Thesis (Final) PDF
Thesis (Final) PDF
Thesis (Final) PDF
A Dissertation
of Cornell University
by
Augustus Arnone
May 2007
© 2007 Augustus Arnone
TEXTURAL AMBIGUITY IN THE PIANO MUSIC OF JOHANNES BRAHMS
clarity has been a primary concern for scholars concerned with historically-
music and changes in piano building based on analysis of his textures, and
composition.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
the performance of contemporary music, and has worked with some of the
iii
This dissertation is dedicated to my mother, Elizabeth Arnone, and my sisters
Olivia and Isabel, whose belief in me has been as constant as the North Star.
I’d also like to dedicate it to the memory of my father, who showed me what it
is to be special
iv
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I would first like to thank Malcolm Bilson, the teacher I’d always
wanted and didn’t know I’d find. His influence has been vast and decisive,
and emanates from every page of this dissertation. I’d also like to thank the
patiently editing each one; I owe much of my writing habits to his help. Styra
Avins has been incredibly supportive and helpful, sending me advance copies
of her publications and reading and commenting on my work. I’d also like to
and model for my work; this list includes, but is not exclusive to, Emily Dolan,
Finally several people have made the substantial and lasting contributions
that led me to Cornell and to becoming the kind of musician that I am.
Penelope Crawford was my introduction to the world of period instruments
and performance practice. Jason Eckardt and Marilyn Nonken have opened
music. The last person I’d like to thank is Jonathan Bass, my first piano teacher
in college: were it not for the excellence of his teaching I might not have
overcome an erratic and insufficient training, and perhaps would not have
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction 1
Conclusion 94
vi
LIST OF FIGURES
vii
Figure 11e Opus 117, no. 1, mm. 38-57. 49
viii
Introduction
sentiment but without marking out the melody too much. [Figure 1a] This
ardent or violent outburst but remains muted and distant. Brahms’s direction
to the performer suggests that the poignant melodic line is meant to remain a
translucent specter, dimly emanating from behind the delicate sonic veil of the
accompaniment.
the melodic line. For one thing, the melody is embedded within the
stemming, the melodic line remains in the alto within the undulating
settled below middle C. The timbre of a piano is mellow and dark in this
register as opposed to the more piercing quality of the treble, and therefore
This section is also marked Più lento. When the section is recapitulated at
measure 135, he writes mezza voce, which is apparently another way of telling
the performer to restrain projection of the theme.
The work was composed in 1854, a particularly painful and turbulent year
for Brahms because of Robert Schumann’s attempted suicide and subsequent
removal to an asylum at Endenich. This year also marked Brahms’s admission
of hopeless love for Clara Schumann in a letter to Joseph Joachim. This letter is
published in Styra Avins, Johannes Brahms: Life and Letters, trans. Josef Eisinger
and Styra Avins (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), 48.
Figure 1a
B minor Ballade Opus 10, no. 4
mm. 47-55
Another effect of the melodic voice’s low tessitura is that, because it inhabits
the same register as the accompaniment, it is not timbrally distinct from the
rest of the texture. A pianist can counteract this tendency by consciously
voicing the melodic notes with their own distinct sound quality, but Brahms’s
direction indicates that he doesn’t want the melody overly separated from the
rest of the texture. Finally, the melodic voice is doubled by a lower, primarily
parallel, harmonic voice, lending a still darker quality to the melodic timbre.
Another factor that contributes to the veiled quality of the section is the
chords than widely spaced ones. This effect is far more pronounced in the
textural clarity above all. In this Ballade, the dense background of overtones
resulting from Brahms’s saturation of the lower register creates a kind of sonic
fog that interferes with melodic clarity. The combination of all these textural
behavior of the piano to obscure the musical surface and minimize a clear
The shifting hierarchy of voices within this section adds still another
layer of ambiguity. In mm. 47-54 the right hand’s middle voice, the alto, is the
a lower parallel voice. In m. 55, however, the left hand’s tenor line begins to
emerge from its role as parallel harmonic voice and become an independent
tenor line has fully arrived as a stable melodic line and equal member in the
The prevailing aesthetic values with regard to textural clarity in piano music
among Brahms’s contemporaries will be discussed in Chapter 2.
Figure 1b
B minor Ballade, Opus 10, no. 4
mm. 56-65
duet, while in the very next measure the alto recedes somewhat into the
beat 5 of m. 60 and accompanying hairpin cue the performer to pull this line
from the background into which it has receded and reassert it as a thematic
voice. The hierarchy and roles of individual voices within this section are
dynamic and unpredictable, and the changes in texture fluid and seamless.
written, ““[f]or pages together Brahms’s texture at all periods invites analysis
as close as that of a Bach fugue …” Tovey performed often as pianist with
aesthetics and intentions. Tovey devotes much of the discussion in this essay
that Brahms as a composer was less reliant on sketches because the details of
most dramatic sonata form and the highest polyphony, can have
effected comparatively little by the practice of outline-sketching.
