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Max Weber - The Rational and Social Foundations of Music

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The document discusses Max Weber's sociology of music and explores rational and social foundations of music development.

The document discusses Max Weber's sociological analysis of the development of Western music and rationalization of musical scales, harmony, and instruments.

The document discusses the works and theories of major figures in the development of Western music like Pythagoras, Rameau, and Weber.

THE RATIONAL AND SOCIAL

FOUNDATIONS O:F MUSIC


BY Max Weber
Translated and Edited by
DC N MARTINDALE
JOHANNES RIEDEL
GERTRUDE NEUWIRTH
lib] SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY PRESS 1958
1958 EY SOUTHERN'ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY PflESS
LIBRAllY r CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER 56-12134
PRINTED nr THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY
AMERICAN BOOK-STRATFORD PRESS, INC. , NEW YORK
DESIGNED BY ANDOn BRAUN
Prefatory Nate
IN TBE stereotypes of an older generation, music belongs
among the spiritual activities of mar., In a world that thought
in terms of contrasts between the sacred and the secular, the
spiritual and the material, this terminology was directly appro-
priate. For in his music (and other arts) man's activity as-
sumes the properties of intensity without practical purpose,
discipline without externally imposed restrictions. No wonder
that in the arts one often feels that he is in the realm of the
pure spirit with its spontaneous activity and self-imposed rules
rising, at times, to lyrical self-expression.
In the same society where music is produced and enjoyed,
the patterned, infinitely varied strategies of social life un-
fold in customs and conventions hardening into institutions or
melting in:o fads and fashions.
Moralists and politicians, humanists and religious neophytes
have seen that these two spheres, the artistic and the every-
day, have some relation to one another. The moralist would
denounce it; the politician use it; the humanist affirm it; the
religious r.eophyte. withdraw from it. Some of these attitudes
e v ~ n reappear in the booster and the social critic.
The modern sociology of music is the disciplined contem-
porary fOJ m of the inquiry into t1: e relation between music
tl
vi
PREFATORY NOTE
and society. The study by Max Weber, one of the greatest soci-
ologists of the twentieth century, of the rational and social
foundations of music is a pioneering venture of the modern
discipline. Though it is a quarter of a century since Max
Weber's essay appeared (first published in 1921), interest in
Weber and the sociology of music has continued to grow.
Johannes Riedel was asked to give a paper on Weber's sociol-
ogy of music at Jordan College, Indianapolis, Indiana, on
April 28, Hl56, to a section of the Midwest Chapter of the
American Musicological Society. We take this as one among
many such evidences that a translation of the Weber essay is
long overdue.
October, 1957
.....
Don Martindale
Gertrude Neuwirth
Iohannes Riedel
CONTENTS
Prefatory Note v
Introduction: MAX WEBER'S SOCIOLOGY OF MUSIC xi
.1 HARMONY AND MELODY AS FAcrORS IN THE
OF MUSIC
3
2 PREDH.TONIC AND WESTERN SCALE SYSTEMS AS
FOUNDATIONS FOR MUSICAL RATIONALIZATION 11
3 TONAJJITY AND ITS EQUIVALENTS IN ANCIENT
MELODY
3
2
4 SCALE RATIONALIZATION IN TEllMS OF FIFTHS AND
FOURTHS: FOUNDATIONS OF MODERN TONALITY
51
: TIlE EVOLUTION OF OCCIDENTAL POLYVOCALITY 66
6 RATIONALIZATION OF THE TOl'i'E SYSTEM AND
TEMPERAMENT
89
vii
viii CONTENTS
'7 TECH!\"ICAL, ECONOMIC, AND SOCIAL INTERRELA-
TIONS BETWEEN MODERN MUSIC AND ITS
INSTRUMENTS
Notes
Index
10
4
12
7
INTRODUCTION
MAX WEBER'S SOCIOLOGY
OF MUSIC
THE STUDY of the interrelations between society
and music is not to be undertaken carelessly nor is it one
affording easy solutions. Since the patterns of music pro-
duction and appreciation may change while the society
remains constant and the same music may be received
and loved by the people of quite different societies, there
is no one-to-one casual interdetermination of society and
music. One must reject as vulgar errors the Nazi idea that
there is a true Aryan music and the Communist idea that
Western music is of a decadent bourgeois type. The soci-
ology of music could not mean this, for it would need be
rejected out of hand.
However , it is a matter of familiar observation that
there are dose ties between various social element : and
music. The musician is a member of society like anyone
else. His requirement for making a living may be bound
up with his artistic role. If he earns a livelihood inde-
pendently of his art, his music has the form of a hobby
or leisure-time pursuit. The manner in which he culti vates
his talents will tend to differ from that of the musician
xi
xii
INTROD U eTION
who makes a living by means of his art. The musician re-
quires an audience. His product is molded by the demand
or lack of demand for his art. In his art the musician em-
ploys instruments related to the level of technology of
his civilization. His finest performances may be attended
for status rather than aesthetic reasons as occasions for
the better elements of society to see and be seen by each
other in appropriate dress, jewelry, furs. The artist may
be a free agent producing his wares in open competition
with others He may be a kept and pampered object, as
much a part of an elegant household as a combed and
brushed poodle. It is a matter of familiar observation that
all such factors enter as encouragements and discourage-
ments in the production and consumption of music.
Thus, there is a kind of common-sense SOciology of
music familiar to us all. We know that, generally, fine art
is for fine people and vulgar art is for the not so fine. We
know that status factors affect the change in artistic styles.
We know that artistic performances have extramusical
functions. The sociology of music takes its point of de-
parture from such familiar observations. It explores the
boundaries between the sciences of SOciology and musicol-
ogy, attempting to explain those links between society and
music that common observation reveals.
Max Weber's pioneering essay, "The Rational and Social
Foundations of Music," 1 has special interest to both soci-
ologists and musicians, for it cuts below the surface of a
common-sense sociology of music to fundamental issues.
Weber attempted to trace the influence of social factors
on the ver)' creative core and technical basis of music.
In its broadest sense, Weber's thesis was that Western
music has peculiar rational properties produced by social
factors in Occidental development. Right or wrong,
Weber's Sociology of Music
xiii
Weber's thesis assumes a relevance for the deepest levels
of musical theory. It also forms a test case as to the values
of sociological and musicological sciences for each other.
As one of the great sociologists in modern times, Max
Weber is universally known among social scientists. In-
asmuch as he is much less widely known in musical circles,
it will be useful for some of our readers briefly to review
those a s p ~ c t s of his thought relevant to his sociology of
music.
Basic Sociological Ideas
Max Weber (1864-1920) was born in Berlin of an
upper middle-class family. His father was a prominent fig-
ure in the National Liberal Party of the Bismarckian era,
serving for some years in the Reichstag. Weber was en-
tered upon the study of law, his father's profession. His
first academic appointment was that of Privatdozent at
the University of Berlin. Very early in his career he ac-
cepted an appointment as Professor of Economics at Frei-
burg, becoming successor to the great economist Karl
Knies. Net long after this he suffered a severe nervous
breakdow:n which required his retirement from academic
life. For the greater part of his productive career he lived
as a private scholar in Heidelberg. During World War I
he accepted an appointment at the University of Vienna,
and later--in 1919-he was appointed to the chair of
Economics at Munich. During this period he was an active
member of the delegation to the League of Nations. He
died of pneumonia in 1920 at the height of his scholarly
powers."
The full stature of Weber as an original scholar became
fully clear with the publication in 1904 of The Protestant
xiv
INTRODUCTION
Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.
3
In an atmosphere
largely created. by Marxist intellectuals, all spheres of life,
including the artistic, were being explained more or less
exclusively in terms of economics. Political, religious,
social, ethical, and aesthetic concerns were interpreted as
extensions of economic interests. The Protestant Ethic
and the Spirit of Capitalism was a dramatic essay in which
Weber corrected the simplism of an exclusively economic
interpretation of cultural life. Other areas of life were
treated as semiautonomous with effects of their own. The
thesis that religion is necessarily or only the opiate of the
masses was implicitly rejected. Causal influences were
traced from religious experience to economics. Many of
the distinctive features of Western capitalism were traced
from the central attitudes and characteristic modes of
deportment generated in the circles of the Protestant
sects.
The essay set off one of the great intellectual debates
in modem times. From the days of The Protestant Ethic to
the collected works in the sociology of religion left un-
finished at his death, Weber's work ranges over an amaz-
ing compass of the modem social sciences. He made orig-
inal contributions to such different fields as economics,
politics and administration, the sociology of religion, the
sociology of law, the sociology of authority, leadership,
and knowledge.'
Weber developed a rich array of concepts which he
applied to e v ~ r y area of social life he brought under re-
view, from the sociology of authority to the sociology of
music." At bottom sociology studies social action. When
the sociologist examines an institution, a group, a com-
munity, or a society, he is only studying ways in which
people act toward one another, for all things social reduce
Weber's SocioZ('gy of Music xu
to interhuman behavior." Social behavior is not only inter-
human but meaningful as well. If in a crowd waiting in
line before a theatre one person stepl on another's toe,
there has been a physical contact of individuals but no
social action. When one offers an apology which the other
accepts, the physical act has initiated a temporary social
act. The meanings present in social action are assumed
to exercise a causal influence upon the course that action
takes. A scientist is interested in regularities in the phe-
nomena he studies. For the social scientist, taking mean-
ingful social actions as his object matter, interest attaches
to the kinds of recurrences they display. Accepting the
usual analysis of action into means and ends, Weber iso-
lates certain fundamental ways in which social actions
may be stabilized: through the rational efficiency of
means to achieve the ends desired; through the establish-
ment of ends as fixed; through acting out of an excess of
emotion; through acting habitually, or if the habit is
socially shared, traditionally." In these various types of
action (rational, evaluative, emotional, and traditional)
the properties of action are determined by the relation of
means to ends. In the first (rational) the action is de-
termined by tl.e complete freedom of the choice of ends
and by the choice of means purely in terms of their effi-
ciency. The actions of a scientist are the very epitome of
rationality. A , housewife choosing freely among food
values and shopping where she gets the highest quality
of food values at the lowest price is behaving rationally.
An action is evaluative when he ends toward which it is
directed are assumed to be absolutely valid. Religion pre-
sents many examples. One may take salvation to be th s
unquestioned ultimate value of human conduct and order
all other aspects of life as means to achieve it. One is act-
xvi
IXTRODUCTION
ing evaluatively when he takes as absolute some value such
as honesty and tells the truth on all occasions regardless
of the consequences. An artist might take some ideal of
beauty as an absolute end and sacrifice fame, fortune,
and perhaps even his family and health to it. An action is
affective when it is determined by the presence of strong
emotion: actions, in rage or terror, grief or despair are
typical. An action is traditional when determined by long
familiarity and habit : when one votes for one party be-
cause his family has always done so. Many hundreds of
little actions in everyday life are traditional.
There are three primary ways in which action may be
regularized: rationally, evaluatively, and traditionally.
Most affective or emotional actions are highly unstable
and variable. Most societies spend much time controlling
unstable affectively determined actions. Collective emo-
tional behaviors , like those of the actions of mobs, are
ordinarily avoided when possible.
Since SOciologists are interested in recurrent patterns
of conduct, an important economy of thought is repre-
sented by a concept which permits reference to the pat-
tern without the need to refer to every single act in which
the pattern is displayed. For Weber a social relation con-
sists in the existence of a probability that there will be ill
some meaningfully understandable sense, a course of so-
cial action." A social relation is an arrangement of persons
present in any social action. If two persons interact ill
such a way that A always gives orders and B carries them
out, one may say that whenever A and B act a social re-
lation of superiority-subordination holds between A and
B. The concept of social relation substitutes for the need
to refer to a whole multiplicity of specific actions, con-
centrating on the common pattern.
rr eoer S o ocwwgy oT ia USlC
A social structure is an organized system of social rela-
tions. A state, for example, is an extensive system of social
relations between officials and citizens. Such social rela-
tions when organized into structures are often very spe-
cifically defined such that very definite rights and obliga-
tions adhere to any single person. A citizen of the state,
for example, may be obligated to pay taxes, to fight in its
armies, to refrain from certain kinds Or actions defined as
treasonable. TIle president of the state receives a specific
salary and has a whole series of definite powers and r(;:-
sponsibilities, perhaps even with specified punishments
(such as impeachment and loss of office).
The stabilities of social action due to rational, evalua-
tive, and traditional forces also apply to social relations
and social structures, A scientific laboratory, for example,
may represent a stabilized social structure the relations
of which are predominantly of a ratior.. al type. A religior-s
sect may be primarily characterized by relations of an
evaluative nature. A family may display a fundamental
system of traditional patterns.
Social actions are the units of interhuman life also in
the collective aesthetic life of man. Here, too, social rela-
tions are stabilized and social structures appear. The musi-
cal life of men also may be organized into a variety of
forms. It is evident that to some degree the musical life (If
men is susceptible to analysis in terms of the same socio-
logical categor ies: as are other areas of life.
Rational Social Action in Occulentai Development
and Social Structure
One of th ~ most fundamental theses running through
Max Weber's many studies is that an ever-growing pre-
xviii INTRODUCTION
ponderance of rational social action runs through the de-
velopment of the Western world. Ultimately this thesis
was applied by Weber to the Occidental arts, particularly
its music.
The term "rational" does not have a single meaning in
ordinary discourse. It has a range of meanings from "rea-
sonable," "representing good judgment," to "conducted
in terms of logical 'or scientific principles." At times ideas,
actions, persons, and even social structures are said to be
"rational." Modern psychologists, particularly the Freudi-
ans, have familiarized us with the concept of rationaliza-
tion as the psychological process of giving pseudo-reasons
for the real ones in conduct, concealing one's true motives
from others and often from oneself. The term "rationalism"
has been employed to refer to a kind of philosophic out-
look such as that current in the eighteenth century.
In applying the term "rational" to social action, Weber
was concerned to isolate one kind of relation between the
means and ends of action. A social action is rational when
the means utilized in the course of action are chosen be-
cause of their efficiency or adequacy to the attainment of
the ends in view. We can be most certain of the rational-
ity of the choice of means to ends to the degree to which
logical cr scientific standards have been established per-
mitting judgments of adequacy or appropriateness. To a
lesser extent ordinary experience supplies us with many
standards of adequacy. A person who tried to cross a
stream by flapping his anns and flying over like a bird
would hardly be considered to possess an average knowl-
edge of appropriate or adequate means . Modem science
has tremendously expanded our knowledge of relations
between things of the world; it has enormously widened
the sphere of man's rationality.
Weber's Sociol,J9Y of Music
xix
The term "rational" does not apply to the ends of action
or to the values to which action"is addressed. This sepa-
rates the technical from the ordinary usage. A youth who
argues with his parents or teachers may be told that he is
irrational or unreasonable when often what is actually
meant is that he is taking some unusual stand or making
some unconventional demand. Such identifications of "ra-
lional" with "conventional" blur its meaning by referring
it partly to the ends of action. The "rationalism" of the
eighteenth-century philosophers was of this type. The ra-
tionalistic philosophers believed that every man has a
faculty of reason and men share the same universal set of
values. Weber's usage has nothing to do with the ends
of action, only with the choice of means in terms of their
appropriateness to ends. An act of thought conducted in
terms of the rules of logic is rational. An act of inquiry
conducted in terms of the norms and criteria of science is
also rational, for rationality means precisely the conduct
of the thought process in terms of such norms and criteria.
The technical conception of rational social action as de-
veloped by Max Weber is a direct extension of these
meanings.
A social relation is an arrangement present in social
action; social structure is a complex, organized pattern of
social relations. By simple extension one may describe a
social relation or social structure as rational. So far as the
actions of a young man and girl in love are determined
by the presence of powerful emotion they are, in Weber's
terminology, affective. When the stirrings of adolescence
send the young boys of America into the trees in the girl's
front yard to behave in ways leading sager minds to think
that perhaps Darwin had a point, such irrationalities are
not atypical of affectively determined actions. By contrast,
xx
INTRODUCTION
the same girl's elder sisters may employ every artifice with
a deliberately calculated rationality. Thus rational social
actions may appear even in areas where the most powerful
emotions normally appear, such as erotic spheres.
A social structure is rational to the degree to which the
system of social relationships rests on an organization of
ends to means in terms of efficiency, adequacy, and ap-
propriateness of means to ends. It has already been ob-
served that rationality may even appear in a courtship.
Rational strategies may be observed by the staff officers
in war. A business corporation may be rationally organ-
ized : computing all actions in terms of their effect in
increasing profits; basing hiring and firing policies on
judgments of efficiency; calculating all assets and expen-
ditures; continually adjusting behavior to cut costs and in-
crease earnings. Not all groups are equally susceptible to
rational organization. A business corporation is ordinarily
more rationally organized than a love affair; a scientific
laboratory is usually more rationally organized than a
family; the experiment conducted by a group of atomic
scientists is ordinarily more rationally conducted than a
blind date. But while differentially susceptible to rational
organization, rational structuring of action may appear
anywhere.
It was Weber's view that one of the ground trends in
Western civilization is the movement toward rationaliza-
,
tion. In every institutional area, in the rise of business, in
' political parties, in government, in religion, calculation in
terms of efliciency and the appropriateness of means to
ends tends 'to be the rule. Old mythologies are exposed,
taboos are exploded, magical forms are destroyed, and the
colorful and varied forms of old mysteries are clarified in
Weber's Sociology of Music
xxi
the cold light of scientific day. In Friedrich Schiller's
phrase, a "disenchantment of the world" is carried out.
Thought itself tends to find its norm in science, the most:
rational of all thought forms, The economic historians
have familiarized us with the idea' that our economics is
characterized by the development of rational business en-
terprise for the pursuit of profit. In political administra-
-tion the Western world has experienced the most com-
plete growth of bureaucracy, the most rational of all
administrative forms, Philosophy and theology are driver.
on to new forms under its impulse.
This process in Occidental culture of disenchantment or,
as it is often called, "progress," to which science belongs
as a link and motive force, has, according to Weber, gom,
beyond merely practical and technical spheres to touch
the very problem of the meaning of the world. As time
went by Weber found himself increasingly turning to the
works of Leo Tolstoi, where, he believed, the problerr,
posed by rationalization reaches a critical intensity. As
Tolstoi saw it, for civilized man death itself has no mean..
ing. When the life of civilized man is placed in a scheme
of infinite prog::ess according to its immanent meaning, it
should never come to an end. While for the peasant, like
the patriarchs of old, life and death were linked in an or-
ganic cycle such that a sense of the ccmpletion of life in
death was possible, this sense of completion has vanished
for civilized man, 'The process of disenchantment has ex-
tended to the very meaning of life and death."
Rationalitu in the Arts
Weber did not develop his.theories as to the relation
between the arts and the rest of life. But there is an un-
xxii
INTRODUCTION
expressed assumption of a continuity. Western man does
Dot change his nature when he turns to his arts. The same
thematic tendencies apparent in other spheres of his life
are apparent here.
The drive toward rationality, that is, the submitting of
an area of experience to calculable rules, is present here.
Only in Western architecture had the pointed arch and
cross-arched vault been rationally used as a device for
distributing pressure and roofing spaces of all forms. Only
here had these been turned into the constructive principle
of great monumental buildings and utilized as the founda-
tion of an architectural style.
Only in Western painting does the rational use of lines
and perspectives come into central focus manifesting a
parallel drive toward rational calculability equivalent to
the employment of the Gothic arch in architecture.
Printing was invented in China, but only in the West
was the rationalization of literature carried through on the
basis of printing. Only here does a literature designed only
for print make its appearance.
This drive to reduce artistic creativity to the form of a
calculable procedure based on comprehensible principles
appears above all in music. Western tone intervals were
known and calculated elsewhere. But rational harmonic
music, both counterpoint and harmony and the formation
of tone materials on the basis of three triads with the
harmonic third are peculiar to the West. So too, is a chro-
matics and an enharmonics interpreted in terms of har-
mony. Peculia, too, is the orchestra with its nucleus in
the string quartet and organization of ensembles of wind
instruments. In the West appears a system of notation
making possible the composition of modern musical works
in a manner impossible otherwise."
Weber's Sociolo!,y of Music
xxiii
In all these areas the experience of Western man is as-
sumed to display a basic continuity of theme from its prac-
tical and technical to its artistic spheres. By itself this is
no new idea, for the continuity of art and the rest of so-
cial life was widely held throughout the nineteenth cen-
tury and dramatically formulated by HegeL Many times
the judgment h1S been expressed that music is the most
modern of the arts. Or, again, it has been asserted that
music is the most spiritual of the arts. It has also been
called the most mystic and most emotional of the arts.
Weber's essay, The Rational and Social. Foundations of
Music, undercuts all such relatively superficial estimates
hy raising the equivalent questions in more specific form.
The issue is not simply left with the rhetorical question,
To what extent does the structure of Viestern music dis-
playa rationality paralleling that found in other areas of
Occidental social, institutional, and technological life?
Rather the concrete investigation is carried out in one
feature of Western music after another. One may, for ex-
ample, ask to what extent has our basic musical scale been
reduced to an ordered system of rules? By comparison
with the scales developed elsewhere it is possible to de-
termine whether greater rationality has been achieved
elsewhere-and, incidentally, to establish what is pecu-
liarly Western in our musical scales. Equivalent types of
investigation are possible for many other features of
Western music.
The remainder of the present essay is concerned with
a quick review of Weber's study. For this purpose, it may
be presented in four basic divisions: the examination of
harmony in its 'relation to melody; the study of the scale
system of Western music in contrast to others; the review
of the kinds of solutions possible to polyvocaIity and poly-
xxiv
INTRODUCTION
sonority in musical schemes; and an examination of the
role of instruments as vehicles of musical rationalization.
Harmony in Relation to Melody
Harmonic chord music is a great and practically
unique achievement,of Western man. As an aesthetic
adventure into the world of simultaneous sound, harmonic
chord music is peculiarly dependent on the rationalization
of tone relations and progressions. Only on the basis of
an ordered structure of sound intervals could one expect
to conjoin tones with the anticipation of regular results.
If one wishes to achieve pleasant or interesting effects
with some combination of tones , if one wishes to repro-
duce it and create others like it, one is moved in the direc-
tion of formulating a comprehensive system of rules for
establishing acceptable tone relationships.
The human ear is capable of an enormous range of
sound discriminations. The precondition of aesthetic en-
joyment of artistically created sound patterns is the fiXing
of some fundamental pattern of sounds as an acknowl-
edged instrument for the creation of such patterns. Scales
have made their appearance in every known society from
the most primitive to the most civilized. But harmonic
chord music depending upon the exploration of changing
patterns of simultaneously sounded tone combinations is
hardly capable of equal development with all scales.
Weber believed that the diatonic scale resting upon the
sound interval of the octave (1 : 2) represented the scale
of maximum ' effectiveness for this purpose. Its primary
structure rested on the interval 1 : 2; through successive
divisions of the intervals within the octave, the fifth,
fourth, the major and minor thirds, and the whole and
Weber's Sociology of Music
xxv
half tones were obtained (with the exception of the sixth
and seventh). Weber called attention to the fact that har-
monic chord music resting on a scale permitting a maxi-
mum of ordered relations does not in the diatonic scale
have a closed logical system. From the very beginning a
nonsyrnmetric division of sounds is evident. The octave
is unequally divided into the fourth and the fifth. Harmonic
'division of the fourth is omitted and the interval of the
seventh is left aside.
When one ascends or descends in rows or circles of
octaves, followed by rows of fifths or other intervals , these
divisions can never meet on the same note. The fifth fifth
approaches the third octave by forty-five cents; the sev-
enth fifth surpasses the fifth octave by fifty-seven cents;
the twelfth fifth reaches beyond the seventh octave by
only twelve cents. So far everything is in order. All this
changes, however, when in accord with harmonic rules
one forms the seventh, and the entire logical structure
tends to come apart at the seams. A suppressed sense of
excitement attaches to Weber's discussion of this problem
that transcends any mere passing curiosity over the fact
that there is an uneliminatable logical looseness which
appears at the heart of harmonic chord music. It cannot
be dismissed, apparently, with the question, What's the
difference?
There is almost a.sense that one 'has touched one of the
ultimate boundaries of human reason itself. In the West
a great drama is under way in the extension of man's
reason. In one area after another, colorful old mysteries
dissipate like mcrning mist in the cold light of reason and
the process of disenchantment of the world is irreversible.
One area after another of human experience is trans-
formed into a problem of arithmetic. Who would abandon
xxvi lNTRODU eTlON
the formidable gains of the logic and science of Western
man? At the same time, in all honesty who would deny
that it is more than nostalgic to look with regret at the
disappearance of one colorful old "mystery after another.
We are like children who are told that there is no Santa
Claus, nor Easter Bunny, and later no stork. The room for
free flight of the imagination is circumscribed by the rules
of logic. The spheres 'to which the attitudes of humility,
astonishment, and awe are appropriate vanish. The atti-
tudes around which the psychology of Western man are
built are matter-of-factness and unemotional logical per-
ception. The world of Western man belongs not to his
heart but to his head. No day goes by without some new
area becoming inappropriate to his emotional apprehen-
sion as it is clarified in his intellectual perception.
There is, of course, no absolute antithesis between
reason and emotion, rationality and irrationality, logiC
and love. This , however, should not blind one's perception
of the fact that they may and, in Western man, repeatedly
have come into tension. This may be seen when the most
ultimately evocative emotional area of all, Death itself,
may be rendered meaningless by the peculiar develop-
ment of the rationality of Western man.
In Western music the drama of the experience of West-
ern man is re-enacted. Practically his music is addressed
to the simultaneous requirements of expression and rea-
son. The history of tuning and temperament, according to
Weber, reflects the contradictions betwen theoretical and
practical needs. Harmonic chord music does not from the
onset rest on a rationally closed system. It is based on
triads obtained through intervals which are the result of
the first two successive divisions of the octave: the fifth
and third. If both intervals are used in ascending and de-
lVeber' s Sociology of Music xxvii
scending fashion, the complete tone material of the dia-
tonic scale, both major and minor, is covered. By obtaining
fifths and thirds, up and down, from any given tone, an
intervallic discrepancy known as a diesis will result.
Thus, harmonic chord music rests on a rationally di-
vided system of basic tone relationships, but basic to the
system is a residual irrational division the consequences
ef which form a primary object of theoretical reflection
for Occidental musical theorists.
The intervals of the diatonic scale have been decided
by tonality and harmony. While sounds may be perfect
according to the pythagorean theory of acoustical laws,
when sounded together they may produce unpleasant
effects. The introduction of harmony led to a change in
the intervals established by the Greeks. That between the
D and E and between G and A were lessened and that
between E and F and A and C were increased. The dia-
tonic scale with C as a keynote already had two semi-
tones. The addition of the black keys of the piano or
organ suggests a continuous succession of semitones. How-
ever, the semitones do not represent a continuous succes-
sion of regular tone distances. A given tone like A when
counted downward from the tone above A, which is B,
is not identical with the first. A-sharp will be a little below
the second, B-flat. This difference is a pythagorean
comma. The differences of opinion between physicists and
musicians have been a central point of theoretical discus-
sion. These problems emerged as harmony became pur-
sued as an objective separate from melody. The tonic and
the keynote became the two terminal points within which
the attempt was made to fix the intervallic system of the
diatonic scale.
In connection with tonality, modulations, inversions,
xxviii
INTRODUCTION
and cadences become important. Tonality remains undis-
turbed as long as dissonances can be resolved into con-
sonances, i.e., triads. But precisely the most important
dissonance of all, the seventh chord is built on the upper
fth of a tone, the dominant seventh chord. It emerges
not as a product of arithmetic division but as an exten-
sion of the diatonic scale progression. Another third is
added to the triad. But the seventh cannot be included in
triadic calculation.
The irrational nature of the seventh chord is empha-
sized, furthermore, by the fact that whenever its root is
omitted, a diminished chord is present; whenever the
minor seventh is altered to the major, an augmented
chord arises. Diminished and augmented chords form
fragments of altered scales which differ considerably from
the diatonic scale.
Seventh chords are not derived harmonically, and they
cannot be established on purely harmonic grounds. Since
they are the result of the transposition of a third, the re-
sult of a change of pitch level, they should be accounted
for through melodic needs. Harmonic chord music, thus,
is not only made up from tone relations which are the re-
sult of arithmetic divisions manifest in the organization
of the diatonic scale, and its intervals, in triads and their
respective tonality; it is also influenced by melodic de-
vices of tone proximity. Harmonic chord music is no mere
sequence of triads, of harmonic dissonances and their
resolutions, but an exchange between the latter and
chords which do not stand for a key, a tonality, a fixed
function within a tonality, tones whose melodic function
has been explained as "passing, sustained, anticipated
tones," and "appogiaturas" or "suspensions."
Harmonic chord music, thus, consists of a fluctuating
Weber's Sociology of Music xxix
tense interpenetration of the harmonic principle by an-
other, that of tone proximity. These chord alien tones are .
considered by Weber as the most effective means of the
dynamics of chord progressions. Without their irrational
tensions, no modem music could exist . The irrationality ill
modern music is given through its melodic-dynamic har-
mony.
A great many of these nonchord tones have been
treated by Hindemith in his Craft of Musical Composition
as offshoots of chords. What Weber describes as dynamics
of chord progression Hindemith describes as follows:
"But there are many such tones which do not produce
independent chords, chord splinters, or offshoots, they
might be called. Such tones enrich chords without essen-
tially changing them:' And again: "The rigid chordal
structure thus has to give up portions of itself bit by bit
to melody, the reaction of which in these scrimmages is
comparable to that of an acid upon metal. A tiny bit of a
mighty force gnaws and bites at the material under at-
tack, not strongly enough to destroy it, and yet affecting
the surface enough by etching scratches and grooves into
it, to roughen its smooth finish." 11
This phase of Weber's essay brings into central fOCl,.S
the relations between the harmonic and melodic elements
of nineteenth-century music and locates many of the most
interesting features of it in the tension between rational
and expressive requirements involved. The protagonists of
the aesthetic adventure of Western man are seen as driven
to attain a maximum of logical order, rationality, on the
one hand, and the intensified, lyric, free, creative expres-
sion, affectivity, on the other. This is the aesthetic COUll-
terpart of the drama of Western man in other areas of his
life.
xxx
INTRODUCTION
The question could be proposed: Has Western music
achieved the maximum rationality within the limits of ex-
pressive possibility? Has one, here, nally located one of
the ultimate limits of rationality itself? Could one have
simultaneously achieved greater rationality and more full
expressive flexibility with some other scale system?
Having posed the problem of harmonic rationality and
melodic expressiveness' in a characteristic manner, Weber
deepens the level of his analysis by raising the question
of the limits of the rationality of the Western scale system
through comparison with prediatonic and Eastern-Asiatic
musical systems.
Prediatonic in Relation to Western Scale Systems
Weber reviewed the literature of his day on Eastern-
Asiatic musical systems in connection with the contro-
versial role of the seventh in nineteenth-century European
harmonic chord music. In the course of this review Weber
came to a number of conclusions: (1) The state of ration-
alization of the scale system cannot be improved through
the utilization of the integral 7 or by still higher prime
numbers. This is revealed by numerous examples of scales
in the Eastern-Asiatic area resting on the seventh upper
partial and the tritone. (2) In contrast to the use of the
integral 7 as a basis for rationalization, the musical sys-
tem of the ,Greeks and the early Christian church elim-
inated the number 5 and thereby the diatonic scale, the
differentiation between major and minor, tonality and
triads. It is an old story that modem harmonic music was
only possible by changing all this. (3) In systems such as
the Greek and the modal system of the early church, de-
vices playin.g the role of tonality are of interest. In these
Weber's Sociolog.1J of Music
xxxi
systems the harmonic third was supplanted by the ditone,
the semitone by the limma. In lieu of the harmonic divi-
sion of a fifth and a conjunct fourth, the division into two
equal fourths each consisting of equal whole tones is in-
troduced. The instrumental division with its tone relation-
ships is replaced by an intervallic division in which modu-
lations , the principle of tone proximity, is of constructive
importance.
In the course of this review of the musical systems of
the Eastern-Asiatic area, of the Greeks, and of the early
church, Weber appears to suggest that a maximum of
rationality, within the limits of a range of expressive pos-
sibilities, has been achieved in Occidental music. Pre-
sumably any further rationality could only be secured by
the sacrifice of expressive plasticity.
Weber turned next to the problem of expressiveness
bound up with the principle of tone proximity and inter-
vallic distance. This was the motivating interest in his
review of prediatonic scale systems. Numerous examples
of pentatonicisrn were reviewed to determine the full na-
ture of the contrast between harmonic and melodic music,
between music with and without triads.
Pentatonicism is characterized by the utilization of the
frame of two equal tetrachords into which an additional
tone is added. The fact that two equal tetrachords are
used presupposes the subdivision of the octave. The ac-
ceptance of the octave as a basic point of departure shows
partial rationalization (in the sense 0 f harmonic chord
music) .
Since pentatonic music is partly rationalized, as found,
for example, in the systems of the Chinese and slendro
scales of the Javanese, it must be distinguished from prim-
itive music. The same would hold for the pentatonicism
xxxii
INTRODUCTION
of the Jewish synagogue and of the Roman Catholic
Church as well as the music of the Indians, Mongols,
Papuans, and Fulah Negroes.
Innumerable studies in comparative and ethnomusicol-
ogy have confirmed the wide distribution of pentatoni-
cism. Although pentatonicism is to be distinguished from
primitive music, it had some things in common with it.
Moreoyer the music of many primitive tribes , such as the
ceremo'nial music of the Chippewa Indians, was of a pen-
tatonic nature. Chromaticism or semitone music, for in-
stance, was used by primitive tribes as well as by repre-
sentatives of the Eastern-Asiatic cultures. It appears in
Negro melodies as well as in Japanese music. The avoid-
ance of the expressive half-tone devices can also be found
in the music of many North American tribes and in the
musical systems of the Chinese and Cambodians. In both
primitive and pentatonic music the major third or its har-
monically measured equivalent is extremely rare. How-
ever, a great variety of imperfect thirds is to be found.
In both primitive and pentatonic musical culture we
often find pentatonic scales in addition to other scale
devices, The Hindu Raga system had seventy-two in all.
12
It is not possible to determine the extent to which the
seven-tone or octave scales originated out of alterations
and corruptions of pentatonic scales. There is no doubt,
however, as to the importance of the pentatonic scale for
the history of scale development toward the seven-tone
and twelve-tone scales, nor is there any doubt as to the
rationalistic organization of a tetrachordal tonality in con-
trast to authentically primitive scales which consist of
unorganized conglomerations of nonrational tone succes-
sions.
