The "Unwelcome Guest" Regaled - Franz Liszt and The Augmented Triad
The "Unwelcome Guest" Regaled - Franz Liszt and The Augmented Triad
The "Unwelcome Guest" Regaled - Franz Liszt and The Augmented Triad
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The
Franz
"Unwelcome Guest"
Liszt
and
the
Regaled:
AugmentedTriad
R. LARRY TODD
It was Franz Liszt's privilege and burden to assume the leadershipduringthe 1850s of that dynamic, new direction in German music known
as Zukunftsmusik. A privilege, because Liszt
enjoyed artistic freedom at the ducal court in
Weimar to pursue his progressive aims in composition; a burden, because his efforts for the
new music, indeed, for his own music, were by
no means completely understood or accepted.
In his later years Liszt withdrew into a kind of
self-imposed creative isolation, and more and
more his music, especially that of the 1870s and
80s, evinced an unsettling, brooding quality,
93
19TH
CENTURY
MUSIC
3-18.
94
R. LARRY
TODD
The "Unwelcome
Guest"
-----------
-1
46
41
I,
f energico
stringendo sempre
AA
marcatissimo
Prestocon strepito
I-I- W
NM
UO
,fff/of
R
Of
b. Reduction.
i
.
Example 1
he published no music, but sketched a variety of
experimental works, including a visionary
"Revolutionary" Symphony inspired by political events of the day. At least one of Liszt's
sketches boldly displays an augmented triad as
its first sonority, as if to proclaim a new harmonic order.7But Liszt did not immediately
take up the challenge in his published music
that soon followed. To be sure, we begin to find
an increasing number of augmented triads-some of them in flamboyant guise. Upon closer
inspection, however, these examples often divulge a relatively straightforwardapplication of
the triad, as in the Harmonies poetiques et reli-
gieuses, composed in 1833 after a volume of poetry by Lamartine(ex. la).8Here Liszt prolongsa
prominent augmented sonority by an energetic
7Reproducedin Torkewitz, HarmonischesDenken, p. 30.
8Accordingto Main it was completed by 30 October 1833
(Main, "Liszt's Lyon," 243). Liszt then revised the work in
1835 and completely recast it several years later as the
arpeggiation for one full measure as it undergoes enharmonic respelling; yet, we may account for the sonority as an unproblematicpassing chord, a colorful link between statements of
D6 major and D major (see the reduction in ex.
ib).
a.
19TH
CENTURY
MUSIC
marcato
of
-
- ,-
"
l, -
b.
8-1
Example2: Lyon.
96
a. Etudeen douzeexercises.
R. LARRY
TODD
The "Unwelcome
Guest"
Allegrocon fuoco
b. Grandesetudes.
Presto
energico
rin:
8--
Example3
Such works as Harmonies po6tiques et religieuses, Vallee d'Obermann, and Lyon suggest
that the stirrings of Liszt's interest in the augmented triad date from the decade of the 1830s.
The point is made succinctly if we comparethe
opening studies of the Etude en douze exercises
(1826) and the Grandes Etudes (1837), the second set comprising the ambitious and-for pianists- treacherousrevision of the first (see ex.
3a and b). In the second measure of the Etude
Liszt devised a sequential pattern with chromatic passing tones; in the GrandeEtude he reinforced the passing tones at the third, yielding
a series of passing augmented triads. Clearly by
1837 Liszt was beginning to apply the sonority
with increasing confidence, primarily as a
means of imbuing his music with a chromatic
flavor.
A critical turning point in Liszt's perception
of the triadoccurs in his music of the 1840s. The
pivotal work here is the setting of Petrarch's
Sonnet No. 104, "Pace non trovo." Liszt held
this work in high regard;he finished no fewer
than four versions, including the original song
in A6 major (1844-45, S 270/1), a revised arrangement for piano solo in E major (1844-45,
published in 1846 with two other PetrarchSon-
97
19TH
CENTURY
MUSIC
There is, however, one passagein which an augmented triad appears over a dominant pedal
point, and it may be to this that Liszt was referring (mm. 81ff., ex. 4a; the passage appearsearlier as well in the Overture,mm. 124ff.).13
Wagner's augmented triad functions as a
prominent chromatic passing chord(related,incidentally, to the ascending chromatic line in
the cellos); specifically, we may hearit as partof
the prolongation of the dominant, B, the harmonic crux of the passage (ex. 4b). In the first
version of Liszt's Sonnet, on the other hand (ex.