(220-221)
Brahms’s solo piano music. The first chapter will be devoted primarily to
In chapter 1 I will discuss textural features in other of his piano works that
serve to obscure melodic material. One of the primary areas I will focus on
is balance. Specifically, I will point to examples demonstrating Brahms’s
which melodic material is separated from the rest of the texture, is critical to
Beyond discussing questions of balance, I will show how Brahms
parts into a single line, only to be separated into individual parts again shortly
which the intricacy of the part-writing places renders the task of identifying
both listener and performer. In these cases, even with the score, a multiplicity
the hands of the performer. A pianist who consciously strives towards textural
Pianists can make it easier for the listener to trace a line’s progress by
“voicing.” (sorting the texture into layers through contrasting dynamic levels
In addition to Op. 10 no. 4 [Figure 1a], see Op. 119 no. 1. [Figure 15]
For example Op. 76 no. 6. [Figure 16a]
hand, one can eschew separating voices within a texture, and resist stratifying
individual voices into a hierarchical order. This can lead to evocative effects
for performance
take up the subject of clarity in piano music. These treatises, which seem
shift in attitudes towards composing for the piano that took place during the
course of the nineteenth century. The shift was directly related to changes
in piano manufacture during the second half of the century; changes that
culminated in more powerful and resonant pianos with the ability to sustain
tones for much longer than pianos of the first half of the century. The increased
resonance of the later pianos, however, also meant a reduced transparency and
clarity of tone, particularly in the lower register. The treatises are devoted to
these treatises, Brahms’s way of writing for the piano was particularly “harsh”
and “dissonant.” The treatises urge caution against overuse of the piano’s
and stepwise motion in inner voices. Throughout Chapter 1, I will refer to
examples spanning the entirety of Brahms’s piano oeuvre that utilize precisely
the kinds of piano textures these treatises argue against. This demonstrates
formed early in his career as a composer and remained in his piano music
instruments very much like those in use today. During the 1860’s, the Steinway
instruments from those in use prior to the 1860’s, including the use of a
complete cast-iron frame, the crossing of the bass strings, and the duplex
have insisted that Brahms would never have written for the piano as he did
had he expected that the music would be played on modern instruments.
I maintain that such a position is indeed untenable, and I will refer to the use
See Chapter 2 for explanations of these design features and their
consequences for the piano’s sound.
Avins, Styra. “Performing Brahms’s Music: Clues from His Letters.” In
Performing Brahms: Early Evidence of Performing Style, ed. Michael Musgrave
and Bernard Sherman. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.), 11-47.
of modern-type instruments not only by Brahms but by concert artists who
were closely associated with him. I will also discuss the problems inherent
assumption, namely that textural clarity was his intent. Arguments for the
century pianos have rested on the assertion that Brahms’s piano writing
sounds heavy and muddled on modern instruments but clear and defined on
has been that the differences between pianos Brahms knew in the 1850’s and
the pianos he knew in the 1890’s were not so substantial as to turn what would
otherwise be a clear and transparent texture into a murky one. The fact that
he continued to write dense, bottom-oriented textures even into the era of the
modern-type piano’s domination indicates that he did not view the decreased
10
authentic performances of Brahms will be with us very soon.” The advent of
of certain aspects of his style despite the changing piano, and the singularity
style, at once of his time and outside his time, to what we can understand
the music itself. This thesis attempts to draw together aesthetic theory and
historical evidence in the hopes not to ‘solve’ those ambiguities, but rather to
appreciate them
11
Chapter 1: Aspects of Textural Ambiguity
motivic. This thesis is a first step in exploring some of the ways Brahms
Brahms analytical literature, though it has a great deal in common with other
10 Discussions of metrical ambiguity in Brahms’s music include: Gabe
Fankhauser, “Rhythmic Dissonance as Motion Propellant in Brahms’s
Intermezzo in A Flat Major,” GAMUT 8 (1998): 53-64; Peter H. Smith,
“Liquidation, Augmentation, and Brahms’s Recapitulatory Overlaps,”
19th-Century Music 17/3 (1994): 237-261; David Epstein, “Brahms and the
Mechansims of Motion,” in Brahms Studies: Analytical and Historical Perspectives,
ed. George S. Bozarth (Oxford: Carendon Press, 1990), 191-228; Walter
Frisch, “The Shifting Bar Line: Metrical Displacement in Brahms,” in Brahms