The complexity of prepentatonic, pentatonic, predia-
Weber's Sociology of Music
xxxm
tonic, and diatonic development of scale formations in
many primitive societies, a problem, partially, of the re-
ciprocal influence between tonality, scale formation, and
society is brilliantly described by Weber in terms of the
insertion of auxiliary and filler tones within the rational-
ized frame organization of the fourth. Driven by melodic
requirements such filler tones may range from a quarter-
tone to a third. Tetrachordal scales using these melodic
forces for the selection of intertetrachord intervals are Iar
more free for scale formation than any harmonically de-
signed scale.
Eastern-Asiatic theorists experimented with a great
many scales consisting of such novel intervallic combinn-
tions within the diazeutic fourth. Residues of these theo-
retic scales can be seen in the division of the Greek
tetrachords into the chromatic and enharmonic genders,
giving the specific role of affective and expressive mean-
ing.
Similar evidences of melodic microtonal formations are
present in the seventeen Arabian thi rd tones," the sruti
system 14 of Hindu music with its twenty-two equal tone
steps to the octave. Survivals from equivalent theoretic
scales can be seen in certain local scales of Greek origin
which refer to specific filler tones of the corresponding
tetrachords (Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian).
It may be noted that in the passages where Weber
raises these issues he has touched an important social
factor affecting the basic scales and the possibility of their
rationalization. Such theoretic syste:natization and in-
genious experimentation with microtonal intervals has
often been the work of professional musicians interested
in two artistic values : increasing expressiveness on tl .e
one hand and codifying procedure on the other.
xxxiv INTRODUCTION
Another kind of general sociatechnical influence is ap-
parent so far as the requirements of instrumental tuning
may aflecc melodic intervals. If they are to be used to-
gether, one instrument has to be tuned to the other. The
tuning of wind instruments, for example, may be adapted
to that of string instruments, as seems to be the case in
the semi tone and microtone tetrachord tuning of the
aulos and kithara. \
A kaleidoscopic picture of the intervals as established
within the tetrachards is presented in the tuning of the
five-string Arabic lute with its twelve chromatic tones, in
pythagorean tuning, and five additional and irrational in-
tervals which increase the number of chromatic tones to
seventeen, due to the fact that some intervals were used
in an ascending, others in a descending fashion. In gen-
eral, however, the effect of instrumental tuning is toward
the fixing of rational intervals.
Another possible rationalizing influence in the early
development of music is language. Linguistic practice
sometimes moves in the direction of creating a tone lan-
guage based on shifting pitch levels and changing tone
volumes. Idiomatic melodicism, by producing clear in-
tervals, may have helped in the fiXing of rational intervals
as well as in the establishment of the musical motive and
its repetition. In the latter case, one rationalizing element
such as hmguage is substituted for another, Le., the rep-
etition of a musical motive on a different pitch level
makes the equalization of the motivic intervals necessary.
The latter can be achieved only through the rationaliza-
tion of melodic intervals. Thus a chain reaction of ration-
alization may already occur at the level of pentatonic
music.
However, too much must not be made of the relation
Weber's of Music
xxxv
between music a.id language, for it has been proved by
Stumpf," Revesz, and others that speech does not know
fixed intervals. The movement of speech tones depends
exclusively on the prevailing mood of the person at the
time of speaking. Nevertheless, an interdetermination of
language and music is evident in the range of the melody.
In ceremonial formulae of magical or sacred character
small intervallic range and stepwise melodic progressions
are preferred.
While language and instruments both contribute im-
portant rationalizing influences to musical culture, special
interest attaches to the effects of the use of instruments in
connection with the secular music accompanying dance
songs. Curt Sachs proves convincingly that instrumental
music, as seen primarily through the history of the drum
and flute, derived from magical rationalization."
Secular music and dance forms of instrumental music
break through the small, litany-like range of intervals of
vocal and sacred music. The range is extended. Tone steps
become tone skips. Through instrumental performance,
large intervals such as the octave, fifth, and fourth are
recognized, established, rationalized, and utilized as con-
sonances. The clear recognizability of these larger inter-
vals permits development of an elementary prediatonic
feeling for tonality. Instrumental activities in these secu-
larized contexts have been of paramount importance in
the rationalizing of 'tone intervals.
Magicians, Virtuosi, and the Rationolizatioii of Music
Max Weber's discussion of magicians and virtuosi
fcrrn a part of his general review of prediatonic scale
systems and the music of the immediately premodern
xxxvi
INTRODUCTION
period. It has rather special sociological interest since it
contains the question of the influence upon musical cul-
ture of social roles.
Weber believed that at relatively early cultural levels
of human civilization, alongside purely personal, emo-
tional, or aesthetic enjoyment of music there appears mu-
sic designed for socially important and practical require-
ments . Music may' be present as a magical device
designed to serve cultic (apotropaic) or medicinal (ex-
orcistic) ends. Weber maintains that whenever music is
used in the service of such magical practices it tends
to assume the form of rigidly stereotyped magical formu-
lae. The intervals of such magically effective musical
formulae are canonized: classified rigidly into right and
wrong, perfect or imperfect. The same applies to the ac-
companying instruments. Such magical mottoes were
identified as highly arbitrary and incomplete scales.
A magical fixing of forms serves rationalization indi-
rectly. For in music as in other areas of life magic may
be a powerfully antirational force. But the fixing of inter-
vals serves the purpose of establishing a set of forms
against which others are to be tested. In this it may serve
as the basis for a uniform musical culture. The people
who realized this anonymous rationalization of invocatory
formulae were priests and magicians, probably the world's
first professional musicians. Unquestionably melodic for-
mulae serving various deities were the source of rational-
ized scale formations such as the Dorian, Phrygian, and
. Lydian. Weber attributes to the magician a role in mu-
sical development equivalent to that attributed to him by
other thinkers in intellectual development.
Special interest attaches to the role of magic in musical
development from a sociological point of view for still an-
Weber's Sociolog.1J of Music
xxxvii
other reason. Weber, it has been noted, analyzed behav-
ior into rational, evaluative, traditional, and affective
types. Magical actions are of an evaluative or traditional
type, operating in terms of fixed means and ends and
traditional stereotyping. They are thus able to promote
rationalization only to a limited degree, for when magical
requirements lead to the stereotyped fixing of instrumen-
tal-use and intervallic pattern, experimentation is discour-
aged. In extreme cases the slightest deviation from a
magico-musical formula is punished by instantaneous
death. Moreover, so long as the musical scale is restricted
to special occasions for magical reasons, it is withheld
from free development.
On the other hand, a professional stratum has been
created. It has become the bearer of a uniform musical
development. The very magical fixing of musical formula
trains both the musician and the audience in the exact
perception and rendition of the musical intervals involved.
The reverse situation to the influence upon musical
rationalization played by the magical musician is pre-
sented by the musical virtuoso. He appears when sacred
tones are transplanted into nonreligious contexts and
adapted to aesthetic needs. Here experimentation rather
than stereotyping may be the rule. Accompaniment by
instruments is sought rather than impeded, and it in turn
forces an interpenetration of musical and technical re-
quirements. Music addressed to aesthetic and expressive
needs may deliberately savor the bizarre. Progressive al-
teration of intervals in the interest of greater expressive-
ness may occur, even leading at times to experiment with
the most irrational microtones. Purposeful rationalization
becomes apparent when tones lying close together are not
permitted simultaneous use. This is made possible by the
xxxviii
INTRODUCTION
organization of typical tone series such as the Greek,
Arabic, Persian, and Hindu scales permitting the tuning
of instruments. The full chromatic scale was available
on both the aulos and the kithara. The Arabic lute con-
tained all rational and irrational intervals. The dissolving
influence of musical virtuosi upon fixed musical structures
under the impulse of sheer expressive needs is not con-
fined to premodern stages of musical culture. Weber saw
the musical virtuosi as one of the forces eating away the
structure of tonality itself.
Early stages of melodic rationalization in the field of
sacerdotal music is further exemplified by Weber through
three characteristic elements of the later church modes:
the concluding formula, the tonus currens, and the tropus.
Illustrations from Yedda music demonstrate the priority
of the concluding formula and outline reverse procedure
in musical composition. Starting with a fixed concluding
formula, musical development may lead to the fixing of
the prefinal cadence and, in time, the remainder, and
eventually the beginning of the piece.
In Western development musical rationalization ap-
pears to have been determined by two factors: the con-
cluding formula and tonus currens. Primitive musical sys-
tems have fixed rules for concluding formulae. The tonus
currens forms the melodic center and is usually situated
in the middle of the tonal system. It is the mese of the
Greek greater perfect system, the finalis of the pIagal
church modes, the initial tone for ascending and descend-
ing motion, for tuning, transposition, and modulation.
The combination of the concluding formula and the tonus
currens establish melodic tonality. However, when music
develops into an, art of virtuosi, the predisposition for
Weber's Sociology of Music xxxix
fixed concluding formulae, cadences, or principle tones is
abandoned.
Principal tones within purely melodic' musical systems
are the so-called "up tones" appearing in descending con-
cluding formulae. Their function should not be confused
with that of harmonic leading tones. The final note may
consist of the frame tones of the fourth, but in systems
which do not possess tetrachordic structure, it may be made
up of tones from any other interval. The initial tone may be
equivalent to the final tone or related to it as in the case
of the church modes. On the other hand, in Greek music
the initial tone is not related at all to the final tone.
Throughout this discussion, it may be seen, Weber as-
signs complementary roles to the magician-musician and
virtuosi in the rationalization of music. Under the influ-
ence of magic, fixed musical forms are established and a
class of priest musicians appears. Under the influence of
magic rigid upper limits on rationalization are established.
When such formulae are released from magico-religious
contexts and when the professional musician is free to em-
ploy such musical formulae in secular contexts, actions
cease to be evaluative and traditionalistic and may be-
come rationalistic and affective. Often for expressive rea-
sons the virtuoso explores musical effects gained precisely
from violation of fixed final formulae and the tonus cur-
rens of the melodic system.
The frame tones of concluding formulae, most often the
fourth and fifth, are: thus, in the course 0:: the histories
of their migration from magical-religious to secular con-
texts, freed by the virtuosi to serve as the basis for ration-
alizations of the systems in which they occur.
Weber discusses at. length the importance of the fourth
and fifth for the raticnalization of music, their occurrence
xl INTRODUCTION
in modulations both of primitive and art music (Javanese
and Ewe Negro). The fourth is a fundamental melodic
interval. The fifth arose to importance in instrumental
tuning. While in Greek and Byzantine music systems the
fourth was predominant, its role fluctuated in the church
modes. It became a dissonance in the Middle Ages
through applications of the successive divisions of the
fifth into the thirds 'of many-voiced art music.
There were many reasons why the interval of the
fourth gained the upper hand over the fifth in ancient
music. Weber observes that it is the smallest unambigu-
ously consonance-making interval. It tends to come to be
relied upon for rational division in musical systems rest-
ing on the principle of intervallic distance. Moreover, in
polyphonic singing the higher of two voices tends to
monopolize the melody, forcing the lower to adjust
melodically to it on the fourth.
Co-operation and competition of both fourths and fifths
is illustrated in the unsymmetrical organization of the
double octave of the Greek greater perfect system. The
two octaves are built upon diazeutic and conjunct tetra-
chords and an additional lower tone (proslambanomenos)
respectively. The lowest tetrachord is in fourth relation-
ship with the next lowest tetrachord, while the latter is
in fifth relationship with the next higher tetrachord.
A B__e _a b__e'_a'
I I I I
The frame tones of the tetrachords were considered im-
movable and fixed. Modulations could only occur through
these frame tones. An additional Bb string was added for
Web.!r's Sociology (If Music xli
modulatory purposes. A new middle tetrachord was ob-
tained which was not in fifth but in fourth relationship.
The shift from the fifth to the fourth was considered to be
a modulation. Further examples of the combination of
disjunct and conjunct tetrachords are found in the octave
organization in Arabic and Javanese systems.
Weber's study of prediatonic scale systems and of the
problems presented by premodern musical forms is not
by any means simply one more history of music. It is a
comparative and analytical study of prediatonic musical
systems to determine the degree to which they were ra-
tionalized, the forces operating for and against rationaliza-
tion, and the probable directions that rationalization
could assume. Only in this way could the full peculiarities
of Occidental musical development be established. It
would make little sense to characterize Western music
as the most rational if more rational models were avail-
able than are represented by it. If there actually was a
movement within musical development Elich that steps
toward more rational structure tended always to prevail
over their opposites, it should be possible to establish the
stages by which the rational forms emerge. As one is able
to trace the stages in the emergence of more rational
thought models, or more rational forms of administration,
or business, it should be possible to trace the stages by
which the rational elements of premodern music antici-
pate modern music. It should be possible to clarify the
force; bringing this about.
Weber found premodern music to be fa less rational-
ized than our own. When it was rationalized it tended to
be on different principles: melodic rather than harmonic.
Premodern music with its often baroque multiplication of
xlii INTROD U eTION
rational and irrational microtones was often as expressively
subtle as it was harmonically crude.
Within this music various factors were operative for
and against a harmonic type of rationalization: the magi-
cal fiXing of musical motives; the rationalizing influences
of language and instrumental tuning; the expressive ex-
perimentalism by virtuosi in secular contexts. Of very
particular importance were those developments which
began to occur in early church music with the adaptation
of the musical tradition to the requirements of singing
choruses . Most of these forces for musical rationalization
were present in the music of other cultural areas. But in
the West the trend demonstrable in other spheres of life
also appears in its music and the more rational forms al-
ways tend to prevail.
Polyvocality and Polysonority in Relation to Musical
Rationalization
The rationalizing process that emerges and gUides the
development of Western musical culture reaches a kind
of definitive stage with the mastery of problems of poly-
voiced music. It forms the point of no return, the point
beyond which something quite new appears.
Polyvoiced music is not confined to the Occident. While
it appeared also in Oriental cultures , it followed a peculiar
course of development in the West. It developed through
contrapuntalism to diatonicism.
In Greek, Eastern-Asiatic, and various primitive cul-
tures, polyvoiced music appeared in the Form of hetero-
phony, the simultaneous sounding of a given melody and
its motivic variation, extension, and improvisation. Weber
excludes from his concept of polyvoiced music the many-
Weber's Sociology of Music xliii
voiced singing in unisons or octaves, anticipating the view-
point of Curt Sachs and other musicologi.sts who main-
tain that parallel octaves are the unavoidable result of
any vocal co-operation of the two sexes and therefore
practised by peoples on the lowest level of civilfzation.l" '
Three basic types of polyvocality are distinguished: the
modern chordal harmony or "polysonority" (to use
Weber's term) in which the fullness of chordal sound ef-
fects is of primary importance; contrapuntal polyphony
in which all participating voices have equal rank, their
progression being submitted to specific rules or prohibi-
tions (heterophony is a preparatory stage of this poly-
phonic type of co-ordinated music) and harmonic homo-
phonic music, in which the entire tone setting is
subordinated to one voice, it being the melodic vehicle.
Weber reviews the parallels of chordal harmonic and
polysonorous music found in Oriental and Eastern-Asiatic
systems. He maintains that though musicians in these
areas were familiar with the simultaneous sounding of in-
tervals, they did not perceive triads as such, but as com-
binations of other intervals. In his examination of contra-
puntal polyphony, his discussion of such techniques as
canon, fugue, and imitation is followed by the presenta-
tion of rules, the tritone problem, dissonance in contra-
puntal polyphony and in chordal harmony, and the pro-
hibition of parallelism. These discussions serve to reveal,
often in fascinating manner, the complexities that sur-
round the stages in the emergence of rational harmonic
forms.
Weber tried both to characterize precisely the three
types of polyvocality and to develop the reasons why they
appear in some parts of the world but not in others. He
explores the bearing of various factors on the local emer-
xliv
INTRODUCTION
gence of polyvocal forms: the different tempo adequate
for the use of instruments by themselves in contrast to
that required when they are used in relation to a vocal
part; the significance of the sustained tones of instruments
in relation to the plucked ones of the strings; the role
played in antiphonal singing of the sustaining of one
voice during the e n t r a n ~ e of others; the importance of the
sonority of the repercussion tones of the harp at the ar-
peggio; the role of 'simultaneous chance tone-production
while tuning instruments. Anyone or any combination of
these phenomena could lead to the perception of the
aesthetic effects to be achieved through one or another
form of polyvocality.
In Western music practically all the conditions that
could bring the aesthetic effects of polyvocality to atten-
tion were present. If the effects to be achieved through
polyvocality are once accepted as a primary musical ob-
jective, an extraordinary powerful stimulus for further ra-
tionalization is present. The rationalization process plays
a considerable role in bringing polyvocality to the fore;
polyvocality plays hack upon musical development as a
tremendous incentive to further rationalization. This spiral
of rationalization can give rise to others.
Western musical notation is in considerable measure a
product of the movement in Western music toward poly-
vocality. The acceptance of polyvocality in the monastic
chant in the ninth century intensified the need to develop
a,more adequate musical notation than was offered by the
neumes. The first important step, the insertion of the
neumes into a system of staff lines appeared as an aid to
sight reading of music in singing. The notational im-
provement of the 1?eumes was secured by transforming
them into dots, squares, and oblongs-a product of the re-
Weber's Sociology of Music xlv
quirements of musical pedagogy. Mensural notation of the
twelfth century made the establishment of relative time
value of tone symbols possible. It became easy to survey
the unambiguous determination of relations of progres-
sion of individual voices. A true polyvocal composition
had become possible.
Notation always retained its character as a compromise
between theory and practice, the harmonic and intervallic,
the rational and irrational. In the case of the neumes
there was no differentiation of whole and semitone steps.
This very ambiguity favored the penetration of popular
vocal traditions into musical development. The daseia no-
tation of the Musica Enchiriadis, most emphatically
through the daseia sign, attempted to establish an order
in the arbitrary melodic patterns. Even with the com-
plexly regulated mensural notation, free space was left to
the contrapunta amente of the descant part. The figured
bass part of the baroque era did not put an end to im-
provised irrationalities. It did not abandon its right of
musica ficta in order to balance melodic harshness by
chromatic tone alterations. The nature of the compromise
also becomes apparent in the chord writing of the nine-
teenth and twentieth centuries. Notation has to ignore
the fact that the chord d-f-a according to provenience is
either a genuine minor triad or a musically irrational con-
struction.
In the Western world the extent to which melodious
alterations should be included in the notation was con-
tinuously discussed. Weber calls attention to the fact that
several chorales with purely diatonic intonation were
known since the fifteenth century and are sung today with
a chromatic alteration. One need only mention, for ex-
ample, the three original monodic versions of Christ ist
xlvi
INTRODUCTION
erstanden and the chromatic alterations of its first phrase
in the settings of the Schott Gesangbuch by Gesius and in
the Christ lag in Todesbanden variation of Johann Sebas-
tian Bach.
Weber was fully aware of the fact that chromaticism
and all irrational intervals are not necessarily the product
of a specifically primitive musical development. In fact
the musica ficta grew precisely within a musical system
which already possessed a rationally regulated polyvo-
cality. On the other hand, music systems which once per-
manently appropriate one irrational interval are particu-
larly inclined to accept further intervals. The diffusion of
Arabic music which experiences a twofold enrichment
with increasingly irrational intervals, restricted any de-
velopment toward harmony, diatonicism, and finally, poly-
vocality.
The most striking general theme running through this
phase of Weber's' essay is that polyvoiced music soon
reaches a point where its further development can only
occur in terms of more efficient notation. Notation in turn
makes the achievement of quite new polyvoiced musical
effects. The problem of musical notation, thus, is lifted to
a position in mus.cal development parallel to the inven-
tion of writing for literature or of notation for mathe-
matics.
If one considers the differences in literary efficiency
made possible by writing resting on an alphabet in con-
.trast to that of a pictographic writing, or the differences
in mathematical efficiency made possible by the use of
Arabic rather than Roman numbers, one gets some idea of
the importance for polyvoiced music of the development
of Occidental systems of musical notation. The mutual
rationalizing tendencies of polyvocal music and notation
Weber's Sociology of ,11usic
xlvii
supplies one of the dramatic spiral developments in the
musical culture of the West.
Instruments and the Rationalization of Nonharmonic
Tones through Equalization and Tempering
In the course of his discussion of prediatonic scale
formations, Weber had raised a question as to the extent
to which premodern music was rationalized. He had also
inquired into the factors that had apparently played a role
in the partial rationalization of pentatonic systems. He had
come to the conclusion that one of the major factors in
establishing such rationalization as premodern systems
display is found in instruments and their tuning.
One of the unique features of Western music is its un-
precedented development of instrumental music. No-
where else has it been possible to bring to bear the tech-
niques of science to the problem of instrument construction
to the same degree. The problems of tuning and tempera-
ment are brought to a new quantatively determined level
of problems. A spiral of rationalization appears also here
comparable to the om: between polyvocal music and no-
tation.
When instruments are the vehicle, rationalization may
occur in a partly extramusical manner. There are two
basic types of tuning: instrumental tuning according to
heard tones, fixed tones, and fixed intervals; instrumental
tuning which establishes tones and intervals according to
purely visual, symmetrical, and ornamental requirements
of instrumental construction. This second type of tuning
is illustrated by some Central American wind instruments.
The tuning of the main instrument of the Chinese orches-
tra, the shun," was not determined by musical consider a-
xlviii
INTRODUCTION
tions but by aesthetic requirements for mechanical sym-
metry. Chinese music demonstrates that intervals created
mechanically can be embodied in musical systems, influ-
encing development in a manner making it unavailable
for harmonic and tonal relations.
One type of rationalistic alteration of the tone system
from within is found in distance tempering. Javanese and
\
Siamese musical systems supply examples of an octave
simply divided into equally large tone distances. Purely
intervallic tempering is designed to permit the transposi-
tion of melodies into any pitch without retuning the in-
strument.
The most important type of rationalistic equalization
from within the tone system is tempering with regard to
the requirements of chordal and harmonic music. In the
West partial tempering existed for the keyboard instru-
ments since the sixteenth century. The range of these in-
struments was little more than that of the human voice,
the accompaniment of which was one of their functions .
Under such circumstances tempering depended upon the
balance with the four middle fifths of our present piano
(C-e') and the purity of the interval of the third.
With the extension in range of the piano and organ and
the rise of an independent instrumental music, the divi-
sion of the octave into twelve equal distances of twelve
equivalent semitones became necessary. The peculiarity
of this modern temperament is found in the fact that the
, practical execution of the principle of distance is treated
and is effective 011 our keyboard instruments as a temper-
ing of tones which are gained harmonically. Besides the
distance-wise measurement of the intervals is found
chordal and harmonic interpretation of the intervals.
The keyboard instruments and the strings have been
W e b e r ' ~ Sociology of .ifusic
xlix
central to development of music in the West so far as in-
struments have played a role. Through these instruments
the using social strata, on the one hand, and the technical
traditions available for instrument construction, on the
other, had a bearing upon the development of musical
culture. This may be seen with regard to the violin.
Organizations of instrumentalists played a role in shap-
ing-the development of the modern violin. The playing of
the crwth 19 was subject to regulations established by the
Congress of Bards in 1176. Practice, thus, is fixed by or-
ganizatlon requirements which create a common musical
culture, on the one hand, and provide a market for
standardized instruments on the other. Toward the end of
the Middle Ages the building of stringed instruments was
influenced by the guild organizations which appeared in
the thirteenth century. These provided a fixed market for
manufactured instruments, helping establish the types.
The gradual acceptance of the instrumentalist along-
side the singer in the Kapellen of kings, princes, and com-
munities fixed their social role. When this fixing of social
roles occurred, it gave the production of instruments an
even more productive economic foundation.
Since the fifteenth century in close connection with
humanistic music theorists, the attempt has been made
to provide instruments ready to be played in orchestras.
The separation of high and low viols was accomplished
with the French menetriers. A standardization of instru-
ments and markets goes on continually.
Uninterrupted experimentation in combination with
the different traditional practices of the leading orchestras
led to the final separation of the violin, viola, and cello.
The supremacy of the violin was secured by the persistent
experiments of manufacturers of instruments .from Brescia
l
INTROD UCTION
and Cremona. The urge for expressive sonorous beauty
and elegance of the instrument were the driving forces
in Italy for the continuous technical development of the
instrument. Once the violin had reached its final form its
possibilities far surpassed the musical potential that had
been demanded of it. The capacity of the Amati instru-
ments was not fully .exploited for decades. The products
of the great violin huilders rested on skills gradually ac-
quired in empirical experience.
Similar circumstances appeared in the development of
the keyboard instruments. Piano virtuosity developed
hand in hand with a heavy harpsichord industry which
was based in turn on the demands of orchestras and ama-
teurs. Between the combined force of social requirements
and the development of technical skills great changes
were brought about in the instrument which was typified.
The great builder of harpsichords (the Ruckers family in
Belgium) created individual instruments commissioned by
their consumers (orchestras and patricians). At this stage
manifold adaptation to all possible concrete needs of com-
munities and individuals was possible.
The fiXing of the piano occurred in the nineteenth cen-
tury when it became the instrument typical of the culture
of the middle-class home. Interesting social factors played
a role in this . The piano was not a product of Italian cul-
ture, which did not have the indoor character of the
Nordic north. The center of gravity of the production and
further technical improvement of the piano lay in Saxony,
where middle-class home comfort developed for climatic
and historical reasons played the critical role.
Weber's Sociology of Music
Summary
Ii
Weber's sociology of music rests on his typology of
action, though this is not made explicit. Musical culture is
analyzed in terms of the rational and nonrational patterns
it displays. The peculiarity of Western music was found in
the unusual development of rational structures. The in-
trinsic properties of this musical rationality was explored
analytically and comparatively. The social and technical
forces that shaped it were examined. The influence of
various sorts of technical and rational, evaluative and
magical, traditional and affective forces were reviewed.
In the dynamics of Western musical development lie
many tensions between rational and affective motives. The
value of musical rationalization is the transformation of
the process of musical production into a calculable affair
operating with known means, effective instruments, and
understandable rules. Constantly running counter to this
is the drive for expressive flexibility.
One of the fascinating aspects of Weber's discussion is
the patience with which he seeks out every irrational resi-
due, every musical element that escapes or seems to es-
cape the rules. It is difficult not to suspect that it is almost
with relief that Weber finds that even at the basis of the
most fundamental scale formation lack of symmetry ap-
pears. There is more than curiosity in the discovery that
melodic and harmonic principles appear in tension which
is precisely where Western music assumes its most dra-
matically effective form.
Here, as in other areas of his sociological analysis,
Weber touches his moving theme of the disenchantment
of the world. As science banishes the colorful mysteries
of old magic, as rational thinking converts all things into
INTRODUCTION
calculable relations, Weber suspects that the drive was
powerfully present at the heart of Western man's musical
culture to transform the highest of his musical expressions
into an equation in. mathematics.
Don Martindale
Johannes Riedel
THE RATIONAL AND SOCIAL
FOUNDATIONS OF MUSIC
Max Weber's essay, "THE RATIONAL AND SOCIAL
FOUNDATION:; OF MUSIC," was written according
to Marianne Weber, about 1911 and first pub-
lished by Drei Masken Verlag (Munich, 1921).
It was republished as an appendix to Wirtschaft
und Gesellschaft (Tiibingen: J. C. B. Mohr,
1921). It was reprinted in the second edition, of
1924, and in the fourth edition, 1956.
The division of the essay into chapters and
subsections is unique to this translation. In view
of the remarkable compactness of the essay and
the difficulty of the subject matter, we take this
procedure to be of self-evident value for greater
ease of reading.
1. HARMONY AND MELODY AS FACTORS
IN THE RATIONALIZATION OF MUSIC
Basic Facts of the Harmonic Chord System
ALL rationalized harmonic music rests upon the oc-
tave (vibration ratio of 1 : 2) and its division into the fifth
(2 : 3) and fourth (3 : 4) and the successive subdivisions
in terms of the formula n/ (n + 1) for all intervals smaller
than the fifth. If one ascends or descends from a tonic in
circles first in the octave followed by fifths, fourths, or
other successively determined relations, the powers of
these divisions can never meet on one 'and the same tone
no matter how long the procedure be continued. The
twelfth perfect fifth (2/3) 12 is larger by the pythagorean
commathan the seventh octave equaling (1/2) 7. This un-
alterable state of affairs together with the further fact that
the octave is successively divisible only into two unequal
intervals, forms the fundamental core of facts for all musi-
cal rationalizations. \Ve shall first examine modem music
in terms of this foundation.'
The tone material of our harmonic chord music is ra-
tionalized by dividing the octave arithmetically or har-
3
4
MAX WEBER
manically into fifths and fourths. Then, leaving the fourth
aside, it is divided into the fifth in the major and the minor
third (4/5 X 5/6 = 2/3), the major third in the major
and the minor whole tone (8/9 X 9/lD = 4/5), the minor
third in the major whole tone and the major halftone
(8/9 X 15/16 = 5/6), and the minor whole tone in the
major and the minor halftone (15/16 X 24/25 = 9/10).
Proceeding from a tone treated as a tonic, chordal har-
mony builds on its, upper and lower fifth. Each fifth di-
vided arithmetically by its two thirds forms a common
triad. When these triads are placed in the order of an
octave, the entire material of the natural diatonic scale,
starting from the corresponding tonic, forms either a ma-
jor or a minor tone sequence, depending on whether the
major third is ascending or descending.
Between the two diatonic semitone steps of the octave
there are at one time two, at others three whole-tone in-
tervals. In both cases the second is the minor; the others
are major whole-tone steps. If by forming thirds and fifths
ascending and descending from any tone of the scale one
continues to gain new tones within the octave, two chro-
matic intervals appear between the diatonic intervals of
the octave. Each forms the interval of a minor semitone
step from the u p p f ~ r and lower diatonic tones, both of
which are separated from the other by a remaining en-
harmonic interval (diesis).
Both kinds of whole tones produce differently sized re-
maining intervals between the chromatic tones. Moreover,
the diatonic semitone steps deviate from the minor semi-
tone by a different interval still. Thus while the dieses are
formed by the intervals 2, 3, and 5, they represent three
quite different and very complex quantities. The possi-
bility of harmonic separation by successive divisions of
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
5
the integers 2, 3, and 5 reaches its one limit at the fourth,
which is only successively divisible by the integer 7. An-
other limit to the possibility of harmonic separation by
divisions of the integers 2, 3, and 5 is reached in the large
whole tone and the two semitones.
Fully rationalized harmonic chord music based on this
tone material maintains the unity of the scalable tone se-
quence in terms of the principle of tonality. The unity of
the scalable tone sequence is achieved through the tonic
and the three primary normal triads any major scale has
together with a parallel minor scale, the tonic of which
is a minor third lower of the same scalable tone material.
Moreover, any triad formed on the upper fifth (dominant)
or the lower fifth (subdominant octave of the fourth) is
tonal, which means that it is a triad built on the tonic of
a closely related (major or minor) key sharing the same
tone material with the original scale except for one tone
each. Correspondingly, the relationships of the keys are
further developed in circles of fifths.
By adding another third to a triad, dissonant seventh
chords are fanned. The most important is the dominant
seventh chord built on the dominant of the key with its
major seventh as the third which characterizes the key
univocallysince it appears only in this key and in this com-
position as a series of thirds made out of scalable tone
material. Any chord built of thirds may be inverted (trans-
posing one or more of its tones into another octave) re-
sulting in a new chord of the same tone number and of
unchanged harmonic meaning.
Modulation into another key normally starts from the
dominant chords. The new key is clearly introduced by
the dominant seventh chord or one of its peculiar frag-
ments. Strict chordal harmony comprises only the regular
6
MAX WEBER
conclusion of a tone form or one of its segments through
a chordal sequence (cadence) clearly characterizing the
key. Also this is normally achieved through a dominant
chord and the tonic or their inversions or, at least, through
distinguishable fragments of both.
The intervals contained in harmonic triads or their in-
versions are (either perfect or imperfect) consonances.
All other intervals are dissonances. Dissonance is the basic
dynamic element of chordal music, motivating the pro-
gression from chord to chord. Seventh chords are the
typical and Simplest dissonances of pure chord music, de-
manding resolution into triads. In order to relax its in-
herent tension, the dissonant chord demands resolution
into a new chord representing the harmonic base in con-
sonant form.
Irraiionoi Properties of the Dominant Seventh Chord
So far, at least , everything appears to be in order. At
least with respect to these (artificially simplified) basic
elements, the harmonic chord system appears to be a ra-
tionally closed unit . However, this is only apparently true.
To be representative of its key, the dominant seventh
chord should, through its third or the seventh of the key,
form a major seventh. However, in the minor scale the
minor seventh must be chromatically raised in contradic-
tion to what is required by the triad. Otherwise the domi-
nant seventh chord of a-minor would at the same time be
the seventh chord of e-minor. This contradiction is not
simply melodically produced, as noted by Helmholtz," for
only the semitone step below the octave of the tonic has
that independent thrust toward the octave which qualifies
it as a leading,tone. The contradiction is already contained
Rational and Social Foundations of Musil:
7
in the harmonic function of the dominant seventh chord
itself when applied to the minor scales." Through altera-
tion from the minor to the major seventh the dissonant
augmented triad arises from the minor third out of the
fifth and to the major seventh of the minor key. It consists
of two major thirds in contrast to the harmonic combina-
tion of thirds .
Any dominant seventh chord contains the dissonant
diminished triad, starting from the third and forming the
major seventh. Both of these kinds of triads are real revo-
lutionaries when compared with the harmonically divided
fifths. Not since J.' S. Bach could chordal harmony legiti-
matethem with respect to the facts of music. If in a sev-
enth chord, containing the minor seventh, two major
thirds are added, the dissonant diminished triad is left as
a remainder . If one forms a minor and a major third from
it, the seventh is diminished. In this manner the altered
seventh chords an::l their inversions are created. Further-
more by combining scalable (normal) thirds with dimin-
ished thirds , altered triads and their inversions are
formed.
The tone materials cast up by this type of chord can be
formed into the much disputed altered scales. These
altered scales and chord categories are harmonic dis-
sonances the resolutions of which may be construed in
terns of the rules of a (correspondingly expanded)
chordal music. These tone materials can also be applied
to the formation of cadences. Characteristically they first
made their historical appearance in the minor keys, only
gradually being rationalized by musical theory.
All these altered chords are eventually traceable back
to the role of the seventh in the tone system. The seventh
is also the stumbl:'.ng block in the attempt to harmonize
MAX WEBE1\.
the simple major scale by a series of common triads. The
connecting tone from the sixth to the seventh step de-
manded by stepwise progression is missing. Indeed, it is
only at this place that the steps lack the dominance rela-
tionship to each other: the degree of next relationship
mediated by the dominants and utilized for the harmoni-
zation of triads.