5a), the augmented triad enjoys a new independence: here it functions as an expressive substitute for the secondary dominant, C major, or
V/vi, as the hypothetical revision of ex. 5b reveals. For the second phrase Liszt recasts the
first phrase one step below, on Gb. Extending
our analogy, we may hear the corresponding
augmented triad as standing for Bb,or V/v.
What Liszt wrote, of course, is inestimably
more satisfying than any theoretical recasting.
The alternation between calming consonant
triads and ambivalent augmented triads captures quite beautifully the essence of Petrarch's
sonnet, celebrated throughout the centuries for
its oxymoronic qualities,14its compact, impassioned statement of the poet who finds no peace
but yearns not for strife, who sees without eyes,
and who speaks though mute as he contemplates his beloved Laura.
In his four settings of the sonnet Liszt gradually strengthened the role of the augmented
triad to underscore Petrarch'svivid antitheses.
The closing measures of each setting demonstrate this most strikingly. The final cadence of
189-90. The dates of the four versions cited here are from
SharonWinklhofer'srevision of HumphreySearle's"Liszt"
article in The New Grove Early Romantic
Masters 1
(London,1985).
BInterpretingthe G11erich quotation, SergeGut misleads
by concludingthat the Venusbergexampleis "tresmauvais,
car il ne s'y trouve aucun accord augment6 mais, en
revanche,de nombreusesseptiemes diminu6es."SergeGut,
p. 300.
14A feature that had inspired several sixteenth-century
madrigal settings and poetic imitations. See James Haar,
"Pacenon trovo: A Study in Literaryand Musical Parody,"
Musica Disciplina 20 (1966), 95-149.
98
5"In
consideringthis cadence, Diether de la Motte describes
the voice leading as a "sensationell neuartigeDissonanzbehandlung."Harmonielehre(Kassel,1978),p. 242.
R.LARRY
TODD
The "Unwelcome
a. Wagner,Tannhiiuser,
act I, sc. 1, "Venusberg"
(1845).
Guest"
81
.
.
4-
0 2
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40
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cresc.
I-,.
W#iiti
-b. Reduction.
MIL
Example4
In the A section (mm. 24-55), x unfolds in a
bass melody; it also appearsin the accompaniment above, where it serves as an auxiliary
chord to the F-minor 6 harmony, yielding a
highly charged, dissonant quality (ex. 6d). By
transposing the passage up a fourth, Liszt repeats the music in Bb minor (mm. 28ff.), where
the second augmented triad, y, is heard. The
contrasting B section in Ab major,markedlagrimoso (mm. 56-108), features x in a suspension
figure (ex. 6e). The stirring C section (mm. 10955), a marchlike passage over a steadily intensifying triplet ostinato, uses the pitches of y to determine its tonal plan: three planes of music in
D6, A, and F major.Of the remainderof the com-
19TH
CENTURY
MUSIC
espressivoaccentuatoassai
m'hain
Tal
I I
-
prig
gion,
n6
pre,
ser -
ra,
cio,
49
ne
'J
.49
suo
per
mi
ri - tien,
nZ
scio
glie ii
r~r:.Jrli
r,
Ipp
lac
b. Hypothetical revision.
m'hain prig
Tal
che non
gion,
V/vi
vi
-ra
per
Voi.
L,,f
;,I
'
At''42PP'P-':
Example 5
100
R.LARRY
TODD
The"Unwelcom
Guest"
12
Fried'
ist
ver
Pa
ce
non
Mf.d
.:'
sagt
tro
mir
-
vo,
dolce
>
sempreuna corda
104
iff
bf.
Arl.
.
3
ritenuto
T
I
.perdendo
hei~
b-"
Example 5 (continued)
a.
19TH
CENTURY
MUSIC
x
Introduzione
1-
pesante
>
>
>
>
sf=
'
'
1"**
sempre marcato
18
fff
d.
e.
56
L
24
lagrimoso
sot o
dolc
voce
pesante
una corda
Pii lento
dolcissimo
189
(cresc.) -
f-
pp
??
7b). The augmented triad, which moves inconclusively to D minor, is a chromatic transformation of the vi6 chord of m. 2, a writhing musical counterpartto the text "Ich trag'im Herzen
viel Schlangen."
But most grippingof all is the bitter climax of
the song, "und dich, Geliebte mein!" At least
one critic, Louis K6hler,commented on this extraordinarypassage, focusing his attention, understandably enough, on its dissonant suspension chord,16which, he maintained, might well
cause musicians to faint. But K6hlerdid not notice how Liszt outlined the augmented triad in
the vocal line (A-F?-C#), and injected it into
the piano postlude, including the final cadence
(C#-E#-A).