Studies: Analytical and Historical Perspectives, ed. George S. Bozarth (Oxford:
Carendon Press, 1990), 139-164. Discussions of formal ambiguity include:
Jonathan Dunsby, Structural Ambiguity in Brahms: Analytical Approaches to
Four Works (Ann Arbor, MI: UMI Research Press, 1981); Studies focused
on harmonic ambiguity include: Peter H. Smith, “Brahms and Motivic 6/3
Chords,” Music Analysis 16/2 (1997): 175-217; Joseph Dubiel, “Contradictory
Criteria in a Work of Brahms,” in Brahms Studies I, ed. David Brodbeck
(Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1994): 81-110; Allen Cadwallader,
“Foreground Motivic Ambiguity: Its Clarification at the Middleground Levels
in Selected Late Piano Pieces of Johannes Brahms,” Music Analysis 7, no. 1
(1988): 59-91; Roger Graybill, “Harmonic Circularity in Brahms’s F Major
Cello Sonata: An Alternative to Schenker’s Reading in Free Composition,”
Music Theory Spectrum 10 (1988): 43-55. Studies that deal with a combination
of these topics include: David Lewin, “On Harmony and Meter in Brahms’s
Op. 76, No. 8,” 19th Century Music 4/3 (1981): 261-265; Ryan McClelland,
“Brahms’s Capriccio in C Major, Op. 76, No. 8: Ambiguity, Conflict, Musical
Meaning, and Performance,” Theory and Practice 29 (2004): 69-94; John Rink,
“Opposition and Integration in the Piano Music,” in The Cambridge Companion
to Brahms, ed. Michael Musgrave (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1999), 79-97. Additional pertinent studies include: Agawu, Kofi. “Ambiguity
in Tonal Music: A Preliminary Study.” In Theory, Analysis and Meaning in
Tonal Music, ed. Anthony Pople, 86-107. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 1994; Roland Jordan and Emma Kafalenos, “The Double Trajectory:
Ambiguity in Brahms and Henry James.” 19th Century Music 13, no. 2 (1989):
129-44; Webster, James. “The Alto Rhapsody: Psychology, Intertextuality, and
Brahms’s Artistic Development,” Brahms Studies 3 (2001): 19-45.
12
ambiguities that have received scholarly attention.
to examples spanning the entire corpus of Brahms’s solo piano literature that
the listener. For example, Walter Frisch in his article on shifting bar lines in
the result that “even the most astute listener will become utterly disoriented.”
Frisch describes such passages as containing “an ambiguity between notated
and perceived meter” and points out that the listener without a score, or
11 Frisch, “The Shifting Bar Line,” 145, 140, 147. Frisch credits Schoenberg as
being the first critic to call attention to such ambiguities.
12 Rink, “Opposition and Integration;” Lewin, “On Harmony and Meter;”
McClelland, “Brahms’s Capriccio in C Major.”
13
These differ from Frisch’s discussion in that they describe a metrical instability
arising from frequent alternation between triple and duple meter, while Frisch
a bar, thus disguising the actual placement of the bar line and the metrical
orientation of the motive itself. In either case the ambiguity could be said to
this aspect of Brahms’s style are articles by Lewin and McClelland on the C
Major Capriccio, Opus 76, no. 8: a work that does not contain a root position
that Dunsby describes create a special challenge to the listener with regard
to recognizing sectional boundaries. As is the case with the kinds of tonal
and metric ambiguity discussed in the Brahms literature, the result is that
the music seems to invite multiple and conflicting interpretations at the same
14
and ambivalence within the Schenkerian literature is Allen Cadwallader’s
identifying note successions that “create the impression of a motive, but one
formal boundaries.
Opus 10, no. 4, that are centered on processes of concealment as well: in this
case, the obscuring of the primary thematic line. Here, Brahms “veils” melodic
lower register, the low tessitura of the melodic line, its embedding within the
accompaniment rather than isolation from it, and the use of a lower doubling
voice to darken the melodic timbre. One of the primary ways Brahms obscures
In these cases, the murkiness of the musical surface is the foundation of the
impenetrable accompaniments.
16 Cadwallader, “Foreground Motivic Ambiguity.”
15
Such masking of melodic material is an aspect of a larger and more
formal boundaries, and blurs the separation between tonal areas, he blurs the
separation between elements of his overall texture and presents them within a
between the right hand’s melodic line and the upper voice of the left hand in
the piano’s low register. The closely spaced chordal texture remains fixed
in the register around and below middle C (C1) for the entirety of the ‘first’
presentation of each strain (the second being an octave higher). The tight
spacing of the left hand’s rolled chords in particular, set in the bottom octaves
17 The use of the terms “foreground” and “background” in this context
is not be confused with the use of those terms by Schenkerian theorists. In
the context of this chapter the terms primarily refer to the degree to which
individual voices stand out from the rest of the texture or recede from
prominence.