Melodic Determination of Chord Progressions
The continuity of progression in the relation of
chords to each other cannot be established on purely
harmonic grounds. It is melodic in character. Although
harmonically conditioned and bound, melody, especially
in chordal music, is not reducible to harmonic terms, In-
deed, Rameau's theory 4 that the fundamental bass, i.e.,
the harmonic root of chords, may only progress in the in-
tervals of the triad, pure fifths and thirds, has also sub-
jugated the melody to rational chordal harmony.
It is also known that Helmholtz in theoretically superb
fashion carried through the principle of stepwise progres-
sion to the next related tones (according to the overtones
of the combination tones) precisely as the principle of
pure monodic melody." But Helmholtz was forced to in-
troduce a further principle, the proximity of the pitch of
tones. He then tried to fit them into the strict harmonic
system partly in terms of the investigations of Basevis 6
partly by limiting these tones, which are explainable only
melodically, to a mere facilitating function.
Yet tone relatedness and tone proximity are in irrecon-
cilable contradiction, for the interval of a second, espe-
cially the intensive leading semitone step, connects the
two tones which are distant in physical relationship. This
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
9
is aside from the general consideration that the scale of
upper partials does not form the perfect basis of a scale.
With pronounced imperfection it skips over certain tone
steps.
The melodies even of the purest counterpoint are
neither broken chords only, i.e., chords projected into the
succession of tones, nor are they always coupled in their
progressions by harmonic overtones of the fundamental
bass. Besides, music could never have consisted entirely
or alone of mere columns of thirds, harmonic dissonances,
and their resolution. The numerous chords do not grow
out of the complications of chainlike progressions alone.
They also, and preferably, grow out of melodic needs.
Melody can be understood only in terms of intervallic
distance and tone proximity. Chord' progressions do not
rest upon an architecture of thirds. They are not har-
monic representatives of a key and not consequently nor
synonymously reversible. Nor do they find fulfillment
through resolution into an entirely new chord, but in a
chord which characterizes and supplements the key. They
are melodic, or seen from the standpoint of chordal har-
mony, accidental dissonances.
Chord aesthetics is concerned with the harmonically or
scale-alien tones of such chords even in the form of pass-
ing, sustained, or repeated tones in addition to chordally
progressing voices whose varying relations to them impart
the peculiar personality of the whole. Again they are
treated as anticipations or appoggiaturas of tones which
belong to chords coming before or after the strictly har-
monic materials. Finally they are treated as suspensions,
chord tones foreign to the chords which, so to speak, have
pushed tones from their proper place. Thus they do not
appear freely like legitimate harmonic dissonances but
10 MAX WEllER.
must always be anticipated. They do not demand the
special chordal resolution of harmony. Resolution is pri-
marily carried out by early restoration to the displaced
tones and intervals of their rights which were infringed
upon by the rebels. Precisely through the contact with
chordal requirements these chord-alien tones are naturally
the most effective means of the dynamics of progression.
At the same time they most effectively slur and entangle
chord successions.
Without the tensions motivated by the irrationality of
melody, no modern music could exist." They are among
its most effective means of expression. The manner in
which such expressiveness is achieved falls outside this
discussion. Here it should be remembered only as dem-
onstrating an elemental fact of music, that chordal ration-
alization lives only in continuous tension with melodicism
which it can never completely devour. Chordal rationali-
zation also conceals in itself an irrationality due to the
unsymmetrical position of the seventh, unsymmetrical in
terms of distance. This has its most direct expression in
the aforementioned inevitable harmonic ambiguity of the
structure of the minor scale.
2. PREDIATONIC AND WESTERN SCALE
SYSTEMS AS FOUNDATIONS FOR
MUSICAL :1ATIONALIZATION
~ r h e C-Major Scale
EVEN physically the chordal harmonic tone system is
unsymmetrical. The foundation of its modern structure is
the C-major scale. In pure tuning it contains ascending
or descending frorr, the seven tones of any octave, five
perfect fifths and as many fourths, three major and two
minor thirds, three minor and two major sixths, and two
major sevenths. Moreover, because of the difference in
the whole-tone steps, it contains two kinds of small sev-
enths (three to 9/6 and two to 5/9) differing from each
other by the syntonic comma (80/81) . Furthermore the
chordal harmonic tene system contains within the diatonic
tones an ascending fifth and a minor third, a descending
fourth and a major sixth, which when compared with two
perfect intervals differ by the same comma and result in
the same relationship for the fifth d-a (27/40) . Con-
sidering the sensitiveness of the fifth to all deviations, this
is quite imperfect.
Indeed, the minor third d- is inevitably determined
11
12 MAX WEllER
by the integrals 2 and 3 (pythagorically determined minor
third). This failure of rationalization can in no way be
eliminated. D and f are limiting tones of the harmonic C-
major scale. This is due to the fact that perfect thirds can
only be constructed by means of the prime number 5.
Hence, the circle of fifths cannot lead back to the perfect
third. This can be interpreted with M. Hauptmann as the
unresolvable opposition of the thirds and fifths.'
Rationalization in Terms of Integral 7 or Higher
Prime Numbers
Evidently rationalization cannot be improved by the
employment of the integral 7 or higher prime numbers for
the construction of intervals. Such intervals are known to
be contained in the upper partials starting with the sev-
enth tone. Furthermore, a harmonic division of the fourth
(in contrast to the fifth of our tonal system) is possible
only in terms of the integral 7 (6/7 X 7/8 = 3/4).
The natural seventh, the seventh upper partial (= 4/7,
Kimberger's "i' 2) is easily produced with string instru-
ments when the strings are damped softly. It is also pro-
duced naturally on all primitive horns. It is believed to be
found on Japanese tuning pipes and forms a consonance
with c-e-g.
Fasch, therefore, tried to introduce this tone into prac-
tical music. So, too, the interval 5 : 7 (natural tritone,
augmented fourth, the only interval in perfect tuning on
the Japanese pipa lute) may operate as a consonance.
Furthermore, all other intervals of 7 such as the Eastern-
Asiatic (7/8) intervals as whole tone on the ch'in, the
main instrument of the Chinese orchestra, on the lowest
octave, and as found in Arabic music and the music of
Rational and Social Foundations of Music 1.1
antiquity, may certainly have been known to Hellenistic
theorists until the Byzantine and Islamitic periods. They
were most certainly known to the Persians and Arabs.
However, they may not have been employed in musical
practice. Hellenistic theorists even identified such inter-
vals with higher prime numbers. However, in no case has
a rational harmonic system been established by means
. of them which is useful for chordal harmonic music.
It is probable that the developments in Eastern-
Asiatic music leading to the theoretical exploration of the
integral 7 and higher prime numbers was a product of
rationalization. undertaken on extramusical grounds . This
type of rationalization will be explored later.
It may be noted, however, that the seventh is quite
legitimate in musical systems with a basic interval of a
fourth rather than the fifth or third. On our piano, de-
signed for chordal music, the seventh upper partial is
nullified by the pedal. In string instruments it is nullified
by bowing techniques. By contrast in primitive horns it
had been driven into the harmonic seventh."
Finally intervals with 11 and 13 are contained in the
overtone scale. Chladni claims to have heard them in
Swabian folk music.' But so far as is known they have not
been employed in rationalized musical art any more than
the interval of 17 by the Persians in the Arabic scale.
Rationalizations in Terms of the Numbers 1J and 3
Finally, there is a kind of music which eliminates the
integral 5 as a basis for intervallic rationalization; thereby
the differences in the whole-tone steps are eliminated.
This music is limited in the forming of intervals to the
numbers 2 and 3 and employs the only whole tone, the
14
MAX WEBER
major one (with the relation 8/9), or the tonus as the
basis of the interval between the fifth and fourth (2/3 :
3/4 = 8/9). Calculating from below, this music gains six
perfect fifths and as many fourths (from all tones with the
exception of the fourth and the seventh) in the diatonic
octave.
This music secures an important advantage for pure
melodic purposes, the' possibility of optimal transposition
of melodic movements in the fifth and fourth. This cir-
cumstance largely accounts for the early preponderance
of both intervals. However, such music completely elimi-
nates the harmonic thirds which can only be built in
perfect form by a harmonic division of the fifth, using the
number 5. Thus, the triads, the distinction between major
and minor scales, and the tonal anchorage of harmonic
music in the tonic have been eliminated. Such was the
case in Hellenic music and the church tones of the Mid-
dle Ages.
The place of the major third was taken by the ditonus
(e : C = 8/9 X 8/9) and the place of the diatonic semi-
tone by the limma (the remaining interval of the ditonus
as contrasted to the fourth = 243/256). The seventh then
equals 128/243. The harmonic method of gaining tones
was thus brought to an end with the first division of the
octave which was regarded as being divided by the fifth
and fourth into two symmetrical fourth tone sequences
(c-f, g-c) divided by the tonus (diazeutic) in contrast
to both by c through the synaphea, which is the identity
of the final tone of the one connected with the initial
tone of the other (synemmenon).
In such tonal series single tones cannot be thought of as
produced by a harmonic division of fifths, but by a divi-
sion within the fourth, the latter being the smaller of the
Rational and Social Foundations of Music 15
two intervals. Moreover, this is not by harmonic division
(which is only possible by means of the seventh) but in
terms of the equality of (whole-tone) steps, intervallic
distance. The unsirnilarity of two whole tones which carne
into being through harmonic division and the two har-
monic semitones had to be omitted. Although made up of
2 and 3 the lirnma, the intervallic difference between the
ditone and the fourth, formed irrational relationships in
this pythagorean tuning. -
Similar results occur with any other attempt to divide
the fourth into three intervallic distances as has been done
several times in theory (and perhaps practically in
Oriental-Arabian music) but which cannot be done with-
out the use of much higher prime numbers and cannot
be employed harmonically.
Pentatonicism
Many primitively rationalized scales content them-
selves with the addition of only one tonal distance. This is
regularly one whole tone within the diazeutic fourth . It
is the essence of pentatonic scaling.
At the present time pentatonicism is still the basis of
the official Chinese musical system. It was the basis for at
least one, probably at one time both, Javanese scales.
Pentatonicism can be found not only in Lithuania, Scot-
land, and Wales, but amongthe Indians, Mongols, Aman-
ites, Cambodians, Japanese, Papuans, and Fulah Negroes."
Many doubtless old melodies of Westphalian songs for
children show distinct pentatonic structures such as the
anhemitonic structure with no semitones." And the gen-
eral prescription for the creation of compositions of popu-
lar character, to use only the five black keys of the piano-
16
MAX WEBER.
which form a pentatonic system with no semitones-be-
longs here. Old Gallic and Scottish music testifies to the
sovereignty of the anhemitonic.
In different ways Riemann and O. Fleischer believed
that they proved traces of pentatonicism in old church
music." Particularly the music of the Cistercians with its
puritanical avoidance of aesthetic refinements in accord-
ance with the rules of their order, seems to have been of
a pentatonic nature. Moreover, among the scales of the
Jewish synagogue, besides hymns which have been built
on a Hellenistic-Oriental basis, there is one single penta-
tonic scale."
Pentatonicism and the Problem of the Semitone
Pentatonicism is frequently closely linked in a musi-
cal ethos to avoidance of the semitone step. It has been
reasoned that this' very avoidance constitutes its musical
motive. Chromaticism was an antipathetical principle not
only to the old church musicians but to the old tragic
poets of the Hellenes. It was even antipathetical to the
rational and, as it were, bourgeois musical culture of the
Confucians.
In their endeavor for passionate expression, the feudally
organized Japanese alone among Asiatic people were
strongly devoted to chromaticism." However, the Chinese,
Amanites, Cambcdians, and Javanese (namely in the
slendro scales) show uniform aversion to chromaticism
'and to all minor chords." It is by no means certain that
pentatonic scales are everywhere older than other types.
Not unusually they appear beside richer scale types.
The numerous incomplete scales of the Hindus appear-
ing alongside complete octave series only resemble the
Rational and Social Fowndations of Music
usual pentatonicism to a small degree." The extent to
which they originated out of alterations and corruptions
of pentatonic scales is not ascertainable. In most cases the
greater age of pentatonic scales, at least when compared
to present scales, seems probable.
In the music of the Chippewa Indians (according to the
phonograms of Densmore) pentatonicism can be found.
This is particularly the case for ceremonial hymns which
naturally were preserved in their purest form."
The extent to which adherence to pentatonicism with
its rejection of semitones is due to musical superstition
even in art music remains uncertain. In China rationalistic
grounds supplied the basis for an antipathy to the semi-
tone. On the other hand, genuinely primitive music, i.e.,
nontonal or little rationalized music, has not been proved
to avoid the semitone. The phonograms of Negro melodies
show the contrary. Thus it has recently been directly dis-
puted that the original reason for pentatonicism can be
found in the endeavor to avoid the semitone step, a posi-
tion taken, for example, by Helmholtz."
Helmholtz assumed Simply that in primitive music an
early interruption occurs to the tone series related to the
keynote in the next grades. However, the analysis of
primitive music shows this to be untenable. Nevertheless,
pentatonicism is often found with such a motive (the
scale c, d-flat, f, g, a-flat, c as against the c, d, f, g, a, c of
the Chinese). The later 'Javanese pelog scale contains
seven steps but the workaday scale has five. In the Japa-
nese scale within the fourth a semitone interval stands
next to an empty third." Yet when contrasted to the
anhemitonic this can only be found in a minority of cases,
as, for instance, in the pentatonicism of the North Ameri-
can Indians.
18
arAx wEBEn,
ail,li,zati,on of the Thi,ril tn Pri,mi,ti,oe Mwsic
At times pentatonicism involves the use of the three
intervals, tlle fffth, fourth, and major third beside which
only the semitone remains. If the third is understood to
be a harmonic rather than a diatonic distance it could
have been produced step by step. In this case the exclu-
sion of the whole-tone step would have been of secondary
I
importance.
Indeed, an interval
to the minor third is
naturally involved in pen music so far as it uses
as well as in pure tun-
of omitting the semi-
the
harmonic
whole tone
ingbetween d anJFilE
tone (as also occurs in the music of the North American
Indians). However,
pentatonicism does not encompass
the major third or, at least, its harmonic measurement.
.The
major third is rare_-rngenglnely
primitive music. How-
enerf the interval of the third appears in a
-Seat
many
phonographically recorded musical compositions in im-
pure form, neither as a harmonic third nor as a ditone.
This could be a product of strong requirements for tone
purity and avoidance of precisely those vibrations char-
acteristic of the third. Or it could be correlated with the
increasing unintelligibility
of the vibrations. The interval
of the third appears as the so-called neutral third which
Helmholtz maintains is more or less of a consonance even
when produced by stopped organ pipes.15 It appears so
imprecisely as to make improbable the utilization of the
pure major third in any relatively
primitive scale.
a[yplimitive. As far as anywhere known even in trhe most
primitive music, an interval lying close to the harmonic
whole tone is the basis of practical music. However, when
Rational and Sociai Foundations of Music 19
the fifth and fourth appear, the interval between them
tends to become the foundation of musical practice. Penta-
tonicism presupposes the octave and divisions as various
as possible. Thus it always represents a partial rationaliza-
tion and cannot be really primitive.
The Fourth as the Basis of Pentatonicism
The structure of the pentatonic anhemitonic system
assumes the fourth as the basic interval. The Irish scale
which the Synod of Cloveshoe in 747 contrasted to the
Gregorian choral as the "way of singing of our Irish an-
cestors," was used in a chordal fashion in the eleventh
century and was free of any semitones." In general when
reading an anhemitonic scale f, g, a, c, d, f instead of c,
d, f, g, a, c, it contains a second, minor third (pythagorean
tone and a half), major third (or ditone), fifth, and sixth.
This scale does not contain the third and the seventh, but
the fourth and the seventh are missing. In this respect the
meaning of pentatonicism is not univocal. Many penta-
tonic: melodies, for example, Scotch melodies and the
temple hymn cited by Helmholtz,'? would correspond to
the second type, if we take our concept of tonality as a
starting point.
Contrary to the rule, in some areas of the world begin-
ners find it more difficult to sing the fourth, alongside the
unsingable seventh, than 'the third. Acccrding to Dens-
more 18 this is the case for the North American Indians.
According to F. Hand, it is also true for the children in
Switzerland and Tyrol. This last example, however, could
be a consequence of the peculiar evolution of the third
characteristic of the North of Europe. This will be dis-
cussed later.
20
MAX WEBER
The anhemitonicism of the Cistercians paralleled a typ-
ical preference for the third. In terms of the facts just re-
viewed, it is questionable whether the more favorable
treatment of the third in North European music men-
tioned by Helmholtz, which sounds purer because of the
large quantity of vibrations from the higher pitches, is
due to the participation of women in choir singing from
which they were excluded in antiquity. Women were ex-
cluded from the choirs of the great cultural centers
(Athens, Rome) as well as from the post-antique, asceti-
cally minded, medieval church.
As far as I can see, in the music of native peoples the
participation of women in song, appearing in a great many
variations, finds its expression in the corresponding dis-
tinctness of the expression of the third. However, it must
be noted, indeed, that no single opinion establishes the
third as the only diatonic interval heard." In the musical
theory of the Middle Ages the fourth, parallel with the
advancing third, fell among the dissonances (primarily
without regard to the organum, etc. , because it was not
theoretically tolerated either in triads, that is clefs, or in
parallel motions, and, thus, it was neglected harmonically
as compared to the third). Among the North American
Indians, whose pentatonicism is becoming extinct, thirds
(minor and neutral ones) also play a significant role."
The intervals of the fifth and the third, though close
neighbors, seem historically to have stood in a kind of
antagonism which Helmholtz tried theoretically to ex-
' plain." He assumed that the nature of this antagonism
was such that pentatonicism was able to operate with
one interval or the other. However, because of the general
position of the fourth in ancient music, this is not prob-
able.
Rational and Social Foundations of Music 21
As far as our knowledge extends today wherever the
octave has been distinguished the fifth and fourth seem
to have appeared as the first unique and harmonically
perfect intervals. This seems to be the case in the over-
whelming majority of all musical systems known to us.
Even in those which like the Chinese have not advanced
a proper tetrachord theory, the fourth possessed the sig-
nificance of a fundamental melodic interval. Westphalian
children's songs typically ascend and descend by a fourth
from the most central tone (g), the melodic tonic.
Both Javanese scales form an octave by means of ap-
proximate diazeutic intervals of fourths. One (slendro)
has an approximately perfect fourth and fifth with one
tone in the center of each. The other (pelog) also ascends
and descends from the middle tone by an approximately
perfect and sustained fourth.f Its customary scale, count-
ing from the lowest tone, contains an initial tone, neutral
third, fourth, neutral sixth, and minor seventh. J. C. N.
Land thinks the first scale to be of old Chinese, the second
of Arabic origin.
Everything considered, pentatonicism should most prob-
ably be interpreted as a combination of two diazeutic
fourths. If both fourths were originally divided by one
interval, each was movable and eventually irrational in
terms of melodic motion (particularly if ascending or de-
scending). The Javanese pelog system could be explained
in this manner. The clearly authentic proof of a similar
evolution, such that first bordering tone s of fourths as
fundaments of all Intervallic semitones became fixed, is
to be found with the Hellenes. Proof is also provided by
the Arabs and Persians. From here a tone system could
evolve which was irrational with exception of the fourth.
Development could lead from here to anhernitonicism and
finally to pentatonicism with semitones and the major
third or, like many Scotch songs, also with the whole tone
and minor third. According to Plutarch, the ancient trope
spondee ( T Q 6 J [ o ~ (JJ[ovbELaswv) serving as the song of sac-
rifice for the Hellenes was pentatonic and apparently
anhemitonic." However, the hymn of the second Delphic
Apollo visibily composed in anachronistic style seems to
avoid utilization of more than three tones of a tetrachord,
but not the semitone step." By all odds the older and
most widely diffused meaning of pentatonicism is the
avoidance of semitones or the reduction of them to a
supplementary role as intervals which lead only melodi-
cally. Pentatonicism itself already represents a kind of
selection of rational and harmonic intervals from the
abundance of melodic intervals.
Scale Formation on the Basis ofMelodic Intervals
In reviewing these phenomena we have left the topic
of the production of harmonic intervals which involve
divisions of the fifth. We have been brought to the prob-
lem of scale formation consisting of selection of melodic
intervals within the fourth. This type of scale formation
allows far more arbitrary freedom than any scale de-
signed harmonically.
The scales of purely melodic music have made ample
use of their freedcm. This is particularly apparent in mu-
sical theory. Once the fourth is taken as the basic melodic
interval, innumerable possibilities, principally arbitrary,
appear for more or less rational division and combination
of intervals. The scales of Hellenistic, Byzantine, Arabic,
and Indian theorists, who apparently influenced one an-
other, show such combinations,
Rational and Social . Fowndations of Music
Tcday it cannot any longer be proved that many of
the bizarre scale formations were actualJv used in fact.
-'
The only circumstance suggesting that they were was the
presence of an ethos favorable to them. At least in the
circles which supported art music the effects of these
baroque scales must have been enjoyed. There are indi-
cations of this in Oriental theory which influenced By-
zantine theory, where they were more frequent and typi-
cal than in Hellenistic theory. Information as to musical
practice is not altogether reliable .
We are in a better position to judge some practical
realities. The. question as to the range of musical practice
can be partly solved in terms of the pantheon of local
tunings of instruments and the adaptation of the tunings
of some instruments to others. For example the upper
partials (diatonics) of wind instruments may be adapted
to string instruments. When this occurs both have become
objects of systematic rationalization. Or again, a differ-
entiation of melodic scales, originally local, is manifest in
the regional significance of the Hellenistic keys (Dorian,
Phrygian, etc.). Similar evidences appear in Hindustan
scales and the Arabic division of the fourth.
Some phenomena in Hellenistic and Arabic music sug-
gest an evolution starting with the acceptance of intervals
derived from diversified instruments. Alongside diatonic
division achieved through pythagorean intervals, the
fourth, as known in the Hellenic tone system of classical
times, was also divided. The division of the Hellenic
fourth was first into a minor third and two semitones
(chromatic) and second into a major third and two quar-
ter tones (enharmonic). Finally, both formations were
characterized by exclusion of the whole tone. In both
cases it is probable that the insertion of thirds left minor
MAX WEBER
tone steps as a residue. It was precisely these tone steps
that led to the first harmonically correct calculations: of
the major third by Archytas and of the minor third by
Erastesthenes." It appears that one inverted to the pyk-
non, chromaticism and enharmonicism were used as a
means of melodic expression. The partly preserved stasi-
mon from Orestes by Euripides containing the enhar-
monic pykna, belongs in dochmic verses to the passion-
ately moving strophes of the piece." Plato's ironical
remarks in Politeia, the more benign observations of Plu-
tarch, and the discussions of late writers of the Byzantine
period prove that the problem of enharmonicism was one
of melodic refinement.
With the traditional fixing of the organization of the
octave into seven steps (also maintained to be sacred),
theory retained only one augmented tone step in the
fourth. The chromatic and enharmonic scales most prob-
ably first appeared in musical practice with the aulos.
The instrument produced irrational deviations from the
rational intervals, which were still enumerated by Aris-
tophanes. This supposition in agreement with tradition is
further supported by the discovery of an instrument in
Bosnia." It is similar to the aulos, producing the chroma-
tic scale of the Hellenes. This is also supposed to be true
for Balearic instruments. As with the aulos, chromatic
tone production and the correction of irrational intervals
was achieved by partly covering the holes. This is similar
to old music for the flute. The production of random slur
tones and partial intervals is almost inevitable under such
circumstances. When such intervals were imposed on the
kithara the attempt was made to rationalize them. Con-
troversy increasingly centers on quarter- and third-tone
intervals.
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
25
However this may be, the intervallic system that ap-
pears is far from primitive, it belongs to Hellenic art mu-
sic. According to papyrus Endings, it was unknown to the
Aiteles and similar tribes without higher culture. More-
over, traditional chromaticism is thought to be younger
than diatonicism and quarter-tone enharmonicism to be
still more so. Chromaticism belongs to the classical and
post-classical periods. It was rejected by both older writ-
ers of tragedies. On the other hand, it was in a state of
decay at the time of Plutarch (to his regret) . The series
of chromatic and enharmonic tones have no tonal relation
to our harmonically conditioned concept of chromaticism.
Although chromatic tone alterations and their harmonic
legitimatization in the Occident historically rest on the
same requirements as the pykna of the Hellenes, they are
twice transformed. First chromatic tone alterations are
transformed by the demand for melodic softening of the
severity of the pure diatonicism of the cl.urch modes.
Later, in the sixteenth century when the majority of our
chromatic tones were legitimatized, they were trans-
formed by the demand for dramatic effects.
The same expressive requirements led to a disintegra-
tion of ancient tonality despite the theory of the Renais-
sance which interpreted chromaticism and sought to res-
urrect ancient tone genders. The same process led on to
the creation of modern tonality, founded in the very de-
caying structure of that music in which these tone forma-
tions were embedded. During the Renaissance new chro-
matic split tones were harmonically formed through third
and fifth derivations. Hellenic split tones by contrast, are
products of pure intervallic tone formation, originating
in melodic interests. The quarter-tone intervals of Hellenic
musical practice in late antiquity (according to the re-
MAX WEBER.
marks of Bryennies concerning the Analysis Organica)
seem to belong to the string instruments. They still ap-
pear in the Orient, be it essentially (or originally) as slur
tones.
Beside these much discussed Hellenic quarter tones, the
Arabic third tones, seventeen for each octave, have played
a prominent and easily misunderstood role in musical his-
tory since the works of Villoteau and Kiesewetter." Fol-
lowing the more recent analysis of Arabic musical theory
by Collangettes, the seventeen-tone octave probably orig-
inated as follows." Before the tenth century the scale
seems to have consisted of nine tones in the octave (in-
cluding the initial tone of the octave, ten): for instance,
c, d, e-flat, e, f, a-flat, a, b, c. These were interpreted
as two fourths conjoined through the tone f beside which
is found a diazeutic tone step (b-e). Since this octave
depended exclusively on pythagorean tuning,30 it almost
certainly derives from Hellenic influence. However, the
fourth, in addition to being divided by a tone and ditone
from below, is also divided by a tone from above. The
old Arabic instruments, particularly those deriving from
the bagpipe, the instrument proper to :111 nomads, have
supposedly never accommodated themselves to this scale.
Thus, there was a strong tendency to extend toward the
pythagorean third and beyond this to an additional third.
Influence of Musical Reformers and Instruments on
Scale Formation
In the growth of the Arabic scale the rationalism of
the music reformers was felt. They unremittingly and in
most varied forms applied mathematical theory to balance
the tuning caused .by the asymmetry of the octave. Later
Rational. and Social Foundations of Music
27
we shall discuss the products of this enterprise. Here we
are only tangentially concerned with them.
In Arabia the bearer of the extensive and intensive
evolution of the scale was the lute (the word is Arabic).
In the Arabic Middle Ages it became the instrument de-
cisive for the fixing of the scale intervals. This parallels
the function of the kithara for the Hellenic world, the
monochord for the Occident, the bamboo flute for China.
Traditionally the lute had first four, later five strings.
Each was tuned a fourth higher than the lower one; each
comprised a fourth; each was characterized by pytha-
gorean tuning, the whole tones of the fourth being di-
vided into three rationally obtained intermediate tones.
These were whole tones from above and ditones from be-
low (thus c, d, e-flat, e, f in pythagorean definition).
It must be assumed that some of these intervals were
used in an ascending fashion, others in a descending man-
ner. When theoretical considerations led to the ordering
of all tones in the same octave, the result was twelve
chromatic tones, defined pythagorically. However, the
central interval (e-flat) was irrationa1 defined differently
by the Persians and the music reformer Zalzal." Then,
since one of these irrational intervals in conflict with the
other maintained itself on the lute next to the diatonic
interval, this meant that in each of the five others there
existsd one interval or more which ordered within the oc-
tave involved an increase of chromatic tones from twelve
to seventeen.
Between the tenth and thirteenth centuries, in the prac-
tical division of the lute, the pythagorean and both kinds
of irrational intervals were used in a miscellaneous fash-
ion. They were arranged within the octave scale in such
manner that both irrational thirds were accepted between
MAX WEBER
e, e-Ilat-e, and a-flat-a. However, between c-d and f-g,
as we would say in their function as leading tones to the
lower whole tone, a pythagorean limma (ditone as
counted from the upper whole tones f or b respectively)
originated. Moreover, one semitone distance was obtained
through quite irrational intervals, each of which corre-
sponded to one or both irrational thirds, Thus, altogether
three intervals were i ~ c 1 u d e d such that within the fourth
c-f the scale originated: c, pythagorean c-sharp, Persian
c-sharp, Zalzal's c-sharp, pythagorean e-Ilat, Persian e,
Zalzal's e, pythagorean e, f . In the same manner the fourth
-b was divided. Obviously only one of the three cate-
gories of intervals could be present in one melody.
In the thirteenth century the Arabic scale was brought
to fractions and powers of the numbers 2 and 3 and de-
fined through the circle of fifths. As a result both fourths
contained the second and the ditones from above and
from below (the upper fourth moreover, contained the
second from below) and, in addition, two tones each
being separated from the other by the interval of a sec-
ond, the lower of which was separated from the lower
whole tone by two limmata so that the upper was sepa-
rated from the upper whole tone by the interval of the
apotome (equals a whole tone minus the limma) minus
the limma. For example, this had a result as follows:
pythagorean g-flat, pythagorean g-Bat plus limma g, py-
thagorean a-flat, pythagorean a-flat plus limma a, pythag-
orean a, b.
Finally, modern Syrian-Arabie calculation (M. Mes-
chaka) 32 distinguishes twenty-four quarter tones in the
octave, and emphasizing the most important intervals in
music, divides both conjunct fourths by a whole-tone
step (8/9) equating the latter with four quarter-tone and
Rational and Social Foundations of Music 29
two different three-quarter-tone steps: 11/12 and 81/88,
both equaling three quarter tones. These seven intervals
most frequently applied in practice could, thus, represent
the second, the old Zalzal sixth (equals a fourth above the
Zalzal third), the minor seventh as the final tone of the
upper fourth so that from there the diazeutic whole-tone
step might remain to the upper octave. In all these cases
of quarter ~ r third tones the significant point is that these
are intervals, to be sure not of harmonic origin, but they
are really not equally large. This is true as we shall see
later in the case of tempered intervals though musical
theory is inclined to regard them as a kind of intervallic
common denominater of so-to-speak just audible musical
atoms. Plato scoffed at this notion. The same is valid for
the sruti calculation of Hindustan art music with its sup-
posedly twenty-two equal tone steps for the octave, while
the major whole tone is set equal to 4, the minor equals 3,
the semitone equals 2 sruti.
33
Such microintervals are a
product of the immeasurable abundance of melodic dis-
tances differing from one another as a result of local dif-
ferentiation of the scales,
The Chinese division of the octave into twelve lii,34
which theory conceived as equal but which are not prac-
tically treated in such manner, illustrates the inexact the-
oretic interpretation of the diatonic intervals as they are
used and fanned according to the circle of fifths.
35
Per-
haps it is also a historical 'product of the coexistence of
rationally and irrationally tuned instruments such as the
ch'in."
But the idea of reducing tonal material to the smallest
uniform distances rests, as we shall see later, on the purely
melodic character of music unacquainted. with chordal
harmony. The lack of chordal harmony lea yes such music
30 MAX WEBER
without any primary barriers to ascending and descend-
ing intervallic measurement. Indeed, wherever music is
not rationalized according to chords, the principles of me-
lodic distance and harmonic division are not in conflict.
Only fifths and fourths and their difference, the whole
tones , are the pure result of the latter. By contrast thirds
almost everywhere appear as melodic distance intervals.
Testifying to this is the old Arabic tanbur from Khoussan,
tuned in the initial tone, second, fourth, fifth, octave.
Also, according to tradition, the kithara of the Hellenes
was tuned in the initial tone, fourth, fifth, and octave.
The designation for the fifth and fourth was simply large
and small distance in China. As far as is known, wherever
the fifth and fourth appear and where no specific altera-
tion of the tone system occurs, the major second also has
been perceived as an important melodic distance. Its uni-
versal significance, thus, is based on harmonic proveni-
ence, something very different from Helmholtz' tone re-
lationship."
In general the major second has priority over the har-
monic third. The ditone, the melodic distance of a third,
is by no means an anomaly. Even today there seem to be
exceptional cases where in purely melodically conditioned
situations the soloist may descend from the harmonic step
of a third to the interval of the pythagorean ditone. De-
spite the harmonically correct measurement of the third
by Archytas (in Plato's time) and later by Didymos (who
correctly distinguishes between the two whole tones) and
-. still later by Ptolemy, it did not playa revolutionizing role
harmonically as in the musical development of the Occi-
dent.
Somewhat analogous to the discovery of the geocentric
system or the techniqual qualities of steam power, the
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
3
1
harmonic third remained the property of the theorists.
The reason for this lies in the character of ancient music
which is oriented toward tonal distances and melodic
successions of intervals . In practice this makes the third
appear as a ditone.
3. TON ALIT Y AND ITS E QUI VALE N T S
IN ANCIENT MELODY
Equalization of Scale Intervals in the Interests of
Melodic Transposition
The tendency toward the equalizations of distances
has been largely determined by interest in the transposi-
tion of melodies. Traces of such equalization are preserved
in fragments of Hellenic melody such as the second Apollo
hymn from Delphi. Hellenic music, for instance, occa-
sionally repeated a tone phrase in different pitch.' To
make this possible the whole-tone steps had to be of equal
dimensions when dealing with such melodically sensitive
hearing as that of the Greek. (Thus it is no accident that
the harmonically correct measurement of the third did
not initially take place with the diatonic but with the
chromatic and enharmonic scales from which the ditone
was excluded.) The same need for equalization appeared
in the early Middle Ages where it implemented muta-
tions into higher or lower hexachords (do-re-mi-fa-sol-
la equals the disl:ance scale c-d.-e-f-g-a). When exceed-
ing the hexachord ambitus, the steps do-re, re-mi, fa-sol,
Rational and Socia : Foundations of Music
33
sol-la (c-d, d-e, f-g, g-a) had to be regarded as equal
whole-tone distances. Precisely here appears the ancient
interpretation of the third as a diatonic distance. This is
why the quantity of the equal distances was brought to
the optimum within the diatonic tonal succession: six
fifths, six (and after the acquisition of the chromatic
string, seven) fourths, five whole-tone steps, two diatonic
and two one-and-one-half-tone steps . Moreover, certain
experiments to be mentioned later, with the Arabic scale
which was in bad disorder because of irrational thirds,
suggest similar motives.
Helmholtz' Theory of Tonality
It is not easy to say precisely what in modern tonal-
ity, a tonal system constructed primarily on melodic or
distance principles, gives it a finn foundation. The very
ingenious formulations in Helmholtz' fine book no longer
exactly conform to the available empirical evidence."