Three other songs may be mentioned more
briefly. In Ein Fichtenbaum steht einsam (S
389; ca. 1845, published 1860) Liszt joins augmented triads to the image of the windswept,
desolate northern pine, in contrast to lyrical
music for the idealized vision of a southern
palm. Mourning for lost love again serves as a
topical allusion in this famous poem, the midpoint of Heine's Lyrisches Intermezzo. In
Freudvoll und leidvoll, from Goethe's Egmont
(S 280; 1844, revised 1860), Liszt introduces
augmented triads for the phrase "zum Tode betriibt." And finally, in Die Viatergruft(S 281;
1844, published 1860), he invokes augmented
triads for the eerie music of spirits who greet an
old warrior, preparedfor death, as he enters a
chapel to take his place alongside the coffins of
his ancestors.
To summarize: by the end of the 1840s Liszt
had made several advances in developing the
augmented triad. The sonority now appearsin a
wider range of applications, including melodic
outlines, enharmonic progressionsand modulations, and cadential passages. Simply put, the
triad begins to affect in more profound ways
Liszt's compositional logic. And no less important, it conveys topical themes of death, mourning, or grief. It is perhapsno surprisethat Liszt's
increasing interest in the augmented triad
parallels the development of his approach to
programmatic music during the 1840s.
R. LARRY
TODD
The "Unwelcome
Guest"
a.
19TH
CENTURY
MUSIC
Heftig deklamiert
sind
mei - ne
Lie - der
wie
k6nnt
es
an
- ders
sein?
vi6
b.
19
Allegromolto
Ich
rit.
und
gen,
im
trag'
zen viel
Her
Schlan
Ge
dich,
lieb
te
mein!
A
-A
a tempo
agitato
'
"
Srozi
me
1[v-IV
P-i
ge-u"
df
rn
a temp
dim.
morendo
a. Schumann,Humoresque,op.20.
R.LARRY
TODD
The"Unwelcome
Einfach
Guest"
in _
14
hel-ler nur
em - por.
:;111
Example 8
cord der quintae superfluae,"Heinichen recommended, should only be used in the free style of
composition, and then only on rare occasions
105
19TH
CENTURY
MUSIC
that, because of its dissonant qualities, the augmented triad was a "totally useless" construct
(1776).21
1*&
SIR
U"
13
major, by lowering the appropriatesupplementary tone one half step (i.e., C6 in E6major,Ebin
G major, and G? in B major).Second, the same
augmented triad may be related to the relative
minor keys of the three tonalities-C minor, E
minor, and G# minor-by raising the appropriate supplementary tone one half step (i.e., B in
C minor, DOin E minor, and Fx in GOminor, or
the raised leading tones of those keys). Finally,
Weitzmann derives the second group of six related tonalities by reversing the major and minor modalities of the first group.In these examples one pitch acts as a common tone, while the
other two either descend or ascend by half step.
These six tonalities, E6 minor, G minor, B minor, C major, E major, and Ab major, are more
distantly related to the augmented triad.
Part of Weitzmann's treatise concerns such
practical matters as the doublings of the triadin
four-part harmony (and the obvious proscription against omitting any of its tones), and the
propernotation of the triad (that is, accordingto
the harmony that follows it). Weitzmann's enthusiasm for the harmony is perhapsmost evident when he takes up the possible resolutions
of the triad and sets forth no fewer than thirtytwo, each precisely analyzed.31The majorityinvolve common tones which permit smooth progressions of the voices according to these four
rules: (1) each pitch of the triad can descend by
step while the other pitches remain stationary;
(2) each pitch of the triad can ascend by step
while the other pitches remain stationary; (3)
each pitch of the triad can remain stationary
while the other two pitches ascend by step; and
(4) each pitch of the triad can remain stationary
while the other two pitches descend by step.
These thirty-two progressions entail resolutions to major or minor triads. But Weitzmann
also investigates Trugfortschreitungen,or deceptive progressions.Thus, an augmented triad
may "resolve" to a diminished-seventh chord;
or vice versa, a diminished-seventh chord may
progressto an augmented triad. In these deceptive progressions Weitzmann uncovered a spe-
pitches. For example, the augmented triad EbG-B may be linked to Eb major, G major, and B
31Ibid.,pp. 24-29.
107
R. LARRY
TODD
The "Unwelcome
Guest"
a.
19TH
CENTURY
MUSIC
minor
major
M3 m3
m3M
m3
-0
augmented
b.
Of
-1-
Ch
li
d.