16
of the piano, result in a menacing rumble. The timbre of the upper melodic
voice because of its low range lacks the piercing quality that might distinguish
Figure 2
Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel, Opus 24
mm. 1-6
it mroe clearly from the rest of the texture. Another factor minimizing melodic
separation is its proximity to the lower chord members. The balance overall
by octave doubling, but primarily by sixths. The bass, on the other hand,
is doubled at the octave throughout, and the left hand usually inserts inner
chord members between these notes, further skewing the balance away from
17
b. The C-Sharp Minor Capriccio, Opus 76, no. 5
The C-Sharp Minor Capriccio, Opus 76, no. 5, exhibits many of the same
textural features. The texture at the outset is balanced in such a way that the
Figure 3a
Capriccio in C-Sharp Minor, Opus 76, no.5
mm. 1-11
The upper melodic voice’s low tessitura and proximity to the chromatic line
interferes with its ability to ring out over the sonic backdrop. Furthermore,
distinctness of individual notes. Through much of the section the bass line is
reinforced though octave doublings, while the melody itself is not doubled. In
short, Brahms has crafted a texture in which the melodic material is scarcely
In the primary theme [Figure 3b], the obstacles to melodic presence have been
18
removed, and the section takes on a triumphant note. The octave doubling of
Figure 3b
Capriccio in C-Sharp Minor, Opus 76, no.5
mm. 86-90
the bass line is removed, thinning the sonic backdrop, while it is the melody
Furthermore, the theme soars high into the treble and is separated registrally
These differences imply that Brahms was well aware of the effect
lower register. In this work Brahms uses the murky quality of the piano’s
lower register not merely as an arbitrary experiment in local color, but as a
for chaos. The work’s drama is embodied in a struggle and ultimate triumph
over this chaos. Contrasts between dark, heavy textures in the depths of the
19
Figure 4a
Brahms C-Sharp Minor Intermezzo, Opus 117, no. 3
mm. 1-27
20
piano, followed by a dramatic movement towards and away from varying
Brahms exploited to great effect throughout his career. The dramatic structure
One such work is C-Sharp Minor Intermezzo Opus 117, no. 3 [Figure
4a]. Brahms’s marking at the outset is molto p e sotto voce sempre, and the
lento section of the B Minor Ballade, the dark quality of the melodic line is
in the tenor register. The piece opens with triple octave unisons that extend
down into the bass register. Low unisons permeate the outer sections of the
Intermezzo. This manner of scoring, along with the consistently low tessitura
spreading out of the sonority, and brighter treble doublings, is a release from
the weight and confinement of the outer sections. The effect of these textural
21
Figure 4b
Brahms C-Sharp Minor Intermezzo, Opus 117, no. 3.
mm. 46-55
with the new freedom of motion in the middle interlude’s jagged melodic line
is lifted away from the bass notes, which are separated by rests. This allows
for a more transparent sonic backdrop that is a distinct contrast to the outer
sections.
contrast in his piano music through adjusting the doubling to emphasize the
either the lower or the upper register, alternating between tightly spaced and
“open” sonorities, and registral placement of the melodic line. The G Minor
22
Rhapsody, Opus 79, no. 2, is still another work that alternates between textures
favoring the bass line and textures favoring the thematic material. Here too,
the changes in doubling, and the contrasts between textures weighted towards
the lower range of the piano and those that stretch into the treble, impart a
vivid dramatic structure to the work, effecting a move out of darkness into
At the outset [Figure 5a], the bass line sounds in octaves while the
doubling of the thematic line is broken into arpeggio. Compare this with mm.
14-30 [Figure 5b], where the melodic line’s doublings are simultaneous, and
the comparatively higher placement of the bass line, now part of an arpeggio,
un-doubled tenor line, confined to the register around middle C, with bass
octaves set in the extreme low range of the piano. At mm. 25-31, however, the
same material emerges out of the darkness as the music is lifted an octave
higher and the upper voice is doubled in octaves as well. In this work, as well
as in the Intermezzo and the Capriccio, it is not only the manner of doubling
but the placement of the music in specific registers that determines the
23
Figure 5a
Rhapsody in G Minor, Opus 79, no. 2
mm. 1-6
24
Figure 5b
Rhapsody in G Minor, Opus 76, no. 2
mm. 14-30
25
e. The F Sharp Minor Capriccio, Opus 76, no.1
structure is the F Sharp Minor Capriccio, Opus 76, no. 1. [Figure 6a] The piece
from the depths of the keyboard, becoming melodic fragments as they ascend.
As the passage intensifies, the right hand begins to strive further upward
until at m. 9 a fortissimo arpeggio erupts, soaring high into the treble and
mm. 1-8 creates enormous tension in this opening section. Unlike the lento
section of the B Minor Ballade, which is settled in a somber fog, the opening
is transformed in the concluding section [mm. 72-85] [Figure 6b] into gossamer
The close-position chords from m. 79 to the end recall once again the blurred
quality of the low register and in this context serve as an echo of the fog that
26
Figure 6a
Capriccio in F-Sharp Minor, Opus 76, no. 1
mm. 1-16
27
Figure 6b
Capriccio in F-Sharp Minor, opus 76, no. 1
mm. 72-85
In the E Flat Major Rhapsody, Opus 119 no. 4, Brahms uses textural
transformations, not to delineate sections that shape the drama across the
entire work, but within a given section. This process is somewhat analogous to
takes place within two corresponding sections, in which he presents the same
28
thematic material first in C Minor, then in C Major [mm 65-85, and mm 132-
with the primary thematic voice rooted in the register around middle C [mm.
