quena plays m1a entirely in the ionian hexatonic mode whose scale degrees are or, in A, . For a theory of popular hexatonic modes, see Tagg (2014: 165‐170). The descending flute appoggiature in the Interlude (bb. 60‐ 61) are a variant of the euroclassical‐sounding museme 5a (see p. 93, ff.) and are consequently ionian heptatonic. The second flute’s parallel thirds include , in A, under the first flute’s recurring s. but no ( ) under (just ). Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 57 Excluding, for those reasons and for the time being, examples 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11, we’re left with ex. 4 (PMFC ‘impression, journey over ex‐ otic landscape’), ex. 5 (Andean‐Indian regions, ‘sadness, melancholy, valley’) and ex. 12 (‘Los Incas’ and a large condor bird passing over‐ head —Fig. 9a). The common denominator of connotation in those three pieces of IOCM is pretty clear: an exotic environment (as viewed/ heard by most Northern Europeans and North Americans), probably Andean‐Indian, with a rural view large enough to register the passing (overhead) of a single, very large bird. Fig. 9. El condor pasa (a) at Machu Picchu - artwork for Deezer; (b) track on Bridge Over Troubled Waters (Simon & Garfunkel, 1970) However, if we concentrate instead on m1a’s characteristic flute sound and ignore tempo and tonal idiom, we’re left with examples 3 (Spain Autumn, South America, country, people), 4 (impression, journey over exotic landscape), 5 (Inca, quena, Bolivia, Peru, N. Argentina, sadness and melancholy, valley) and 7 (wine festival, gay, exotic, Mediterra‐ nean). That’s not the same connotative sphere as before: despite the similarity of flute sound in examples 3‐5 and 7, the Andean connota‐ tion (ex. 4‐5) is contradicted by ‘Spain’ (ex. 3) and ‘Mediterranean’ (ex. 7), while there is no clarity about happy (ex. 7) and sad (ex. 5). More im‐ portantly, m1a is only one element in m1, which is in fact a museme stack, a syncritic unit, a composite ‘now sound’. Museme 1a is simply melodic foreground figure inside m1. It’s set in relief against an accom‐ panying background environment consisting of m1b (see next) and m3a (see p. 69, ff.). 58 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 m1b: charangos and open stillness Fig. 10. m1b: charangos and wide-open stasis/spaces All variants of m1b share one obvious trait: they all seem to be long, held, rhytmically, metrically and melodically unconfigured single, ac‐ companimental chords. Well, that’s how they look in notation, even when, as in Fernando’s verses, they change from A to F#m, Bm and E. In‐ deed, that motoric stasis is, as we’ll see, part of their function in provid‐ ing a background of stillness against which the melodic foreground figures of flute and vocals can stand out in relief. That said, m1b and its variants are more than mere chordal Polyfilla spackling potential cracks in the musical texture because they have particular sonic charac‐ teristics. The tremolando charango sound (m1b1: b. 3‐6, 9‐25, 62‐63) is one of them, whether or not doubled by piano (b. 13‐25, 62‐63), the ‘sil‐ ver strings’ sound of m1b2 another, and the brightly equalised and re‐ verb‐rich laisser vibrer downstrokes on electric guitar (m1b3) yet another. In other words, the musical backing in bars 1‐6 may be station‐ ary but it isn’t ‘neutral’ and it isn’t, for example, anguished, cheeky, dull, dark, dense, heavy, lugubrious, mechanical, round, small, stern or threatening. The quasi‐parlando senza misura tonic A major tremolando on what might be 12‐string guitars in the Fernando recording (m1b1) has been given a substantial boost of treble frequency so that the rapid percus‐ sive quality of plectrum or fingernail ‘scratching’ is in evidence, result‐ ing in a sound reminiscent of massed balalaikas, bouzoukis, cimbalons, mandolins or charangos. Such sounds over static or slowly changing harmonies are not only to be heard in examples 4 (Exotic Flute, p. 55) and 12 (El condor pasa, p. 56) but also in recordings by popular ‘ethnic’ artists like Gheorghe Zamfir on Les Flûtes Roumaines (1970), or on tracks like Balada Sarpelui (1976b: violins only) and Doina din Arges (1976a: pi‐ ano and violin tremolandi, cimbalon swirls). The latter, originally con‐ ceived as a lament for the devastation of the 1970 Danube floods in Romania, was also used later as the title theme for the BBC TV series The Light of Experience (1976), which ambitiously covered the history of Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 59 human knowledge. Both inundated plains and the history of knowl‐ edge from time immemorial constitute large stretches and spaces of space, time and thought. It’s therefore no surprise to find plains and other large, empty, motionless spaces manifested in terms of static har‐ mony, often tinged with an ‘ethnic’ or exotic element providing dis‐ tance in time, culture and/or place, as in the film music extract In the Mountains (ex. 13), or in such pieces as Borodin’s On the Steppes of Cen‐ tral Asia (ex. 14), ‘On the Prairie’ from Copland’s Billy The Kid Suite, (ex. 15), or as in practically any library music purporting to conjure up this sort of connotative semantic field.5 Ex. 13. Friedhofer (1957): ‘In The Mountains’ from Boy On A Dolphin6 Ex. 14. Borodin (1880): On The Steppes Of Central Asia – opening 5. 6. See tracks like Evolving Dawn and Stillness ( audionetwork.com), or Lonesome Travel‐ ler 2 and Spirit Of The Hills ( .unippm.com); see also the end of Mussorgsky’s Night on a Bare Mountain. For more about stillness and open spaces in music, see Tagg (1982a, 1989, 2013: 420‐423). Try also searchword PANORAMIC in library music sites. Cited in Dolan (1967: 108‐109). 60 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 Ex. 15. Copland (1941): ‘On The Open Prairie’ from ballet suite Billy The Kid Ex. 16. Händel (1741): Pastoral Symphony from The Messiah Ex. 17. Bruckner (1881): Symphony No.4 – opening ‘In der Wald’ Ex. 18. Beethoven (1808): Pastoral Symphony (opening) Ex. 19. Schubert (1827): Der Leiermann. Rurality: ‘Drüben hinterm Dorfe steht ein Leiermann’...‘Barfuß auf dem Eise wankt er hin und her’ Now, the static harmony under discussion here isn’t linked only to the ‘calm grandeur of nature’; it can also, in euroclassical contexts, be un‐ derstood in terms of a drone and of the drone as synecdoche for a ar‐ chaic folksiness and peasant simplicity which harmonic practices among the artistocracy and merchant classes had supposedly super‐ seded. It’s in this way that Handel (ex. 16: shepherds, not city dwellers, Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 61 keeping watch over their flocks), Bruckner (ex. 17: alone in the woods), Beethoven (ex. 18: cheerful on arrival in the countryside),7 Schubert (ex. 19: the village hurdy‐gurdy player) and Mahler (ex. 20: alone in the timeless cool of sunset),9 not to mention Vaughan Williams (e.g. The Lark Ascending, Fantasia on Greensleeves), all use drones or static har‐ mony in conjunction with either rural yesteryear, or with supposedly timeless outdoor spaces,8 as in the Mahler example and as at the start of Ives’s The Unanswered Question (ex. 21, p. 62), whose pianissimo sus‐ tained chords are described by the composer as connoting ‘the Silences of the Druids Who Know, See and Hear Nothing’. Ex. 20. Mahler (1912): ‘Der Abschied’ from Lied von der Erde.9 7. 8. 9. ‘Erwachen heiterer Empfindungen bei der Ankunft auf dem Lande’. See Rebscher (1981), Tagg (1982a). Text translation: ‘the sun departs behind the mountains; evening descends in every valley, its shadows full of coolness’; source Hans Bethge’s Die chinesische Flöte, based on poems written during the Tang dynasty(618‐907). 62 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 Ex. 21. Ives (1908): The Unanswered Question. Opening bars. Ethnic qualifiers Sustained chords played in slow or senza misura time are often used in film and television contexts to conjure up a mood of calm in large open spaces,10 but they need to be combined with some sort of ‘ethnic’ mel‐ ody instrument if the folksy character of those large outdoor spaces is to be established at the same time. This means that a very general sense of calm rurality (nature as a meditative, recreative leisure resource) can be particularised to various degrees. Such ethnic melody instrument qualifiers as Fernando’s quenas are not only to be found in examples 14, 15 (continuation) and 17 but also in library music pieces like Saffron and Green, Shannon Fen, Horizons Unlimited, Meadowsweet, Shepherd’s Song, Folk Ballad II or Tema Medievale.11 The balance between melodic‐rhythmic profile and quasi‐static drone‐ like accompaniment is delicate in this sphere of musical connotation. The rurality and calm of the first museme stack in Fernando (m1+m2a) or in Mahler’s Abschied (ex. 20) is not as abstract as Hymas’s At Peace or the opening of Ives’s The Unanswered Question (ex. 21). Nor is it as so‐ cially/musically ‘populated’ as the start of Beethoven’s Pastoral Sym‐ phony with its much quicker tempo, more affirmative rhythmic 10. For example, the start of Pink Floyd’s Shine On Crazy Diamond (from Wish You Were Here, 1974) has been used on Swedish TV to underscore the lonely wastes of the Norwegian‐Swedish border in a documentary called Över kölen and to underscore pictures of the sea, with plenty of horizon and huge nuclear submarines invisible in the depths, with a feeling of ominous eternity in a documentary about the stockpil‐ ing of nuclear weapons. Such calm in large open spaces does not have to be omi‐ nous, but it is usually lonely and frequently sad, as is shown in the discussion of nature as a mood music category (Tagg 1982a: passim; 2013: 420‐425). 