TI
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Ia
/
010 c
33NZfM52 (1860),passim.
32Ibid.,pp. 29-30, 22-23.
108
R.LARRY
TODD
The"Unwelcome
Guest"
8----------------------------------------------------------------------------
19TH
CENTURY
MUSIC
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vation of the theme from augmented triads.Already in the nineteenth century Pohl, for one,
was impressed that "here for the first time in
the entire musical literature a complete theme
is actually constructed from the augmented
triad, a surprisingly new musical discovery, in
the fullest sense of the word, which may be ignored as little in future harmony treatises as it
may be by the composers who follow."43
The first twenty-two measures of the symphony, in fact, represent a self-contained passage almost entirely derived thematically and
harmonically from the augmented triads of the
opening theme. Severedfrom the main body of
the movement by a long pause, this passage depicts Faust's self-imposed isolation; in Goethe's
poem we see him first in his study, as a man disenchanted with life and groping to extend the
limits of his knowledge.44In Liszt's score muted
a.
R.LARRY
TODD
The"Unwelcome
208
Lentoassai
Guest"
espressivo
b.
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rit.
21d
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3
19TH
CENTURY
MUSIC
11
14
22
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w
o,
----
"
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--..
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',
for what Forte has termed "a process of accretion to the augmented triad"46-was unquestionably the Faust Symphony.
In Goethe's monologue Faust scorns philosophy and religion and turns instead to magic to
satisfy his quest for knowledge. In a similar way
Liszt shuns the trappingsof traditionaltonality
and advances instead the special qualities of the
augmented triad, which is now boldly explored
outside a tonal context. The entire passage is
dimly lit by dark scorings and muffled strings,
the musical equivalent of the reflected moonlight that envelops Faust in his study. Allying
the augmented triadwith magic or some kind of
altered state thus acquiresa topical significance
in the Faust Symphony, as it had before in the
admonition scene from act III of Lohengrin
(1848),where Wagneremployed the harmonyat
the passage, "Soist derZauber,dermich dirverbunden,"47or, after Liszt, in works such as Dukas's L'apprentidu sorcier (1897), the finale of
Schoenberg'sSecond String Quartet ("Entriickung," 1908), or Busoni's Doktor Faust (1924).
But none of these examples is as extensively
based on the sonority as is the opening of Liszt's
symphony.
Pohl characterized this passage as "vielsagend (wie vieldeutig)"; he might just as well
have applied Weitzmann's concept of Mehrdeutigkeit to describe the tonal implications of
Liszt's treatment of the augmented triad. On
the surface, Liszt's opening is atonal; nevertheless, it suggests, however elusively, certain fundamental tonal relationships of the entire symphony.48In particular, the three pitches of the
underlying arpeggiation,A6, C, and E, represent
the three principal tonalities of the composi46Forte,"Liszt'sExperimentalIdiom,"227.
47Transcribed
by Liszt for piano solo (S446, 1854).
48Seealso Floros, "Die Faust-Symphonie,"pp. 60ff.; and
Morgan,"Dissonant Prolongation,"62.
that beginning did not preempt the fundamental tonal orderof the symphony. And, of course,
the scale of the symphony did not permit extensive experimentation outside the limits of tonality. To accomplish this, Liszt found it convenient to work with music of smaller dimensions, in particular, relatively short works for
piano.
Aux Cypres de la Villa d'Este, from the third
volume of the Annies pdlerinage (1869), is one
of several threnodies from the late period;its extramusical associations alone mark it as a potential source of prominent augmented triads.
One particular augmented triad, F#-Bb-D, is
especially active throughout the introductory
measures, where it is linked as an antecedent or
consequent to several major and minor triads.
Each progression in the summary of ex. 14
moves by stepwise motion with one or two
common tones, recalling similar progressions
discussed in Weitzmann's treatise. Liszt avoids
defining G minor, the key suggested by the signature of two flats; instead, he implies that key
by its dominant (in both its major and minor
forms). But the solemn preface concludes not
with the dominant but with the opening augmented sonority, which effectively claims harmonic priority for the passage.
Associating the augmented triad with nondiatonic scales was another means by which
Liszt approachedatonal composition. As early
as 1850, in the Fantasy and Fugue for Organon
the pseudochorale "Ad nos, ad salutarem undam" from Meyerbeer's Le prophete, Liszt had
produced a large-scale work based on a tritonal
axis, with whole-tone passages and supporting
augmented triads (and diminished-seventh
sonorities)."5Even more remarkablein this direction was Der traurigeM6nch (S348), a recitation for voice and piano written in 1860, but not
published until 1872. Nearly the entire setting
derives from whole-tone formations, an important by-productof which are augmented sonorities, and looks forward to a somewhat similar
experiment, Debussy's Voiles, based entirely on
whole-tone and pentatonic formations. The
poem, "Der traurige Monch," a ballade by Lenau, concerns a haunted tower inhabited by a
spirit in the guise of a melancholic monk. With
51Seemy "Liszt,Fantasyand Fuguefor Organon 'Adnos, ad
salutaremundam'."