Figure 7a
Rhapsody in E-Flat Major, Opus 119, no. 4
65-92
29
At the consequent of this phrase, beginning m. 73, the melodic voice
pushes up into the treble register, ultimately ascending to two octaves above
the middle C it began on. Though the sonority at this point contains more
harmonic notes, they are dispersed across a wider compass resulting in a more
transparent and open sound. The effect is repeated in mm. 132-151 [Figure
7b] with an even wider expansion of the registral compass. This example
contrasts between transparent and dense textures, but also through the
depends largely on some of the features outlined above. The octave doubling
of the principal melody [mm. 1-4] is further darkened by the left hand’s
additional doubling, two octaves below [Figure 8a]. The entire section is
weighted heavily towards the low register. Its opening eight-bar phrase
end of m. 5 that come to rest in m. 8. Mm. 14-21 are a repetition of the opening
phrase except that the corresponding sigh motives sink still further downward
the a-b-a’-b’ phrase structure of the initial A section [mm. 1-26]. Similarly, the
b phrases exhibit a downward pull with melodic material that is stated and
then repeated a fifth lower. Together, the murkiness of the melodic doublings,
30
Figure 7b
Rhapsody in E-Flat Major, Opus 119, no. 4
mm. 128-152
31
Figure 8a
Ballade in D Minor, Opus 10, no.1
mm. 1-26
The texture of the B section [mm. 27-59] [Figure 8b] stands in vivid
32
move out of the confinement and downward pull of the A section. The effect
of this new spaciousness in sonority, along with the turn to D Major, could
descent back into the low register begins, heralding the return of the A section.
As the chord spacing becomes denser and more confined, and settles into a
drawn inevitably back into the somber, veiled atmosphere of the A section.
when Brahms wrote densely scored textures in the low register, in spite of the
particular should try to understand his reasons for doing so. In a work like the
D Minor Ballade, projecting the uppermost notes of the opening theme in the
right hand and underplaying the lower doubling notes, in the right hand and
especially the left hand, will give the melodic line a bright and clear quality.
In all of the works referred to above, even the C Sharp Minor Capriccio, the
pianist can thin out the accompanimental material and work to demarcate
melodic lines over the rest of the texture. Such an approach would result in
the clearest sonority possible, even given the denseness of Brahms’s piano
textures. However, in many cases this approach would negate the contrasts
33
Figure 8b.
mm. 27-60
34
35
Figure 8b (Continued)
Brahms’s use of low doublings presents the pianist with the opportunity
may utilize the buildup of sound to partially obscure thematic lines, creating
36
The intricacy of Brahms’s polyphony
the density of the texture and weighting of the balance towards the
pushed back into a subsidiary role as new lines materialize, often from what
chord members that are there for harmonic support rather than to provide
melodic interest; though in the next few examples I will show cases where the
his polyphonic writing is also frequently flux, with thematic priority migrating
to existing voices, sometimes renders the listener’s task of following the voice-
leading extraordinary challenging, particularly without access to a score. In
this section I will discuss how, apart from using the buildup of overtones and
dark quality of the low register, Brahms crafts the veiled piano texture through
melodic lines is by setting them beneath cover tones, so that the melody
is entangled within the texture rather than isolated from it. A few of these
37
examples have already been discussed: among them the piu lento section from
the Ballade in B Minor, Opus 10 no. 4 and the C Sharp Minor Intermezzo,
Opus 117 no. 3, where in both cases the melody is often covered by harmonic
tones. In the C Major Intermezzo, Opus 119 no. 3, [Figure 9] the melody is given
throughout the piece.As so often, Brahms reveals his fascination here with
Figure 9
Intermezzo in C Major, opus 119, no. 3
mm. 1-8
38
a. The F Major Romanze, Opus 118 no. 5
Initially, the primary thematic line is in the alto voice, doubled by the left-
hand’s tenor, and is covered by an upper voice. The relationship between the
parts is not merely a thematic line submerged beneath cover tones, however;
fluctuates throughout the opening section (mm. 1-16) [Figure 10a]. The
thematic priority of the two voices is in constant flux throughout the section.
parts are seamless, occurring in the middle of musical phrases rather than at
In mm. 1-3 the alto line has more melodic interest than the upper voice,
which doubles at the upper sixth in primarily parallel motion; the lower
interest resides in the uppermost voice. If the pianist initially stratifies the
inner voice because of its thematic content, that balance of parts would have to
a performance where the alto voice continues to be projected over the soprano
in the manner illustrated in Figure 10b (in this and subsequent examples
happens again at m. 8, with the soprano taking over thematic material that
had previously been in the alto part. In both cases there is a four-measure
phrase in which the alto voice assumes priority through the first three
39
Figure 10a
Romanze in F Major, Opus 118, no. 5
mm. 1-16
40
� � 46 � � �� � � � � �� � �
�
� � � �
� � � � ��
Figure 10b.