Even the panharmonicists' assumption that excepting the
primitive, all melodicism is finally based on dissected
chords, does not smoothly accord with the facts." Only
recently has empirical knowledge available through phon-
ograms of primitive music supplied materials for a more
adequate picture o ~ origins. This evidence as to the nature
of primitive melodicism hardly accords with the supposi-
tion that it rests on a strictly naturalistic scale. In Pata-
gonian phonograms, for example, there ere latitudes for
intonational deviations from a naturalistic scale of up to
a halftone. A range of variations is treatec as one and the
same tone.' Only recently has the analysis of the limitless
possibilities of musical expressiveness for pure melodicism
been cultivated for purposes of advanced study.
34
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The question, finally, of most interest is how far nat-
ural tone relationships purely as such have been impor-
tant as a dynamic element in musical development. Even
today this question should be answered for concr ete cases
only by experts and then with great caution. As indicated
by Helmholtz, it may be questioned whether harmonics
played a role in the ,evolution of ancient music.
Primitive Equivalents of Tonality
,
The assumption must be abandoned that primitive
music is a chaos of arbitrariness. The feeling for some-
thing corresponding to our tonality is hardly recent. Ac-
cording to Stumpf, Gilmann, Filmoore, O. Abraham, von
Hornbostel, and others it appears in many musical pieces
of Oriental music." It is known in Hindu music under a
special name, Ansa." However, the meaning and function
of such tonality equivalents are essentially different and
their range is more limited in melodically structured mu-
sic than in our own.
Primitive melodicism has certain distinct external char-
acteristics. The musical formations of the Yedda, for in-
stance, one of the few people with no musical instruments,
not only display rhythmic structuralization, a kind of
primitive periodicity of typical cadential and semicaden-
tial tones, but also despite the universally strong inclina-
tion of the voice toward diatonization, the tendency to-
o ward the conservation of the normal tone steps which are,
indeed, harmonically irrational and lie between a tem-
pered three-quarter tone and a whole tone.' This is not as
obvious as it seems to us today. The stepwise nature of
tone motion is explained, on the one hand, by the effects
of rhythm on tone formation, granting it a shocklike char-
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
35
acter , and, on the other hand, by language which must
have been important for the evolution of melody."
The Effects of Language on Ancient Melody
The role of language in the evolution of melody may be
examined briefly. Sometimes it would seem to have no in-
!J.uence, for there are people who, like the Patagonians, sing
their melodies exclusively in nonsense syllables. However,
it has been proved that this was not originally the case.
Generally, articulated language leads to articulated
tone formation. Under special circumstances language
may have other direct influences on melodic formations.
There are tone languages in which the significance of
syllables changes according to the pitches at which they
are pronounced. Chinese is the classic example. Among
the music of phonographically recorded primitives, that
of the Ewe Negroes supplies an example." The melody of
a song in a tone language had to cling to linguistic sense
in a very specific manner, creating distinctly articulated
intervals. The same holds for languages which, though not
tone languages, have so-called "musical accent" (pitch
accent ) in contrast to dynamic accent (expirational stem
accent, i.e., raising the tone of the accented syllable rather
than increasing the volume of the tone) . This was the
case with classical Greek and, less certainly, with classical
Latin, though the existence of musical accent in classical
Greek is no longer unconditionally beyond dispute.
Of archeological remains of the music of past societies,
the oldest for which a date can be definitely established
follows linguistic accent. This is not true for the others.
As proved by Crusius," the oldest musical fragment, the
hymn of the first Delphic Apollo, follows linguistic ac-
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cent; but the similarly archaic Mesemedes hymn does
not. Even the Ewe Negroes, with their tone language,
do not consistently achieve idiomatic tone motion by
means of the melody."
There are strong forces tending to shatter the one-to-
one correspondence of language and melody. Musically
there is a tendency to repeat the same motive in different
words. From the standpoint of language the strophic
structure of a song with a fixed tune has to destroy the
unity of language and melos. For the Hellenes such unity
as existed originally had to disappear with the develop-
ment of the language into an exquisite rhetorical tool.
This development caused the decay of musical accent.
In the case of the Ewe Negroes, despite the curtaihnent
of melodicism, which in the long run is only relative in
nature and which also occurs in the tone languages, the
link of language and melody might have inclined the mu-
sical system toward the development of fixed rational in-
tervals. Indeed the occurrence of rational musical inter-
vals seems to be natural to peoples with a tone langauge.
Magical and Sacred Factors in the Range of Primi-
tive Melody
The ambitus .: range) of melody is small in all gen-
uinely primitive systems. In most cases, for example in
the music of the North American Indians (for whom
scalar tone formation as a whole is rather important),
there are numerous "melodies" in which a single tone is
repeated rhythmically.'? There are other melodies on two
tones. In the music of the Veddas, who had no instru-
ments, the range comprises three tones somewhat similar
to a minor third." In the music of the Patagonians, who
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
37
at least possess the musical bow, which is widely diffused
over the world, the range, according to E. Fischer, is ex-
tended on exceptional occasions to a seventh though the
fifth is the normal maximum." Even in developed musical
systems, all ceremor.ial, hence stereotyped melodies have
less range and smaller tone steps.
In the Gregorian chant 70 per cent of all tone progres-
sions are second Sb3pS. Even the neumes of Byzantine
music, with the exception of four, do not exclusively mean
pneumaia (skips) but semata (diatonic tone steps) . By-
zantine as well as early Occidental church music, the
latter at first without exception, kept within the range of
an octave and prohibited progressions exceeding a fifth.
Similarly, the very antique chorus singing in the syrla-
gogues of the Syrian Jews, of which J. Parisot gave a few
specimens, strives to keep the range from a fourth to a
sixth. Among the Greeks only the Phrygian mode which
inherited the characteristic intervallic distance of a sixth
(e - c) was famous for its extensive skips. Pindar's first
Pythian ode, though the available score is certainly of
post-classical origin, is kept within the range of a sixth."
Hindustani sacred music avoids tonal skips of more than
four tones. Similar practices are widespread.
It is probable that in a great many rationalized music
systems the fourth ~ s the normal melodic range. In me-
dievaJ Byzantine theory, for instance, in Bryennies "em-
melian tone series" the fourth, which was thought to
sound pleasant, was basic .
The Increased Range of Secular Folk Music
Secular folk music very frequently shows a larger
range and greater freedom than sacred or ceremonial mu-
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sic. This is strikingly true for the music of the Cossacks,
but it also appears elsewhere. Freedom and increased
range are a symptom of greater youth and less stereotyp-
ing than is normal for sacred music. The plasticity of sec-
ular music also shows an increasing influence of instru-
ments upon music. Yodeling, for instance, with its large
range and use of falsetto, is a recent product probably
originating under influence of horn instruments, as Ho-
henemser proves for the Kiihreihen (cow round dance)
which developed around a seventeenth century Waldhorn.
The characteristics of genuinely primitive music are
found in relative smallness of melodic range, and, often
correlated therewith, a relative largeness of intervals un-
derstood as stepwise in nature (not only seconds, but,
according to von Hornbostel, also thirds, and often, in-
deed, as a consequence of pentatonicism). On the other
hand, relatively small skips occur together (rarely ex-
ceeding the interval of a fifth, except for following melo-
dic sections on the occasion of reiteration of the melodic
line). The extension of range and use of rational intervals
occur together, though certainly not everywhere and
alone. Beside the octave the fifth is also employed by
peoples whose primitive instruments (bows) may scarcely
have contributed anything of importance to rationaliza-
tion. Rationalization has been partly the effect of instru-
ments and has been fixed or supported in its fiXing by
them. Indeed, only with the aid of instrumental illustra-
tion can the idea be maintained that the overwhelming
quantity of intervals is rational. This idea appears in
primitive music systems, even in systems which are not
acquainted with the octave but which have forms of in-
strumental accompaniment. It appears even in such UD-
organized musical formations as those of the Patagonians.
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
39
By providing the accompaniment to the dance, i n s t r u ~
ments have affected the melodicism of dance songs in
ways often of basic importance in music history. With the
help of instrumental crutches, tone formation first dared
to undertake large steps, at times so extending its range
that its steps could only be vocally accomplished with the
help of falsetto (as with the music; of the Wanyamwesi) . 16
Incidentally, falsetto occasionally develops into the gen-
eral form of singing. On the other hand, by means of in-
struments, the musician not only learned how to dis-
tinguish the consonances with certainty but to fix them
unmistakably and consciously use them as artistic devices.
The harmonically most perfect intervals, the octave,
fifth, and fourth were distinguished by the recognizability
which made them paramount for the development of a
primitive tonality. They are distinguished for the musical
memory from tone distances near them by their greater
clarity. As it is easier correctly to remember real as con-
trasted to unreal events and clear as contrasted to COIl-
fused thoughts, a corresponding condition is present for
distinguishing right and wrong rational intervals. The
analogy between musically and logically rational rela-
tions may be extended at least this far.
The majority of ancient instruments contain the sim-
plest intervals as harmonics or as directly neighboring
tones. In instruments with movable tuning only the fifth
and fourth could be remembered and used as univocal
tuning tones.
The phenomenon of measurability of the perfect inter-
vals, once recognized, has been of extraordinary influence
on the imagination as shown by the quantity of number
mysticisms connected with it.
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The Differentiation of Tone Series from Original
Magical Formulae
The theoretic differentiation of certain tone series
has often occurred in connection with tone formulae typi-
cal of most musical systems at an early developmental
stage of culture.
Sociologically primitive music appears to a consider-
able extent to have been removed at an early evolutionary
stage from the sphere of pure aesthetic enjoyment and
subjected to practical requirements. It was addressed to
magical ends, particularly apotropaic (cult) and exorcis-
tic (medicinal) needs." Therewith it was subjected to
the stereotypingto which any magically important action
or object is inevitably exposed. This holds for works of
fine art, mimes or recitations, instrumental or vocal de-
vices (or, often, "all of them together) when used for in-
fluencing the gods or demons. Since any deviation from
a magical formula once proved to be effective destroys its
potency, in fact, since such deviation can attract the wrath
of metaphysical powers, the exact memorization of the
tone formulae was a vital matter. The wrong rendition
of a tone formula was an offense which often could be
atoned for only through the instantaneous murder of the
offender. Once canonized for any reason, stereotyped
tone intervals were of extraordinary influence.
Even the instruments which helped in the fiXing of the
intervals were often differentiated according to the par-
ticular god or demon to whom the magical tone formulae
were addressed. The Hellenic aulas was originally the
instrument of the mother of the gods, later of Dionysus."
The oldest keys of the Greek music system also were
typical differentiations of tone formulae used in the serv-
Rational and Social Foundations of MU3ic
4
1
ice of certain gods or at specific festive occasions. Unfor-
tunately there are almost no reliable traditions of really
primitive tone formulae of this kind. Precisely the oldest
were the objects of secret art which rapidly fell into
decay under the contact and influence of modem culture.
The ancient inaccessible tone formulae of the Hindu soma
sacrifice, which were still known to Haug, seem to be
lost for good with the premature death of this scientist.
The soma sacrifice is very expensive and disintegrates
for economic reasons.
Tone intervals appearing in such magical formulae had
in common only the possession of a melodious character
throughout. For example, the fact that an interval is used
with the descending melody, as, by the way, is still true
for traditional contrapuntalism, does not at all prove that
it may be used in a descending fashion. As little does the
presence of an interval involve the acceptance of the in-
version of the interval. The descending melody was con-
sidered normal in Hellenic music and is found in the
majority of ancient music systems, supposedly due to
physiological causes. Most of the time the scale of in-
tervals is highly incomplete and arbitrary from a harmonic
standpoint. The scale of intervals does not correspond
to Helmholtz' postulate of derivation from tone relation-
ships mediated by partial tones.
Rationalization and Expression and the Proiessional-
ization of Music
Rationalization proper commences with the evolution
of music into a professional art, be it of sacerdotal or
aoidic nature: that is reaching beyond the limited use of
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tone formulae for practical purposes, thus awakening
purely aesthetic needs .
A phenomenon of primitive music which influenced the
development of cultured musical systems is the expressive
alteration of intervals and, indeed, in contrast to har-
monically conditioned music, even by small irrational dis-
tances to such a ~ e g r e e that tones which are very close
to one another (particularly different kinds of thirds) ap-
pear in the same musical structure. It is a major advance
when tones lying close together are excluded from simul-
taneous use. This occurs in Arabian musical practice and
also, according to theory, in Hellenic music. It is brought
about through the setting up of typical tone series.
Ordinarily this is not done for tonal reasons but for
practical reasons." The tones occurring in certain songs
had to be put together in a manner pennitting the tuning
of instruments. This may now react back upon music-
making; the melopole is now taught in such a manner that
the melody Is accommodated to one of these patterns
and thus to the corresponding instrumental tuning. In a
melodically oriented music these series of intervals do
not have the harmonically determined meaning of our
present-day keys.
The different keys of Hellenic art music and analogous
formations in Hindu, Persian, Eastern-Asiatic music and,
in essentially stronger tonal sense, even the church modes
of the Middle Ages are, in Helmholtz' terminology, acci-
dental rather than essential scales like ours." They are
not, like ours, bordered on top and bottom by a tonic; nor
do they represent an essence of triadic tones. In principle
they are patterns built according to distance which con-
tain the range and its corresponding admitted tones. First,
they can be r.egatively distinguished from one another in
Rational and Social Fouauiations ot JV.IUSlC
43
terms of tones and intervals known but not used by the
music. On their instruments, the single aulos and poten-
tially, also, the single kithara, at the end of the classical
period the Creeks had the full chromatic scale. On the
lute the Arabs had all rational and irrational intervals of
their tone system. The common scales represented a selec-
tion among these available tones. This selection char-
acterized their structure, determined by the position of
the semitone steps within the succession of tones and then
through the antagonism of certain intervals to each other.
For the Arabs the thirds illustrate this.
A tonic in our sense is unknown, for the succession of
intervals is not based on a fundament of triads. It rather
contradicts triadic comprehension even where the inter-
vals are located within the diatonic tone series. The really
genuine Hellenic key, the Dorian, corresponding to the
Phrygian church mode (beginning tone e), strongly re-
sists our modern chordal and harmonic tonality." This
is immediately evident as soon as one deals with the
lowest tone in terms of our tonic. According to our con-
cepts a typica. authentic cadence in the Phrygian church
mode is impossible due to the fact that the dominant
chord b leads to the fifth f-sharp, Thus it contradicts the
basic intervallic structure of the Phrygian scale: its be-
ginning with the semitone step e-f. Moreover, it o u ; ~ h t
to contain as a' third the major seventh d-sharp in its func-
tion as a leading tone. Its utilization in the Phrygian mode
is impossible because it would place the initial tone e, in
contradiction with the basic principles of diatonicism, be-
tween two semitone steps which follow directly after es.ch
other. The place of the dominant can" thus, he taken here
only by the su)dominant, quite corresponding to the fun-
44
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damental position of the fourth in most purely melodic
tone systems. ,
From the standpoint of our harmonic concept of music
this example illustrates with sufficient clarity the differ-
ence between scales of tonal and of intervallic formation.
It is quite impossible to find a place for our major and
minor in intervallically rationalized music (especially in
the old ante-Clarean church modes) . Where the final
chord in a church mode (for instance the Dorian, after
its recognition, the Aeolian mode) ought to have been a
minor chord, "one concludes with an empty fifth simply
because the minor third was not considered to be of suf-
ficient consonance. Thus the final chords ought always
to impress us as major chords. This is one of the reasons
for the much talked about "major" character of old church
music. In fact old church music stands entirely on the
other side of this division. Helmholtz already pointed to
the fact that one can still observe in J. S. Bach the aver-
sion to conclusions in the minor key, at least in chorales
and other tone formations consisting of self-enclosed
units."
Ancient Equivalents of Modern Tonality
In the early stages of melodic rationalization, what
fonned the importance of the tone series? And what cor-
responded to our tonality in the musical interpretation of
the time?
In the language of the Stumpf school, there was orienta-
tion around certain main tones, representing a kind of
"melodic center of gravity." This is first manifest in the
quantitative frequency of sounds and not necessarily in
a characteristic qualitative musical function. In almost
Rational and Social Fowndations of Music
45
all really primitive melodies one or sometimes two tones
of this kind can be found. In the old ecclesiastical chant
the petteia (a technical term in Byzantine and archaic
stereotyped Armenian church music) 23 is a remnant of
the psalmodic uses as well as the repercussion tone
(tonus currens) of the church modes (which is named in
this manner from times past}." But even the mese of
Hellenic music, to be sure, only fragmentarily in avail-
able compositions, originally had similar functions. So,
too, did the finale in the plagal church modes. In all older
music systems the principal tone usually lies somewhere
in the middle of the range of the melody. Where fourths
organize the tone material, it usually forms the initial
point for ascending and descending calculation. It serves
as the initial tone in the tuning of instruments and is un-
alterable at modulations.
The typical melodic formulae are of far greater im-
portance than this central tone. Certain intervals are
characteristic for the corresponding key. This was still the
case for the church modes of the Middle Ages. To be sure,
at times it is difficult to attribute one melody to one
church mode and the harmonic attributions of the single
tone are ambiguous. The conception of the authentic
church modes as a type of octave characterized by its
lowest tone is probably a late product of the theory in-
fluenced by Byzantine music. But even the practical music
of the later Middle Ages still recognized the modal af-
finities of a melody which to our sensibilities often appear
to be a fluctuating quality. This affinity for a given
church mode is manifest in three things: the concluding
formula, the so-called repercussion interval, and the
tropus.
Viewed historically only the concluding formulae in
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church music belong to the very early material developed
before the theoretic fixing of the church modes as octave
species. In the oldest church music, so far as conclusions
can be drawn from Armenian music, the interval of the
minor third, common to a great many music systems,
might have been predominant in its function of a recita-
tive-like final cadence. The typical concluding formulae
of the church m o d ~ s quite correspond to traditions of
music systems which did not lose their tonal fundament
through the influence of virtuosi. Precisely the most prim-
itive music systems have fixed rules for conclusions. Like
most rules in contrapuntalism, they consist less in positive
directions than ill the exclusion of certain liberties.
In Vedda music, in contrast to the melodic motion it-
self, the conclusion never seems to occur in a descending,
but always in an ascending fashion or on the same pitch.
Particularly prohibited was use at the conclusion of the
semitone step which is located above the two normal
tones of the melody. One may observe in Vedda music
how, beginning : with an organized finale, regulation is
extended backward. The final cadence comes to be an-
ticipated by a rather extensive typical penultimate ca-
dence observing similarly fixed rules.
The development for an original melodicism starting
from the coda is also probable in the synagogue chant as
well as in church music ." The final tone is often regulated
in music systems which are still quite irrational. As many
-cont emporary phonograms show, the final and half ca-
dence on the melodic principal tone are frequently the
rule. Where there is a different interval , fourths and fifths
relations stand out distinctly. Von Hornbostel beautifully
illustrated this with Wanyamwesi songs where the princi-
pal tone often has an uptone or several of this kind, the
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
47
latter of which are felt as leading toward it.
26
In music
systems with predominantly descending melodies it is lo-
cated underneath the principal tone. According to von
Hornbostel it can form various regular intervals up to
a major third. As compared with the harmonic leading
tone which is always located on the semitone step under-
neath the tonic, the position of this uptone in purely
melodic music systems offers a colorful picture. Along-
side the tendency of the melody to descend is the fact
that tuning is also easier moving down from above.
The rationalized scales of stringed instruments have
small tone steps, like the Dorian fourth of the Greeks,
sometimes in the r.eighborhood of the lower frame tone of
its tonic, which is characterized by pseu:lo-Aristotle 27 as
leading distinctly to the hypate. It is therefore very hard
to sustain as an independent tone in singing. The Arabic
conjunct scale of fifths experimented later with three dif-
ferent kinds of neighboring tones underneath g and e',
thus with upper uptones. In the Chinese scale the degra-
dation of the semitone to an unsatisfactory tone step is
also evident. This is perhaps the case in other pentatonic
scales as a product of the sense of "lack of independence"
caused by its melodically leading position.
'When musical development attributes the role of a me-
lodic uptone to the semitone stem, neither this nor the
development toward a leading tone is of an entirely gen-
eral nature. The occurrence of the uptone despite the
general avoidance' belongs here. Sometimes purely me-
lodic music tends toward an uptone. The existence of
typical uptone intervals as certainly as the development
of final cadences is being brought into a tonal organiza-
tion of tone intervals in relation to the principal tone in
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its function as a tonic. An example is provided by the
church modes.
Purely melodic music systems in the course of the de-
velopment into a virtuoso art are led in precisely the op-
posite direction, abolishing predispositions for fixed final
cases. If von\Hornbostel is right, such are already found
in music. Virtuoso development also threat-
ens the role of the principal tone. Hellenic music during
its early history had something corresponding to the best
of our final cadences (a second, but most of the time a
major lower second and minor upper second before the
final note). A typical cadential tone, even if not especially
employed throughout, is to be observed for subdivisions
(verse endings) too. The final tone then joins the frame
tones of fourths forming the basis of the scale.
However :!lany other music systems such as the Eastern-
Asiatic art music systems hardly know of such a thing.
They terminate quite negligently not only with the second
of the initial tone, which frequently plays a kind of har-
monic role in its function as a principal melodic interval
constituted through fourth and fifth, but with any other
interval. In Hellenic music the tonal type is less clear the
more melodically refined the musical structure. One can
observe in Hellenic and in primitive as well as art music
systems that with peculiar frequency half cadences are a
rather rhythmic phenomenon. There frequently appear
extensions of tonal time values as found in most primitive
music systems. Such formations played an important role
in Occidental musical development both in the syna-
gogues and in the churches .
Less consistently was the principle realized only tem-
porarily and soon modified in the old church modes that
the composition had to begin with the final note (accord-
.Rat ionol and Social Foundations of Music
49
-ing to Wilhelm von Hirsau) or with an interval har-
monically related to it (in the eleventh century: the fifth,
fourth, and later the third or second, but, in any case no
.more distant tone from the final one than the fifth) .
j So far as may be determined by the archeological
remains, Hellenic music shows nothing of the sort. Other
music systems show most varied traditions. Beginnings
with a minor second of the final.tone are found (in Arabic
and some Asiatic systems) . Some primitive systems begin
their melodies in the octave (as in that of the Ewe Ne-
groes) or one of the dominants. In church composition
musical seconds form the principal seat of the tropes.
The latter were originally melodic formulae memorized
'according to syllables which characteristically contained
the repercussion intervals of the key. In this case they are
not primitive. Moreover, like all the musical systems of
Christendom, they never had magical significance.
Finally, the repercussion interval itself was very fre-
quent in the corresponding melodies. It was proper to
any church mode and resulted from the range and sti uc-
ture provided by the position of the semitone steps. It was
frequent at a time when the church modes were already
rationalized on Byzantine models into four authentic keys
which ascended from d, e, f, and g as final tones of the
octave and into four plagal keys which started with the
same final tones but which were placed between the lower
fourth and upper fifth.
In the authentic modes the repercussion tone was at
the fifth with the exception of the Lydian which started
with f. In the Lydian mode it was the sixth. In the plagal
modes it was twice the fourth, one the major and one the
minor third, always counting from the final tone. The in-
tervals seem to have been determined by the fact that the
50 MAX WEBER
lower of both tones of the halftone interval of the key
was avoided as an upper tone of the repercussion interval.
This is to be considered less a fragment from pentatoni-
cism than a symptom of the role of the lower semitone
which was felt as leading.
Even the tropes which were accepted by the church be-
latedly and with hesitation are analogous to the schemata
by Byzantine music, perhaps borrowed from it, the theory
of which, indeed distinguished a whole series of melodic
formulae. A diffusion of the old Hellenic music system
was occurring. This was perhaps due to Oriental (Hebrew)
influence the direction of which, unfortunately, cannot be
established. But development hardly reverted to the for-
mulae of Hellenic musical practice. In olden times the
latter might have worked with fixed melodic formulae.
This is doubtful, probable though it may seem. In any
case nothing can any longer be proved. Reliance on
sacred tone formulae of a pagan cult in ecclesiastical
music was in principle excluded.
The parallel influences upon synagogue music cannot
be certainly determined. Synagogue music also developed
tropes, and it agrees in a number of melodic clausulae with
parts of the Gregorian chant. However, at least in its new
creations it relied to the highest degree upon tradi-
tional musical practices of the milieu. From the eighth to
the thirteenth ' century in the Occident it was predomi-
nantly influenced by the Gregorian chant and by folk
melodicism. In the Orient in contrast to the Hellenic area
it was influenced in a limited manner by Persian-Arabic
music. As mentioned earlier, its scales correspond essen-
tially to the church modes of the Middle Ages.
4. sexL ERAT ION A LIZ AT ION IN T E RM S
OF FIFTHS AND FOURTHS: FOUN-
DATIONS OF MODERN TONALITY
Role of Fourths and Fifths in Melodic Transposition
THOSE intervals appearing in music systems which
have been rationalized and are regularly found in tem-
perament are the fifths and fourths. In Japanese and other
art music systems and already in Negro music, modula-
tions or transpositions of the center of gravity preferably
occur in the position of the fifth or fourth. The songs of
the Ewe Negroes show distinctive thematic organization
rather than variation of the same motive which usually
predominates.' Rather unorganized repetition of the same
motive in the fourth appears to be characteristic of the
original transposition problem which is of such importance
from a developmental and a historical standpoint.
However, the existence of a melodic tonality of fourths
and fifths and even an elaboration of triads does not pn-
vent the appearance of irrational chromatic single tones
(as for the Ewe Negroes) besides those modulations
51
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which are normal to our sensibilities. Its appearance in a
music system even where it has harmonic character and
where fifth and fourth are the accompanying intervals in
the many-voiced singing does not necessarily imply its
universal rationalization, Quite the contrary. There are
circumstances where the most irrational intervals are to
be found beside them as bearers of harmony, as we shall
see later. \
The intervals of the fifth and fourth belong together.
They are inversions of one another, appearing partly in co-
operation, dividing their work between them, partly in
competition. Generally the fourth is the fundamental
melodious interval while the fifth is often the basis of in-
strumental tuning. However, next to the tetrachord the
pentachord is found . Though occasionally, as in Arabia,
the consonant quality of the fifth has been doubted under
influence of the tonality of the fourth.
The competition between the intervals also appears in
the development of European music, being terminated
only when the fifth found re-enforcement through the
third. In the theory of many-voiced music of the Middle
Ages this ended with the degrading of the fourth to a
dissonance. As a main interval, the fourth was more im-
portant in Byzantine and old Hellenic music than in the
church modes with their strong orientation toward the
fifth. In the church modes the plagal secondary keys
from the dominant (lower fourth equals fifth) of the prin-
cipal key and at least three of the authentic keys have
fifths as main intervals while, by contrast the piagal keys
which were probably imported from the Orient and in
which the fourth is located below, avoid skips of a fifth.
Old Hellenic theory fonned the series of secondary keys
(the "hypo" keys) from the subdominant (lower fourth
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
53
equals fifth) . If the phonographic reproductions of many
primitive tones are correct (the tendency of the voice to
distone, which was mentioned, is the only reason to doubt
it) the diatonic intervals, especially the fourth, fifth, and
whole tone, would appear in correct size in music systems
with less- than an octave range. (This seems to be the
case for the Patagonians who, according to travelers' re-
ports, have a phenomenal ability for instantaneous imita-
tion of European melodies.)
Such facts would seem to suggest that the fourth is hIS-
torically the first, the octave the last of the three main
consonances to be discovered. However, this is not estab-
lished for certain. Attempts to explain the development of
the Hellenic music system in this manner are premature.
Indeed, the interpretation of the Hellenic music system
must include not only, as in other purely melodic systems,
the arithmetic division of the octave by the fourth as the
proper equal division (according to pseudo-Aristotle 2) bit
the elevation of the fifth to the signiBcance of a funda-
mental interval (occasionally ascribed to Pythagoras a).
This may have led to the rationalization of the octave
which is dissected into two diazeutic fourths 4 separated
by the tonus from which anyone tone of the fourth (for
instance, e - a) is kept in the distance of a fifth for the
corresponding tone of the other (b-e), thus the fiXing of
instrumental tuning by means of the circle of fifths.
Origin of the Keys in Rationalization of Melodic For-
mulae
The manner in which the three-stringed kithara was
originally tuned remains uncertain." More important, as
in Hellas, is the origin of the various keys through ra-
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malization of typical melodic formulae. This is hardly
iestionable even though nothing other than the pattern
names (Dorian, Phrygian, etc.) remains from their his-
,ry. These typical melodic formulae were employed in
ie religious service of various deities. They were specific
aurch tones, finding their school-like development in
onreligious lyrical and elegiac writing (singing accom-
anied by lyre and flutes).
Hypotheses will be advanced later as to the probable
ole of instruments on such occasions. It is difficult to
letermine the status of the generally accepted tone sue-
.essions preserved in complicated Hellenic scale doctrine.
Either these consisted of tone successions of intervals
within octave ran!?e, the series being determined by the
position of the semitones starting from any of the seven
tones 6f a diatonic octave (by range extension over the
octave to two octaves) or the tone succession consisted
of a regrouping of the intervals within the same octave
by means of a different tuning of the instruments.
Though the del ails are of no concern we are interested
in the inner tensions of this tone system. Once the octave
had been made the basis of the tonal system, the circle of
fifths as the thecretic basis of tuning, on the one hand,
and the fourth as a melodic fundamental interval, on the
other, had to come into tension. Thereafter the continuous
growth of the melodic range inevitably led to a dynamic
interplay precisely at the place where it also appears for
modern harmony: at the unsymmetrical construction of
the octave.
The Dorian mode, which descended from the middle
tone (mese) a, and ascended from the secondary middle
tone (paramese) b to A or a' respectively, thus con-
tained, according to Aristotle, the normal range of the
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
55
human voice, a to.ie series of two octaves and proceeding
in a diatonic fashion." In post-classical times this Dorian
tone series was considered to be the fundamental scale of
tones. It probably also has been the fundamental scale
historically, Descending from e to B and ascending from e'
to a' it contained symmetric fourths consisting of the mid-
dle fourth e-a and of the diazeutic fourth b-e'. Each
-fourth had the initial tone in common with the preceding
tone. It stood in the relationship of synaphe or fourth re-
lationship of the parallel tones. In response to the unsym-
metrical construction of the octave the rr:iddle fourth e-a
was in diazeutic relation or fifths of the parallel tones with
respect to the diazeutic fourth b-e'. The frame tones of
the fourth, thus, B, e, a, b, e', a' and the lower additional
tone (proslambanomenos) A, were considered to be fixed.
They were tones which could not be tuned to a different
key or tone gender.
In other music systems, too, the frame tones of the
fourths were treated as immovable, the other tones as
movable melodic elements. Properly speaking, regular
modulation (metabole) into different tone genders or into
different keys (fourth relationship) ought only to have
occurred by crossing these fixed tones. The lack of sym-
metry of the division was evident. A tone series standing
in synaphe (fOurt;1 relationship) and in symmetric rela-
tionship with the middle .fourth, could only be obtained
in an ascending fashion through the introduction of the
tone b-flat next to b. This led to the addition of the chro-
matic b-flat string on the kithara.
The term chromatic had essential significance in this
case as in harmonic music, for it expressed a tonal condi-
tion, not merely a relation of tone distance. The use of
the b-:B.at string was interpreted as a modulation (in Hel-
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lenic terminology the agoge peripheres) into another
tetrachord a, b-flat, c' , d' conjoined (synemmenon)
through the mese (a ) with the middle fourth (e - a) and
in symmetric relation with the diazeutic fourth b, c, d, d'.
Thus, tonally speaking, the modulation was interpreted
as going from the fifth to the fourth relation.
The series of conjunct fourths reaches its end at d'. The
step b-flat-b could obviously not be an admitted tonal
step, but in order to use the b-flat string, one had to
ascend from the mese a, which realized the modulation
into one of the two fourths (a, b-flat, c', d', or b, c' , d',
e' ). Then one had to descend in the other fourth back to
the mese. At least this was the case in strict theory.
Obviously the true motive for the construction of the
synemmenon is simply given by the fact that in the dia-
tonic scale, which the Hellenes also accepted as normal,
F is the only tone which, due to asymmetry of the division
of the octave, has no fourth above it, the fourth being the
basic interval of the melodicism of nearly all ancient
music.
Parallel Developments in Other Music Systems
The correlation of the fourths and fifths, expressed in
the combination of diazeutic and conjunct tetrachords, is
found not only in Hellenic music but in Javanese and in
somewhat changed form in Arabian music.
The theory of the Arabic scales of the Middle Ages,
which due to errors of Villoteau and Kiesewetter," seem
to be extremely confused, have been put upon a more
plausible, though perhaps not more secure, basis by Col-
langettes." 'Under Hellenic influence before the tenth cen-
tury the fourths were divided downward and upward in
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
57
pythagorean fashion, thus containing five tones each : c,
d, e-flat, e, f; f, g. a-flat, a, b (d, e, a from below, e-flat and
a-Bat assessed from above).
9
In the tenth century th:l
fourths had absorbed two different species of neutral
thirds, which resulted in seventeen, in part completely ir-
rational, intervals of the octave. This will be discussed
later .
If Collangettes is right, in the thirteenth century both
fourths were rationalized by the theory in such way that
one, also to be discussed more completely later, retained
the third contained next to it. In each fourth was con-
tained, likewise, one irrational second, which was sepa-
rated from it by a pythagorean tone step. Moreover, the
intervals between these neutral and pythagorean rela-
tions were reduced to the range of residual pythagorean
intervals. Thus they were included in the scheme of tonal
formation by the numbers 2 and 3. The lower of both
fourths now contained the following tones (reduced to c) :
pythagorean d-flat, irrational d, pythagorean e-flat, irra-
tional e, pythagorean e, f, with six distances of: limma,
limma, apotome, limma, apotome minus the limma, limma.