11. Saffron and Green, Shannon Fen, Horizons Unlimited, and Meadowsweet are by Trevor Duncan on Boosey & Hawkes’ Recorded Music for Film, Radio and TV, SBH 2991. Shep‐ herd’s Song, Folk Ballad II or Tema Medievale (Santiseban) are in the CAM collection. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 63 patterning, more regular periodicity and almost immediate crescendo into a tutti statement of the main theme. That aspect of Beethoven’s pas‐ torality contains too many people (tutti) who are too lively (tempo, rhythm and periodicity) and too close (dynamics) to qualify as pastoral in the meditative ‘wide‐open‐spaces’ sense of the mood.12 It should also be clear that in considering the combination of m1a and m1b we are dealing with an area of connotation which is far more pre‐ cise than just folksy, calm or outdoors. The exotic rural environment of Fernando is not, for example, the wide open spaces of Eastern Europe or Central Asia: we are not in Hungary with the slow molto rubato con molto vibrato ed espressione portamenti and trills of ‘gypsy’ violinists in the harmonic minor accompanied by cimbalon and piano swirls over chords of the dominant minor ninth in the introduction to a csárdás, nor are we in the Russian ethnic cultural sphere with accordions and bala‐ laikas rustling away in parallel thirds and with characteristic melodic formulae like the melodic cadence, all in the minor key. It’s less clear that we aren’t somewhere in the Mediterranean (as in ex‐ amples 3, 6, 7, 8), but the lack of phrygian cadences (ex. 3 and 6) and fla‐ menco style guitar probably rules out a stereotypical Spain, at least as imagined in the popular music of Northern Europe and North Amer‐ ica. Naples and Venice are two other locations also suggested by the presence of small string instruments played tremolando, for example the mandolins in the library music piece Mare di Marcellina, annotated as ‘Neapolitan band with hurdy‐gurdy and plectra, Neapolitan ally, fishermen’);13 but the Italian mandolin, like the bouzouki of Greek pop‐ ular music, tends to play more melodically and less as chordal accom‐ paniment than the charangos of Fernando’s m1b. And neither mandolin nor bouzouki are very likely to be played in a fourthless hexatonic mode like that of Fernando’s flutes in bars 1‐6. 12. For more on the nature‐related subcategories ‘pastoral/calm’, ‘ethnic/national’, ‘bucolic/light action’, and about nature as a leisure resource, see Tagg 1982a. 13. Description of pieces in the Boosey & Hawkes Recorded Music Library. 64 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 Bars 1‐6 summary The combination of m1a and m1b can be summarised as connoting large, open spaces in a (for Northern Europeans and North Americans) far‐off, exotic rural region, probably in the Andes (Peru, Bolivia, Chile) and perhaps something resembling the scene shown as figure 11. Fig. 11. Bolivian altiplano (photo: Manfred Schweda) An individual (the melodic instrument)14 is thrown into a relief as a fig‐ ure against this background, adding a simple, human, folksy, honest Naturvolk romantic aspect tinged with melancholy, as suggested rather stereotypically in Figure 12 (p. 65). The generous reverb adds consider‐ ably to acoustically enlarge the impression of space15 and the whole ‘scene’ (sound ‘landscape painting’, complete with ethnic individual) is faded in at the mixing console, coming into complete sonic ‘focus’ (nor‐ mal dB output level) at bar 6 — a sort of establishing shot in sound. 14. I’m assuming here the reader’s familiarity with analogies between the melody/ accompaniment dualism of most Western music and the figure/ground dualism of European visual art, as well as between these two on the one hand and the mono‐ centric individual/environment dualism of Western thought in general. For more about this, see Maróthy 1974: 22, ff., Tagg 2013: 425‐445). 15. See section on reverb and the urban soundscape in Tagg (1990 and 2013: 439‐441). See also anaphonic names given to reverb templates on studio effects units and syn‐ thesizers, e.g. (in ascending order of reverb time) ‘locker room’, ‘recital room’, ‘con‐ cert hall’, ‘cathedral’. For more about populated rural environments in music, see Tagg (1989) on big towns and small towns as musical mood categories. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 65 Fig. 12. ‘Boy musician on mountain road’ (photo: Werner Bischof, 1954) What happens next? m2: sunrise Lifting to lighter areas I’ve called museme 2 (b. 7‐9, 51‐53) SUNRISE because it so strongly re‐ sembles, both melodically and harmonically (though obviously not as regards instrumentation and pitch range), the grandiose Sonnenaufgang (= ‘sunrise’) passage found near the start of Richard Strauss’s tone poem Also sprach Zarathustra (ex. 22). Ex. 22. R. Strauss (1896): Also sprach Zarathustra — sunrise motif: full symphony orchestra (reduced) 66 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 According to the philosophical novel by Nietzsche which provided the programme for Strauss’s tone poem, Zarathustra, after ten years as a hermit meditating in the wilderness, ‘arose one morning with the dawn and, turning to the Sun, said “Thou tremendous Planet, where would be thy happiness if thou hadst not those to whom thou givest light?”’16 Strauss expert R. Specht describes example 22 as ‘a nature mood in the aspect of sunrise... The nature theme shines with increasing brightness until the climax of sunrise is reached.’17 This music became widely known after its use in Kubrick’s 2001 (1968) where it accompanied the visually spectacular ‘earthrise’, as seen from the moon, and, more popularly, in the Dawn of Man segment of the same film when, after aeons of fear and ignorance, it literally dawns on the big ape that he can use a bone club instead of his bare hands to kill large animals. After 2001 (1968), the Zarathustra sunrise music became the most popular musical trope of grandiose opening in Western me‐ dia. It has been used —and parodied— in hundreds of different con‐ texts, for example to mark Elvis Presley’s grand entry on stage in Las Vegas, or to underline the epic proportions of a monolith chocolate bar in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), as well as to advertise a fabric softener, office machinery and a spoof casino.18 There are also some important correspondences between m2 and the sunrise of ex. 23 (key, crescendo, tempo, melody rising to the major 6th and the octave). Indeed, waking up (e.g. the ‘ups’ and/or ‘outs’ of ‘Wa‐ chet auf’, ‘l’Éveil de la nature’,19 ‘et resurrexit’, ‘ascendit in cœlos’),20 get‐ 16. ‘Als Zarathustra dreißig Jahre alt war, verließ er seine Heimat und den See seiner Heimat und ging in das Gebirge. Hier genoß er seines Geistes und seiner Einsam‐ keit und wurde dessen zehn Jahre nicht müde. Endlich aber verwandelte sich sein Herz — und eines Morgens stand er mit der Morgenröte auf, trat vor die Sonne hin und sprach zu ihr also: «Du großes Gestirn! Was wäre dein Gluck, wenn du nicht die hättest welchen du leuchtest!»’ (Nietzsche: Zarathustra’s Vorrede, introduction to pocket score of Also sprach Zarathustra, page ii). 17. ‘Eine Naturstimmung im Anblick des Sonnenaufgangs... das Naturthema strahlt in gewaltiger Steigerung immer leuchtender auf bis zum Höhepunkt des Sonnenauf‐ ganges’ (op. cit. p. iii). 18. See TV Tropes tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Music/AlsoSprachZarathustra [151130]. For analysis of the Strauss trope in popular culture see Leech (1999). 19. Ravel: Daphnis et Chloë. Note the distinction between réveil (alarm clock, sudden action and sound) and éveil (more gradual process). Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 67 Ex. 23. Haydn (1798): The Creation – sunrise, introduction to recitative ‘In Splendour Bright Is Rising Now The Sun’ (reduction) ting up, etc. often seem to provoke a rise in musical pitch and volume, at least according to the sense of ‘high’ and ‘low’ as understood the mu‐ sical tradition I belong to. However, a gradual rise to a high point from which the process is not reversed (i.e. the initiated process does not continue into its own descending motion) is equatable neither with processes which both ascend/increase and descend/decrease, nor with those which rise too suddenly. This means that parallels to m2 cannot be found in the reveille leaps of the fanfare or ‘call to attention’ type, nor with rising phrases that continue into a descending revocation of the preceding ‘up‐and‐out’. Thus, while m2 is comparable to the sun‐ rise examples (22 and 23), to the waking of the soul in Haydn’s Seasons (ex. 24) or to the ‘upwards in thy embrace’ idea in Schubert’s Ganymed (‘aufwärts an deinen Busen’ in ex. 25), it cannot be considered in terms of ‘sudden lift’ (ex. 26a) or ‘gradual rise and fall’ (ex. 26b).21 It may also seem rash to call m2 ‘sunrise’, since only two of the four musical quota‐ tions relevant to this museme (ex. 22 and 23) actually have sunrise as an explicit PMFC. Please note, therefore, that I’m using SUNRISE here as a metaphorical mnemonic for this museme which, like a sunrise, pro‐ ceeds from low to high, from dark to light and from weak to strong. 