Romanze in F Major, Opus 118, no. 5
mm 3-4
measures, while the soprano takes over thematic priority in the fourth
the intricacy of the layering of parts within the opening A section into relief.
material. Thematic material is in the top voice and the relative absence of
line clearly stands out from them. The relationship between the parts is not
stable but variable, and the listener (and performer) subtly changes listening
41
a critical concern for the performer. Pianists communicate their sense of the
to which they organize the musical texture into hierarchical layers through
hierarchy within the Romanze requires special handling from the performer.
in Figure 10c. This would lead to the mistaken impression that the alto line
� � 46 � � �� � � � �� �� �� � �
�
� �� � � ��
Figure 10c
�� � � � � � � � � �
� ��� �
Figure 10d
encountered in the lento of the B Minor Ballade. There, Brahms has entangled
the melody within the accompaniment and asks the performer not to
the rest of the texture for the sake of clarity, is well suited to homophonic
textures where the melody is isolated from the accompaniment, but is often
42
far too simple for the subtlety of Brahms’s textures. In the F Major Romanze,
though the alto and soprano lines temporarily assume roles as thematic and
these shifts gradually in the transitional measures; i.e. mm. 3 and 7. It requires
arrived at naturally.
The E-Flat Major Intermezzo, Opus 117, no. 1 [Figure 11a] is another
work in which the melody is the alto voice in the right hand, while the upper
piece begins, the upper voice repeatedly sounds a tonic pedal—E Flat. In mm.
5 and 6 it gains some melodic interest, doubling the alto at the third. By the
end of m. 6, though, the primary thematic material has migrated into the bass
and the soprano line assumes greater melodic interest, sharing prominence
with the bass. The change from pedal to doubling voice to melodic voice is
seamless and gradual, and as we find ourselves in a texture with a completely
different hierarchy of voices we are barely aware of how the change came
about.
is analogous to that in the Romanze, and presents the pianist with similar
43
Figure 11a
Intermezzo In E-Flat Major, opus 117, no. 1
mm. 1-20
44
stepwise moving line supported by parallel harmonic tones. Following mm.
1-4, in which the alto is the lone melodic voice, we are likely to interpret mm.
soprano line becomes a secondary parallel voice, thus more prominent within
the musical texture than when it was a pedal tone. However, though the alto
this line continues to be projected as the main melodic line from the middle of
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�� � � � �� �
�� � �
� � � � �� �
�
�� ���
� �
� ��� � ���
� �
4
Figure 11b
Intermezzo in E-Flat Major, Opus 117, no. 1
mm. 2-9
alto. Yet here the situation is somewhat more complicated in that at m. 7 the
bass line also assumes a role as a thematic voice. Pianists must determine
how to balance the right hand’s thematic material, in m. 7, with the bass. This
respectively favoring or not favoring either part. At the same time they must
determine, with respect to the relative melodic distinctness of the soprano and
alto lines, what the relationship between these parts at m. 7 is to that in mm. 5
45
and 6, and by extension to m. 1; where the hierarchy of parts, and primacy of
the alto line, is most straightforward. In other words, to what extent will the
alto voice be delineated over the soprano’s cover tones at m. 1, to what extent,
if at all, will the soprano be delineated over the alto at m. 7, and how does
this change in balance come about? A performance that embraces the subtlety
of these shifting relationships will be one that refrains from marking out
melodies “too much,” and strives for the most seamless transitions in balance.
which again the voice leading is exceptionally difficult to trace without aid of
� � � �� �
� �� � �� �
� � � 86 � � �
�
� � �
� � � �� � � � � � � �
� � � � 86 � � � � � � � �� � � � � ��� � �
�
� � �
� �� � � � � �
� � 6 � �� �
��8
�
� � �
�
Figure 11c
Intermezzo in E-Flat Major, Opus 117, no.1
mm. 11-14
The alto voice is the lone thematic voice all the way to its ascent to E
flat2 in m. 12, from which it resolves downward while the upper voice begins a
46
covered by E flat3. At this point, the listener might easily hear this new
thematic voice is the inner voice ensconced within a tonic pedal doubled at
the octave. However, the inner voice is not a continuation of the alto, which
has resolved downward, becoming the lower of the three voices. If anything,
it seems like a continuation of the soprano line, but it promptly descends into
the original alto register and is covered by an upper voice that, for the first two
of interpretations. In m. 13, where does the thematic inner voice in the right
hand lead as it continues into m. 14? The diagram in Figure 11c is drawn from
the thematic line continues its stepwise descent through m. 14, as indicated in
Figure 11d.