The rational d was canceled. One did not yet dare to ex..
elude the harmonic fifth g. The upper fourth, on the con-
trary, contained the following tones: f, pythagorean
g-Hat, irrational g, harmonic g, pythagorean a-flat, irra-
tional a, pythagorean a, harmonic b and harmonic g, py-
thagorean a-flat, irrational a, pythagorean a, harmonic t
and the seven distances of limma, limma, apotome minus
lirnma, limma, lirnma, apotome minus llmma, limma. As-
cending, standing next to the conjunct fourth within the
octave the whole tone step remained with which a new
conjunct system of fourths started. The lower fourth con-
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tained three, the upper fourth four overlapping whole-
tone steps. ,
The question which of the two fourth positions, the
fourth or fifth tonality, is the older, cannot be answered
with certainty. It can only be answered probably in favor
of the fifth, thus of the diazeutic fourth. This applies at
least to music based on and starting from the octave. In
primitive music the fourth could have obtained its im-
portance merely through melodic procedures. The Java-
nese system of conjunct fourths (if the pelog system can
be interpreted 'in such a way) was probably imported
from Arabia. It can no longer be ascertained whether
tetrachords ever played a role in structuring the octave
in Chinese musk. However, in Hellas the chromatic string,
thus the conjunct fourth, was added later according to
tradition and notation. This may have been the case wher-
ever the conjunct pattern of fourths appeared alongside
the disjunct one. It appeared here for the first time when,
under the influence of instruments, the ambitus of tones
utilized was extended beyond the octave and at the same
time descending and ascending conjunct fourths emerged
unsymmetrically next to two disjunct fourths of the start-
ing octave. In reaction, the sense for symmetry led to
striving for the transposability of melodies into other
pitch levels. This was of great importance in music history.
Precisely the same procedure, the insertion of a single
chromatic tone, took place in Hellas as well as in medieval
Europe under the same inclinations and on the same type
of material. In Byzantine music, in order to transpose
melodies into the fifth in the third (Phrygian) , one
had to lower b to b-flat. Thus our b corresponded to the
so-called 1ixoc; The same procedure was to be found
in the Occident. But the manner and direction in which
Rational and Social Fowndations of Music
55
the urge for symmetry became practically effective devi-
ated from those of antiquity. The special vehicle of this
was the solmisation scale.
Role of Solrnisation in Occidental Musical Develop-
ment
Solmisation is a tonal alphabet characterized not by
an order of tones per se, but by the relative position of
tone steps, especially of semitone steps in the scale pat-
tern. At all times, including the present, this pattern in
the Occident served the purpose of vocal practice in scale
instruction. Something corresponding to their tetrachord
genders was known to the Hellenes. There were also paral-
lels in India.
In the schola of Guido d' Arezzo ecclesiastical singing
practice of the Middle Ages used, basically, a diatonic
and hexatonic scale." Only since the seventeenth century
was the heptachord gradually transformed into a hepta-
tonic scale by adding the seventh syllable (si) after it
had performed the essential part of its role and was about
to become a simple abstract tone designation with the
Romans (Italians ) and English. This could only have
occurred within a single diatonic scale which could not
be transposed, divided unsymmetrically by the semitone
step. It could not be a quarter-tone scale as in antiquity,
for though the position of the fourths remained important,
especially in theory, it declined more than in antiquity
through the reduction in importance of the antique
kithara which had been the historical vehicle of the tetra-
chord in musical practice and education. The monochord
was substituted for the kithara as a school instrument.
Moreover, musical education at first concentrated entirely
60 MAX WEBER
on singing. It is convincingly argued by H. Riemann that
the attempt was made to find the largest series of tones
which appeared more than once within the diatonic scale.
A homogeneous, symmetrical divisibility was achieved by
means of the semitone step. But this is a hexatonic scale
starting from C or G. In either case it is exactly divisible
in the center through the semitone step. As is known, the
syllables do, re, mi, sol, la-wherein mi-fa always marks
the semitone step-were taken out of the hemistichs of a
St. John's hymn 11 which were ascending diatonic steps.
However the symmetrical hexatonic scales, starting from
C and G respectively, were jointed by the third hexachord
starting from F. Even Guido d'Arezzo, who as strict ad-
herent of diatonicism refused all chromaticism in musical
practice, in order to build a fourth from F, took over the
tone b-flat, "the b-moll," in contrast to and beside the
b-quadratum (b). Though perhaps unintentionally in
practice this very tetrachord symmetry was not confronted
and displaced by the hexachord symmetry precisely be-
cause it accepted the chromatic tone.
Emergence of the Tonic, Dominant, and Subdean-
inant of the C-major Scale
Arising out of melodic interests and certainly without
conscious intention, tonic, dominant, and subdominant of
our C-major scale became the starting points of the three
hexachords . This, of course, was not without consequences
for the evolution of modern tonality. It was, indeed, not
the decisive fad, for the b-moll (b-flat) itself arose as a
concession to the old supremacy of the fourth, to which
the small seventh refers back as much as the big seventh
leads on to the octave. The b-flat in itself could have
Rational and Social Fowndations of Music 61
operated in favor of the fourth's tonality and the "middle-
tone system." 12
That this did not occur was due to decisive peculiarities
of musical development in Western civilization, for which
the selection of a hexachord pattern was certainly more a
symptom than an operating cause. As one factor (beside
many others), it was subject to the inner logic of tone re-
, lations- which immediately pushed on toward the forma-
tion of the modern scales the moment the old tetrachord
division, resting on the principle of distance, was aban-
doned at any point .
The superior role of the fourths and fifths in ancient
music, discernible everywhere, certainly rests on the role
played by the single meaning of their consonance in the
tuning of instruments with movable tones. The third
could not have performed this role since the older instru-
ments with fixed tones either had none or had only neu-
tral thirds. This is the case for most horns, the flutes, and
the bagpipe, with one important exception to be men-
tioned later (indeed, one of the oldest instruments known
in northern Europe).
Generally the reason why of the two intervals the
fourth gained ascendancy over the fifth is that it repre-
sented the smaller of the intervals. Of course, different
explanations were sought for its original predominance
and later recession before the fifth." It has been said to
occur physically by the mere vocal. character of the older
polyphonic music It was maintained that in singing the
higher of the two voices tends to monopolize the melody,
forcing the lower to adjust itself melodically to it, on the
fourth. Thus the fourth harmonic tone of the lower voice
coincided with the third tone of the higher. This is said
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to be the closest relationship of tones situated in such a
way within the octave (tetrachord tonality) .
In contrast, for instrumental two-part writ ing, the lower
voice is said to have stronger resonance and the upper
tone is said to adjust itself harmonically in the fifth, at
which the third harmonic tone of the lower voice coin-
cides with the second tone of the upper voice (scale
tonality). This explanation, the value of which only ex-
perts are entitled to judge, seems historically problematic
since it presupposes polyphony. On the other hand, in
unaccompanied two-part singing of persons completely
devoid of musical training, fifths appear habitually and
easily. Moreover, the Arabic music system does not favor
this position, for though especially rich in instruments,
within it development of the fourth progresses always
toward division in a descending fashion at the expense of
the fifth. Hindustan development would rather support
it. Yet, again, the ascendency of the fourth in the church
modes, in contrast to Hellenic music, occurred despite
the far-reaching repression of instruments.
Apparently the nature of the instruments may have
been an element. On the other hand, the explanation is
certainly tenable for the importance of the instrumental
bass and descending structuration of harmony promoted
by it. At the same time, the position of the fourth in
ancient music can be explained in this manner only with
respect to the peculiar structure of ancient melodies.
These achieve a descending melody and incline toward
the use of the fourth as finale of a melodic phrase. Of
course, this has nothing to do with a stronger resonance
of a higher voice. Even from a purely melodic point of
view, a phrase descending in one stretch down the scale
of passing tones to the fifth (namely C-F), involves a
Rational and Socia! Foundations of Music
"
very long and melodically difficult tritone dissonance if
the semitone stands near the end or beginning. Thus, the
insertion of a semitone in its center had a significant ef-
fect only when the third was already understood har-
monically, as today in our tonal organization perhaps the
phrase G to C.
As long as the third, in intervallic terms, was felt as a
ditone, the fourth was the first clear consonance reached
through melodic motion. When the octave was known,
it always appeared together with the fifth. For nearly all
people, at least those who did not know the third, it was
perceived among the intervals as a melodic skip which
was especially easy to intone. Moreover, the fact that it
was also the smallest unambiguously consonance-making
interval in contrast to the ambiguity of the third, finally
decided in its favor. Thus it was taken as a starting point
for rational intervallic division in musical systems which
obtained tone material in accordance with the intervallic
principle.
As soon as the ancient types of tone formulae of sacred
and medicinal character, which had served as strong
tonal supports, are stripped away, the once firmly rooted
tonal anchorage comes into continuous fluctuation in a
purely melodically developed music. Under the growing
need for expressiveness the destruction of all tonal bar-
riers is more complete the more the ear is developed to
melodic refinements. Such is the case in Hellenic music.
We observe how the chromatic string, as part of a spe-
cially conjunct tetrachord, and the fiXing of the frame
tones of the tetrachords limited, in a theoretically strict
manner, the means of modulation. Something correspond-
ing to the musical practice involving instruments, though
not strictly proved, can be found insinuated here and
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there. Many of the observations of writers on music and,
even more, archeological remains, especially the first Del-
phic Apollo hymn indicate that musical practice had
little correspondence to theory." Although they should in
principle have been rejected, as Gevaert's untiring efforts
show, chorus s o n g ~ were preserved with partly genuinely
ancient, partIy intentional archaism of simple melodi-
cism;" In theory these are at best, capable of rationaliza-
tion. They hardly correspond to our comprehension of
harmony. The first Pythian ode of Pindar (the composi-
tion of which cannot be placed in time), the hymns of
Mesomedes and, moreover, the little funeral song to
Seikolos, presumably imitating popular tunes, can be
fitted into the theory fairly welL By contrast, the second
great Apollo hymn, belonging to the second century B.C.
(even if Riemann's hypothesis of the mutilation of one
note symbol be accepted) defies rationalization." The
tctrachord theory of the Hellenes limited melodic chro-
maticism so narrqwly that two intervals of main tones
could not appear in immediate succession to each other.
According to Aristoxenus this was due to the fact that
otherwise proportions of the consonances within the
fourth patterns would be lost." However, the Apollo
hymn contains three successive chromatic intervals and
only by assuming extremely free modulations could it be
theoretically interpreted with the assistance of Gevaert's
explanation that tetrachords of intervally different struc-
ture (and of entirely different genders) are here com-
bined with each other." Without doubt an ancient theo-
rist would have c:mstrued the circumstances in the same
)
way. The theory . of Arabic music approves of similar
things, combining differently structured tetrachords and
pentachords. Then, according to the circumstances every
Rational and Socici Foundations of Music
tonal fourth and fifth relationship in the Hellenic sense,
with the exception of the frame tones of the tetrachords,
had to be abandor.ed and a melodicism developed which,
despite its lawfulness, was to a large extent detached. Its
relation to its musical foundation was as theoretically
loose as that of modem music to strict chordal harmonic
theory discussed at the beginning of this study.
. Precisely official Athenian music (a song of praise to
God after the defense against an attack launched by the
Celts) is here brought into question. It appears that in
Hellenic art music during the period of its greatest crea-
tivity the very striving for expressiveness led to an ex-
tremely melodic development which shattered the har-
monic elements of the system. Since the end of the Middle
Ages in the Occident, the same striving led to an entirely
different result, the development of chordal harmony.
This is to be ascrihed, in the first instance, to the fact that
at the time the increased demand for expressiveness was
felt, the Occident, in contrast to antiquity, was already in
possession of polyvoiced music. Expressiveness could then
follow the path (If polyvoiced music. However, though
this is true without any doubt, polyvoc:ality was by no
means found only in Occidental music. Thus, its evolu-
tionary conditions must be examined.
l>. THE EVOLUTION OF OCCIDENTAL
POLYVOCALITY
Meaning and Forms of Polyvocality
Here in its broadest sense music will be called poly-
voiced only when the several voices do not go together
exclusively in unison or in the octave. Unison of instru-
ments and voices was known to nearly all musical sys-
tems. It was familiar in antiquity. Similarly the accom-
paniment of voices in octaves (the voices of men, boys,
and women) is naturally a very general phenomenon, also
familiar to antiquity. Wherever it appeared the octave
was perceived as tone identity on another step. Only in its
extreme form does polyvoiced music take on typically
different character. Of course all kinds of transitional con-
ditions are possible. Their pure types are sharply differ-
entiated from each other. Moreover, historically they have
quite different roots even in very primitive musical
. systems.
Polysonority
One may distinguish, first, modem chordal harmonic
polysonority, or, perhaps more strictly, polyvoicedness.
66
Rational and Social Fowndations of Music
Chord progressions should not necessarily be understood
as a quantity of voices, one to be distinguished from the
other, and as voices which progress together. On the con-
trary, the chord progressions do not necessarily even con-
tain in themselves the melodic p r o g r e s s i o ~ s of a single
voice.
The absence of all and any melodicism in the usual
. sense is, of course, a pure type. This pure type and what
musically approximates it has no analogies whatsoever in
the music of non-Occidental peoples in the past before the
eighteenth century. The Oriental nations, especially those
with developed art music, are acquainted with the simul-
taneous sounding of several tones. Moreover, as mentioned
earlier, it appears that at least the major third has been
accepted as beautiful by most people whose music lacks
tonality in our sense, or, as in the case of the Siamese,
whose music rests on a completely different base.' Yet
such people do not interpret the chord harmonically nor
enjoy it as a chord in our way, but as a combination of
intervals which they want to hear separately. Thus, they
prefer to play them in the form of arpeggios in the same
manner as they originated on the harp (arpa) and other
ancient strummed string instruments. In this form the
chord is very anciently known to all peoples possessing
instruments with several strings .
Even when the piano was improved in the eighteenth
century, the beauty of the sound of arpeggio chords cus-
tomary from lute performance was one of the effects
sought and appreciated. Series of bismorous formations
and triads on the harp between the alternating solo and
choral parts are to be found in the very fascinating semi-
dramatic recitations of legends of the Bantu Negroes re-
corded by P. H. Trilles." Of course these (very simple)
68 MAX WEBER
chord sequences bear no relation to our harmonic pro-
gressions. In most cases they came together in unison or,
if not, they conclude under certain circumstances in strong
dissonances (for example the tritone when the reproduc-
tion is exact) . Fullness of sound seems to have been the
essential goal.
Contrapuntal Polyphony
Another pure type is represented by the form of poly-
vocality called polyphony which found its consistent type
in contrapuntal writing. Several voices of equal standing
run side by side, harmonically linked In such a way that
the progression of each voice is accommodated to the pro-
gression of the other and is, thus, subject to certain rules.
In modern polyphony these rules are partly those of
chordal harmony, partly they have the artistic purpose of
bringing about such a progression of voices that each sin-
gle one can independently come to its melodic right. Still,
and possibly because of it, the ensemble as such preserves
a strict musical (tonal) uniformity.
Thus , pure chordal harmony thinks musically in two-
dimensional terms: vertically across the staff lines and at
the same time horizontally alongside these lines. Contra-
puntalism first operates monodimensionally in horizontal
direction and only then vertically, for the chords were not
born out of configurations constructed uniformly and
from chordal harmonies, but arose, so to speak, by chance
out of the progressions of several independent voices, re-
quiring harmonic regulation. The contrast appears to be
and is largely relative .
How clearly this can be perceived can be demonstrated
Hot so much by the angry reactions of Italian musical per-
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
69
ception of the late Renaissance against the barbarousness
of counterpoint in contrast to harmonic homophonic mu-
sic, as by the position which was still taken by contrapun-
talists like Grell (manager of the Singakademie of Ber-
lin) who in the last third of the nineteenth century flung
his condemnation posthumously against all musical inno-
vations since J. S. Bach.' Occasionally his pupil Bellennan
also takes. the same position.'
However, modern creative artists, oriented to chords,
experience a notable difficulty in the interpretation of
Palestrina and Bach in the same musical sense as their
contemporaries. In spite of all the preparatory stages,
polyphony in this sense, especially contrapuntalism, has
been known in the West in highly developed conscious
form only since the fifteenth century. It attained its high-
est perfection in the work of Bach.
No other epoch and culture was familiar with it, not
even, as Westphal believed because of wrongly inter-
preted sources, the Hellenes." So far as is known the Hel-
lenes even completely lacked initial stages similar to those
of the 'Western world which can be found with most dif-
ferent peoples of the earth." For the Hellenes the words
for the chord as well as for any simultane ous use of the
consonance in musk was Tj <HJ!.U:pWVLU oux. flU that is to
say, having the same meaning. This can be seen, to, in a
passage of pseudo-Aristotle, indicating tl.at consonance
chords were known through the tuning of instruments,"
To the Greeks they were pleasant to the car but had no
musical significance.
This was intended for art music. Naturally it does not
prove that the chord was unknown to the Hellenes. The
contrary can be observed in the remarks of the theorists
about the of tones with consonances in contrast to
7
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dissonances. Though the assumption is frequently made
that in Hellas many-voiced singing occurred in the prim-
itive form of consonance parallels, this can neither be
proved nor disproved with certainty. If it occurred the
music and chord use must have been folk music (which
we naturally cannot trace) and would have belonged to
the kind of country fair entertainment of the crapuie, the
musical needs of whom were haughtily dismissed by
Aristotle.
Briefly, the artistic means of a specific polyphonic many-
voicedness must be recalled. The uniformity of a melodi-
ous configuration, polyphonic in a technical sense, has
been preserved in its simplest form in the canon: the
simple coexistence of the same motive on different steps,
having been successively taken over by new voices before
expiring in one voice. This singing practice is found in
Simple folk music as well as in art music. The first pre-
served example, of course far from the oldest in the West-
ern world, to be dated with certainty in terms of its nota-
tion is the famous summer canon of the Monk of Reading
(manuscript from the middle of the thirteenth century) ,8
By contrast one of the most sublimated art forms of con-
trapuntalism, the fugue, belongs exclusively to art music.
In its Simplest form a given theme is imitated by a comes
( companion) on another pitch (normally fifth). The
comes in turn is confronted on the initial steps with a
counter subject. By means of episodes this game of con-
flicting forces is interrupted and varied by changes in
tempi and (normally, key-related) modulations. By the
stretta (canon-like entrance of the comes next to the
theme itself) and also, especially preferably, close to the
conclusion of leading the voices over a sustained tone
(organ' point), the musical meaning of the configuration
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
7
1
is concentrated and emphasized. The beginnings of the
fugue are ancient. It reached its fullest development only
in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Also, outside
both these marginal forms, which in a certain sense, are
highly characteristic, the either stricter or freer imitation
of a given motive on other pitch levels is the vital element
of polyphony as art music. This melodious motive is con-
tinuously augmented and interpreted ever more inten-
sively from all sides.
Although it has essential beginnings, the evolution of
"imitation" to this predominant position is an artistic de-
vice belonging only to the fifteenth century. As a second
ars nova it displaces the coloristic style of the fourteenth
century which was an older, more mechanical mode of
voice leading. Only since the re-establishment of the
papal chapel in the fifteenth century after termination of
the schism has contrapuntalism dominated all many-
voiced forms of ecclesiastical vocal art. To a considerable
extent it has also dominated artistic composition of folk
songs since the sixteenth century."
Starting with a simple two-part setting written in punc-
ius contra punctum musical development led to composi-
tions of several dozens of voices with two, three, and four
notes of one voice against one of the others . It progressed
from simple to multiple counterpoint (to a counterpoint
formed through reversible voices, one against others) .
Many-voiced compositiori had to be woven into an in-
creasingly sublimated and complicated structure in terms
of increasingly complex artistic rules.
Even before the appearance of these complicated tasks,
the simple problems of parallel motion, lateral motion,
counter motion of voices with their rules and prohibitions
formed the specific object of a theory of polyvocality
7
2
MAX WEBER
which was gradually developed since the twelfth cen-
tury." Two prohibitions were of paramount inter est, the
one dating at least since the twelfth century (but prob-
ably-earlier) the other since the fourteenth century. These
were the avoidance of the tritone (the augmented fourth,
if measured in pythagorean terms, e.g., f-b) which since
the Middle Ages was ~ e g a r d e d as the sum total of all evil
and ugliness and the prohibition of parallel motions on
perfect consonances, especially of octaves and fifths.
The rigorous prohibition of what is certainly the acute
dissonance of the tritone (which according to Helmholtz'
theory belongs to intervals disturbed by especially close
overtones) which belongs as a specific interval to the
Lydian mode (starting from F) was still unknown to the
genuine Gregorian chorale. Moreover, it did not penetrate
to places where the authority of the church remained rel-
atively weak (as in Iceland ).!' The use of the Lydian
mode was quite familiar to older church music. Later it
was prohibited, at least in its pure form. No church
chorale uses it. One could be tempted to attribute the
origin of this prohibition to the invasion of the Hellenic
tetrachord system into Western music theory since Caro-
lingian times, though of course not in the form of genuine
Hellenic art practice of classical and post-classical times
which did not by any means, as proved by archaeological
remains, avoid the tritone even as a direct skip."
Perhaps the interpretations of tonality in the latest pe-
c riod were influenced by Christians and therefore indi-
rectly by the Orient. Moreover, outside our harmonic
world, which has become accustomed to the tritone step,
it does not seem to be easily intonable. A series of three
whole-tone steps, is also avoided as a melodic harshness
by otherwise entirely different musical systems, without
Rational and Social Fowndations of Music
73
this determining the role played by tonal perceptions and
the effect of acquaintance with the fourth.
Once the differentiation between whole tones and semi-
tones is clearly learned, it is understandable that a sys-
tematic change should occur in both. The whole tone and
the semitone or two whole tones and one semitone are
now perceived as more pleasant and normal melodically.
Considered rationally it was obvious to regard the tritone
(and its inversion, the diminished fourth) as an interval
cutting the relationship of the fourth and fifth. It de-
stroyed tonality in the meaning this had at the time,
namely, the division of the octave into fourths and fifths.
For the same reason, Byzantine music did not consider
the infraction of the mete (highest note) of the scale by
the semitone step as a modulation, like other infractions
of the ambitus, but as a destruction of tonality itself,
However, it is possible that the change of the tritone
occurred not only later, but parallel with the appearance
of polyvocality. Yet, reliable knowledge as to the stages in
the historical prohibition has not been obtained. Since the
tritone was not allowed to appear simultaneously or suc-
cessively, neither indirectly nor as a tone series within the
ensemble of voices, its prohibition (in medieval language
the rule that mi contra fa is not permissible) was indeed
a very perceptible barrier. A rational explanation was not
sought for the fact that although the large intervals, the
minor sixth (the main interval of the Phrygian mode)
and the octave, even if only as an ascending interval, were
allowed, at least by later music theory, yet the major sixth,
in contrast to the seventh which always remained forbid-
den, has never been admitted as a melodic tone step in
spite of its good intonation.
We are inclined to account for the often cited prohibi-
1'1'
tion of fifth and fourth parallels under the dominance of
choral and "harmor:lic music in tonal terms by the fact that
empty fifths and octaves are interpreted by our ear as
fragments of triads. Thus their use is understood as an
uninterrupted change of keys. Polyphony understood in
purely melodic terms would reject this usage for a differ-
ent reason, as a threat to the musical independence of the
single voices with respect to each other. As is known, all
attempts for a really principled rationale are most prob-
lematic. According to archeological remains, it developed
historically only after musical theory of the Occident be-
gan to occupy itself with the investigation of consonances
and dissonances and their use in many-voiced writings.
This occurred only when contrary motions as an artistic
device and the usefulness of thirds and sixths as intervals
(in faux-bourdon) were recognized and, finally, after the
first really singable creations of polyphonic art composi-
tions became available. Then precisely the change of in-
tervals, regulated by artistic norms, was cultivated as a
special artistic device.
This appears as a product of the emancipation of poly-
vocality from completely opposite art practice now re-
garded as barbarous. As is known, the prohibition of par-
allels, which apparently was never objected to by any
artist in all its consequences, was accompanied by quite a
number of very perceptible barriers for melodic voice
motion. Beside the tonality of polyphony, in a narrower
' sense, there gradually developed a condition the final re-
sult of which served the practical demands of chordal
harmony. As we have seen, through the entire Middle
Ages to the eigh.teenth century, it rested on the tonally
unstable foundation of the church modes. Out of the in-
dependence of several voices, the older writing for many
Rational and Social Fouauiat ions of Music
75
voices (especially the motetus of the thirteenth and four-
teenth centuries) did not hesitate to supply them with
entirely different texts." The practice was also justified of
permitting single voices to be written in several church
modes (which according to the intervals between the
different voices was, indeed, often directly unavoidable,
whenever chordal and harmonic unity was observed).
The extension of the church modes to twelve by Glarean
in the sixteenth century 14 by including the Ionian (on C)
and Aeolian (on A) modes which were used in other than
church music long before, implied the final renunciation
of the residues of old tetrachord tonality. The principles
of final and of half cadences of polyphonic music corre-
spond even more clearly to the demand for chordal har-
mony which grew next to it and with it, even partly
against it, subject to peculiarities which were always es-
pecially retained in the Phrygian mode (the Hellenic
Dorian) and which had to be retained because of its
structure.
Inevitably the position of the dissonances was different
in contrapuntal polyphony from those in chordal harmony.
The appearance of theories dealing with the dissonances
marks the beginning of the special musical development
of the Occident. While the old strict (note against note)
polyphonic writing avoids direct dissonances, the oldest
theories of many-voiced writing, though pennitting them,
refer them to the unaccentuated beats of the measure. In
the writing of several notes against one, this remained a
permanent feature of contrapuntalism while in chordal
harmony, the proper place of the dynamic dissonance is
precisely the accentuated part of the measure. In principle,
at least in strict polyphony, chords are only considered as
elements of the beauty of sonority. Unlike chordal har-
MAX WEBER
many the dissonance is not the specifically dynamic ele-
ment which gives birth to melodic progression but, by
contrast, is a product of voice progressions which are
strictly determined by their melodies. Thus, in principle,
it is always accidental and, where the originating chords
present a harmonic dissonance, it must always appear in
a sustained manner
i
This contrast of harmonic and poly-
phonic music is already rather clearly recognized in the
fifteenth century in the treatment of dissonance in the
Italian vernacular song, on the one hand, and in the eccle-
siastical art of the Netherlands, on the other.
H armonic-Homophonic Music
Harmonic-homophonic music as the third pure type
of polyvocality, is confronted by polyphony and strict
chordal harmony. It is called polyvocality only for tech-
nical reasons. It represents the subordination of the entire
tone setting under one voice carrying the melody, as its
harmonic accompaniment or supplement or interpretation
in all the most varied forms such relations can take. Prim-
itive and preparatory stages of this type can be found
diffused in the most varied forms over the world. But they
were apparently nowhere so far developed as in the Occi-
dent as early as the fourteenth century (in Italy) .15 Only
since the beginning of the seventeenth century has it
been developed with full consciousness as an artistic style
in the music of Western civilization, again first in Italy,
particularly in the opera.
The primitive preparatory stages of polyvocality as-
sume various forms which correspond to these pure types.
The accompaniment of a voice part can be found as vocal
and instrumental in unrationalized music systems. Some-
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
77
times, in quantitative terms, the accompanying voice is
simply characterized by the fact that although it carries
a melody of its own it is sung more softly. This occurs, for
example, in the folk song in Iceland, where the accom-
panying voice proceeds with its own melody. Sometimes
the accompanying voice is characterized by the fact
that it appears to be qualitatively dependent on the voice
which carries the melody in such manner that it circles
round the latter in the fonn of passing tones or colora-
turas . This occurs frequently in other music systems as,
for example, in the Eastern-Asiatic (Chinese and Japa-
nese) . 16 It also appears as uno if H. Rie-
mann is right in his interpretation of the disputed con-
cept, in old Hellenic music (as the only vestige of
. many-voiced writing known to this music.) 17 The instru-
ments harmonize with the vocal part but insert coloraturas
between the latter's sustained main tones (for which, ac-
cording to Byzantine sources, evidently typical patterns
existed). Or, beside the melodic motion one or more si-
multaneous accompanying tones are sustained in the
form of bourdons.
In all these instances either the lower or upper vocal
or instrumental voice can be the accompaniment. In vocal
as well as instrumental polyvocality of this kind with more
than two voices, the middle voice appears rather often as
carrier of the melody (tenor, cantus firmus in the lan-
guage of the Middle Ages). This is the case in Javanese
gamelan music 18 where the vocal part recites the text, or
in case of purely instrumental music, where the percussion
instruments lead the cantus firmus in the middle voice.
Upper voices of musica figurata nature appear next to it
and a lower voice marks certain single tones according to
its own rhythm. In Occidental art music during the Mid-
MAX WEBER.
dIe Ages it was taken for granted that the principal voice
(originally it was exclusively a motive from the Gregorian
chant) was the lower one above which the descant exe-
cuted its melodic figurations. So exclusively was this the
case that when the reverse distribution of the melody in
the third and sixth songs, of the French and English so
important in music history, penetrated into art music it
was designated as faux-bourdon (false accompaniment),
a name it retained permanently.
The fact that the upper voice became the melodic ve-
hicle was of far-reaching significance for the formation
of harmony. It was especially important for the position
of the bass as harmonic foundation. This was only a prod-
uct of a long evolution in Occidental art music. The prim-
itive bourdon was not yet a bass part in the sense that the
sustained tone should always lie in the lower voice. Von
Hornbostel cites the occurrence of a vocal bordon pre-
cisely in the upper voice for the music of a tribe of Suma-
tra (Kubu) 19 although it is the rule that the bourdon is of
instrumental nature and lies in the lower voice. Further-
more, the bourdon is by no means generally to be inter-
preted as a harmonic basis, like an organ point. Like any
primitive polyvocality, it is often to be interpreted only
as an aesthetic device used to achieve full sonority. It is
then without harmonic Significance, having at least pri-
marily rhythmic significance, particularly where it is pro-
duced by percussion instruments. Often, however, it has
a so-called indirect harmonic meaning, even in those cases
where it only appears as a drone bass produced by per-
cussion instruments (gongs, tone sticks). In such cases
the percussion instrument does not supply only (or rather
not directly) th'e rhythm of the song, for it sometimes ap-
pears to be quite unconcerned in its own rhytlun. The
Rational and Social Foundations of Mus :\c
79
singer assigned to the drone bass does not provide the
rhythm but the support of the melody when that bass is
missing. The varying distance to' which he is assigned
below the melody and the accompanying tone evidently
serves as a basis for the melody in spite of its harmonic
irrationality.
Finally the direct orientation of the principal tone of
. the song can frequently be determined according to the
bordon (as with the North American Indians) . The final
cadence of the tone given by the percussion instrument
is taken as the normal one by the Hindus and occasion-
ally by other peoples. Then something similar to our
basso ostinato can easily develop from the occurrence of
a two-part bourdon (i.e., of instruments tuned in fifths and
octaves). Such is known to Japanese (instrumental)
gagaku music in which the koto (horizontal harp) takes
over this role." Where the sense for harmony is growing
with the bordon, particularly the instrumental one, which
is the lowest part, this evolution can be accelerated by
the development of the instrumental bourdon into a kind
of bass formation, accomplishing the formation of con-
sonances from below.
This type of polyvocality subordinated to the upper
voice is now confronted with the recently named "hetero-
phony, " as a preparatory stage of co-ordinating poly-
phony. It consists of a simultaneous performance of sev-
eral voices in several melodic variants in which each of
the several voices apparently goes its own way without
concern for the others. In any case, the kinds of chords
that appear are not consciously planned. This is usually
found in connection with an instrumental accompaniment
that serves as a basis. However, it also appears without
80
MAX WEBER.
instrumental accompaniment, even on most primitive lev-
els of musical development.
In its most primitive form, heterophony, as with the
Veddas who possess no instruments, appears as a confused
singing of individuals who vary notes similar to those ap-
pearing in the solo. Such a plurality of individuals often
conclude in the 'cadence either with the unison or with a
consonant interval. '
According to Wertheimer, heterophony appears as a
product of singing together encouraged by the fact that
melodic cadential tones become larger and (especially)
more constant in time value than in the solo. Thus the
entrance of other voices is regulated.
21
Beautiful examples
of original and" rather advanced peasant's heterophony
in Russian folk songs have been phonographically re-
corded for the Petersburg academy by Mrs. E. Linjeff. As
in all ancient folk music, the heterophonic development of
the theme is improvised." The several voices do not dis-
turb each other either rhythmically or melodically only
because of an established communal tradition. People of
different villages cannot sing together in a many-voiced
fashion. Moreover, unified organization of either homo-
phonic-harmonic or contrapuntal vocal ensembles is ab-
sent.
Still, even in purely improvised folk heterophony and,
even more so in heterophonic art forms, chords are ob-
served in such a way that certain dissonances are avoided
and certain kinds of chords sought. This first appears in
the cadential tones of melodic sections which terminate
either in unisons or consonances, especially the fifth, as in
Japanese heterophony. Chinese heterophony developed
as far as and essentially no farther than the level of the
early medieval descant which consisted partly in a sepa-
Rational and Social Fowndations of Musil: 81
ration of voices from unison into alternating consonances
and back to unison, partly in the establishment of an im-
provised coloring in the upper voice above the tenor,
which was the main melody borrowed from the Gregorian
chant.
Once the several voices were harmonically linked, the
most radical harmonic form was one of strict parallel mo-
-tion of consonant intervals . Such was the often cited
primitive organum of the early Middle Ages. It is diffused
rather widely over the world. Even Hucbald mentions it
somewhat inaccurately in the tenth century." Often it is
the oldest form of classical many-voiced art music (al-
legedly also in Japan) . Fourth and fifth parallels are pre-
dominant (among the Indonesians, Bantu tribes, and
others). Considering the importance of these intervals for
the tuning of instruments, the strict prohibition of fifth
parallelism in the art music of contrapuntalism and in
classical music is decidedly original.
Von Hornbostel mentions the occurrence in the Ad-
miralty Islands of second parallels such as were also
ascribed to the Langobards." Here the most perfect con-
sonances and the tonus produced by them as a residue
were the preferred vehicle of the parallels. Chords of
seconds which are said also to be found in the final ca-
dences of Japanese gagaku music are not performed, at
least in Japan, as a chord with simultaneously struck notes
but as an arpeggio, according to the explanations of a
Japanese musician reported by Stumpf.
In contrast to these cases as far as is known, till now
real first parallels, such as the harmonic use of the third,
seem to be found only in isolated instances. In choral
songs in Togoland and Cameroun, perhaps due to Eurc-
pean influence, alternations between major and minor
MAX WEBER
thirds appear." They can also be found as harp passages
in one of the instrumental interludes of the Bantu, re-
ported by Trilles, Until the present the third and (through
its octave-wise duplication) the sixth as typical autono-
mous bases of polyphony appear with provable certainly
only in northern: Europe, especially England and France,
the home countries of faux-bourdon and of the develop-
ment of medieval polyvocality in general. The fact that
the popular bicinium in Portugal should know third and
sixth parallels beside fifths can be attributed to the influ-
ence of the development of sacred music.
The existence of polyvocality even on the basis of har-
monic intervals of the whole-tone system of a musical
composition does not by itself indicate the penetration of
principles of harmonic tone construction. On the contrary,
as noted in connection with von Hornbostel, melodicism
may remain so 'completely untouched by it that it con-
tinues to use neutral thirds and similar irrational intervals.