20. i.e. the ανάβασις (anabasis = ascent, going upwards) of Affektenlehre, see Schmitz (1955: 176‐183), Bartel (1997: 179‐180). 21. For further discussion of unidirectional and bidirectional runs and their relation‐ ship to musical episodicity, see the Romeo & Juliet and A Streetcar named Desire chap‐ ters in Tagg & Clarida (2003). 68 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 Ex. 24. Haydn (1810): The Seasons – (nº 17: aria) ‘Welche Erhöhung für die Sinne!’ Ex. 25. Schubert (1817): Ganymed — ‘aufwärts’ Ex. 26. Commutations for the ‘sunrise’ in Fernando: a) too sudden lift b) gradual rise ‘cancelled’ by gradual fall In this light (!) it’s worth comparing m2 to a passage from El Condor Pasa (ex. 27). Ex. 27. Simon & Garfunkel (1970), Los Incas (1968): El Condor Pasa, B section - quenas in thirds rising to subdominant major’ By the time Simon and Garfunkel get to that point in the track, the mu‐ sic has progressed from the static parlando rubato of the introduction (ex. 12, p. 56) and low register in the minor key (Dm) during the first eight bars of the verse to high register with parallel thirds on the tonic and third of the subdominant relative major (B$), moving up to the third and fifth (subdominant) and down to third and fifth over the tonic relative major. This double process resembles the position of m2 in Fernando. Moreover, in the Simon & Garfunkel version of El Condor Pasa, the passage quoted (ex. 27) is firstly sung to words which also ex‐ press a ‘rise’ out of the melancholy of the A section (from ‘I’d rather be a hammer than a nail’, etc.) to a semantically lighter, more cheerful sphere (to ‘sailing away... like a swan’). Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 69 Due to the similarities already mentioned between El Condor Pasa and Fernando in connection with m1 and to the continuation of these simi‐ larities as regards m2, it seems quite plausible to assume —bearing of course in mind the unprecedented popular success of the Simon and Garfunkel recording— that the process from m1 to m2 in Fernando may act as a reminder of the same process in El Condor Pasa, both musically and with its verbal connotations mentioned above, i.e. from static mel‐ ancholy to ‘rising out of’ that state. This parallel will not seem less rea‐ sonable if the reader bears in mind that the excerpt quoted as ex. 27 is played for the second time by quena flutes in parallel thirds at a similar pitch to that occupied by the flutes in the Fernando recordings. Finally, this parallel substantiates the interpretation of Fernando’s specific ethnic connotations, at least as far as the average Northern European or North American listener is concerned. m3: in paradisum m3a & m3b: paradise, angel harps and milksap Poco staccato e leggiero arpeggio figures, played in Fernando by piano and by what sounds like harp, flute or even pizzicato violins but is more likely to be a synthesiser, are reminiscent of motifs from Fauré’s Req‐ uiem (ex. 28) accompanying angels who lead our souls into heaven. Ex. 28. Fauré (1888): Requiem - ‘In Paradisum deducant te angeli’22 At the very end of Ein deutsches Requiem (ex. 29, p. 70) Brahms (1869) uses rising harp arpeggios to accompany the arrival of the blessed (Seelig) soul at its final destination in paradise.23 22. ‘In paradisum deducant te angeli’ = Angels will lead you away into paradise. 23. ‘Blessed are they that die in the Lord’ (Revelation, 14:13). 70 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 Ex. 29. Brahms (1869): Ein deutsches Requiem. Final bars Ethereal arpeggios are also omnipresent in two well‐known Ave Maria settings (ex. 30‐31) whose lyrics, imbued with pathos and devotion, be‐ seech the Madonna to send us ‘holy comfort’, protection and rest. Ex. 30. J S Bach (1722), arr. Gounod (1853): Ave Maria Ex. 31. Schubert (1825): Ave Maria: ‘Jungfrau mild, erhöre einer Jungfrau Flehen’, etc. And it is with ‘sincere faith’ that Tosca, accompanied by angelic arpeg‐ gios (ex. 32), insists she has acted when relieving the misfortunes of others, offering prayers to heaven, putting flowers on altars, donating jewels to the Virgin’s mantle, etc.24 24. ‘…quante miserie conobbi aiutai… con fè sincera la mia preghiera ai santi tabernac‐ oli salì… con fè sincera diedi fiori agli altar… [e] gioielli della Madonna al manto’. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 71 Ex. 32. Puccini (1900): ‘Vissi d’arte’ from Tosca The ‘plink‐plonk’ or ‘clink‐clink‐clink’ pianisation of heavenly harps occurs in much romantic keyboard music, as illustrated in the Sibelius quote (ex. 33), swaying with a similarly ethereal I\vi harmonic shuttle (b. 4‐5) to that found in Fauré’s musical notion of paradise. Ex. 33. Sibelius (1903): Romance for Piano 72 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 In Hollywood film music, harps used in a similar fashion to that shown in examples 28‐29 and 32 are also often associated with transcendence, either in religious contexts or, as in ex. 34, in connection with a more secular sort of sincerity, devotion and love. Ex. 34. Skinner (c.1940): Cue ‘The Man I Marry’, from The Irishman. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 73 To give an idea of the sort of effect composer Frank Skinner (1950: 99) was aiming at with the harp and strings of bars 7‐16 in example 34 (and to see how this writing contrasts with the different moods both before and after this passage), here’s the timing sheet corresponding to ex. 34. 0:00.0 0:01.5 0:03.5 0:08.5 0:09.3 0:12.0 0:14.5 0:17.3 0:21.3 1:02.3 1:12.0 Music starts after O’Toole’s line: ‘I’m sorry’. The look on his face denotes disappointment. Slowly Maureen lowers her head. She says: ‘I too’. O’Toole walks towards Maureen. Maureen starts to turn. She says: ‘Forgive me’... Maureen looks up at O’Toole and says: ‘Philip told me how it happened’. She pleads with him to be her friend and continue to help her cause. Fade full out. Start to fade in... ...(new) dialogue starts ...end music. The mood of this extract is reasonably clear. Its context in the film is best grasped by remembering that O’Toole is the swashbuckling Irish ‘hero’ (helping the English against the French!) and Maureen the hero‐ ine (the ‘love interest’). They are together fighting for the same suppos‐ edly noble cause and are tragically but nobly in love. Skinner (1950: 99) comments his scoring of this scene as follows: At twelve seconds (0ʹ12ʺ), I would have to create a feeling of tragedy as Maureen realized that she had hurt his feelings... At 0ʹ17.25ʺ she sof‐ tened her speech and at 0ʹ21.25ʺ I planned to employ the love theme in a slightly different manner. A comparison with other statements of the love theme in the film re‐ veals that tempo (here slower) and orchestral arrangement are the clearest distinguishing marks. For Maureen’s pleading in ex. 34 and for the ‘noble cause’ aspect of her relationship to O’Toole —no ‘sex’, ‘fun’ or ‘pining with desire or longing’ in this statement of the theme—, Skinner has used ‘angel harps’ playing their ‘devotional’ rising broken chords: the ‘angelic’ aspect of love is present instead. Bearing also in mind that similar fields of film‐musical connotation are apparently produced by the slow‐moving arpeggiated common triads on piano that permeate Arvo Pärt’s Spiegel im Spiegel (1978) and that 74 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 these have been used time and time again to signal serious transcend‐ ence,25 it seems quite likely that Fernando musemes 3a (IN PARADISUM) and 3b (ANGEL HARPS) might also relate to things heavenly, devotional, religious and romantically beseeching, slightly ‘other‐worldly’, tran‐ scendental, angelic and pure.26 But those Fernando musemes are, as we’ll see after some short structural comments, more connotatively precise than that. Ex. 35. Fernando m3a and 3b arpeggios as I-vi-ii-V in A As shown in example 35, Fernando musemes 3a and 3b first arpeggiate the home key’s A major tonic (I) sonority (b. 1‐6, 9‐15), then the tonic and subdominant relative minor triads (F#m = vi, Bm = ii), then the dominant major triad (V) (b. 13‐38, 64‐76). A-F#m-Bm-E, is of course the well‐known vamp chord sequence I-vi-ii-V in A, a progression virtu‐ ally identical to that heard in example 36 (p. 75) whose four chords, GEm-Am/c-D, constitute a I-vi-iiÌ-V progression in G. Now, a key‐spe‐ cific vamp sequence’s third chord can, as a simple triad, be either sub‐ dominant relative minor (ii) or subdominant major (IV).27 Example 36’s third chord (Am/c =iiÌ) illustrates this equivalence in one way: it’s a simple subdominant relative minor triad (ii) but in first inversion (iiÌ) i.e. not with the G major piece’s (a) but with its Ô (c) as bass note. An‐ other way of conceptualising the equivalence of ii and IV in a vamp is to compare their tetrads, because ii7 and IVå contain the same notes. In G, for example, ii7 is Am7, containing a c e g, while IVå is C6, contain‐ ing c e g a. It’s for these reasons that I-vi-ii-V and I-vi-IV-V will be considered as the same basic key‐specific progression, and that the ex‐ pression ‘I-vi-ii/IV-V’ will act as shorthand for that equivalence.27 25. Of Pärt’s Spiegel im Spiegel Holden (2003) wrote: ‘it is fast becoming a movie sound‐ track cliché, … used to telegraph instant profundity by Tom Tykwer in Heaven and by Mike Nichols in… Wit.’ On the use of Pärt’s music in film, see Maimets‐Volt (2013). For films using Spiegel im Spiegel, see tagg.org/KMV/SpiegelSpiegelFilm.docx. 26. This interpretation is also borne out by the fact that Friedhofer’s harp (ex. 16, p. 60) starts its arpeggiations with a cut at 1:30 to a ‘monastery in view’. 27. For discussion of vamp and key‐clock progressions, see Tagg (2015: 262‐264, 270, 404‐412). NB. VI and II as vamp variants of vi and ii are not key‐specific. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 75 Ex. 36. Tchaikovsky (1892): Start of the Pas-de-deux from The Nutcracker (I-vi-ii3-V in G)28 The wide‐ranging I-vi-ii-V arpeggios of the Tosca aria (ex. 32: E$-Cmze$Fmze$-B$ze$) and the Nutcracker pas‐de‐deux (ex. 36), are, like examples 28‐31 and 33‐34, certainly linked to the beauty, transcendence or an im‐ aginary paradise, but they are both quicker, richer and more expansive than Fernando’s m3a and m3b. That’s why discussion of their connota‐ tive precision needs to focus on IOCM featuring not only I-vi-ii/IV-V progressions but also accompaniment figures that more closely resem‐ ble m3a and m3b than do those of examples 32 and 36. Given the museme labels IN PARADISUM and ANGEL HARPS —based initially on hunches—, the obvious repertoire to check for IOCM consists of all those TEEN ANGEL songs from the ‘milksap’ period of anglophone pop history.29 There’s no room here to quote from more than just a few tunes (examples 37‐45) in this vast repertoire containing: 28. Па‐де‐дё: Танец принца Оршада и Феи Драже = Pas‐de‐deux: Dance of Prince Orgeat and the Sugar Plum Fairy, first two bars, from The Nutcracker Ballet Suite. Thanks to Kaire Maimets for drawing examples 32 and 36 to my attention. 29. Vamp progressions of the 1957‐1962 pop period in the USA can be heard as the har‐ monic epitome of what Jerry Lee Lewis is reported to have called ‘MILKSAP’ sung by ‘all those goddam Bobbies’ (Bobby Darin, Bobby Rydell, Bobby Vee, Bobby Vinton and their soundalikes). I regret that I have neither Lewis’s original quote nor its source. My secondary source is Swedish Radio series, Rockens Roll, on the history of rock by Tommy Rander and Håkan Sandbladh (c.1974). It may well be that ‘milk‐ sap’ should be written ‘milksop’ but spoken with a North American accent [O+NMU3R]. Lewis was referring to the period in US pop history when Elvis Presley was in the army, Little Richard had turned religious and both Jerry Lee Lewis and Chuck Berry were in jail, in other words after the proto‐rockers but before the Beatles. It was the period of the high school hop, crew cuts, ‘clean America’, Paul Anka, Neil Sedaka, ‘shalalalala’, ‘doobie doobie doo’, etc. 76 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 • I-vi-ii/IV-V progressions (though over more regular periods than in Fernando); • lyrics making frequent quasi‐religious references to ‘angels’, ‘prayer’, ‘devotion’, ‘true love’, etc; • ‘angel harp’ arpeggio figures (like m3a and m3b), of the ‘innocent‐ and‐pure’ or ‘bell chime’ sort and mostly played on electric guitar (often with light dampening of each note), or else by ‘clink‐clink‐ clink’ piano,30 or on pizzicato strings. It might also be advisable to restrict references to such common traits of ‘symphonies for the kids’31 from the late fifties and early sixties to just a few songs such as: Tell Laura I Love Her (Ray Peterson, 1960); Come Softly To Me (The Fleetwoods, 1959); Wait For Me (The Playmates, 1960); Countin’ Teardrops (Emil Ford and the Checkmates, 1960); Judy (1958) and Dream Lover (Bobby Darin, 1958, 1959); Nobody But You (Dee Clark, 1958); Diana and Lonely Boy (Paul Anka, 1957, 1959); Blue Angel (Roy Or‐ bison, 1960); Am I The Man? (Jackie Wilson, 1960). However, to give the uninitiated reader some idea of the type of material under discussion, there now follow ten (ex. 37‐46) quotes from other songs in the same genre, all of which are accompanied in a similar manner to that de‐ scribed above. They all include I-vi-ii/IV-V harmonies with ‘pizzi‐ cato’, arpeggiato or piano ‘clink‐clink‐clink’ accompaniment and lyrics containing notions like PRAYER, DEVOTION, HEAVEN, ANGEL, SINCERITY, IN‐ NOCENCE, YOUNG LOVE, etc. These traits are typical for not just the ten next examples but also for countless other songs of their ilk. Ex. 37. Sam Cooke (1959): Only Sixteen (I-vi-IV-V in A ) If you were only sixteen when Only Sixteen was first released, you’d be twice sixteen (=32) in 1975 when Fernando was released. That’s old enough to reminisce about what might have seemed like a more inno‐ 30. See Stan Freeberg’s 1956 pastiche of The Great Pretender (Platters, 1955). 31. Expression used by Ahmet Ertegun (Atlantic) in interview for BBC radio’s The Story of Pop (1975). Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 77 cent time of life (‘too young to know’). It was also a time predating Ser‐ geant Pepper, prog rock and reggae, a time when pop tunes and their harmonies all seemed simpler. Even teenage fear of romantic rejection could be couched in simple verbal and harmonic terms accompanied by sprightly arpeggiations, as in example 38.32 Ex. 38. Neil Sedaka (1959): Oh! Carol (I-vi-ii-V in B ) Now, if teenage love is as beautiful (‘I loved her so’ [ex. 37]) or cruel (‘I will surely die’ [ex. 38]) as it appears to be inscrutable (‘Why must I be a teenager in love?’ [ex. 39]), then only supernatural forces can be in‐ voked to intervene in matters of the heart (‘I ask the stars up above’ [ex. 39]; ‘my one and only prayer’ [ex. 40]; ‘I prayed to the Lord’ [ex. 41]; ‘I pray that… he’ll be mine’ [ex. 42], etc.). No adult awareness here of per‐ sonal relationship dynamics: just a mystical belief system consisting of STARS, SKY, ABOVE (ex. 39, 41), DREAMS (ex. 40), HEAVEN (ex. 41, 44) and, most commonly, the loved one as ANGEL (ex. 41, 42, 43, 44, 46). The only 32. NB. The Oh! Carol bass line, identical to Fernando museme 10a (see p. 00, ff.). 78 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 mention of any social aspect of love is in terms of idealised heterosexual monogamy (‘wedding ring’ [ex. 40]; ‘I want to marry you’ [ex. 45]). Ex. 39. Dion and the Belmonts (1959): Teenager In Love (I-vi-IV-V in G) Ex. 40. Conway Twitty (1958): Only Make Believe (I-vi-IV-V in C) Ex. 41. Jack Scott (1958): My True Love (I-vi-IV-V in E) Ex. 42. Shelley Faberes (1961): Johnny Angel (I-vi-ii/IV-V in C) Ex. 43. The Crew Cuts (1955): Earth Angel (I-vi-IV-V in E ) Ex. 44. Rosie and the Originals (1960): Angel Baby (I-vi-IV-V in C) Ex. 45. Paul and Paula (1962): Hey Paula! (I-vi-ii-V in G) Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 79 Ex. 46. Mark Dinning (1960): Teen Angel (I-vi-IV-I in C) The long and short of the IOCM in the last ten examples (ex. 37‐46) is, as demonstrated in The Milksap Montage video (Tagg, 2007b), that m3a and m3b relate not only to, as suggested earlier, a semantic field involv‐ ing the heavenly, devotional, religious, romantically beseeching, other‐ worldly and transcendental, but to all those things seen through the prism of idealised young love, angelic and innocent, all tinged with nostalgic reminiscence of pop music produced in the USA for a teenage market during the milksap years around 1960. It’s in other words little wonder that Fernando musemes 3a and 3b occur in conjunction with the song’s verses whose lyrics reminisce (‘I remember long ago’, ‘Do you remember?’, etc.) about important experiences shared with another in‐ dividual (‘We were young and none of us prepared to die’, etc.). m3c: tiptoe bass Finding IOCM for m3c was a tricky task: rising common‐triad arpeg‐ gios played leggiero e poco staccato on electric bass just don’t seem very common in twentieth‐century popular repertoires, including the euro‐ classical, relevant to Fernando. True, the fact that none of those asked to induce IOCM for this study mentioned music containing anything re‐ sembling m3c could have meant that the museme was unremarkable and that it went unnoticed; but that it is highly unlikely since m3c is easily perceptible in all three mixes of the tune. Now, rising common‐ triad arpeggios played on electric bass, do occur in reggae but no‐one associated in that direction, presumably (i) because m3c doesn’t contain the characteristic skipped downbeats of reggae bass lines (ex. 47); (ii) because the rest of Fernando is devoid of other elements that could have helped lead to a reggae identification of the museme. Ex. 47. Reggae commutation of Fernando museme 3c over I and vi 80 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 One possible interpretation of m3c came from a student who called it the ‘tiptoe bass’.33 Running with that kinetic anaphone as a hypothesis, it seemed like a good idea to check for similarities in ‘tiptoe music’ for stealth situations in animated film. I scoured Tom & Jerry cartoons for segments containing cats on tiptoe