� �
� � �
� � � 86 �
� � � �
� � � � �
� � � 86 � �
� � � � �
� � � 86 � � � � � � � �
Figure 11d
Intermezzo in E Flat-Major, Opus 117, no. 1
mm. 13-14
47
We should keep in mind that in beaming compromises are often
made for legibility. In this work, the density of the polyphony may have
m. 1) and in others (i.e. m. 14) for legibility. In any case, with several strands
within close proximity to existing voices, it will be anything but clear to the
Mm. 38-57 [Figure 11e] are a varied reprise of the initial A section [mm.
of the ambiguities between parts from the opening A section. Mm. 42-45, for
example, are a decorated version of mm. 5-8. Brahms indicates the separation
of the voices more clearly in this version by separate stemming. The main
whereas in m. 6 the alto clearly retained its thematic priority. The result is
that the upper line is pushed more clearly into the foreground, and at an
earlier point. Meanwhile, in mm. 50-51, which correspond to mm. 13-14, the
individual lines maintain equality in a two-voice canonical passage.
117, no. 1, and the Romanze, Opus 118, no. 5 are examples of Brahms avoiding
inherently less transparent than homophonic ones, where the listener can
more easily separate the texture into foreground melody and background
48
Figure 11e.
Intermezzo in E Flat Major, Opus 117, no.1
mm. 38-57
49
cover tones for example, rather than isolating it above the accompaniment,
Brahms has already made a move towards a less transparent texture. The
secondary melodic lines compete with primary thematic lines for the listener’s
that the hierarchy among the parts is unstable, with melodic primacy being
the texture, and the difficulty in tracking the voice leading among emerging
and receding lines, Brahms has defeated the easy apprehension of stable
Minor Capriccio Opus 76, no. 1. In mm. 1-8 [Figure 6a], it is initially difficult
to discern whether the rising lines that migrate up the keyboard between
hands are melodic lines or accompanimental figures. As the figure passes into
the right hand towards the end of each measure, though, each line terminates
50
looks like Figure 12. However, rather than presenting a texture that is clearly
divisible into separate parts, with a clear separation between melodic and
accompanimental material, Brahms fuses two voices into one stream of notes;
��� 6 � � �� � � �� �� �� � � � � �� �� � � � �� ��
� 8 �� � � �� � � ���
�
�
� ��� 6 � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �
8 � � � � � � �
Figure 12
Capriccio in F-Sharp Minor, Opus 76, no.1
mm. 1-4
variation has a great deal in common with the piu lento in the B Minor Ballade.
confined to a low tessitura and narrow overall compass, and the pianist is to
play pianissimo with pedal. One can readily imagine that the marking senza
[Figure 13b] is derived from Variation 1, but here the melody is isolated from
51
the accompaniment, and set above it. Furthermore, like the Intermezzo, Opus
117, no. 3, along with the melody moving out of the covering
Figure 13a
Variations on an Original Theme in D Major, Opus 21, no. 1
Variation 1, mm. 19-27
Figure 13b
Variations on an Original Theme in D Major, Opus 21, no. 1
Variation 2, mm. 37-43
52
shadow of its accompaniment is a breaking out of its registral confinement.
The melody expands its compass high up into the treble register, where it will
in melodic prominence that take place in the later piano works. Once again
the pianist opts to delineate the melody with clarity in Variation 1, the effect
others. The passage from the Liszt B Minor Sonata shown in Figure 14 is one
representative example.
Figure 14.
Franz Liszt, Sonata in B Minor
53
What makes Brahms’s use of this pianistic device distinctive is the
degree to which he blurs the distinction between the melodic notes of the
line and the harmonic notes. In the example from the Liszt Sonata, the non-
thematic notes of the arpeggio are harmonic filler that create a lush and
beautiful harmonic backdrop, from which the thematic notes are easily
distinguished. The figurations in the right and left hands of the first variation
of Brahms’s Opus 21, no. 1, on the other hand, tread a thin line between being
The B Minor Intermezzo, Opus 119 no. 1 [Figure 15], is one of the
most striking examples of Brahms blurring the line between melody and
seems that we are hearing one distinct melodic thread. It is only as the
piece continues that we are able to discern a top voice, separate from the
continually merging with the secondary line beneath it. For example, in m. 4 it
is quite clearly a separate thematic voice, but in the following measure it sinks
to b1 on the last sixteenth note that is at the same time part of the continuing
chain of thirds that comprises the secondary line; the note is stemmed
upwards and downwards to show its double function.. The two lines merge
into one another again in mm. 7-8 and in mm. 11 and 13. The ambiguity at
the beginning of whether we are hearing one voice or two separate voices is
54
Figure 15
Intermezzo in B Minor, opus 119, no. 1
mm. 1-30
55
of the two voices in the right hand is quite clear, at other times it is dissolved.
