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Copyright Society for Music Theory Jun 2009

Abstract

Pentatonic pitch space is also revealed by non-cadential motions using -, as illustrated by the following passage from Schubert's "Gute Nacht" (Example 6), as well as by the pentatonic voice exchange in Mahler's Symphony No.\n This prelude features numerous - cadences and frequent neighbor-note ornamentation of with , both of which evoke the pentatonic. [...]Day-O'Connell's research into the changing role of culminating with the plagal - cadence is masterful, while his analysis of the pentatonic itself is weakened ab origine by the way in which he insists on defining this topic. of article Mark McFarland Assistant Professor of Music Theory School of Music Georgia State University P.O. Box 4097 Atlanta, GA 30302-4097 of article

Details

Title
Review of Jeremy Day-O'Connell, Pentatonicism from the Eighteenth Century to Debussy
Publication year
2009
Publication date
Jun 2009
Publisher
Society for Music Theory
e-ISSN
10673040
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1620095154
Copyright
Copyright Society for Music Theory Jun 2009