creeping up on mice. I also checked similar scenes in eighteen Tex Avery cartoons. Then I searched on line for various combinations of TIPTOE, MUSIC, STEALTH, CREEP (UP), SNEAK and PIZZICATO. That led to a few library music pieces and to games mu‐ sic tracks like Zelda: Spirit Tracks—Stealthy Music. Much of what I found contained leggiero e staccato sounds (minimal decay —typically mid‐ range xylophone, marimba, woodwind, etc.), but although there was some pizzicato, none of it came in the form of arpeggio patterns played on a plucked string bass instrument —with one exception (ex. 48). Ex. 48. A. L’Estrange (2010): Elfin Magic (bass line at start) The Audio Network library music staff characterise this piece, with its arpeggiated Gm\D$zÌ tritone shuttle, as ‘[m]agical, haunting vibes’…, adding that it is ‘[i]nspired by the sound‐world of… Danny Elfman’, a connection reinforced by the pun in the piece’s title about Elfman, elves and Elfman’s famous association with the quirky Gothic horror‐com‐ edy whimsy of Tim Burton movies.34 It’s a semi‐comical stealth tiptoe with a history going back through the themes for The Addams Family (1964‐66) and Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1955‐65, ex. 49), through silent film Misterioso pieces in Motion Picture Moods for Pianists and Organists (Rapée, 1924)35 to The Sorcerer’s Apprentice (ex. 50) and The Hall of the Mountain King (Grieg, 1891).36 While these stealth pieces demonstrably relate to tiptoe movement, they are, as suggested in figure 13 (p. 81), in‐ compatible with m3c in other ways. 33. ‘Question bass’ (frågebas) and ‘tiptoe bass’ (tåspetsbas) were epithets offered by stu‐ dents at SÄMUS (Särskild Ämnesutbildning i Musik), Piteå, in March 1980. 34. See The Danny Elfman Tim Burton 25th Anniversary Music Box (Elfman, 2011). 35. e.g. Misterioso n°1 (Otto Langey, p. 165), Misterioso infernale (Gaston Borch, p.169), Misterioso n°2 (Adolf Minot, p. 171) —all in Rapée (1924). 36. The Hall of the Mountain King, filed under ‘Sea storm’ in Rapée (1924: 51), was pre‐ sented as ‘tiptoe music’ on the BBC children’s TV channel: see CBeebies Melody, Series 1, Episode 15 ‘Tip Toe Troll’, 2014‐06‐29 G bbc.co.uk/programmes/p021vr30. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 81 Ex. 49. Gounod (1872): Marche funèbre d’une marionette37 Ex. 50. Dukas (1897): L’apprenti sorcier Fig. 13. Tiptoe differences: [a] burglar; [b] ballerinas en pointe Differences between these two tiptoe images can be stereotypically characterised as those between stealthy, dark, comical mystery (13a) and light, bright, dainty but erotically tinged female innocence, grace and beauty (13b).38 Musically, the burglar sneaking off with his swag is more likely to be associated with examples 48‐50 —quirky, semi‐comi‐ cal stealth tiptoe— while the girls practising en pointe in a classical bal‐ let class more likely connect with examples 28, 30‐33, 36, and especially example 51 (p. 82) —the shiny, light, long‐legged tiptoe. In fact, figure 13b distils the choreographical style of at least one online performance of The Dance of the Hours (ex. 51) down to one freeze‐frame.39 37. Used as TV title theme for Alfred Hitchcock Presents (NBC, 1955‐65). 38. There’s no room here to discuss erotic aspects of classical ballet —foot fetishes, lengthened legs, Louis XIV’s high heels, (Caucasian) flesh‐coloured point shoes, horizontally flared micro skirts (tutus), anorexic ballerinas, narcissism, mirrored walls, the Paris Opera’s Corps de Ballet as a 19th‐century prostitution racket, etc. See instead, for example, Dancing for Degas ( K Wagner, 2010) and The Black Swan ( 2011: ‘the sadomasochism of an unnatural art form’); see also ftnt. 39 (p. 82). 82 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 Ex. 51. Ponchielli (1876): ‘Dance of the Hours’ from La gioconda. The pizzicato figures in example 51 resemble Fernando’s tiptoe bass (m3c) more closely than does any of the IOCM cited earlier. The resem‐ blance is threefold: [1] as with m3c, example 51’s rising arpeggios span a pitch range of over one octave from bass to mid register; [2] example 51’s pizzicati, like the Fernando tiptoe bass, stop on each arpeggio’s top note, leaving a hiatus ‘in the air’ before presenting another exclusively upward gesture; [3] like m3c, the Dance of the Hours arpeggios are bro‐ ken chords on simple tertial functions (I = D and V7 = A7). It’s for these reasons that m3c can be interpreted as much closer to the light, bright, dainty type of tiptoe than to any other. Examples 52 and 53 (p. 83) complete the IOCM for m3c. Their slow, plucked, rising arpeggios (unidirectional in example 53), consisting of simple broken chord patterns without accidentals, also bear considera‐ ble resemblance (though less than example 51) to the combined effects of Fernando’s m3a, 3b and 3c. It should be noted that examples 52 and 53 both have religious associations. Mascagni has scribbled imitando la preghiera (= imitating prayer) at the start of his manuscript of the Inter‐ mezzo which represents, in highly concentrated emotive form, time spent in church away from the opera’s main activities of honour killing and vendetta, while the Massenet Méditation, marked Andante religioso, accompanies the heroine’s reflections about a dubious declaration of ‘pure’ love from a confused ascetic prelate. We are in other words back in the metaphysical borderlands between this world and the ‘next’. In‐ deed, among the most frequently requested or recommended pieces of euroclassical music for funerals —when the deceased is imagined as ‘passing on’ from this world into an ineffable beyond— you’ll find not just Elgar’s Nimrod (1899) plus the Adagios by Albinoni (1708) and Bar‐ 39. See, for example, the 2008 performance in Indianapolis by young ballerinas in tutus and point shoes ( gmBF1bOlKOA). A more famous performance of Dance of the Hours is by the daintily animated ostriches, long thin legs and body feathers shaped like tutus, in Disney’s Fantasia (1940). Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 83 ber (1938) but also several of the ANGEL HARP and TIPTOE BASS pieces dis‐ cussed in this chapter. Those funeral favourites are: Mascagni’s Intermezzo (ex. 52), Massenet’s Méditation (ex. 53), the ‘In paradisum’ from Fauré’s Requiem (ex. 28), the Ave Marias by Bach/Gounod and Schubert (ex. 30‐31), the ‘Vissi d’arte’ aria from Puccini’s Tosca (ex. 32) and, of course, Pärt’s Spiegel im Spiegel (p. 73).40, 41, 42 Ex. 52. Mascagni (1890): Cavalleria Rusticana — Intermezzo, b. 20-23 Ex. 53. Massenet (1894): Thaïs — Méditation, b. 3-6. 40. See: [1] ‘The top 75 funeral songs’ ( telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturepicturegalleries/9969669/Topten-funeral-songs.html?frame=3351459); [2] ‘Funeral music – Classical music’ ( lastingpost.com/classical-funeral-music/); [3] ‘Dignity: caring funeral services’ ( dignityfunerals.co.uk/ funeral-services/arranging-a-funeral/meeting-your-needs/music/); [4] About the Pärt piece: ‘Tear Jerker: Classical Music’ ( tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/TearJerker/ClassicalMusic) —’I want this played at my funeral’ ( soundcloud.com/anasinho-ii/arvo-p-rt-spiegel-im-spiegel). Or sim‐ ply search on line for |funeral music classical|. 41. Several of the seriously popular pieces cited as IOCM in this chapter are by euro‐ classical one‐hit wonders —Dukas, Mascagni, Massenet and Ponchielli. Delibes (1876) and his ‘Pizzicati’ from Sylvia could’ve been another. Are those composers remebered for anything other than their single ‘hits’? 42. For a discussion of Romantic piano arpeggiation, see the Dream of Olwen analysis in Ten Little Title Tunes (Tagg & Clarida, 2003: 231‐249). 84 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 This section on Fernando’s tiptoe bass would not be complete without remarking how unusual it is to find a bass part in twentieth‐century, anglophone, non‐reggae popular song which, with the obvious excep‐ tion of breaks and intros, does not sound constantly throughout the en‐ tire number. Indeed, in Fernando’s verses the bass line includes as much silence (beats 3 and 4 in each bar) as sound (beats 1 and 2). These ‘top‐ of‐the‐arpeggio’ hiatuses make m3c diverge from the standard rock practice of playing together with the bass drum all through the song — bass drum, hi‐hat and cymbals are also notably absent from the verse; instead, m3c is performed simultaneously with and has a similar leggi‐ ero arpeggio configuration as m3a and m3b (pp. 69‐79). Museme 3c also contains the same straight quaver movements as m3a and, together with m3a and m3b, it contrasts with the ‘bolero march’ snare drum idea (m4) in verse 1. In short, m3c can be interpreted as underlining the light (not dark, not heavy), positive, devotional, angelic, innocent, youthful, religious, otherworldly, heavenly character of m3a and m3b. m4: ‘bolero’ Ex. 54. Museme 4 (m4) has a large number of variants in Fernando, one of which (b. 12‐14) appears as example 54 (in 4/4). All variants of this pat‐ tern are played on snare drum in a tempo and mode of execution simi‐ lar to those heard throughout Ravel’s Boléro (ex. 55), even if that piece of popular IOCM is entirely in 3/4.43 The Fernando snares are mixed at rel‐ atively low volume and panned left and right centre back, a stereo po‐ sition compatible with the ‘distant drums’ notion alluded to in the lyrics at the start of verse 1, (‘Can you hear the drums, Fernando?’, b. 12‐13), just after m4 emerges from the song’s ‘sunrise’ (p. 65, ff.). Ex. 55. Ravel (1928): Boléro snare pattern The most obvious PMFC for Ravel’s Boléro, at least for non‐Hispano‐ phones like myself and most of my students, is SPAIN. Indeed, Ravel 43. At least, Boléro was the m4‐related IOCM most frequently mentioned by my popu‐ lar music analysis students in the 1980s and 1990s. 3/4 v. 4/4: see ftnt. 45 (p. 85) . Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 85 had been commissioned to orchestrate, for ballet purposes, a collection of Spanish piano pieces with the Spanish title Iberia by Spanish com‐ poser Isaac Albéniz (1908). Now, since copyright issues prevented the realisation of this project, Ravel had to write his own short Spanish‐ style ballet piece, which he called Fandango, a title that soon changed to Boléro (Spanish bolero spelt à la française). For its première at the Paris Opera in 1928, ballerinas/impressarios Ida Rubinstein and Bronisława Niżyńska included the following passage in their programme notes. ‘Inside a tavern in Spain, people dance beneath the brass lamp hung from the ceiling’… [The female dancer] leaps ‘on to the long table… [H]er steps become more and more animated…’44 The original Spanish connotations of Ravel’s Boléro are in other words clear enough and may well reinforce the Spanishness of Fernando’s MAÑANA TURN (m1a), at least in the ears of non‐Hispanics who may be unaware of differences between Spanish and Spanish‐American types of bolero.45 That said, MORE AND MORE ANIMATED may be more crucial than SPAIN in the semiotics of the Boléro snare drum. One reason is that Ravel seems to have been more interested in what he called the piece’s INSISTENT character than in its Spanishness. After all, the piece’s reiter‐ ated theme and the relentless looping of the short snare drum pattern (ex. 55) are heard from start to finish. Boléro’s overall processual interest derives from one long, single, unidirectional timbral, registral and dy‐ namic ‘increase’ that spans the entire piece. Put another way, film direc‐ tor Akira Kurosawa was hardly thinking of Spain when commissioning Boléro‐like music for Rashōmon (1950), nor was Koji Kondo when re‐ cording his Boléro pastiche for a Zelda game (ex. 56). Ex. 56. Kiji Kondo (1998): ‘Bolero of Fire’ from The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time ( 炎のボレロ Honō no Borero)46 44. Cited in Wikipedia article Boléro, referring to Lee (2002: 329). 45. The Spanish bolero, in 3/4 like Ravel’s Boléro, is not the same as, for example, the Cuban bolero, in 2/4 (or 4/4), as in the bolero‐son (≈ rumba), bolero‐mambo, etc. 86 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 So, if not Spain, what is the connotative value of the Boléro snare drum in these audiovisual productions from Japan? I’m unable to explain its use in the Kurosawa movie47 but the Zelda Boléro music (ex. 56) is the object of extensive online exegesis. ‘When played, this teleportation song transports Link to the Triforce Pedestal in the center of the Death Mountain Crater, near the entrance to the Fire Temple. This is the only way with which Link can get to the central area of the crater as a child, where a patch of Soft Soil (and by extent, a Gold Skulltula) can be found.’48 (sic) I have no idea what that means, but I suppose the Triforce Pedestal, Death Mountain Crater and Fire Temple, not to mention teleportation and reverting to a childhood state, are all quite momentous things.48 If that supposition is not entirely erratic, I will, if I play the game, expect to deal with superhuman forces over which I exert no control in reality. I’m also guessing that Kondo’s Boléro pastiche (ex. 56) is there to help me make some sort of kinetic or emotional sense of that aspect of the Zelda fantasy world. But how would that work? Part of the explanation comes from examples 57‐59. Ex. 57. Holst (1922) ‘Mars’ (opening) from The Planets Example 57 shows a short excerpt from the start of Holst’s Planet Suite, just enough to hear the first tritone (d$ in bar 5) and the insistent mili‐ tary rhythm beaten out on timpani and tapped out by col legno strings, all in an asymmetric 5/4 march. The planet on musical display here is zelda.wikia.com/wiki/Bolero_of_Fire [160125]. NB. Ravel’s and Kondo’s snare patterns are identical and their tempi very similar. 47. Instead see Wikipedia Boléro entry [160128] citing interview with Hayasaka Fumio who was in charge of music in several Kurosawa films, including Rashōmon. 48. zelda.wikia.com/wiki/Bolero_of_Fire. This source also informed me that the Gold Skulltula embodies Evil in the shape of a huge spider. See also ‘The Legend Of Zelda ‐ Bolero of Fire’ at 5WSymBiYhqA [160128]. 46. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 87 ‘Mars, the Bringer of War’. There’s very little let‐up in the piece. Aside | figure marches from thirty‐odd bars in the middle, the | T implacably on to reach the irregularly repeated horror chords as its final destination: total, violent destruction.49 Similar dissonant devices occur in the Imperial March from Star Wars (a.k.a. ‘The Darth Vader Theme’) whose memorable hook is cited as ex‐ ample 58. It’s a more symmetrical version (4/4) of merciless military evil, represented visually by the impregnable Death Star and by Darth Vader in his ‘dark helmet’.50 Its musical representation lies in the march’s ominously repeated shuttle Gm\E$m and in the relentless rhythm of the tutti strings playing percussively, loud, preciso e marcato. Ex. 58. John Williams (1977) ‘Imperial March’ from Star Wars Tonally less ominous than Mars or Darth Vader but just as militaristi‐ cally persistent is the snare pattern in the ‘Conquest of Paradise’ theme from 1492 (ex. 59). Viewing the film, we know that military might, greed, ignorance, bigotry and disease will inevitably destroy ‘Paradise’ and its inhabitants, all in the name of God, king and country: the relent‐ less helps hammer home that inevitability. Ex. 59. Vangelis (1992): ‘Conquest of Paradise’ theme from 149251 49. The military 5/4 rhythm is present in bars 1‐37 and 96‐165 (just before the final hor‐ ror chords). It is absent between bars 65 and 95. 50. ‘Dark Helmet’ is the name of the comical Darth Vader character in Mel Brooks’s hilarious Star Wars parody Spaceballs (1987). 51. Vangelis uses the La folia chord progression throughout this piece. Is that to suggest 15th/16th‐century Europe? The words are all total nonsense in pseudo‐Latin. 88 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 Examples 57‐59 are all associated with overwhelmingly powerful, vio‐ lent, warlike and destructive forces of evil that are also merciless, re‐ lentless and unstoppable. While POWERFUL, UNSTOPPABLE or, at a pinch, even RELENTLESS might be used to qualify Boléro‐type snare patterns in general (Ravel mentioned INSISTENT), at least if performed by a large en‐ semble, the other adjectives are less appropriate. This difference is due to a combination of tonal and timbral issues in examples 57 and 58, more precisely the accentuated tritonal or semitonal sonorities (plus the ‘horror’ chords, not shown) and the nonsense‐Latin lyrics of exam‐ ple 59, sung in unison by a full choir in a minor mode with churchlike reverb to create an ‘O Fortuna’ sort of effect (Orff, 1936).52 Even if those structural elements and their PMFCs are absent in the actual Boléro ex‐ amples (55‐56) and in Fernando’s m4, the snare drum figures are decid‐ edly present. This implies that INSISTENT, PERSISTENT, POWERFUL and UNSTOPPABLE may be more relevant as connotative descriptors for Bol‐ éro‐type snare patterns in general. That would at least partially explain how the pattern might work in the Zelda example (ex. 56), with its mi‐ nor and diminished triads along linked to all the ‘momentous things’ in the game narrative. This line of reasoning is borne out by the following observations about [i] the snare drum’s military uses and [ii] the intrin‐ sically propulsive character of Boléro‐style rhythm patterns on snare drum (ex. 54‐56, 60), or played by other instruments (ex. 57 and 58). The snare drum’s military connection should need no explanation. ‘Gus’ Moeller, doyen of military drumming in the USA, put it like this: ‘[The snare drum] is essentially a military instrument… When a com‐ poser wants a martial effect, he instinctively turns to the drums.’53 The snare drum is a loud, easily portable instrument whose sound, when played with sticks rather than brushes or the hand, has both body (mid register) and, more notably, a strong, sharp, crisp attack that is re‐ 52. ‘Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi’ —fate or fortune as the evil and fickle empress of the world— is the first, last and best‐known part of Orff’s Carmina Burana (1936). ‘O Fortuna’ has been used extensively in popular culture, e.g. [1] in Excalibur (1981), when King Arthur and his knights ride into battle (slaughter); [2] arranged by Trevor Jones in Last of the Mohicans (1992: more slaughter); [3] in Beowulf: Prince of the Geats (2007) as Beowulf discovers the holy sword with which to slay the Helldam (yet more slaughter). For other uses of this ubiquitous music, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Orff's_O_Fortuna_in_popular_culture [160129]. 