The tension between melodic and harmonic forces is al-
ready character:stic of primitive polyvocality. Hence no
evolution toward harmonic music could have begun with
the organum of the Occident, if other conditions, espe-
cially pure diatonicism as a basis of the tone system of art
music, had not already existed.
Musical Notation as a Precondition of the Develop-
ment of Harmonic-Homophonic Music
Evidently ],10 uniform reply, either for the past or
present, can be , given to the question, Why did polyvo-
cality appear in some parts of the world but not in others?
Among factors which could have co-operated and allied
themselves with chance occurrences no longer accessible
Rational and Social Foundations of Music 83
to produce polyvocality the following stand out: (1) the
different tempo, adequate for the use of instruments by
themselves and in relation to the vocal part; (2) the sus-
tained tones of the wind instruments ::.n relation to the
plucked ones of the strings; (3) in antiphonal singing the
resounding or sustaining, found nearly everywhere, of
the extended cadential tones of one voice during the en-
. trance. of the other; (4) the sonority of the repercussion
tones of the harp at the arpeggio touch; (5) the poly-
sonority of some ancient wind instruments with nnper-
feet technical mastery; finally, (6) acoording to the cir-
cumstances, the simultaneous tone production while tun-
ing instruments.
Another question arises : Why did polyphonic as wel,
as harmonic-homophonic music and the modem tone sys
tern develop out of the widely diffused preconditions of
polyvocality only in the Occident? Such preconditions
were of at least equal intensity in otter regions of the
world and notably so in Hellenic antiquity and in Japan.
The specific conditions of musical development in the
Occident involve, first of all, the invention of modem no-
tation. A notation of our kind is of rnore fundamenta l
importance for the existence of such music as we posses:;
than is orthography for our linguistic art formations. This
is perhaps true for all literary art with the possible excep
ticn of hieroglyohic literature and Chinese poetry fa;'
which, due to their artistic structure, the optical irnpres-
sion of the characters is integral to the full enjoyment OJ:
the poetic product. Still, any poetic product is nearly
completely independent of the type and form of orthog-
raphy. Disregarding the highest artistic performance of
prose, perhaps on the height of the art of a Flaubert, 01'
a Wilde, or of the analytic dialogues of an Ibsen, even
84 MAX WEBER
today, in principle, the pure linguistic rhythmic work
could be thought of as existing quite independently of
orthography. A 'somewhat complicated modern work of
music, on the other hand, is neither producible nor trans-
mittable nor reproducible without the use of notation. It
cannot exist anywhere and in any form at all, not even as
an intimate possessi9n of its creator.
Symbols of notes of some kind can be found on other-
wise relatively primitive levels of musical development
without correlation with rationalized melodicism. Al-
though an object of theoretic treatment, modem Arabic
music during the long period since the Mongolian attacks
has gradually lost its old notational system and is now
entirely without, it. The Hellenes were consciously proud
of their attribute as a nation with a musical notation.
Note symbols were quite indispensable for instrumental
accompaniment .as soon as it participated in more com-
plicated pieces and not simply in unison with the vocal
part. The technical formation of the older note symbols
is without interest here. Even in Chinese music it is still
extremely primitive. The art music systems of peoples
with writing occasionally use numbers, but commonly
letters serve for tone designation. This is also true for the
Hellenes, where vocal and the older instrumental sym-
bols stand for the same tone independently of each other.
In Byzantine terminology the designation of the same
melodic motion is different for song and instrument. The
note symbols are unambiguously transmitted by the
Alypic tables, a product of the period of the Emperors."
The very fact that such tables were kept indicates the
practical complexity of the system.
The designations are especially detailed for the pykna
of chromaticism and enharmonicism. As notes they would
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
85
have caused difficulties to the performer of any of the
more complicated pieces. Even a simple score would be
unthinkable by means of them. Rather, in practical musi-
cal performances, at least in the danced\course songs, the
coryphaeus indicated the motion of the melos with his
hand as well as the rhythm with his foot'. The cheironomy
was taken as an integral part of orchestrics and was also
. practised in form of rhythmic gymnastics separately and
independently of the dance proper.
The development of letter designation, which in the
Western world occurs rather late, namely in the tenth cen-
tury, appears, after some fluctuations to have taken the
letter a to designate the very tone which even today cor-
responds to it. This indicates at least one thing, that at
the time of their origin the church modes did not mean
anything, for otherwise, doubtlessly the letters would
have had to take the tetrachord system into consideration
in the same manner as with the Hellenes,
Letter designation did not play -a lasting role in Occi-
dental musical practice and it has finally disappeared
except in regions with weak development of many-voiced
writing, such as Germany. In the classical areas of rnany-
voiced writing the solmisation system with its hexachords
starting from G, C, and F served for the practice of the
diatonic scale since Guido's time and permitted the de-
velopment of a gesture language by transferring the hexa-
chord intervals to the fingers of the hand. This also occurs
in India.
Neumes first known in the Orient and later in Byzantine
church music were used for the benefit of singers. The
neumes represent a transference of cheironomic motions
into written symbols : shorthand symbols for groups of
melodic tone steps and singing modes. The transcription
86 MAX WEBER
of them has not been entirely successful despite the works
of O. Fleischer, "H. Riemann, J. B. Thibaut, von Riese-
mann, and others." They neither indicate absolute pitch
nor the time value of the single note, but only, as obvi-
ously as possible, the tone steps and singing modes to be
performed within a single group of symbols (Le ., the
glissando). Yet, as indicated by continuous controversies
,
and varied interpretations by individual magisters of
monastic choruses, even the tone steps and singing modes
were not really given in an exact way.
In particular the neumes did not differentiate between
whole and semitone steps. This circumstance favored
flexibility of official musical patterns with respect to the
musical needs of ordinary practice and favored the pene-
tration of popular tonal traditions into musical develop-
ment. As early as the ninth century, because of this un-
orderliness, the improvement of a notation had become
an object of e a g ~ ~ r speculation by monastic musical schol-
ars. Such speculations were carried on in the North (Hue-
bald) as well as in the South (the manuscript of Kircher
of the Cloister S. Salvatore near Messina). 28 Moreover,
the acceptance of polyvocality in the monastic chant and
thus also under the materials of theory doubtless intensi-
fied the incentive for the creation of tone symbols easily
read and comprehended. This is especially demonstrated
in kind by Hucbald's attempts. However, the first impor-
tant step, inserting the neumes into a system of staff
lines, was not developed in the interest of polyvocality
but to reduce melodic ambiguity of sign reading in sing-
ing. This is clearly indicated by Guido d'Arezzo's own
appraisal of his invention (or rather, of his consistent use
of the device o ~ two-colored lines to designate the posi-
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
tion of F and C, which had already been previously ap-
plied by monks).
The substitution of neumes which symbolized not only
tones and intervals but also ways of performance and
which were thus Erst taken over unchanged into the sys-
tem of staff lines by simple dots and by squares and ob-
long note symbols, paralleled the second decisive develop-
mental step. This was the introduction of the time value
indications together with the tone designation, the work
of the so-called rnensural notation which occurred since
the beginning of ':he twelfth century. !twas primarily the
work of music theoreticians, mainly monks close to the
musical practice of Notre Dame and the Cathedral of
Cologne. The details of this developmer.t so fundamental
for Occidental music are out of place here. They are
analyzed in the work of J. WO].29 It is necessary for us
only to note that they were the necessary consequence of
certain very specific polyphonic problems in the area
of rhythm. So far as it is important for development of
rhythm, it will be examined later.
The decisive element for polyvocality was the fact that
the establishment of the relative time value of the tone
symbols and the fixed pattern of measure division now
permitted the unambiguous determinaticn of the relations
of progressIon of the individual voices in a manner easily
surveyed. Thus a truly polyvocal composition was made
possible. In itself, this was by no means Established by the
development of artistically organized polyvocality, Even
when the many-voiced accompaniment of a basic melody,
considered as the tenor, had developed into a measured
art, the composing of descants still remained largely im-
provisation (contrapunctus a mente), perhaps in the same
way as the later playing of the basso cc,ntinuo. Even up
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to the end of the seventeenth century, as in the contract
quoted by Cam, of the band of San Marco in Venice in
1681,30 the bands often listed a special contrapunto with
the singers of the canto fermo. The papal band required
of all applicants the ability to improvise counterpoint."
As, later, the player of the thorough bass, the contra-
puntalist had to stand on the summit of the musical art
education of his time in order to find the correct counter-
point, super librum, i.e., the available part of the singer
of the cantus firmus. The society of descant singers of the
papal group of Rome praised at the beginning of the
thirteenth century, was, in principle, of the same char-
acter.
However, first of all, mensural notation permitted the
planning of many-voiced art compositions. Also the great
prestige of the Flemish school of musical development of
the period from 1350 to 1550,32 though overestimated in
his time due to the brilliant prize-winning essay of Kiese-
wetter," rested quite essentially on the fact , so far as ex-
ternal circumstances played a role, that they brought
planned written compositions to the center of ecclesiastical
music. Moreover, the papal band, precisely after its return
from AVignon, was nearly exclusively dominated by them.
Only the elevation of many-voiced music under nota-
tional art created the composer proper and guaranteed the
polyphonic creations of the Western world, in contrast to
those of all other peoples, permanence, aftereffect, and
continuing development.
6. RAT ION ALIZ AT ION 0 F THE TON E
SYSTEM AND TEMPERAMENT

The Western Development toward Strict Diatonicistn


WIn! a basis of rational notation it is obvious that
polyvocality provided powerful support to the harmonic
rationalization of the tone system. This was initially felt
in the pressure toward strict diatonicism.
According to the best authorities (P. Wagner and
Gevaert) 1 the Gregorian chant and its direct derivatives
do not seem to contain any diatonic tones even after
Carolingian times. One manuscript suggests that an oc-
casional antique enharmonic splitting of semitones occurs ,
as in Byzantine music. In the analysis organica Byzantine
theory was familiar with the enharmonic intervals on the
string instruments for a descending tone series. Since they
were most difficult, they were considered as the highest
level of harmony." Equivalent practice quickly vanished
in the Occident around the tenth and eleventh centurie >.
From that time: at least in theory, diatonicism began to
monopolize thinking.
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Reaction against Pure Diatonicism
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The implications of the supremacy of one particular
tonality should not be misunderstood here nor for any
musical system not conditioned harmonically. In Eastern-
Asiatic, particularly Japanese music, where the semitone
is much enjoyed, also in Chinese as well as in Occidental
music in the early Middle Ages, the progression laid down
in the tone symbols is often merely the skeleton or frame
for the real performance.
Moreover, improvised ornaments of many kinds, espe-
cially prolonged tones in final cadences, were permissible
spontaneous tasks of the singer. The singers and even
more, the magi stri of the greater bands assumed the right
to balance melodic harshness by chromatic tone altera-
tions. The older neume notation, common to Orient and
Occident, furthered this tendency by its failure to differ-
entiate univocally between whole and semitone. In By-
zantine notation there are aqxova tones which although
sung were not counted (rhythmically). In the Western
world the extent to which melodious alterations should be
included in the notation was continually discussed. Guido
d'Arezzo designed his notational innovations precisely to
remedy the arbitrariness possible here. However it per-
sisted in the face of Guido's rigid diatonicism.
The fact that the great majority of all tone alterations
are not fixed in writing presents a major difficulty for de-
ciphering archeological music fragments. The restraints
fixed by sacred music theory and practice on alterations
did not prevent popular influence of church songs. The
great quantity of old folk songs appears to have been
deeply influenced by the diatonicism of the church modes.
The church modes could hardly have acquired this influ-
Rational and Social Foundations of MU,;ic
9
l
ence without the flexibility noted above, With increasing
response to expr essive needs the effect; of this elasticity
became ever more extensive. After five hundred year:;
several chorales, the purely diatonic intonation of which
is known since the fifteenth century, are, as provable by
details, being sung today with chromatic tone alterations.
The latter is stretched until it is almcst unrecognizable
. and has become a permanent official possession.
More important than alterations of tie individual song,
the church modes themselves had .to yield to the continu-
ing permanent acceptance of musical elements originall)'
foreign to them. This led to the schism which shattered
the musical of the church. The third (in faux-
bourdon, which probably at the time was taken ave':
oflicially by the church) and then regular chromaticism
organized harmonically were accepted.
This further chromaticism, though o::iginating as a re-
volt against pure diatonicism, developed internally on the
basis of the diatonic church modes, from the beginning
creating tone material which was to be interpreted ill
harmonic fashion. It grew precisely within the musical
system which already possessed a rationally regulated
pclyvocality, presented in a harmonically rational nota-
tion.
Quite apart from Hellenic enharmonicism in tonally
less developed music systems which lack polyvocal writ-
ing or its rationalization, not only new 3/4 and 5/4 tone.:
but even completely irrational intervals are joined to the
older intervals as a product of the drive for melodic ex-
pressiveness. Basque music, the age of which is uncertain.
not only inserts semitones in the diatonic basic scale, bu':
does so, apparently arbitrarily. " Thus to our musical sensi
bilities it not only changes rapidly fro.n major to minor
92 MAX WEBER
but also creates entire formation without tonality, al-
though it apparently at a change of key obeys certain
rules (leading tone) which determine the principal tones.
From the tenth to the thirteenth century, the Arabian
scale experienced a twofold enrichment with increasingly
irrational intervals.
As soon as the s ~ r o n g grip of the typical tone formula
is loosened and the virtuoso or professional artist trained
for virtuoso-like performances becomes the carrier of
musical development, there is no finn barrier against the
extensive growth of tonal elements arising through new
expressive needs. Perhaps it is characteristic that, so far
as I can see, among the songs of the Ewe Negroes pub-
lished by Fr. Witte, those which are farthest away from a
restless tonal rationalizability (especially in the final ca-
dence and half cadence tones) are two very fast epics
performed by master singers in which an irrational, chro-
matically sharpened tone sequence (not in individual
irrational tones) appears as a forerunner of the transition
into another key. By contrast, simpler songs are poorer in
alterations (and apparently are more apathetic) ."
We can perceive several phenomena which dissolve
tonality in our own musical development. This has been
testified to as well for completely heterogeneous condi-
tions for the evident reason that the use of entirely irra-
tional expressive devices can often be understood as the
product of a baroque and affected aesthetic manner, sort
of an intellectualistic epicureanism. Under otherwise rela-
tively primitive conditions this most easily arises in the
circles of a guild of learned musicians who monopolize
court music. The analogy can be drawn to the Nordic
court scaldic art with its linguistic creations which defy
any taste.
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
93
For this same :reason not all irrational intervals are a
product of primitive musical development. A music which
is 'not harmonically rationalized is much freer in its mo-
tions. Also an ear which, unlike ours, does not, by training
unconsciously interpret each interval born out of pure
melodic and expressive needs in harmonic terms, is no':
restricted to the enjoyment of intervals which it can clas-
sify harmonically, Thus it is understandable that music
systems which once permanently appropriate an irrational
interval are particularly inclined to accept others.
All Oriental music contains the irrational third, which
probably originated from the old bagpipe, a primitive in-
strument known to all cattle breeders and Bedouins. It is
evidently permanently attached to the peculiar ethos at
this very irrationality." Thus the music reformers were
repeatedly lucky with the creation of irrational thirds. The
diffusion of Arabic music over the whole of Asia Minor
restricted any development toward harmony or, even,
pure diatonicism. Only the Jewish synagogue song was
unaffected." Apparently it was retained in a form which
is very closely related to the church modes which, indeed,
makes somewhat plausible the often maintained relation-
ship of old Christian with jewish psalmody and hym-
nology.
Rationalization by 'Means of an Arbitrary Equaliza-
tion of Tones
The flexibility of the melodicism of nonharmonically
conditioned music provided space for rationalization by
an arbitrary equalization of those tones lacking in perfect
tuning. Such tones always result from the unsymmetrical
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division of the octave and from the dissociation of differ-
ent interval circles.
This kind of rationalization could and did occur partly
in a completely extramusical manner. Historically the ra-
tionalization of tones normally starts from the instru-
ments: the length of the bamboo flute in China, the ten-
sion of the strings of the kithara in Hellas, the length of
the strings of the lute in Arabia, of the monochord in
Occidental cloisters, In their respective areas these instru-
ments served for the physical measurement of conso-
nances. In these cases the instruments were tuned from
heard tones and only used for the more exact determina-
tion and settlement of consonance intervals. They were
employed in the service of previously fixed tonal require-
ments.
However, the reverse was possible and did occur. Cer-
tain ancient Central American wind instruments show a
hole distribution in accordance with purely symmetrical
ornamental requirements to which the played tones con-
formed.' This is neither unusual nor characteristic only
of barbarian music.
The Arabian music system, the external fate of which
was previously discussed, was a true drill ground for ex-
perimentation of the theorists. They continued the Hel-
lenistic speculations, under Hellenistic and Persian influ-
ence, concerning purely mathematical intervals. This
doubtless occurred remote from actual musical practice.
To the present the intervals of Arabic music system are
determined by experiments of the Persians. In a purely
mechanical division of space they inserted between the
frets for the forefinger (salaba) and the ring finger (bin-
cir ) a completely irrational third (assessed as 68/81 by
the theorists) .for the middle finger (wosta-wusta). Then
Rational and Sc ciol Foundations of Mvsu: E5
Zalzal by another mechanically equal separation of the
space between ':he Persian wosta and the bincir inserted
another irrational third (assessed at 22/27) which was
closer to the harmonic third. It holds its ground today."
This was neither the only nor first insertion of this kind.
Other instruments were subject to even more radical ex-
periments. The tanbur from Bagdad t with two strings,
whose intervals were already thought to be pagan, i.e.,
pre-Islamic, by Al Farabi 10 is certainly a primitively di-
vided instrument, for it gained intervals by a mechanically
equal division of one eighth of a string in five equal parts,
thereby distance of 39/40 upward to 6/8 resulted. Evi-
dently the rabab (rebab) with two strings had to serve
experimentally for the division of the octave by an in-
terval between a fourth and a fifth in two parts really
equal in terms of distance. But the string represents the
ambitus of a peculiar tritone interval which arises when
the large third is augmented by a whole tone (the same
happens in Arabic assessment, if the ditone is increased
by a minor whole tone). If the intervals were harmor.i-
cally assessed this resulted either in the harmonic aug-
mented fourth (f-sharp) or, and this was always the case
in Arabic music which calculated downwards) in the
harmonically diminished lower fifth of the upper octave
(g-flat) equals 32/45, which comes ::ather close to the
second power :;'024/2025 indeed to ~ / 2 of the algebralc
and equal divisions of the octave interval. The intervals
of the strings contained the second , the harmonically
minor third, and the ditone. Since the strings were sep3.-
rated from each other by a minor third when tuned the
scale contained the tonic, the second, the harmonically
minor third, the ditone, the fourth, a somewhat too smell
interval standing close to the algebraic. half of the octave)
96 MAX WEllER
and two smaller thirds (625/1206 [sic] = 1/2.08) harmonic
octave), a fifth being too high by the pythagorean comma,
and finally the pythagorean sixth. Al Farabi also rejects
this scale, which evidently originated from intervallic ra-
tionalization within the octave, but which certainly was
not primitive. Already in the musical practice of AI
Farabi's time; it Is-reported that the intervals of the tanbur
of Bagdad were not retained but struck in a deviating
manner, doubtless in correspondence with the fret inter-
vals.
By contrast the octave division could not have remained
without influence on the rabab. Probably it was under
this influence that the fifth, the fundamental harmonic
Arabian and Indian interval, raised the tritone to the
status of an important interval. In contrast to the almost
completely irrational intervals of the tanbur, this interval
is easily rationalized.
Moreover, Zalzal's third, which was created arbitrarily,
still appears in the scales of Meschaka. It was based on the
old Oriental neutral bagpipe third. Chinese music, indeed,
shows that intervals created mechanically and arbitrarily
without musical basis can be permanently embodied in a
musical system. The main instrument of the Eastern-
Asiatic orchestra, the king (percussion instrument or
harmonized stone or metal plate) had very obviously not
been determined in its tuning by musical consideration,
but by requirements of mechanical symmetry." It is evi-
dent how strongly such antimusical arbitrariness could
alter musical sensitivity and divert it from an understand-
ing of harmonic relations. Without doubt such antimusical
considerations profoundly influence the musical develop-
ment of some peoples and are probably responsible for
Rational and Social Foundat ions of Music
97
the stalemate of Eastern-Asiatic music on a "tonal" level
which was otherwise only peculiar to primitive peoples.
RationaZ1zation from within the Tone System: Tem-
perament
Extra-musical rationalistic alteration of the tone sys-
tem contrasts sharply with rationalization from within, in
terms of the specific character of melodicism and in the
interest in the symmetry and comparability of tone dis-
tances. We are familiar with attempts to find a common
distance denominator for the intervals of the octave from
. Chinese, Indian, and Hellenic experiments. Since all at-
tempts at rationalization do not balance evenly on the
basis of the harmonic, thus resulting in the distance-wise
unequal division of the octave, at ail times and precisely
in melodic music systems the obvious attempt was rr.ade
to reach rational results in a special way, by temperament.
In the broadest meaning, any tone scale is tempered
when the distance principle is applied in such a manner
that the purity of the intervals is relativized for the pur-
pose of equalization of contradictions between different
interval circles, reducing distances to only approximate
tone purity.
In the most extreme pure type, cne interval, naturally
the octave which in tum does not tolerate any merely rela-
tive tone purity, is taken as a basis for the scale and sim-
ply divided into equally large tone distances. In Siamese
music it is divided into seven," in Javanese music 13 it is
divided into five, to that single tone steps become ~ / l / 2
and ~ 1 / 2 respectively. In such extreme cases one cannot
speak of a temperament of harmonic intervals, the rela-
tivization of their purity, but of scale rationalization as
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presented on truly musical, yet entirely extraharmonic
bases (with the exception of the octave itself ). In the
case of the Siamese it seems probable that the historical
starting point was the division into fifths and fourths, for
according to Stumpf's investigations 14 precisely these im-
perfections, which also according to our feelings are most
objectionable, were avoided as far as possible. There were
intervals lying close to the fourth. This was followed
(possibly passing through pentatonicism) by the present
rationalization which was founded solely on extraordi-
narily acute sensitivity by the Siamese for intervals, a
sensitivity surpassing the achievement of the best Euro-
pean piano-tuners (according to Stumpf's investigations) .
As the phenomenon of physical distinctiveness of con-
sonances in terms of numbers always encouraged the
mythological interpretation of tones in numerical terms, it
is probable that the holiness of the numbers 5 and (par-
ticularly) 7 influenced the type of division." Of course,
practically, temperament for purely melodic music is
essentially a device to accomplish the transposition of
melodies into any pitch without retuning the instruments.
Temperament is very close to music oriented primarily
toward intervallic melodicism. In Hellenic antiquity, Aris-
toxenus was its advocate in his function as a tone psy-
chologist. He rejected the idea of rationalization by
instruments and -the dominance of purely virtuoso in-
strumental music. He thought that the ear alone should
decide upon the worth or worthlessness of melodic in-
tervals. In the near and far East, even the experimenta-
tion with quarter tones and other small intervals as
atomic units of the tone system suggested the idea of a
temperament. In reality temperament was not carri ed out
anywhere except in the cases mentioned which belong to
Rational and Socioi Foundations of Musil :
99
the topic of extramusical violence. In their deviations from
the official intervals Japanese singers seem to glide as
often to the side of perfect as to the side of tempered
tuning.
Despite its obvious affinities with melodic music, the
principle of temperament did not find its most important
home ground in melodic music. For temperament was
also the last word in our chordal and harmonic develop-
ment. Inasmuch as physical tone rationalization always
meets somewhere with the fatal comma and pure tuning,
especially since it only presents a relative optimum of an
ensemble of fifths, fourths, and thirds, since the sixteenth
century a partial temperament already prevailed for the
special Occidental instruments, the keyboard instruments.
At the time the range of these instruments was little
more than that of the voice. The main function of the
keyboard instruments was vocal accompaniment. Thus
tuning depended on the balance with the four middle
fifths of our present piano (C-e') and the purity of the
interval of the third, which at that time penetrated the
music from within and which was the center of interest.
The means for obtaining the balance varied. According
to Schlick's suggestion the "unequally floating" tempera-
ment, by tempering of the fifth, should tune in a perfect
way that e. which appears as the fourth fifth in the cir-
cle of fifths starting from C. The "middle tone" tempera-
ment was more practical. Schlick's suggestion had the
defect of all "unequally floating" temperaments. Altering
the fifths brought fourths into existence. The fifths so
important to the music of the time are the notorious
"wolf" of the organ-builders, through whose hands all
problems of tuning passed.
The increase in the range of organ and piano, the
100 MAX WEBEll.
striving after its complete exploitation in purely instru-
mental music, in contrast with the difficulty of using
pianos with some thirty to fifty keys on the octave in
piano tempo were forces on temperament. In principle
no upper limit can be assigned to the number of keys to
the octave if one. wants to construe pure intervals for
each circle. The requirements of freer transposition and
especially of freer movements lead forcefully toward
equal floating temperament: the division of the octave
into twelve equal distances of equivalent semitones \/1/2.
The result is twelve fifths with seven octaves, the aboli-
tion of enharmonic dieses, which finally, after a hard
struggle, won for all instruments with fixed keys. This was
brought about theoretically under the influence of
Rameau, practically through the effect of J. S. Bach's
"well-tempered piano" and the school works of his son."
However, for chord music temperament presupposed
the free progression of chords which without it had to be
triturated continuously by the coexistence of various sev-
enths , completely perfect and completely imperfect fifths,
thirds, and sixths. But through the so-called "enharmonic
exchange" it positively offered entirely new and highly
productive possibilities for modulation, namely putting
another sense of a chord or tone upon a chord relation in
which it is written into another. This is a specifically
modem modulatory device, at least so far as employed
consciously. By contrast the meaning of the polyphonic
music of the past was very frequently related to the ton-
ality of the church modes.
Though it has been occasionally maintained, it cannot
be ascertained for certain that the Hellenes construed and
used their enharmonic partial tones for similar reasons.
This supposition is contrary to the character of..these tones
Rational and Social Foundations of Music 101
which originated through the splitting up of tone dis-
tances. Their modulatory devices were quite different ,
even though the pyknon (as in the Apollo hymn) occa-
sionally played a role in the transition to the synemmenon
which, however, would have been a purely melodic re-
lation and cannot be compared to the enharmonic rela-
tions of the present. This is similar to the purely melodic
. function of an irrational tone series which can, apparently
be found in Negro music systems. The principal bearer
of the enharmonic exchange in chord music was obviously
the diminished seventh chord (for instance, f-sharp, a, c,
e-flat) proper to any scale on the major seventh of the
minor keys (for instance, g-minor) with resolutions into
eight different keys always according to the enharmonic
interpretation of its intervals. The whole of modern
chordal harmonic music is unthinkable without tempera-
ment and its consequences. Only temperament brought it
to full freedom.
Peculiarities of Occidental Temperament
The peculiarity of modem temperament is found in
the fact that the practical execution of the principle of
distance is operative on our keyboard instruments as a
temperament of tones gained harmonically. It is not like
the so-called temperament in the tone systems of the
Siamese and Javanese, merely a creation of a real distance
scale rather than a harmonic scale. Beside the distance-
wise measurement of the intervals is the choral and har-
monic interpretation of intervals. Theoretically it domi-
nates the orthography of notation.
Without this quality modern music would neither have
been technically nor meaningfully possible. Its meaning
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rests on the fact that tone successions are not treated as
an indifferent series of semitones. Despite all orthographic
liberties taken even by the masters, it clings fast to the
signation of the tones according to their harmonic mean-
ing. Obviously the fact cannot be changed that even our
notation, corresponding to its historical origins, is limited
in the exactitude of its harmonic tone designation and
reproduces, above ;all, the enharmonic but not the chro-
matic precision of the tones. For example, notation
ignores the fact that the chord d-f-a according to the
provenience of the tones is a genuine minor triad or a
musically irrational combination of the pythagorean and
minor third. But, even so, the significance of our type of
notation is great enough. Although explainable only from
a historical viewpoint it is not merely an antiquarian
reminiscence.
Our musical sensitivity also is dominated by the inter-
pretation of the tones according to their harmonic prov-
enience. We feel, even "hear," in a different fashion the
tones which can be identified enharmonically on the in-
struments according to their chordal significance. Even
the most modern developments of music, which are prac-
tically moving in many ways toward a destruction of
tonality, show this influence. These modern movements
which are at least in part the products of the character-
istic, intellectualized romantic turn of our search for the
effects of the "interesting," cannot get rid of some residual
' relations to these fundaments, even if in the form of de-
veloping contrasts to them.
There is no doubt that the distance principle which
is akin to harmony and which is the basis of the subdivi-
sion of the intervals of our keyboard instruments, has an
extensively dulling effect upon the delicacy of listening
Rational and Social Foundations of Music 10
3
ability. The frequent use of enharmonic exchanges in
modern music has a parallel effect on our harmonic feel-
ing.
Though tonal ratio is hardly able to capture the living
motion of musically expressive devices, it is, nevertheless,
everywhere effective, be it ever so "indirectly and behind
the scenes, as a form-giving principle. It is particularly
strong in music like ours where it has been made the
conscious fundament of the tone system. Theoretically the
modern tone system is not understandable without its
effects. Nor has its influence fallen exclusively upon what
already existed in musical practice. To be, sure, repeatedly
it has tended to place our music in persistent dragging
chains.
Certainly modern chordal harmony belonged to prac-
tical music long before Rameau and the encylopedists
provided it with a theoretic basis (still somewhat imper-
feet) Y The fact that this occurred was productive of ef-
fects in musical practice quite in the same manner as the
rationalization efforts of the medieval theorists for the
development of polyvocality which existed before their
assistance. The relations between tonal ratio and musical
life belong to the historically most important and varying
situations of tension in music.
7. TECHNICAL, ECONOMIC, AND SOCIAL
INTERRELATIONS BETWEEN MODERN
MUSIC AND ITS INSTRUMENTS
Origins of the Strings
OUR string instruments which are akin to those of
antique culture and known in a primitive form to the
Chinese and other music systems, represent the conver-
gence of two different species of instruments. On the one
hand, they are descendants of the violin-like string instru-
ments native to the Orient and the tropical regions, pro-
vided with a resonant body made of one piece (origi-
nally the shell of the tortoise with skin stretched above it).
The lyre known from Otfried in the eighth century which
consisted of one, later three and more strings, belonged
't o these instruments as did the rubeba (rebek) imported
from the Orient during the crusades and used extensively
in the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries. This
instrument was well adapted to traditional music. It was
able to produce the diatonic church modes including the
b-moll (b-flat). However, it was not properly of progres-
Rational and Social Foundations of Music 10
5
sive nature. Neither the resonance nor the cantilena was
ready to be developed beyond narrow limits.
These instruments were confronted by string instru-
ments with a resonant body built as a composite and
provided with special string parts (frets). These made
possible the formation of the resonant body necessary for
an unhindered manipulation of the bow and its optimal
equipment with the modem resonance bearers (bridge)
sound post). For the effectiveness of string instruments
shaping of the resonant body is decisive. A string merely
firmly strung without a vibrating body does not produce
a musically useful tone.
The creation of resonant bodies is a purely Occidental
invention) the specific motive for which can no longer be
ascertained. It seems to be related to the fact that the
handling of woodin the form of boards and all finer
carpenter's and wooden inlay work is much more typical
of Nordic peoples than those of the Orient.
The Hellenic plucked string instruments with their res-
onant bodies, which in comparison with those of the
Orient, were already built artistically, were subject, thus,
after their migration north) to very early further improve-
ment precisely in dose respects. The first instruments with
raised borders were still of rather primitive kind. The one
stringed irumscheit which probably originated from the
monochord had a resonant board body with transmission
of the vibrations by means of a sound post and produced
by means of simple technical devices a strong, trumpet-
like increased sound.' Tone production did not take place
mechanically but through fingered manipulation. Only
experts could produce other than first harmonics. Without
doubt because of .its very tonal limitations, the instru-
ment re-enforced modern tone feeling. The wheel lyre
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(organistrum), a keyboard instrument with raised borders,
produced the diatonic scale, but it also possessed bourdon
strings tuned in fifths and fourths. Like the trumscheit it
was domesticated in the monasteries of the early Middle
Ages.
Whether wheel lyres were originally in the hands of
jongleurs cannot be established, but they were never the
instruments of noble amateurs, Next to the lyre among
the instruments important to the jongleurs later belongs
the Germanic and Slavic fiddle, which is already found
in the ninth century." It was the instrument of the Nibe-
lungen heroes. For the first time on it, the neck was
formed as a separate part supplying the sturdiness needed
for its use in a modern fashion.
The fiddle (called by Hieronymus of Moravia "vielle")
originally had two unison strings (for the third accom-
paniment) and bourdon strings or none of this kind de-
pending on whether artistic or popular music was to be
performed." From the fourteenth to the eighteenth cen-
tury it also had frets. As long as the requirements of
orchestra music did not take possession and transform it,
the instrument had increasing harmonic importance. Be-
cause of its technique and hardiness it became the bearer
of folk tunes.
Evolution of String Instruments under the I nftuence
of the Bards
Social organizational factors contributed additional
forces to the evolution of the strings. The Gaelic crwth,
important as the instrument of the bards, was originally
plucked and later played.' The rules for playing it were
subject to regulation through congresses of bards (as, for
Rational and Social Foundations of Music 107
example, the Congress of 1176).5 It is the first of many
string instruments with a bridge and holes through which
the hand may be passed. Subjected to continuous tech-
nical improvement, it became harmonically useful after
the addition of the bourdon strings. The crwth is today
considered to be the ancestor of the fiddle with raised
borders.
. Professional organization secured the musical influence
of the bards. This in turn was a basic factor in the con-
tinuous improvement and typification of their instruments.
These instruments were indispensable for the advance-
ment of music.
Furthermore, technical improvements in the construc-
tion of string instruments was connected, toward the end
of the Middle Ages, with the musical guild organizations
of instrumentalists which in the Sachsenspiegel were still
treated as having no legal rights. This guild organization
appeared in the thirteenth century, providing a fixed mar-
ket for the manufactured instruments, helping standardize
their types.
Still other social factors are represented in the gradual
acceptance of instrumentalists beside the singers in the
bands of the hierarchy, of princes, and of communities.
Established instrumental roles became the rule only in
the sixteenth century. This gave to the production of in-
struments an even more productive economic foundation.
Since the fifteenth century in close connection with hu-
manistic music theorists, the attempt was made to pro-
vide instruments ready to be played in orchestras. The
separation of the high and low viols was executed at
least with the French metietriets of the :fourteenth cen-
tury.