113
R. LARRY
TODD
The "Unwelcome
Guest"
4-5
19TH
CENTURY
MUSIC
-~
7-8
8-9
29
Example 14
Aux Cypr s de la Villa d'Este, reduction.
such a subject, augmented triads were almost
de rigueurfor Liszt, who introduces this apparition with alternating minor and augmented triads (ex. 15). Liszt referredto the work as "bodenlos wiist" and its mysterious harmonies as
"ungeheurlich."52
Aux Cypres de la Villa d'Este and Der
traurigeMinch begin to exhibit that simplification of means that became increasingly common in Liszt's late music, in stark contrast to
the effusiveness of his earlier music. In a series
of piano pieces from the 1880s, nearly all of
them conceived as dirges,Liszt carriedthe process to its natural conclusion, methodically
strippingaway ornamental detail and leaving in
place unaccompanied melodic lines and disturbingly sparse textures-in short, music of
the barest means. In these works, including the
piano works Nuages gris, La lugubre gondola I
and II, R. W. Venezia, Unstern, Am Grabe Richard Wagners, and Trauer-Vorspiel,and the
sacred work Via crucis, the backgroundstructure is pushed toward the foreground;and the
structural role of the augmented triad, which
now operates on the most fundamental level, is
highlighted.53
of the augmented triad C-Fb-Ab; the accompanying ostinato figure presents a more direct
statement of the same triad, respelled enharmonically and inverted as E?-C-Ab, and supported by the auxiliary tone Db (ex. 16a). Despite the signature of four flats, suggesting the
key of F minor, a conventional tonal analysis is
vitiated by the lack of firm tonal cadences.
Rather,the cohesion of the piece depends on its
sequential underpinnings, as shown in the reduction of ex. 16b. The opening material returns transposeddown a step in m. 39, and again
down one more step in m. 77, where a blurring
tremolando replaces the methodic ostinato in
eighth notes. In the final portion of the piece
Liszt effects two more transpositions of the augmented triad, completing the sequence. And, as
a closing master stroke, Liszt omits the C of the
last triad, reducing the final augmented triadto
the nebulous interval E-Ab.
Liszt's development and emancipation of the
augmented triad stands as one among many of
his innovative accomplishments that influenced generations of later composers.But recognition of his role in this development did not go
unchallenged. Schoenberg, for example, attempted to make a case for Wagner'suse of the
sonority, citing the famous motive from the
"Ride of the Valkyries" in the third act of Die
Walkiire as an Ausgangspunkt for further experimentation.54(Surelya more momentous example from Wagner would be act I, sc. 3, of
Siegfried,in which Mime attempts to teach the
young hero the meaning of fear in a scene suffused with augmented triads.)
Schoenberg to the contrary, the case for
Liszt's influence, it would seem, is clear: his
music represents the crucial nineteenth-century link in the evolution of the augmented
triad. Works such as Wolf's songs Die verlassene Miagdlein or Bei einer Trauung from the
Mdrike Lieder, in which sequences of augmented triads underscore bitterly ironic texts;
Schoenberg's own op. 11, no. 1, in which augmented triads are discernible in the welter of
of
atonal sound; the second movement
Mahler's Fourth Symphony, in which an augmented triad introduces the eerie, altered sound
S4ArnoldSchoenberg, Harmonielehre (Vienna, 1911; 7th
edn., 1966),p. 468.
Nun schaut den Geist der Reiter auch Und kreuzet sich nach altem Brauch. Der M6nch hat sich vor ihn gestellt,
Die rechte Handunisono ad libitum
aberetwas markiert
R. LARRY
TODD
The "Unwelcome
Guest"
so klagend still, so schaurig, Als weine stumm aus ihm die Welt, So traurig, o wie traurig!
.................
.
...._
semprelegato
una corda
b. Reduction.
AM:
39
77
87
95
101
119
14
'4-,
Example 16
of a scordatura solo violin; the second movement of Bart6k'sSuite, op. 14, constructed upon
an interlocking series of augmented triads; or
later in the twentieth century, Vom TodeMariii