53. Moeller (1925/1982) as cited in the Wikipedia entry ‘Snare drum’ [160129]. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 89 inforced and extended by the vibrating wires of the instrument’s snare device. The fact that this sort of sound pierces ambient noise and can be heard over some distance makes the snare drum ideal for military situ‐ ations where concerted, synchronised movement is the order of the day, when troops need to move forward in an orderly manner, in the same direction, at the same time, ‘as one man’ and, preferably, with a common purpose, be it on parade or marching into battle. Forwards movement is intrinsic to the snare drum and snare‐drum‐like rhythms under discussion. Now, in military marches, feet will usually hit the ground at somewhere between 112 and 124 bpm, 120 being typ‐ ical for a brisk march. While the bass drum in a marching band is usu‐ ally struck on every or every other footstep —| | or | | (once every half second or second in at =120)—, snare drum patterns run at a higher surface rate, e.g. | |. This means the time between notes or groups of notes played on snare drum is shorter and that it normally varies from a minimum of one note per footstep ( = two per second at 120 bpm) through two ( ), three ( T ) and four ( ) to six notes per footstep (ex. 58) and faster. The point is that feet tend to hit the ground on the regularly recurring longer notes and that synchronisation of those steps will be more exact if they are immedi‐ ately preceded by shorter notes. Put simply, “| * ” moves forward more convincingly into * than does “| | * ”, but “ * ” does so with even greater propulsion. So far, then, the Boléro‐like patterns just discussed seem to relate not so much to Spain (although that’s also possible) as to the military and to forces, literal or metaphorical, marching with determination towards a common goal. Now, moving forward in the same direction at the same time ‘as one man’ certainly fulfils an important function in the military, but it’s also relevant to sports events where physical prowess (includ‐ ing force) and concerted effort (energy, synchrony and coordination) are, as in battle, essential to success (victory) and where an impressive public display of strength and order, as in a parade, can be an essential aesthetic ingredient. Indeed, that seems to be a likely reason for the striking similarities between music for sports and for the military.54 54. For more on sports music, incl. military crossovers, see Tagg & Clarida (2003: 410‐ 417, 426, 428, 475, ff.. 605‐606, 624). 90 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 Ex. 60. John Williams (1984) Olympic Fanfare and Theme (snare at 0:50) Example 60 (p. 90), with the repeated smattering of its snare drum fig‐ ures, serves to illustrate the sort of structural and semiotic convergence just mentioned. And it’s not just team sports that rely on the sort of dogged effort, energy and coordination with which this kind of snare‐ drum pattern is associated. It applies just as much to individual ath‐ letes55 and, more importantly, to cohorts of partisan spectators, many of whom seem to experience a quasi‐religious sense of belonging and common purpose that they share with each other and project on to whoever they’re cheering for. Among musical expressions of this kind of quasi‐tribal behaviour is the use of Vangelis’s Conquest of Paradise (1992; ex. 59, p. 87) before home matches of teams like the Widnes Vi‐ kings, the Wigan Warriors (UK rugby league) and Sheffield Wednesday (English football league).56, 57, 58 But do all these powerful mass‐event uses of Boléro‐like rhythms (ex. 57‐60) really have anything to do with Fernando’s m4? The answer is both yes and no: YES, because of obvious rhythmic simi‐ larity between, say, | (Fernando, b. 14), | (Vangelis, ex. 59) and | (Williams, ex. 60); and NO, be‐ cause of at least three other factors. [1] m4 is placed towards the back of the mix (and of the listener’s head), not loud and ‘up front’. [2] m4 is not part of a large‐scale symphonic, military‐band or electronic texture; [3] Fernando’s main foreground (melodic) figure is carried by neither pow‐ erful brass (ex. 57‐58, 60), nor by a large unison choir à la Carmina Burana (ex. 59) but by a single lead vocalist. It’s for these structural rea‐ 55. 56. 57. 58. See KPM producer Ron Singer’s comments on this issue in Tagg (1980: 7). For more see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conquest_of_Paradise_%28song%29 [160128]. By football is meant a team sport in which feet, not hands, are important. Even the music for Danny Boyle’s humanistically patriotic opening ceremony for the London Olympics (Underworld, 2012) contains an everlasting forward‐driving drum pattern of a similar type — . Check also the world cup chant South Africa: Calling You (constant ) at audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/calling-you_63586?category=23601nswiuh [160130]. Try also the constant of the gradiose library music piece Kirov at audionetwork.com/browse/ m/track/apocalypse_3976?category=23296 [160130]. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 91 sons that m4 is unlikely to connect with troops parading at a tattoo or marching into a pitched battle, or with Olympic ceremonies, or with hordes of tribal fans in a football stadium: m4 cannot reasonably make such paramusical connections when it is blended, as in Fernando bars 8‐ 15 (pp. 23‐24), into a calm, tonally static texture whose other ongoing ingredients (m1 and m3) relate, as I’ve argued (pp. 53‐65, 69‐84), to stillness and open spaces, to heaven, to angels, to devotion and tran‐ scendence. That’s why it may be wise to consider m4 in relation to Bol‐ éro‐type rhythms in smaller‐scale productions featuring a single lead vocalist (ex. 61‐64). Ex. 61. Staff Sergeant Barry Sadler (1966): Ballad Of The Green Berets Example 61 Ex. 62. Gilbert Bécaud (1961): Et maintenant 92 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 Ex. 63. Roy Orbison (1961b): Running Scared Ex. 64. Roy Orbison (1964): It’s Over (last 3 bars) Similar snare effects also abound in military‐style pop ballads like Staff Sergeant Barry Sadler’s lump‐in‐the‐throat rendition of an infamous piece of Vietnam war falsification entitled The Ballad of the Green Berets. Similar rhythm patterns can also be heard in a special type of dramatic and fateful love song performed in slow alla marcia time. We are refer‐ ring here to big ballads like Gilbert Bécaud’s Et Maintenant, as well as to Roy Orbison’s It’s Over and Running Scared (ex. 65). Bécaud is wonder‐ ing where to go and what to do now that his love has definitely left (‘Et maintenant, que vais‐je faire?’), while Orbison, apart from running scared, is inexorably left alone with ‘silent days and silent tears’ now that ‘It’s Over’.59 Ex. 65. Boléro-type figures in dramatic love ballads — (a) Et maintenant (Gilbert Bécaud, 1961); (b) Running Scared and (c) It’s Over (Roy Orbison, 1960 and 1964)60 All this means that we might expect m4 to connote something Hispanic (the Boléro connection), something military (like the Green Beret snares), 59. It is worth noting that the English translation of ‘Et maintenant, que vais‐je faire?’ runs ‘What now, my love, now that it’s over?’ We are unlikely ever to know if the late Roy Orbison was influenced by Et maintenant or its English translation when writing It’s Over. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 93 something scary (Running Scared) and something dramatic, fateful and inexorable (the relentless, heavy, onbeat, funeral drum patterns signal‐ ling ‘everything is lost now that she’s gone’ in Et maintenant and It’s Over). Conveniently enough, Fernando‘s lyrics have it all: Hispanic (‘Fernando’, ‘Rio Grande’), military (‘bugle calls’, ‘guns, cannons’, ‘ri‐ fle’, ‘fight for freedom’), scary (‘I was so afraid’, ‘made me cry’) and in‐ exorably fateful (‘eternally’, ‘prepared to die’, ‘never thought we could lose’, ‘fateful night’). m5: legato sincerity m5a: appoggiature Museme 5a occurs mostly in the vocal part, often in parallel thirds. It is also heard in the Interlude on flauti dolci. C.P.E. Bach (1794:87) describes appoggiature (Vorschläge) as ‘the most essential embellishments’, ex‐ plaining the matter as follows. They enhance harmony as well as melody. They heighten the attractive‐ ness of the latter by joining notes smoothly together and, in the case of notes which might prove disagreeable because of their length, by short‐ ening them while filling the ear with sound. At the same time they pro‐ long others by occasionally repeating a preceding tone, and musical experience attests to the agreeableness of well‐contrived repetitions. Without going into further detail about the expressive character of Vor‐ schläge,61 we shall make the generalisation that appoggiatura strings like those of m5a — i.e. grace notes performed as onbeat suspensions resolving on to offbeat consonances or as onbeat consonances leading into anticipated onbeat dissonances, as notes of equal duration and in consecutive ascending or descending scalar order — have, in Baroque and Viennese classical music, when played andante, lento or moderato, the tendency to heighten the emotional expressiveness of the melodic 60. As with Fernando’s m4, these are generic renderings of rhythm patterns that vary slightly during each performance or recording. As in his In Dreams (1963), Orbison uses non‐recursive diataxis in Running Scared to underline the unstoppable move‐ ment of destiny (final chord and melodic climax). 