108 MAX WEBER.
The Great Instrument-Makers and the Modern Or-
chestra
The numerous species of viols still found in the sev-
enteenth and eighteenth centuries with very different,
often very numerous stringing, recalling the rapid in-
crease of strings on the Hellenic kithara, were a product
of uninterrupted experimentation especially in the six-
teenth century. It was also encouraged by the individually
varied traditional practices and pretensions of the leading
orchestras. These numerous types of viols vanished in the
eighteenth century in favor of the three modern string
instruments : the violin, viola, and cello. The superiority
of these instruments was unambiguously demonstrated by
violin virtuosity first appearing in full bloom since Corelli,
and through development of the modern orchestra.
The violin, viola, and cello became the instruments for
a special modem organization of chamber music, the
string quartet as it was definitely established by Joseph
Haydn. They constitute the kernel of the modern orches-
tra. They are a product of persistent experiments of the
manufacturers of instruments from Brescia and Cremona.
The gap between the performance capacity of these
instruments, which were in no way improved since the
beginning of the eighteenth century, and their predeces-
sors is very striking. Speaking with some exaggeration, the
string instruments of the Middle Ages did not permit the
legato playing which in our view is specific to them, al-
though the ligatures of old mensural notation permit us
to conclude they existed. The sustaining of tones, increas-
ing or decreasing volume, melodious playing of fast pas-
sages, and all the specific qualities which we expect to
be executed by the violin were still rendered only with
Rational and Socia' Foundations of Music 10
9
difficulty until the sixteenth century. They were nearly
impossible quite apart from the fact that the changes of
hand position required today for the domination of the
tone space of string instruments were almost excluded by
the fype of construction. Considering the quality of the
famiIy of instruments it is not surprising that the division
of the neck through frets, thus mechanical tone produc-
tion, prevailed. Virdung, therefore, still calls the hand
fiddle together with the more primitive string instruments
useless."
In connection with the demand of court orchestras the
ascension of string instruments to their perfection began
in the sixteenth century. The ever-present desire for ex-
pressive sonorous beauty, for a singing tone, and elegance
of the instrument itself were the driving forces in Italy of
the orchestras and the instrument-makers . Even before the
transfer of technical supremacy in violin construction to
Brescia and Cremo.ia, one notes in the sixteenth century,
gradual approximations of various parts of the instrument
(especially of the form of the bridge and the sound holes)
toward its final form.
What such technical development offered in possibili-
ties, once perfection was achieved, far surpassed what had
been demanded. The performance capacity of the Amati
instruments was not really exploited for many decades.
In the same way as the single violin, following an ineradi-
cable conviction, first had to be "played in" and had to
wait a generation before it could reach the full height of
its rendition potential, so the adaptation and introduction
also as compared with other instruments occurred only
very slowly. Ruhlmann's supposition that modern string
instruments originate in a unique, unanticipated accident
goes too far. However, it remains true that the tonal
110 MAX WEIlER
potential made available by the construction of the in-
strument was not immediately exploited. Its availability
as a special solo instrument of virtuosi could not have
been guessed beforehand by the builders.
It is to be assumed that the concern of the Amati,
Guarneri, and Stradivari were turned essentially toward
achieving sensuous b e ~ u t y and only then sturdiness in the
interest of the greatest possible freedom of movement
by the player. The;restriction to four strings, the omission
of frets, therewith mechanical tone production, and the
final fixing of all single parts of the resonant body and of
the systems of conducting the vibration were aesthetic
consequences. Other qualities devolved upon them in the
form of "secondary products" as much unwilled as the
atmospheric effects of Gothic inner rooms was initially.
These were involuntary consequences of purely construc-
tive innovations.
In any case the production of the great violin-builders
lacked a rational foundation such as can be clearly rec-
ognized with organ, the piano and its predecessors, as
well as the wind instruments. The crwth was improved on
grounds belonging to the guild. The string instruments
were developed on the basis of purely empirical knowl-
edge gained gradually in time as to the most useful shape
of the top, the sound holes, the bridge and its perforation,
the core, the post, the raised borders, the best qualities of
wood and probably also varnish. This resulted in those
achievements which today, perhaps because of the dis-
appearance of the balsam fir, can no longer be completely
imitated.
Considering their technical construction, instruments
created in such manner did not as such consist of a device
to promote harmonic music. On the contrary, the lack of
,,,:. .; ;,
Rational and Social. Foundations of Music III
the bridge of the older instruments facilitated their use in
bringing forth chords and the bourdon strings served as
the harmonic support of the melody. This was omitted in
the modern instruments which, on the contrary, seemed
designed as vehicles of melodic effects. Precisely this was
welcome to the music of the Renaissance, governed as it
was by dramatic interests."
Social Ranking of the Instruments
The new instruments were soon employed in the
orchestra of the operas (according to customary supposi-
tions, first employed in modem fashion in Orfeo by
Monteverdi) . We do not initially hear anything of their
use as solo instruments. This is due to the traditional social
ranking of the instruments.
Since the lute was a court instrument, the lutenist was
inside the pale of society. His salary in the orchestra of
Queen Elizabeth was three times as much as that of the
violinist, five timesas much as that of the bagpipe-player.
The organist was considered to be a complete artist.
Only by great efforts did the violinists first manage to
gain recognition and only after this (especially through
Corelli) did an extensive literature for string instruments
begin to develop.
As the orchestra of the ' Middle Ages and Renaissance
was built around the wind instruments, orchestra music
today is as unthinkable without the violins. The exception
is found in military music, the old natural home of wind
instruments. The modern strings, precisely as used in or-
chestras, are indoor instruments which do not produce
their full effect even in rooms surpassing a certain moder-
112
MAX WEBER
ate size-to be sure, a smaller size than is ordinarily used
today for chamber music.
The J(eyboard Instruments: The Organ
To an even greater degree than the strings, indoor
character is impoi tant for the modern keyboard instru-
ments.
The organ consists of a combination of the panpipes
with the principle of the bagpipe." It was supposedly con-
structed by Archimedes. It was known in any case in the
second century B.C.o In the time of the Romans the organ
was a court, theatre, and festival instrument. It was par-
ticularly important as a festival instrument in Byzantium.
The antique water organ extolled by Tertullian, to be
sure without any technical comprehension, could not have
pentrated into our latitudes because of the freezing of
the water. Perhaps even before the use of water regula-
tion, in any case since the fourth century (obelisk of
Theodosius in Constantinople) the pneumatic organ ap-
peared. It came to the Occident from the Byzantine em-
pire. In Carolingian times it was still essentially a court
music machine. Louis the Pious did not put the organ he
received as a gif:: into the cathedral, but into the palace
in Aachen.
Where the organ penetrated into the monasteries it
became representative of all technical musical rationaliza-
. tion within the church. Also important, it was used for
musical instruction, The regular ecclesiastical use of the
organ is documented since the tenth century in connection
with festivals.
In the Occident from the beginning the organ under-
went continuous uninterrupted technical improvement.
Rational and Social Foundations of Music 113
Around 1200 it had reached the range of three octaves.
Since the thirteenth century, theoretic treatises were writ-
ten about it. Since the fourteenth 'century its use in the
large cathedrals has been universaL In the fourteenth cen-
tury it became an instrument really capable of melodic
performances, after the windchest had obtained its first
rational form in the so-called Springlade for which at the
. end of the sixteenth century the Scbleiilade was substi-
tuted.
In the early Middle Ages the organ was at best just
able to play the cantus firmus . Planful mixtures were still
unknown and unnecessary, for congregational singing did
not exist and knowledge of the cantus fi ;'mus was not re-
quired . From the eleventh to the thirteenth century tones
were formed by pulling out the keys, with up to forty
pipes to a key in the oldest organs which are described
in detail. A separation of tones as was later produced by
the boards of the windchest was still impossible. For
musical performance as such, compared with the pulled
keys, the Orgelsc/!lagen, beating with :sts on the pres-
sure keys, sometimes over a decimeter broad, was an
advance, though inconstancy of the w.nd supply even
then still strongly detracted from the perfection of its
temperament.
Precisely in that primitive condition, however, it was
more suited than, any other instrument to sustain one
tone or one complex of tones above which played a figura-
tion performed by voices or other instruments, particu-
larly voices." Thus it functioned harmonically. With the
transition to the pressure keyboard system in the twelfth
century and with the increasing melodious movability
achieved through special contrivances, the attempt was
mace to conserve the older function L ntil the double
114 MAX WEllER
bourdons were introduced for this purpose. Behr is right
when he directs attention to the fact that (according to
the Cologne Trakiat de organo)11 precisely because of
this function many-voiced singing accompanied by the
organ was not allowed to descend beneath the lowest
organ tone. As shown by the name organizare for the
creation of many-voiced settings, the organ (and perhaps
also the organistrum) played an important role in the
rationalization of polyvocality.
Since the organ, in contrast to the bagpipe, was tuned
diatonically, it could serve as an important support for
the development of the corresponding tone feeling. On
the other hand, at first it remained purely diatonic
(though it early admitted the b-moll). What was worse,
it long retained pythagorean temperament. Thus it was
unavailable for the production of thirds and sixths. But
in the thirteenth and fully in the fourteenth century a
highly developed coloration together with increasing de-
velopment occurred." Perhaps the organ directly influ-
enced the figurative polyphony such as prevailed at the
beginning of the ars nova.
No instrument of older music had the same kind or
amount of influence as the organ on the evolution of
polyvocality. In the Occident from the beginning only
ecclesiastical use offered a solid basis for the development
of this instrument which became ever more complex after
invention of the pedal and led toward its perfection
through the differentiation of measured musical organize-
tion, above all since the early sixteenth century. In a
period without any market, the monastery organization
was the only possible base on which it could prosper.
Thus in the entire early period it remained an instrument
particularly of the Nordic missionary territory, ,according
' " "' ...,_.
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
115
to Chrodegang with its strong monasterial foundation,
also in the cathedral chapters." Pope John the Eighth
asked the Bishop of Freising to send an organ-builder
who, as was then the custom, had to function as an
organist.
Organ-builders and organists are, at first, either monks
or technicians from monasteries or from chapters in-
structed. by monks or canons. After the end of the thir-
teenth century, when any sizable church obtained an
organ, many two of them, organ-building and with it to
a considerable degree the practical leadership in develop-
ment of the tone system lay in the hands of professional
secular organ-builders. They not only decided the tem-
perament of the organ, but since vibrations at an impure
temperament of the organ are easily determined, they
had a hand in bringing about changes far surpassing the
problems of temperament in general importance. At the
time, the general advance and technical elaboration of
this instrument coincides with the great innovations in
polyvocal singing which in spite of initial restrictions are
unthinkable without the participation of the organ.
Religious Change and the 'I'ramejormed Function of
the Organ
The organ was and remained the representative of
ecclesiastical art music, not of the singing of laymen. It
was often maintained in earlier times that it was not
supposed to accompany congregational singing. Such con-
gregational accompaniment was only very recent.
The Protestants, as in the beginning the Swiss Re-
formed and almost all ascetic sects, did not banish the
organ (precisely because it had served art singing) from
116 :\IAX WEllER
the church in the way antique Christendom did the aulos .
As Hietschel," too, emphasized, even in the Lutheran
church the organ preserved art music under the influence
of Luther." It remained, at first, the instrument which
supported art music essentially in the old style or which
substituted for it. Verses and the text, which was read by
the congregation from a hymn book arranged for the
organ, alternated with the art productions of the schooled
choir. After a brief period of popularity the participation
of the congregation itself in the singing so much declined
in some as to hardly present a recognizable contrast to
the Middle Ages.
The reformed churches were more favorable to con-
gregational singing. Particularly after the French psalm
compositions had gained international diffusion, they were
opposed to art music. Then, since the end of the sixteenth
century the organ was introduced again step by step in
most of the refo::med churches. On the other hand, a
catastrophe to old church music occurred in the Lutheran
church with the advance of pietism at the end of the
seventeenth century. Only the orthodox retained any con-
siderable amount of art music. It is tragicomic that J. S.
Bach's music, which corresponded to his intense religious
piety and despite a strict dogmatic relationship bears an
unmistakable flavor of pietism, was in his own domicile
suspected by the pietists and appreciated by the ortho-
, dox."
Thus the function of the organ is relatively new as an
instrument which primarily accompanies congregational
singing. From olden times it preludes and fills the inter-
ludes, the entrance and recession of the congregation, the
long ceremony of the communion. In the same fashion as
. ~ ' < " , -v :
Rational and Social Foundations of MU3ic 117
the specifically fervent and religious cachet which organ
music means for us today, above all, the sonority of the
mixtures and great registers which are supposed to be
considered aesthetically and which fundamentally, in
spite of Helmholtz, are of barbarian emotional nature."
The organ is an instrument strongly bearing the char-
acter of a machine. The person who operates it is rigidly
bound by the technical aspects of tone formation, pro-
viding him with little liberty to speak his personal lan-
guage. The organ followed the machine principle in the
fact that in the Middle Ages its manipulation required a
number of persons, particularly bellows treaders. Ma-
chine-like contrivances increasingly substituted for this
physical work. In common with the iron forge it faced
the problem of creating a continuous supply of air. The
twenty-four bellows of the old organ of :he cathedral at
Magdeburg still needed Kalkanten. The organ of the
cathedral in Winchester in the tenth century required
seventy."
The Piano
The second specifically modern keyboard instrument,
the piano, had two technically different historical roots.
One was the clavichord, in all probability the invention
of a monk."
By increasing the number of strings the clavichord orig-
inated from the early medieval monochord, an instrument
with one string and a movable bridge which was the
basis for the rational tone arrangemen:: of the entire
Western civilization. Originally the clavichord had con-
[unct strings for several tones which, thus, could not be
118
MAX WEBER
struck simultaneously. It had free strings for only the most
important tones. The free strings were gradually increased
at the expense of the conjunct strings. With the oldest
clavichords, the simultaneous touching of c and e, the
third, was impossible. ,
Its range comprised twenty-two diatonic tones in the
fourteenth century (from G to e' including b-flat next to
b). At Agricola's time the instrument had been brought
to a chromatic scale from A to b' . Its tones, which rapidly
died away, encouraged rapid, animated figuration making
it an instrument adaptable to art music . The instrument
was struck by tangents which limited the sounding part
of the string, simultaneously silencing the latter. At the
peak of its perfection, the particular sonorous effects of
its expressive tone oscillations permitted it to yield be-
fore the hammer piano only when a small stratum of
musicians and amateurs with delicate ears no longer de-
cided over the fate of musical instruments, but when mar-
ket situations prevailed and the production of instruments
had become capitalistic.
The second source of the piano was the clavicembalo,
clavecin, or cembalo, which was derived from the psal-
terium and English virginaL It differs in many ways. Its
strings, one for each tone, were plucked by quills, there-
fore without capacity for modulation in volume or color,
'but permitting great freedom and precision of touch.
The clavecin had the same disadvantages mentioned
-for the organ and similar technical devices were employed
in the attempt to correct them. Until the eighteenth cen-
tury organists were normally the builders of keyboard
instruments. Also they were the first creators of piano
literature. Since the free touch was favorable to use of
Rational and Social Foundations of Music
Il9
the instrument for the reproduction of folk tunes and
dances, its specific audience was formed essentially by
amateurs, particularly and quite naturally all folk circles
tied to home life. In the Middle Ages it was the instru-
ment of monks, later of women led by Queen Elizabeth."
As late as 1722 as a recommendation for a new compli-
cated keyboard type it is emphasized that even an experi-
enced woman is able to handle the customary playing of
the keyboard,
In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries the clavecin
doubtless participated in the development of music which
was melodically and rhythmically transparent. It was one
of the mediators for the penetration of popular simple
harmonic feeling opposite the polyphonic art music. The
theorists built keyboard-like instruments for themselves
for experimental purposes." In the sixteenth century, the
period of general experimentation with the production of
purely tempered instruments for many-voiced composi-
tions, the clavecin was still less important than the lute
for vocal accompaniment. However, the cembalo gained
territory and became the characteristic instrument for the
accompaniment of vocal music, then for the opera." In
the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the conductor
sat in the middle of the orchestra. As far as art music is
concerned, the instrument remained strongly dependent
on the organ in its musical technique until the end of
the seventeenth century. Organists and pianists felt them-
selves to be separated but solitary artists and representa-
tives of harmonic music in contrast, above all, to the
string instruments which "could not produce any full
harmony," withdrew (with this motivation) in France
from' the dominance of the king of the viols.
120 MAX WEBER
Emancipation of the Piano and Its Emergence as the
Instrument of the Middle Classes
French instnunental music showed the influence of
the dance, determined by the sociological structure of
France. Then, foHowing the example of violin virtuoso
performance, musical emancipation of piano music from
the organ style of writing was carried out. Chambonnieres
may be considered the first creator of specific piano works.
Domenico Scarlat ti, at the beginning of the eighteenth
century, is the firjt to exploit in virtuoso fashion the pe-
culiar sonorous effects of the instrument." Piano virtuosity
developed hand in hand with a heavy harpsichord indus-
try which was based on the demand of orchestras and
amateurs. Continued development led on to the last great
technical changes of the instrument and its typification.
The first great builder of harpsichords (around 1600 the
family Ruckers in Belgium) 24 operated like a manufac-
turer creating individual instruments commissioned by
specific consumers (orchestras and patricians) and thus
in very manifold adaptation to all possible special needs
quite in the manner of the organ.
The development of the hammer piano occurred by
stages partly in Italy (Christoferi) partly in Germany. In-
ventions made in Italy remained unexploited there.
Italian culture (until the threshold of the present) re-
mained alien to the indoor culture of the Nordic Europe.
Italian ideals lacked the influence of the culture of the
bourgeois-like horne. They retained the ideal of a capella
singing and the opera. The arias of the opera supplied
the popular demand for easily comprehensible and sing-
able tunes.
The center of gravity of the production and technical
Rational and Social Foundations of Mus ic 121
improvement of the piano lies in the musically most
broadly organized country, Saxony. The bourgeois-like
musical culture derived from the Kantore len virtuosi and
builders of instruments proceeded hand in hand with an
intense interest in the orchestra of the count. Beyond this
it underwent continuous improvement and popularization.
In the foreground of interest was the possbility of muffling
and increasing the volume of the tone, the sustaining of
the tone and the beautiful perfection of the chords played
in the form of arpeggios at any tone distance. In contrast
to these advantages was the disadvantage (especially ac-
cording to Bach) of deficient freedom, in contrast to the
harpsichord and clavichord, in playing fast passages. The
removal of this disadvantage was of.major concern.
In place of the tapping touch of the keyboard instru-
ments of the sixteenth century, beginning with the organ
a rational fingering technique was in progress, soon ex-
tended to the harpsichord. This presented the hands work-
ing into each other, the fingers crossing over one another.
To our conception this was still tortured enough. Even-
tually the Bachs placed fingering technique, one would
like to say, on a "physiological tonal" basis by a rational
use of the thumb." In antiquity the highest virtuoso
achievements occurred on the aulas. Now the violin and,
above all, the piano presented the most difficult tasks.
The great artists of modern piano music, Johann Sebas-
tian and Philipp Emanuel Bach were still neutral toward
the hammer piano. J. S. Bach in particular wrote an im-
portant part of his best work for the old types of instru-
ments, the clavichord and harpsichord. These were weaker
and more intimate than the piano and with respect to
sonority calculated. for more delicate ears. Only the in-
ternationally famous virtuosity of Mozart and the increas-
122 MAX WEBER
ing need of music publishers and of concert managers to
satisfy the large music consumption of the mass market
brought the final victory of the .hammer piano.
In the eighteenth century the piano-builders, above all,
the German, were still artisans who collaborated and ex-
perimented physically (like Silbermann ).26 Machine-made
mass production of the piano occurred first in England
(Broadwood) then in America (Steinway) where first-
rate iron could be pressed into construction of the frame.
Moreover, iron helped overcome the numerous purely cli-
matic difficulties that could affect adoption of the piano.
Incidentally, climatic difficulties also stood in the way of
adoption of the p i ~ n o in the tropics. By the beginning of
the nineteenth century the piano had become a standard
commercial object produced for stock.
The wild competitive struggle of the factories played
a role in the development of the instrument. So, too, did
the virtuosi with the special modern devices of the press,
exhibitions, and finally analogous to salesman techniques
of breweries, of the building of concert halls, of the in-
strument factories of their own (with us, above all, those
of the Berliner). These forces brought about that technical
perfection of the instrument which alone could satisfy
the ever increasinz technical demands of the composers.
...,
The older instruments were already no match for
Beethoven's later creations.
Meanwhile, orchestra works were made accessible for
home use only in the form of piano transcriptions. In
Chopin a first rank composer was found who restricted
himself entirely to the piano. Finally in Liszt the intimate
skill of the great virtuoso elicited from the instrument all
that had finally been concealed of expressive possibilities.
The unshakable modern position of the piano rests upon
Rational and Socicl Foundations of Music
12
3
the universality of its usefulness for domestic appropria-
tion of almost all ,treasures of music literature, upon the
immeasurable fullness of its own literature and finally on
its quality as a universal accompanying and schooling in-
strument. In its function as a school instrument, it dis-
placed the antique kithara, the monochord, the primitive
organ, and the barrel-lyre of the monastic schools. As an
accompanying instrument it displaced the aulos of an-
tiquity, the organ, and the primitive string instruments
of the Middle A g ~ s and the lute of the Renaissance. As
an amateur instrument of the upper classes it displaced
the kithara of antiquity, the harp, of the North, and the
lute of the sixteenth century. Our exclusive education
toward modern harmonic music is represented quite es-
sentially by it. .
Even the negative aspects of the piano are important.
Temperament takes from our ears some of the delicacy
which gave the decisive flavor to the melodious refine-
ment of ancient music culture. Until the sixteenth cen-
tury the training of singers in the Occident took place on
the monochord. According to Zarline, the singers trained
in this manner attempted to reintroduce ?erfect tempera-
ment. Today their training occurs almost exclusively on
the piano. And today, at least in our latitudes, tone for-
mation and schooling of string instruments is practised
hom the beginning at the piano. It is clear that delicate
hearing capacity possible with training by means of in-
struments in pure temperament cannot he reached. The
notoriously greater imperfection in the intonation of
Nordic as compared to Italian singers must be caused
by it.
The idea of building pianos with twenty-four keys in
the octave, as suggested by Helmholtz, is not promising
for economic reasons. The building of the piano is con-
ditioned by the mass market. It is the peculiar nature of
the piano to be a middle-class home instrument. As the
organ requires a giant indoor space the piano requires a
moderately large indoor space to display its best enchant-
ments. All the successes of the modem piano virtuosi can-
not basically change the fact that the instrument in its
independent appearances in the large concert hall is in-
voluntarily compared with the orchestra and obviously
found to be too light.
Therefore it is no accident that the representatives of
pianistic culture are Nordic peoples, climatically house-
bound and home-centered in contrast to the South. In
southern Europe the cultivation of middle-class home
comforts was restricted by climatic and historical factors.
The piano was invented there but did not diffuse quickly
as in the North. Nor did it rise to an equivalent position
as a significant piece of middle-class furniture.
Notes
Index
Notes
INTRODUCTION
1. First published by Drei Masken Verlag (Munich, 1921);
republished as an appendix to Volume II of Weber's Wirt-
schaft und Gesellschaft (Tiibingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1921);
reprinted in the edition of 1924 and in that of 1956. The 1956
edition has textual corrections by Johannes Winckelmann.
2. Marianne Weber, Max Weber: Ein Leoensbild. (Tubin-
gen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1925) ; for an excellent intellectual biog-
raphy see H. H. Gerth and C. Wright Mills, From Max Weber:
Essaqs in Sociolog; (New York: Oxford University Press,
1946).
3. Max Weber, Die protestantische Ethik tmd der Geist des
Kapitalismus, in Archiv fur Socialuiissenschatt und Socialpoli-
tik, "0Is. XX, XXI (1904-1905); tr . by Talcott Parsons (New
York: Scribner, 1930).
4. A bibliography of Weber's writings is contained in Mari-
anne Weber's Max V
1eber
: Ein Lebensbild.
5. The most complete review of his basic concepts appears
in Part I of Max Weber's Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft, 4th
ed. (Tiibingen, 195), pp. 1-30. This has been translated by
A. M. Henderson and Talcott Parsons in Max Weber: The
Theory of Social and Economic Organization (New York: Ox-
ford University Press, 1947).
6. This type of sociology has been called "social behavior-
ism." There are other kinds of sociological theory that Violently
reject this, asserting it to be a kind of social atomism. Contem-
12
7
128 NOTES TO PAGES XV-3
porary sociological functionalism, for example, assumes that
social life is found only in systems.
7. The famous typology of action erected on this foundation
described these various kinds of actions as zweckrational,
wertrational, affective, and traditional. See The Theory of So-
cial and Economic Organization, P: 114.
8. See ibid., p. 118.
9. See Weber's formulation in "Science as a Vocation" in
Gerth and Mills, op. cit., pp. 139 ff.
10. See the introduction to The Protestant Ethic (Parson's
translation, Pl': 13 ff.) for a brief summary of Weber's views
on these matters.
11. Paul H. Hindemith, The Craft of Musical Composition
(New York: Associated Musical Publishers, 1945), P: 164.
12. See E. Clements, Introduction to the Study of Indian
Music (London: Longmans, Green, 1913), pp. 11-14.
13. Henry George Farmer, A History of Arabian Music
(London : Luzac, 1929), pp. 205 f.
14. Clements, op. cit ., Appendix E, pp. 100-101.
15. Carl Stumpf, Die Anfiinge der Musik (Leipzig, 1911).
16. Curt Sachs, The History of Musical Instruments (New
York: Norton, 1940).
17. Curt Sachs , The Rise of Music in the Ancient World:
East and West (New York: Norton, 1943) .
18. This is the literary appellation of the instrument shaped
like the mortar. Its popular name is ch'ing. It is struck with
a wooden hammer. When used at religious ceremonies it is
placed in a kind of silken purse richly ornamented with rare
fish scales.
19. Oldest form of bowed instrument known in England,
dating to four hundred years before Christ. Ancestor of the
violin and descendant of the Irish emit.
CHAPTER I
L The pythagorean comma is the difference between the
twelfth, fifth, and seventh octave above a given note in a
mathematically perfect scale. It is different from the comma
syntonum or comma of Didymos. When the scale is rnathe-
NOTES TO PAGES 6-16 12
9
matically perfect, the interval between one and two is a
major tone and between two and three a minor. The majors
contain nine commas and the minors eight. A Didyrnos comma
is the difference between a major and a minor.
2. For his discussion of the dominant seventh chord see
Hermann L. F. Helmholtz, On the Sensations of Tone , 2nd
rev. ed. by Alexander F. Ellis, with a new Introduction by
Henry Margenau (New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1954),
pp. 341 ff .
3. Ibid ., p. 355.
4. Jean Philippe Rameau, Traite de l'harmonie reduite d
ses ptincipes naturels (1722).
5. Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 356.
6. Sig. A. Basevis, Introduction a un nouveau systeme
d'harmonie (Florence, 1955).
7. "Modern" is taken in the sense of Wagnerian music. See
Ernst Kurth, Die romantische Harmonik und ihre Krise in
Wagners "Tristan" (Leipzig, 1920) .
CHAPTER II
1. Moritz Hauptmann, Die Natur der Harmonik und Metrik
(Leipzig, 1853), pp. 26 ff.
2. Johann Phil. Kimberger, Die Kunst des reinen Satzes in
der Musik (1774-1779); Hugo Riemann, Geschichte des Mu-
siktheorie im IX-XIX Iahrhundert, 2d ed. (Berlin: Max Hesse,
1920), pp. 476 If.
3. Helmholtz, op. cit., pp. 77, 545 If.
4. With respect to Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni's writ-
ings, compare his Akustik (1802) and his Kurze Uebersicht
der Schall- und Klanglehre (1827) .
5. Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 257.
6. Ludwig Erk and Frank Magnus Boehme, Deutscher
Liederhort, 3 vols. (1893--1894).
7. Oscar Fleischer, "Zur vergleichenden Liedforschung,"
Sammelbiinde der Internationalen Musikgesellschaft, III
(1901-1902), 185 If. Of the many recent studies, the article by
Bruno Nettl should be mentioned: "Change in Folk and
Primitive Music: A Survey of Methods and Studies," Iournal
13
NOTES TO PAGES 16-24
of American Musico .'-ogical Society, VIII (Summer, 1955),
101 ft.
8. Basic information on Jewish music and liturgy may be
found in the following works by Abraham Zebi Idelsohn:
Jewish Music in its Historical Development (New York: Holt,
1929); Jewish Liturgy and its Development (New York: Holt,
1932); Thesaurus of Oriental Hebrew Melodies, 10 vols. (Ber-
lin: Harz, 1922-1932).
9. Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 556.
10. Ibid., pp. 518, 522.
11. tua, p. 517 c, d.
12. Frances Densmore, "Chippewa Music," Bureau of Amer-
ican Ethnology Bulletin No. 45 (1910),53 (1913) .
13. Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 526.
14. Ibid., p. 518, nos. 96, 97-102.
15. Ibid., pp. 200 if.
16. Giovanni Domenico Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum Col-
lectio, Vol. XII (1766), col. 399; A. W. Haddan and W. Stubbs,
Councils and Ecclesiastical Documents, III (1871), 367.
17. Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 260.
18. Frances Densmore, "The Melodic Formation of Indian
Songs," Journal of Washington Academy of Sciences, XVIII
(1928), 395-408.
19. For Helmholtz, op. cit., pp. 190ff.
20. Frances Densmore, "The Music of the American In-
dians," The Overland Monthly, March, 1905, pp. 230-34;
"Scale Formation in Primitive Music," American Anthropolo-
gist, n.s., XI (1909), 1-12; "Chippewa Music," Bureau of
American Ethnology Bulletin No. 45 (1910).
21. Helmholtz, op. cit., pp. .186ft.
22. Ibid., pp. 518, 1,26.
23. Ibid., p. 262 b.
, 24. See the examples of Greek music available in modem
transcriptions by Custav Reese, Music in the Middle Ages,
(New York: Norton, 1940), p. 48, note 90.
Q5. Helmholtz, op. cii., pp. 262, 263.
26. Reese, loco cit.
27. Curt Sachs, "Ueber eine bosnische Doppelflote," Sam-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - -
NOTES TO PAGES 26-34
melbiinde der Internationalen Musikgesellschaft, IX (1907-
1908),313 f.
28. Raphael Georg Kiesewetter, Die Musik der Araber nach
Originalquellen dargestellt (Leipzig, 1842) ; Guillaume Andre
Villoteau, "Descriptions des instruments de rnusique des orien-
taux," in his Description de l'Egypte (1809) .
29. Pere Collangettes, "Etude sur la musique arabe,' Jour-
nal Asiatique (1904-1906) .
30. S ~ e J. Murray Barbour, Tuning and Temperament (East
Lansing, Mich., 1951) .
31. See Henry Gecrge Farmer, A History of Arabian Music
(London: Luzac, 1929), pp. 118 ff.
32. R. G. Kiesewetter, Die Musik der Araber (Leipzig,
1842); Helmholtz, op. cit., pp. 264, 285; 525.
33. A. H. Fox Strangways, The Music of Hindostan (Ox-
ford : Clarendon Press, 1914), pp. 118 if.
34. John Hazedel Levis, The Foundations 0.' Chinese Musi-
cal Art (Peiping: Henri Vetch, 1936), P: 91.
35. Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 229 c.
36. Heinz Trefzger, "Ueber das K'in, seine Geschichte,
seine Technik, seine Notation, und seir.e Philsophie,"
Scbuievzerische Musibeitung, LXXXVIII (1948), 81 fI.
37. Helmholtz, op. cit., pp. 262 c, 263 a, 228 e.
CHAPTER III
1. Reese, Music in the Middle Ages, p. 48, note 90.
2. Helmholtz, op. cit., Ch. XIV, pp. 250-90.
3. Sir John Stainer maintains that harmony bad its origins
in melcdy. See his Theory of Harmony, Founded on the Tem-
pered Scale (1871). .
4. E. Fischer, "Patagonische Musik," AnthTJpos, Vol. III
(1908); Robert Lehmann-Nitsche, "Patagonische Cesange und
Musikbogen," ibid.
5. For specific works by these authorities see the bibliog-
raphy ill Jaap Kunst's Ethno-Musicology (The Hague: Mar-
tinus Nijhoff, 1955), pp. 65 fI.
6. Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 243 b.
132 NOTES TO PAGES 34-45
7. Max Wertheimer, "Musik der Wedda," Sammelbiinde der
Int ernationalen MuSikgesellschaft, XI (1909), 300 ff.
8. Thrasybulus Georgiades, Vers und Sprache: Musik und
Sprache (Berlin, 1954).
9. Father Witte, "Lieder und Cesange der Ewe Neger,"
Anthropos, Vol. I (1906) .
10. Otto Crusius, Die delphischen Hymnen. Untersuchun-
gen tiber Texte und Melodien (G6ttingen, 1894).
11. Witte, in Anthropos, Vol. I.
12. Frances Densmore, "The Melodic Formation of Indian
Songs," Journal of Washington Academy of Sciences, XVIII
(1928), 395-408; "What Intervals do Indians Sing?" American
Anthropologist, XXXI (1929), 271-76.
13. Wertheimer, lac. cit .
14. E. Fischer, in Anthropos, Vol. III. On the musical bow
see also Belfour, The Natural History of the Musical Bow
(1899).
15. Reese, lac. cit.
16. Erich von Hornbostel, "Wanyarnwesi-Cesange," Anthro-
pas, Vol. IV (1909).
17. Jules Combarieu, La musique et la magic: Etude sur les
origines populaires de Tar: musical, son influence et sa fonc-
tion dans les societes (Paris, 1909) .
18. Albert Howard, "The Aulas or Tibia," Harvard Studies
in Philology, Vol. IV (1893). A modem standard work is
Kathleen Schlesinger's The Greek Aulos (London, 1939) .
19. Weber, it may be noted, uses "practical" as a term to
refer both to everyday conduct, as above when he referred
to magical musical formulae as practical, and to instrumental
requirements, as in the present context.
20. Helmholtz, op. cit., Ch. XVI, pp. 310-30, 514 II.
21. Ibid., p. 242 a.
22. Ibid., p. 217 a.
23. For Byzantine church modes see H. J. W. Tillyard, By-
zantine Music and '. Hymnography (1923) ; Egon Wellesz,
Byzantinische Musik (1927) .
24. K. Keworkian, "Die armenische Kirchenmusik," Sam-
melbiinde der Internationalen Musikgesellschaft, Vol. I; also
NOTES TO PAGES 46-60
133
Egon Wellesz, "Die annenische Messe und ihre Musik,"
Peters Jahrbuch (1920).