61. On Vorschläge and musical rhetorics, see Schmitz, 1955: 176‐183. 94 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 phrase.62 This claim will seem less unreasonable if we make some hy‐ pothetical substitutions (HSs). Let us change the suspended grace notes at the start of the well‐known aria ‘Che farò senza Euridice’ from Gluck’s Orfeo e Euridice (ex. 66) into straight consonances (ex. 67). This ‘de‐appoggiaturation = de‐emotionalisation’ effect is even more notice‐ able in the Handel example and its HS (ex. 68a, b). Ex. 66. Gluck (1762/1744): Orfeo e Euridice. Aria ‘Che farò senza Euridice’ Ex. 67. Hypothetical Substitution on Ex. 66 - no appoggiature Ex. 68. Handel (1741): ‘He Was Despised’ from The Messiah; a) original, b) without appoggiature. There should be no need for further quotes and commutations of Ba‐ roque and Rococo music to illustrate this point. However, the uncon‐ vinced reader may test the theory by ‘de‐appoggiaturising’ the following passages: 1. Bach’s Matthew Passion a) the soprano aria ‘Wie wohl mein Herz in Tränen schwinnt’ (oboes d’amore appoggiature in parallel thirds) b) the duet ‘So ist mein Jesus nun gefangen’ (flute obligato appoggia‐ ture in parallel thirds, see especially at ‘Schmerzen’) c) the alto aria ‘Lebet, sterbet, ruhet hier’ (two oboi da caccia obligati and at the words ‘bleibet in Jesu Armen’) d) the final chorus ‘Wir setzen uns’ at the words ‘mit Tränen nieder’, ‘Ruhe sanfte’, ‘soll dem ängstlichen Gewissen ein bequemes Ruhek‐ issen und der Seelen Ruhstatt sein’, ‘höchst vergnügt’... ‘schum‐ mern da die Augen ein’, etc., etc. 2. Bach’s John Passion at the words ‘Es ist vollbracht’. 62. The C.P.E. Bach quote bears this out to a certain extent. See also Bernstein 1976: 135‐ 140. Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 95 3. Gluck’s Orfeo e Euridice, in Orpheus’s well‐known aria ‘What is Life Without Thee?’ (Che farò senza Euridice?, ex. 66), also at the words ‘Ah! Have Pity!’ and ‘the world has never known such grief’. 4. Lully’s Amadis, the aria ‘Bois épais’ at the word ‘silence’. This list could have been made much longer, but it is suggested that the references offered here should suffice to establish the general tenet that appoggiature tend to increase the grace, pathos and general expressive content of a melodic line in Baroque and Rococo music, especially if played or sung in parallel thirds or sixths so that double suspensions are constantly being created and resolved. Such appoggiature are stock‐in‐trade of the Viennese classical idiom. We do not intend to quote any examples to prove this rather obvious point, referring suspicious readers to Mozart’s Eine kleine Nachtmusik (K.525) first movement, bars 6‐8, 12‐18 (and their frequent reprises), 2nd movement, bars 2‐3 (and their reprises), not to mention the same composer’s highly popular Piano Concerto no.21 in C (K.467), 2nd movement (the Elvira Madigan theme), bars 17‐21 et passim. Readers sceptical about our view of the affective function of appoggiature should ‘de‐appoggiaturise’ these Mozart references. If you find the ex‐ pressive value of those passages to be the same with as without the ap‐ poggiature, you are right and this account is wrong! It is interesting to note that no similar strings of appoggiature were found in our IOCM from the nineteenth century. This may well be due to changes in the norms of dissonance treatment in the transition from Viennese classicism, where suspensions do not tend to be longer than their resolutions (unless in feminine endings, etc.), to romanticism, where suspensions seem to acquire an inherent affective value and are frequently longer than their resolutions. In fact, the latest references in the classical repertoire part of our IOCM are to Beethoven (ex. 69) and Schubert (ex. 70), i.e. in the breaking point between Viennese classicism and the Romantic era. Though similar in their treatment of appoggia‐ ture, their connotations are rather different, the Beethoven example be‐ ing the start of a sonata (a.k.a. The Ghost Sonata) while the Schubert quote is ‘To be sung on the water’. 96 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 Ex. 69. Beethoven (1802): Piano Sonata Op.31, no.2 Ex. 70. Schubert (1823): Auf dem Wasser zu singen. Moreover, unlike earlier references, examples 69 and 70 are to be played in a much faster tempo that m5a and they cannot be considered to the same extent so directly relevant to the discussion of affective meaning in the Fernando museme m5a, however tempting it may be to include the VVA of ex. 70 in this discussion (the boat swaying, accord‐ ing to the lyrics, like a gliding swan and the soul floating in the joy of gently glittering waves). Although no strings of appoggiature like m5a were found in the late 19th century part of our IOCM, they do occur in popular music, in op‐ eretta, in sentimental ballads, songs from musicals, evergreens, even in Country and Western (e.g. Tulips From Amsterdam, Claribel’s I Cannot Sing The Old Songs, The Cascades’ Rhythm Of The Rain, Claes‐Göran Hedenström’s Det börjar likna kärlek banne mej).63 In Merle Haggard’s The Fighting Side Of Me (ex. 71), we find strings of appoggiature underlining the pathos with which the renowned Country music troubadour pleads for the resurrection of a reactionary, Confederate, pro‐Vietnam‐war view of US patriotism. Haggard’s patriotic pathos takes a comic turn when his pleading appoggiature are replaced by on‐beat consonances (ex. 72). Similar commutations applied to the other references will sub‐ stantiate this observation. 63. Det börjar likna kärlek banne mej, with music by Roger Wallis, means ‘It’s starting to feel like love, damn it!’ Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV)— 3. Musemes 1-4 97 Ex. 71. Merle Haggard: You’re Walking On The Fighting Of Me Ex. 72. Hypothetical Substitution on ex. 71 - no appoggiature If we found no appoggiature in the late romantic part of our IOCM, their presence turned out to be just as infrequent in the African‐Ameri‐ can department. This seems to imply that m5a is a genre‐determinable idiom with parallels in the pre‐romantic classical tradition and in pop‐ ular ballads of the non‐African‐American type. Bearing also in mind that m5a is often sung or played in parallel thirds (or sixths) over stand‐ ard tertial (‘functional’) harmonies — an idiomatic trait in Mediterra‐ nean and Latin American popular song — we may now be more explicit about its affective message. Since Fernando received extensive airplay in North‐Western Europe and North America in top‐forty or middle‐of‐the‐road programme formats whose target groups had mu‐ sical tastes and socio‐musical group identification towards pop, rock, disco, etc., the inclusion of appoggiature in Fernando may also be inter‐ preted as connoting areas of affect outside the contemporary or imme‐ diate terms of listener reference in that part of the world. Thus, 98 Tagg: Fernando the Flute (IV) — 3. Musemes 1-4 associations would be more likely to go towards notions of ‘deep feel‐ ing’ and ‘great sentiment’ (popular ballads in European or Euro‐Amer‐ ican genre), the Latin sphere of influence (as viewed from the North‐ West European / North American ‘metropolis’) and to popular arche‐ typal notions of ‘Olde Worlde temperament’ and to ‘graceful’ music of ‘class’ (use of appoggiature in Baroque and Viennese classicism).64 m5b: string filler This violin filler has a similar appoggiatura character to m5a and the use of legato string obligati or fillers in popular song is also extremely common in connection with ‘love’, ‘deep feelings’, etc. as a general field of affective association. The equation ‘melodic legato strings = love’ is so well established in film music, television and mood music that fur‐ ther explanation of the phenomenon seems superfluous.65 64. Appoggiature do not occur in rock music. Their absence there makes their presence in a pop tune like Fernando all the more conspicuous as referring to genres where they do occur. For general account of rock and classics, see Schuler 1978. 65. Almost all Hollywood love scenes between 1927 and 1960 sport sumptuous legato string scoring. Here are a few examples: Driscoll and Anne kissing on the boat in King Kong (Steiner 1933); Olivia de Haviland’s and Errol Flynn’s romance in Captain Blood (Korngold 1935); Robin and Maid Marion planning their future together in The Adventures of Robin Hood (Korngold 1938); John Wayne proposing to Miss Dallas in Stagecoach (Hageman 1939); Bette Davis and Paul Henreid in Now Voyager (Steiner 1942); Barbara Stanwyck as femme fatale Mrs Dietrichson in Double Indemnity (Róz‐ sa 1944); luscious Laura (Raksin, 1944); the G.I. and the Geisha in Sayonara (North 1957); Romeo and Juliet (Tchaikovsky 1869 or Rota 1968). Most of these examples are on Fifty Years of Film and Fifty Years of Film Music.