25. For a new comparative study of Christian and Jewish
liturgy and music see Erich Werner, The Sacred Bridge (New
York: Columbia Univ. Press, 1956).
26. Erich M. von Hornbostel, "Melodic und Skala," Peters
[ahrbucli (1913) .
27. On pseudo-Aristotelian theories see Ch. Edmond Henrie
de Coussemaker, Scriptores de musica medii aeoi, 4 vols.
(1864-1876); also Carl Stumpf, Die pseudo-aristotelisoheti
Probleme tiber die Musik: (1897) .
CHAPTER IV
1. Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 267 c.
2. Stumpf, Die pseudo-aristotelischen Probleme tiber die
Musik.
3. Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 278 d.
4. Ibid., p. 266 b, c.
5. Camille Saint-Saens, "Lyres et cithares en Lavignac," En-
cqclopedu: de la musique, I (1912), 538 f.
6. For a discussion of Aristotle's explanation of the mese
see Helmholtz, op. cit., pp. 2 4 ~ 1 . .
7. Kiesewetter, Die Musik der Araber nach Originalquellen
dargestellt; Villouteau, "Description des instruments de mu-
sique des orientaux," in Descriptions de l'Egypte.
8. Pere Collangettes, "Etude sur la musique arabe," Journal
Asiatique (1904-1906).
9. For references to the following discussion see Helmholtz,
op. cii., pp. 282--84.
10. Guido d'Arezzo, Regulae de ignotu cantu and Epistola
Michaeli monachi de ignotu cantu directa, in Martin Gerbert,
Scripiores ecclesiastici de musica sacra, Vol. II (1784); trans.
of Epistola in Oliver Strunk, Source Readings in. Music History
(New York: Norton, 1950), pp. 121 f.
ll. The text of the St. John hymn reads:
Ut queant laxis
resonare fibris
134
NOTES TO PAGES 61-64
mira gestorum
famuli tuorum
solve polluti
labii reatum,
Sancte Johannes .
As translated in Reese, Music of the Middle Ages (p. 150),
this reads: "That with enfranchised voices thy servants may
be able to proclaim the wonders of thy deeds, remove the sins
of (their ) polluted lips, a holy John."
12. The design of the solmisation scale shown here is taken
from August Wilhelm Ambros, Geschichte der Musik, 2nd ed.
(Leipzig, 1881), p. 174.
ee
dd
cc
bb
aa
g
f
e
d
c
b
la
la sol
sol fa
fa mi
la mi re
sol re ut hexachordum durum superacutum
fa ut. hexachordum molIe acutum
la mi
la sol re
sol fa 'I t hexachordum naturale acutum
fa mi
a la mi re
G sol re ut. .... . ........ hexachordum durum acutum
F fa ut .... ... ..... . . .. . hexachordum molle grave
E la mi
D sol re
C fa ut. hexachordum naturale grave
B mi
A re hexachordum grave
13. As recently by A. H. Fox-Strangways, The Music of
Hindostan (Oxford, 1914).
14. Reese, op. cit.
15. Francois August Gevaert, Hisioire et tlieorie de la
musique de Tantiquite, 2 vols. (Ghent: Annoot-Braeckrnann,
1875--1881); Traite d'harmonie theoretique et pratique, 2 vols.
(Paris: Lemoine, 1905-1907); Gevaert and J. C. Vollgraff (eds.)
Les problemes musiC.1UX d'Aristotle (Ghent: Haste, 1903) .
.' .~ .. , ...
NOTES TO PAGES 64-71 135
16. Hugo Riemann, Handbuch der Musikgeschichte (Leip-
zig, 1901), I, 238 If.
17. Paul Marquard (ed.) Die harmonischen Fragmente des
Aristoxenos (Berlin: Weidmann, 1868).
18. Weber probably refers to the second Delphic hymn. A
good example is given in Sachs, The Rise of Music in the An-
cient World; also in Otto Gombosi, Tonarten und Stimmungen
der antiken Musik (lH39), pp . 124 f.
CHAPTER V
1. Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 556; also Frederick William
Verney, Notes on Siamese Musical Instruments (London,
1885).
2. For Bantu music see Percival R. Kirby, "The Recognition
and Practical Use of the Harmonics of Stretched Strings by the
Bantu of South Africa," Bantu Studies, Vol. VI (1832); "Some
Problems of Primitive Harmony, with Special Reference to
Bantu Practice," South African Journal of Science, Vol. XXIII
(1926); "A Study of Negro Harmony," Musical Quarterly, Vol.
XVI (1930).
S. Eduard August Grell, Aufsiitze und Gutachten iiber
Musik, ed. by Johann Gottfried Heinrich Bellerrnann (Berlin,
1887) .
4. An exhaustive bibliography of Bellermann's publications
appears in Dietrich Sasse, Familie Bellermann, Musik in
Geschichte und Gegenwart (Cassel, 1949-1951), I, 1606 f .
5. "Rudolph Westphal, Die Fragmente und Lehrsiiize der
griechischen Rhythn'tiker (1861); Geschichie der alten und
mittelalterlichen Musik (Breslau, 1864); Sachs, The Rise of
Musi'J in the Ancient World, pp. 256 f.
6. For a comprehensive discussion of polyphony in ancient
cultures see Sachs, op. cit., pp. 48 if., 289 If.
7. On the problem of many-voiced music in Hellas see
Ellis' footnote to Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 251 a,
8. Manfred Bukofzer, "Sumer is icumen in"; A Revision
(Berkeley: Univ. of Calif. Publications in Music, No.2, 1944),
p.79.
9. Weber refers to the innumerable contrapuntal settings of
NOTES TO PAGES 72.-80
German Lieder during the sixteenth century composed by
Flemish and German authors such as Isaac, Senfl, Hofhaimer,
and Heinrich Finck.
10. On the rules of polyvocal progression as developed
since the twelfth century see Riemann, Geschichte der Musik-
theorie (Leipzig, 1898); also John F. Spratt, "Contrapuntal
Theory of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries from the
Geschichte der Musikiheorie by Hugo Riemann," Studies in
Music History and Theory (Tallahassee, 1955), pp. 41 f.
11. E. M. von Hornbostel, "Phonographierte islandische
Zwiegesange," Deutsche Islandforschung (Breslau, 1933) .
12. The interval of the tritone is touched in the first three
measures of the first Delphic hymn as quoted by Sachs, op.
cit., P: 240. .
13. Weber refers to mass and motet compositions of com-
posers of the Burgundian and Flemish schools-Dufay,
Okeghem, Obrecht, etc.
14. Henricus Glareanus, Glareani Dodechachordon (Basel,
1547), ed. and tr. by Peter Bohn, Publikation alterer prak-
tischer und. theoretischer Musikwerke, Vol. XVI (Leipzig,
1888) .
15. Reese, Music in the Middle Ages, pp. 360 f.
16. Sachs, op. cit., pp. 48 a, 289 if.
17. Riemann, Handbuch der Musikgeschichte, 3rd rev. ed.
(Leipzig, 1923), I, 120 if.
13. Jaap Kunst, Music in Java, Its History, Its Theory and
Its Technique, 2 vols. (The Hague, 1949); also Curt Sachs,
Der Gamelan. 50. lahreebericht der Staatlichen Akademischen
Hochschule fur Musik in Berlin (1929), pp. 230 ff.
19. Erich von Hornbostel, "Ueber die Musik der Kubu, " in
B. Haben, Die Orang-Kubu auf Sumatra (Frankfurt-Main,
1908); repro in Sammelbiinde fur vergleichende Musikwissen-
schaft, I (1922), 359 Jr.
20. Sh. lsawa, Collection of Koto Music (Tokyo, 1888,
1913).
21. Helmholtz, op. cit., p. 243 b.
22. A. Dirr, "25 georgische Volkslieder,' Anthropos, Vol. V
(19.10) .
NOTES TO PAGES 81-89 137
23. Hucbald, De Harmonica Institutionis, in Gerbert, op.
cit ., I, 104 fr.; anon., Musica enchiriadis, ibid., pp. 18 fr.
24. Erich von Hornbostel, "Ueber Mehrstirnmigkeit in der
aussereuropaischen 1'1 usik," III, Kongress der 1nternationalen
Musikgesellschaft (Vienna, 1909), pp. 298 fr.
25. Wilhelm Heintz, "Musikinstrumente und Phonograme
des Ost-Mbarn-Landes," in F. and M. Thorbecke, 1m Hoch-
land {Jam Mittelkamerun (Vienna, 1909), pp. 298 ff.
26. Charles Emile Ruelle, Collection des auteurs grecs rela-
tifs it la musique Alypius et Gaudence (1895); A. Samojloff,
Die olpiudschen Reihen der altgriechischen
Archiv fiir Musikwissenschaft, Vol. I (1924).
27. Oscar Fleischer, Neumenstudien. Abhandlung iiber mit-
telaltcrliche Gesangstobschriften, 3 vols. (Leipzig, 1895-1897);
Hugo Riemann, Studiei: zur Geschichte der Notenschrift
(1878) ; Antone Fr. J. Thibaut, Ueber Reinheit der Tonkunst,
2nd rev. ed. (Heidelberg, 1826); Oscar von Riesemann, Die
Notat ionen des altrussischen Kirchengesanges (1907) .
28. Athanasius Kircher, Musurgia universal is sive ars magna
consoni et dissoni, 2 vols. (Rome, 1650).
29. Johannes Wolf, Geschichte der Mensuralnotatioti von
1250--1460, 3 vols. (Leipzig: Brietkopf und Gaertel, 1904) .
30. Fr. Caffi, Storie della musica ... di S. Marco in Venezia,
2 vols. (Venice, 1854-1855) .
31. Franz Xavier Haberl, "Die romische Schola Cantorum
und die papstlichen Kapellsanger,' Vierteljahrschrift fiir
Musikwissenschaft, Vol. III (1887) .
32 With the Flemish school Weber refers to both Burgun-
dian and Flemish schools.
33 Raphael Georg Kiesewetter (Edler von Wiesenbrun),
Die Verdienste der io/iederliinder um die Toi-kunst (1826) .
CHAPTER VI
1. For selections ef Peter Wagner's writings on the Gregorian
chant see Reese, Music in the Middle Ages, p. 439; Hans
Joachim Moser, Musik Lexikon, 4th rev. ed. (Hamburg, 1955);
for the writings of Francois Auguste Gevaert see Les Origines
du chant liturgique de l'eglise latine (Ghent, 1890) and La
13
8
NOTES TO PAGES 89-100
melopee antique dans le chant de l'eglise laiine (Ghent, 1895-
1896).
2. See particularlyManuel Bryennios, Harmonics, in J. Wal-
lis, Opera math. (1699).
3. F. Cascue, "Origen de la musica popular vascogada,"
Revista into de Estudios Vase os (1913).
4. Father Witte, in Anthropos, Vol. I (1906).
5. William H. Grattan Flood, The Story of the Bagpipe
(London,1911). '
6. Helmholtz, op. cit., pp. 77, 545 fr.
7. Ibid., pp. 280-8;1,515-17.
8. Ibid., p. 517 b.
9. See Henry George Farmer, The Music and Musical In-
struments of the Arub (London: F. Salvador Daniel, 1915);
"The Influence of Al-Farabi's Ihsa' al' ulum (De Scientiis) on
the Writers on Music in Western Europe," Journal of the
Royal Asiatic Society (1931), pp. 349 ff.; Al Farabi's Arabic
Latin Writings on Milsic (Glasgow, 1934).
10. Helmholtz, op. cii., p. 517 b.
11. Heinz Trefzger, "Ueber das Kin, seine Geschichte,
seine Technik, seine Notation und seine Philosophic,"
Schweizerische Musikzeitung, LXXXVIII (1948),81 ff.; R. M.
Marks, "The Music and Musical Instruments of Ancient
China," Musical Qumterly, Vol. XVIII (1933).
12. Helmholtz, op. cit ., p. 556 a.
13. Ibid., pp. 518 d, 522 b. Compare also references in note
18, Chapter V, and Manfred F. Bukofzer, "The Evolution of
Javanese Tone Systems," Papers Read at the International
Congress of Musicology (New York, 1939).
14. Carl Stumpf, "Tonsyst em und Musik der Siarnesen,"
Beitrage zur Akustik und Musikwissenschaft, repro in Sammel-
biinde fur vergleichende Musikwissenschaft, Vol. I (1922).
15. On the holiness of numbers see the discussions of Jules
Combarieu: La musique et la magie (Paris, 1909); Hisioire de
la musique (Paris, 1913), I, 39.
16. Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Essay on the True Art of
Playing Keyboard Instruments, ed. and tr. by William J.
Mitchell (New York: Norton, 1949).
NOTES TO PAGES lOl-115
139
17. Helmholtz, op. cit., P: 356 b, R. de Recy, "Rarneau et
les encyclopedistes," Revue des deux mondcs (1886); A. R.
Oliver, The Encyclopedists as Critics of Music (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1947).
CHAPTER VII
1. Wantzloeben, Das Monochord als Instrument und als
System (Halle, 1911) .
2. Curt Sachs, Reallexikon der Musikinstrumenie (Berlin,
1913).
3. G. Hart, The Violin (1875); A. Vidal, Les Instruments a
I'archet (1876); Carl Engel, Researches into the Early History
of the Violin Family (1883).
4. Edward Jones, Musical Relics of the Welsh. Bards (1794);
Francis William Galpin, Old English Instruments of Music,
Their History and Character (London, 1911).
5. T. Gwyn Jones, "Bardism and Romance," Transactions of
the Honorable Society of Cymmrodorion (1913-1914) .
6. Sebastian Virdung, Music getutscht (Basel, 1511), ed. by
Leo Schrade (Cassel: Baerenreiter, 1931).
7. By Renaissance Weber here means the early baroque
period.
8. Kathleen Schlesinger, "Researches into the Origins of the
Organs of the Ancients," Sammelbiinde der Internationalen
Musikgesellschaft, II (1900-1901),167 If.
9. J. W. Warman, "The Hydraulic Organ of the Ancients,"
Proceedings of the Music Association (1903-1904); Francis
W. Galpin, "Notes on a Hydraulis," The Reliquary (1904);
Charles Macleau, "The Principle of the Hydraulic Organ,"
Sammelbiinde der Intern,ationalen Musil(gesellschaft, VI
(1905), 183 If.; R. Tannery, "L'Invention de l'hydraulis," Revue
des etudes grecques; Vol. XII (1908).
10. Conrad Amelin (ed.), "Fundarnentum organisandi Mag-
ister Conradi Paumans," Locheimer Liederbuch.
11. Riemann, Gesichte der Musiktheorie (1898), pp. 20 If.
12. B. A. Wallner, Buxheimer Orgelbuch, fac, reprint in
Documenta Musicoiogica (Cassel: Baerenreiter, 1955).
13. See Dam Anselm Hughes, Early Medieval Music up to
140 NOTES TO PAGES 116-122
1300 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1954), pp. 81, 100.
14. Georg Christian Rietschel, Di e Aufgahen der Orgel im
evangelischen Gottesdienst bis ins 18. ] ahrhundert (1893).
15. Weber refers to Luther's interest in Josquin's and
Senfl's music. Emphasis on art music can also be seen in
Johann Walther's four- and five-part chorale settings.
16. Hans David and Arthur Mendel, The Bach Reader
(New York: Norton, 1945), P: 24.
17. Helmholtz, op. cit.; p. 206 c.
18. Bernhard Engelke, Musikgeschichte in Magdeburger
Dam his 1631 (1913); Wackerbarth, Music and the Anglo-
Saxons, pp. 12-15.
19. Carl Auerbach, Die deutsche Klavichordkunst des 18.
[ahrhunderts (Cassel : Baerenreiter, 1930); H. Neupert, Vas
Klavichord (Cassel: Baerenreiter, 1949) .
20. Margaret H. Glyn, "The National School of Virginal
Music in Elizabethan Times;' Proceedings of the Music Asso-
ciation, Vol. XLIII (1917).
21. A famous instrument of this sort was that of the Renais-
sance theorist Nicolog Vincentino who defends it in his
L'antica musica ridotta ella moderna prattica (1555).
22. Weber is referring to the beginning of the seventeenth
century.
23. Ralph Kirkpatrick, Domenico Scarlatti (Princeton, N.J.,
and London, 1953) .
24. E. Closson, La facture des instruments de musique en
Belgique (Brussels, 1935).
25. David and Mendel, op. cit., pp. 306 fE.
26. A. Mooser, Gottfried Silbermann (Langensalza, 1857).
Index
ABRAHAM, 0 ., 34
Acoustical laws : pythagorean
theory of, xxvii
Admiralty Islands, music of: use
of second parallels, 81
Agoge petipheres: use of b-flat
string in modulation, 56
Al Farabi, 95, 96
Amanites, music of : 'pentatonic
basis, 15, 16
Amati family, no
Arabic Music : use of fourths and
fifths, xli, 47, 52, 56, 62, 64,
96; use of integral 7, 12-13;
scale freedom, 22; develop-
ment of theory, 26-29; exclu-
sion of use of near-lying tones,
42; range of instruments, 43;
use of minor second, 49; influ-
ence on Javanese music, 58;
loss of notation, 84; restriction
of harmony in Asia Minor, 93;
as drill ground of musical ex-
perimentalism, 94
Archimedes, 112
Archytas of Tarentum, 24,30
Aristophanes, 24
Aristotle, 70
Aristoxenus, 64, 98
Armenian music : recitative-like
final cadence, 46
BACH;Johann Sebastian, xlvi, 7,
44, 69, 100, 116
Bach, Philipp Emanuel, 121
Bagpipe: primitive instrument of
cattle breeders, 93. See also
Organ
Bamboo flute: as key instrument
of Chinese, 27
Bantu Negroes, music of: legends
and recitations, 67; use of
fourth and fifth parallels, 81;
use of thirds in instrumental
interludes, 82
Bards: influence on development
of strings, 106-8
Basevis, Sig. A., 8
Beethoven, Ludwig van, 122
Bellerman, Johann Gottfried, 69
Bryennies, 26, 37
Byzantine music : use of fourths
and fifths, xl, 52 ; use of inte-
gral 7, 13; scale freedom, 22;
tone progressions, 37; conver-
sion of church modes into type
of octave, 45; use of repercus-
sion interval, 49, 50; transposi-
tion devices, 58; modulation,
73; use of notation, 84; split-
ting of semitones, 89; use of
organ as festival instrument,
112
141
14
2
CAMEROUN, music of: har-
monic use of third, 81
Canon: nature of, 70
Cembalo: as predecessor of piano,
118-19
Charnbormieres, Jacques Cham-
pion, 120
Chinese music: pent atonicism,
xxii, 7; use of integral 7, 12;
avoidance of chromaticism, 16,
47; lack of tetrachord theory,
21; division of octave into Iii,
29; elements of harmonic-
homophonic music in, 77; het-
erophony in, 80; primitive
character of notation, 84; plas-
ticity, 90; mechanical creation
of intervals, 96; search for
common denominator for in-
tervals, 97
Chippewa music : pentatonic
character, xxxii, 17
Chladni, Ernst Flores Friedrich,
13
Chopin, Frederic Francois, 122
Chromaticism: harmonic inter-
pretation, xxii ; of Japanese
music, xxxii; of Negro melo-
dies, xxxii; antagonism to pen-
tatonicism, 16; chromatic
scales and the aulas, 24; re-
cency of, 25; avoidance by
Guido d'Arezzo, 60; internal
development, 91
Christoferi, 120
Church modes: order of composi-
tion, 48; melodic formula in,
45
Circle of fifths: as theoretical
basis of tuning, 53-54
Cistercians, music of: puritanical
character, 16; preference for
the third, 20
Clavichord: predecessor of piano,
117
Clements, E., 128
INDEX
Closson, E., 140
C-Major scale : as foundation of
modern harmonic tone system,
11-12; emergence of tonic,
dominant, and subdominant,
60
Collangettes, Pere, 26, 56, 57
Comma of Didymos, 128-29
Contrapuntal polyphony: nature
of, xliii; as form of polyphony,
68; height in work of J. S.
Bach, 69; development, 71;
rules, 71-72
Congress of Bards : on playing of
crwth, xlix, 107
Consonances, 6
Corelli, Arcangelo, 108, 111
Cossack music, 38
Counterpoint melodies, 9
Crusius, Otto, 35
Crwth: xlix, 107
DENSMORE, Frances, 17,19
Diatonicism: in Western music,
89; reaction against, 90-93
Diatonic scale, xxiv, 4
Dissonance, and harmonic triads,
6; in contrapuntal polyphony
and chordal harmony, 75
Drone bass, 79
Dominant seventh chord: how
formed, 5; role in modulation,
5; irrational properties of, 6-8
EASTERN-ASIATIC music:
compared to Western, xxx; use
of integral 7, 13; lack of final
cadences, 48; elements of har-
monic homophony in, 77; plas-
ticity,90
Elizabeth I, of England, Ill, 119
Enharmonicism: as problem of
melodic refinement, 24; more
recent than diatonlcisrn, 25;
Hellenic, 91
INDEX
Enharmonic scales: probable first
appearance, 24
Erastesthenes, 24
Euripides, 24
Ewe Negro music : tone language,
36; beginnings of melodies, 49;
variations on motive, 51; musi-
cal expressiveness, 92
-FALSETTO: in yodeling, 38; in
Wanyamwesi music, 39
Faux-bourdon: use of thirds and
sixths, 74; and rise of harmonic-
homophonic music, 79
Fischer, 0, 37
Flaubert, Gustave, 8:)
Fleischer, Oscar, 16, 36
Folk heterophony: in Russian
folk songs, 80
Fugue: origins and development,
70
Fulah Negro music, XOO, 15
GAGAKU music: and role of
koto,79
Callie music: sovereignty of an-
he.mitonic, 16
Cerrian music: use ef notation,
8E'
Cevaert, F. A., 64, 89
Clareanus, Heinrich, '75
Greater perfect system: use of
concluding formulae, xxxviii;
use of fifths and fourths, xl
Greek music: use of fifths and
fourths, xl; differentiation of
Greek modes from magical
formulae, 40-41; range of in-
struments, 43; lack of tonic
and triadic comprehension, 43.
See also Hellenic music
Cregorian chant: tone progres-
sions in, 37; melodic clausulae,
50
Grell Eduard August, 69
143
Guarneri family, no
Guido d'Arezzo, 59, 60, 85, 86,
90
Guilds: and fixing of instrument
types, xlix, 107, no
HAND, F., 19
Harmonic chord music: basic
facts of th e system , 3-6; tonal-
ity, 5; ten sions in, 10. See also
Harmony; Polyphony; Dia-
tonicism
Harrnonic-hcrnophonic music:
nature of, 76; as form of poly-
vocality, 16-82; role of nota-
tion in development of, 82-88
Harmony: as factor in rationali-
zation of music, 3-10
Hauptmann, Moritz, 12
Haydn, Joseph, 108
Hellenic music: use of harmonic
third, 14; scales, 21; trope
spondee, 22; melodic transpo-
sition, 32; use of intervals, 42;
final cadences, 48; initial for-
mulae, 49. diffusion, 50; im-
portance 0.:four th in, 52; theo-
ries of, 53; construction of
synemmenon, 56; as combin a-
tion of diazeutic and conjunct
tetrachords, 56-57; tonal al-
phabets, 5D; effects of melodic
refinement in, 63; tension of
melodic and harmonic require-
ments, 65; lack of contra-
puntalism, 69; elements of
harmonic-homophonic music,
77; notation in, 84; enhar-
monicism, 91; interval meas-
urement, 9/; use of enharmonic
partial tones, 100. See also
Greek music
Hellenistic music: scale freedom,
22; regiond significance, 23;
influenced hy instrumental in-
tervals,23
144
Helmholtz, Hermann, 6, 8, 17,
18,20,33,34,41,42,44,117,
123
Heterophony: as preparatory
stage of co-ordinating polyph-
ony, 79
Hieronymous of Moravia, 106
Hindemith, Paul H. , xxix
Hindu music: pentatonic scales
of, 16-17; Ansa tonality,' 34;
avoidance of tonal skips in, 37;
magical tone formulae of, 41;
keys as accidental scales, 42;
role of percussion instruments
in final cadences, 79
Hirsau, Wilhelm von, 49
Hornbostel, Eric von, 34, 38, 46,
47, 48, 78, 81, 82
Hucbald, 81, 86
Hymn of the Delphic Apollo:
anachronistic style, 22; lan-
guage accent in, 35
Hypo keys: formed from sub-
dominant, 52
IBSEN, H., 83
Iceland, music of: characteristics
of folk songs, 77
Imitation: in fifteenth century,
71
Indian music: pentatonicism of,
xxxii; scale freedom, 22; equiv-
alents of solmisation in, 59;
search for interval measure,
97; fifths as fundamental har-
monic intervals, 96
Indonesian music: use of fourth
and fifth parallels, 81
Instrumental bass: and descend-
ing structuration of melody, 62
Instrument makers: and modern
orchestra, 108-11
Instruments: role in musical
rationalization, xlii-I, 104-24;
effects on polyvocality, xliv;
range, 43; role in origin of keys,
INDEX
54; social ranking of, 111;
development of keyboard in-
struments, 112-24; the piano,
117-24
JAPANESE music : use of inte-
gral 7, 12; pentatonicism, 15;
chromaticism, 16; fourths and
fifths in, 51; harmonic-homo-
phonic music, 77; role of koto
in gagaku music, 79; heteroph-
any in, 80; use of seconds in
gagaku music, 81; plasticity of,
90; deviations from tempered
tuning in, 99
Javanese music: use of fourth and
fifth, xl, xli, 21, 56; division of
octave, xlviii, 97, 101; penta-
tonicism, 15, 17; avoidance of
chromaticism, 16; pelog scale,
21; harmonic-homophonic mu-
sic, 77
Jewish synagogue music: penta-
tonicism in, xxxii, 16; range of
fourth to sixth, 37; develop-
ment of tropes, 50
John the Eighth, Pope, 115
Jongleurs: use of lyre, 106
KEYBOARD instruments: and
problem of temperament,
xlviii-xlix, 112-24
Keys: origin in rationalization of
melodic formulae, 53-56
Kiesewetter, Raphael Georg, 26,
56, 88
Kircher, Athanasius, 86
Kirnberger, Johann Phil., 12
Kithara: in Hellenic music, 27
Knies, Karl, xiii
Koto: in Japanese music, 79
Kubu music: vocal bourdon in
upper voice, 79
Kiihreihen: influenced by Wald-
horn, 38 .._, .,*,,-,
INDEX
LAND, J. C. N., 21
Langobards; music of: use of
second parallels, 81
Language: as factor in musical
rationalization, xxxiv, xlii;
effects on ancient melody, 35-
36
Linjeff, Mrs., 80
Liszt, Franz, 122
.Lithuanian music: pentatoni-
cism in, 15
Louis the Pious, 112
Lii r.In Chinese musical scale, 29
Lute: in Arabic music, 27
Luther, Martin, 116
MAGIC: effects on music, xxv-
xxxvii, xlii; effects on primitive
melody, 36; magical formulae,
40-41 .
Medieval music: elimination of
harmonic third, 14; decline of
fourth, 20; equalization of
scale intervals, 32-33; melodic
formulae in church modes, 45;
fourth as a dissonance, 52;
dominance of harmony over
melody, 65
Melody: role in rationalization of
music, 3-10; determination of
chord progressions, 8-10; rests
on intervallic distances, 9; scale
freedom of, 22; determination
of scale intervals, 30; tonality
equivalents in ancient, 32-50;
rationalization of formulae and
origin of keys, 53-56
Menetriers: role of in standardi-
zation of instruments, xlix, 107
Meschaka, M., 28
Mesomedies, 64
Middle class: and the piano,
120-24
Minor scale: harmonic ambiguity,
10
Modulation, 5
145
Mongoli an music: pentatonicism,
15
Monochord: in Occidental music,
27; as school instrument, 59
Monodic melody: Helmholtz'
theory, 8
Monteverdi, Claudio , III
Mozart , Wolfgang Amadeus, 121
Musica Enchiriadis: and develop-
ment of notation, xlv
NEUMES: use in Orient and
Occident, 85-86; plasticity of
interpretations, 90
Notation, musical: as prerequisite
of modem composition, xxii,
82-88; and compromise be-
tween theory and practice, lxv;
compared to writing, xlvi, 83;
in Arabic, Hellenic, and Chi-
nese music, 84
OPERA: and development of
harmonic-homophonic music,
76
Orestes: and use of chromaticism
and enharmonicism, 24
Orfeo: and employment of new
instruments, 111
Organ: development of, 112-17;
as combination of bagpipes,
112; builders of, 115
Otfried, 104
PAINTING, western: rational
use of perspective, xxii
Palestrina, 6 ~ l
Papuan music; pentatonicism in,
xxxii, 15
Pari sot. J., 37
Patagonian music: intonational
deviations, 33; melodies ren-
dered in nonsense syllables,
35; and capacity to imitate
' European melodies, 53; rests
on range of seventh, 37
Pelog scale: theory of Arabic
origin, 21
Pentatonicism: nature of, xxi; as
basis of Chinese music:, 15; and
problem of semitone, 16--17;
and use of the third, 18-19;
based on fourth, 19-:n; prob-
ably not primitive, 18; as
partial rationalization, 19; as
combination of two :liaze'utic
fourths, 21-22
Persian music: keys as accidental
scales, 42
Piano: becomes middle-class in-
strument, I, 120; development
of,117-24
Pindar,64
Plato, 24, 29
Plutarch, 22, 24, 25
Polyphony: meaning, 66; evolu-
tion of Western, 66--88; con-
trapuntalism, 68-69
Polyvocality: occurrence, xxiii;
in non-Western cultures, xlii;
three basic types, xliii; expres-
siveness within, 65; l .armonic-
homophonic types, 76-82; fac-
tors producing, 83; rcle played
by organ in development of,
114
Polysonority: employment in mu-
sical systems, xxiii; as a form
of polyvocality, 66-8S
Pre diatonic scale systems: ra-
tionalization in terms of the
integral, 7, XXX; in relation to
Western scales, L.-31; as
foundations for musical ra-
tionalization, 11-31
Pr ediatonic scale systems: ra-
tionalization in terms of the
interval 7, xxx; in relation to
Western scales, 1.1-31; as
foundations for musical ration-
alization, 11-31
Primitive music systems: rules for
INDEX
concluding formulae, XXXVlll;
characteristics of melodicism,
34; magic, 40; expressiveness,
42; tonality built around oc-
tave, fifth, and fourth, 39
Professionalization: effects of,
42-44
Pseudo-Aristotle, 47, 53, 69
Ptolemy, 30
Pythagoras, 53
RAGA system: and complexity
of Hindu scales, xxxii
Rameau, Jean Philippe, 8, 100,
103
Rational social action: meaning
and importance, xix; in Occi-
dental development, xviii-xxi
Religious change: and function
of organ, 115, 117
Riemann, Hugo, 16, 60, 64, 77,
86
Rietschel, G. C., 116
Rubeba: Oriental predecessor of
string instruments, 104
Ruckers family, 1, 120
Russian folk songs: and peasant
heterophony,80
SACHS, Curt, xxxv, xliii
Sacred music: restricted range
of,36-37
Scaldic art : compared to musical
virtuosity, 92
Scale-alien tones : role of in chord
aesthetics, 9
Scales: musical diatonic, xxiv;
rationalization in terms of
prime numbers, 12-15; in
terms of fifths and fourths and
modern tonality, 51-65; equal-
ization of tones, 93
Scarlatti, Domenico, 120
Schiller, Friedrich, xxi
Scottish music: pentatonicism in,
sovereignty (If anhemi-
tonic, 16
Secular music; expanded range
of, 38-39
Seventh chord: irrational proper-
ties of, xxviii; formation of, 5
Siamese music : divi sion of oc-
tave, xlviii , 101; seven-tone
scale, 97; origin of scale , 98
scale . theory of origin,
2]
Social actions: nature and types,
xv
Social relations: nature of, xvi
Sociology of music: theories, xii
Social structure, nature of, xvii;
rational forms of, xix-xx
Solmisation: in Occidental music,
55-60
Sruti : intervals of Hindu scales,
29
Steir way family, 122
Stradivari family, 110
String instruments; origin, 104;
as nucleus of modem orches-
tra, 108
Stumpf, Carl, xxxv, 34 . 44,81,98
Swabian folk music, 13
Synod of Cloveshoe,
TEWPERAMENT: how deter-
mined, xxvi-xxviii - modem,
xlviii, and rationalization of
nonharmonic tones, xlii -l, 97-
101; equalization ill tone sys-
tem, xl-xlviii; and occurrence
of fifths and fourths, 51; in
Western music, 89-:'.03; mean-
ing of, 97; and Intervallic me-
lodicism, 98; unequal, 99; and
organ builders, 115
Tertullian, 112
Theodosius,112
Thibaut, Jo n., 86
Togoland, music of: harmonic
use of third, 81
147
Tolstoi, Leo, xxi
Tonality : an I resolution of dis-
sonances into consonances,
xxviii; substitutes form, xxx-
xxxi, 32-;30; as organizing
principle, 5; Helmholtz' theory,
33-34; pr imitive equivalents,
34-35; ancient equivalents,
44-50; in scale rationalization,
51-64
Transposition : and equalization
of intervals, 32-33; role of
fourths and fifths in, 51-53
Trilles, Po, 67, 82
Trumscheit : as predecessor of
string instruments, 105
Tuning: basic types, xlvii
UNEQUAL floating tempera-
ment: Schlick's theory, 99
VILLOTEAV, Guillaume Andre,
26,56
Virdung, S., 109
Virtuosos, musical: effects on
rationalization, xxxvii; expres-
siveness and experimentalism,
xlii, 48, 92
Yedda music . early forms of ra-
tionalization, xxxviii; rhythmic
structuralization, 34 ; range,
36; concluding melodic formu-
lae, 46; he terophony in, 80
WALES, muric of: rests on pen-
tatonicism, 15
Wagner, Po, 9
Wanyamwesi music : use of fal-
setto, 39; use of uptones, 46-
47; experimentalism in, 48
Weber, Max: The Protestant
Ethic, xii-xiv; biography, xiii;
theory of social relations, xvi;
conception of rational social
action, xix; on dynamics of
chord progressions, xxix; the-
ory of magiCian as mUSICIan,
xxvi; theories of role of fifth
and fourth in musical rationali-
zation, xl; on comparative ra-
tionality of premodern and
modern music, xli
Wertheimer, Max, 80
Western music: peculiarities,
xxii; rationality of, xxiii., keys
as essential scales, 42
INDEX
Westphal, Rudolph, 69
Wilde, 0 ., 83
Witte, Fr., 92
Wolf, J., 87
YODELING: and hom instru-
ments,38
ZALZAL, 27, 28, 29, 95, 96

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