When the passage is revisited later in the piece [m. 47] the descending chain
of thirds has been embellished to become even more of a true melodic thread
which two individual voices are entangled into a single line, so that their
separation is at certain times not audible. Figure 16a shows mm. 1-24, which
constitute the initial A section of a ternary form. Figure 16b shows a diagram
of the separation of the two voices in mm. 1-4. Nevertheless, through these
measures the listener hears not two but one continuous strand in perpetual
motion. These strands do not remain entwined within one another through the
entire section; they are first split into two distinct voices at m. 5. The uniting of
the two voices into a single strand and subsequent splitting into two separate
voices, occurs three times in these first twenty-four measures: the second time
separate voices serves to partially hide details of the composition from the
listener.
Conclusion
which Brahms explored textural ambiguity in his piano music throughout his
56
Figure 16a
Intermezzo in A Major, Opus 76, no. 6
mm. 1-24
57
��� 2 �
3
�� � �� �
3 3
� �
3 3
� � �
4
� � � � � � � �
��
� � 42 � �
3 3 3 3
� � � �� � � � �� �
� � � �
Figure 16b
Intermezzo in A Major, Opus 76, no. 6
mm. 1-4
being separated into distinct layers with a clear and stable hierarchical
out clearly into the foreground but rather partially hidden or veiled. This
voice and by utilizing the murky quality of the piano’s lower register. He also
by embedding the melodic lines into the accompanimental figures, often to the
point where it is temporarily not possible to distinguish between the two, and
by submerging the melody within the texture, partially hidden underneath
within his multi-voiced textures, like Opus 117, no. 1, and Opus 118, no. 5,
it becomes very difficult to trace the progress of each individual part in the
58
voices emerge and recede from the foreground, as the roles played by each
significantly inform the way pianists perform these works. Control of the
balance and the projection of melodic lines into the foreground is, after all, in
the hands of the pianist. I contend that though in only one case did Brahms
specifically ask for the melody to not be marked out too much, in much of his
music the pianist would do well to adopt a like attitude towards the balance.
and the degree to which individual lines within multi-voiced textures are
separated from each other, is something that pianists are constantly forced
to come to decisions over. My contention is that one often better serves the
There are just as many cases in which Brahms has composed transparent,
Brahms’s textures for clarity, through voicing and pedaling, pianists should
work towards clarity only where the texture seems to be designed for it, and
embrace the obscurity of his ambiguous textures as well. In many cases, it
is this very contrast between clear and ambiguous textures that defines the
59
Chapter 2: Brahms and Nineteenth-Century Performance
Practice: The Issue of Clarity Then and Now.
lower register. For these writers these textural features constitute proof that
Brahms could not have intended performance on the modern piano. Firms
the early 1860’s, roughly the midpoint of Brahms’s life, that already exhibited
from earlier ones, and enjoyed enormous success across Europe. Performance
practice scholars have argued that the increased power and slower decay of
much of Brahms’s music, implying that he was writing for the lighter and
more transparent instruments that predate the modern piano, many of which
The view that low-lying melodies and densely spaced textures in the
60
During the last decades of Brahms’s life several treatises appeared elucidating
dynamic layering as basic ideals for piano playing. They provide numerous
modern piano, and warn against other textures that result in harsh or muddy
issues of register and spacing that are often pointed to by modern scholars as
and that Brahms would have agreed that such textures do indeed produce
adverse and inartistic effects on the modern piano. In this chapter, I shall
argue that this is simply not the case. In Chapter 1, I presented examples from
his piano music in which avoiding melodic projection and textural clarity
must be taken as an essential aspect of his aesthetic intent, and the source of
ambiguity and predilection for the lower registers may be found in other
genres in his oeuvre, particularly the vocal music and chamber music, in this
thesis I confine the discussion to examples from his solo piano literature, in
61
clarity is directly linked to acoustic aspects of the piano itself. Considering
the piano to ideas on playing and composing for the piano embraced by some
of his contemporaries. Hans Schmitt’s The Pedals of the Piano-Forte and Their
Relation to Pianoforte Playing and the Teaching of Composition and Acoustics was
published in 1893. This was taken from a series of four lectures that Schmitt
this book, Schmitt discusses “the modern use of the pedal,” which he declares
(29)
pianists, he declares,
The importance to which the pedal has in our days attained can
be appreciated when we consult the older piano schools. From
what is to be seen in his Grand School for the Piano, [Johann
Nepomuk] Hummel seems to have regarded the pedal mainly
as a means of creating confusion. ... He seems never to have
discovered how much the instrument gains in resonance by the
use of the pedal, apparently holding it immaterial for beauty of
tone whether, during a long tone, the pedal be used or not. (30)
Schmitt, The Pedals of the Piano-Forte.
62
It is clear that for Schmitt the beauty of the piano’s sound rests in
series and the piano’s capacity for sympathetic vibration he hopes to guide
holds the conviction that the piano sounds more beautiful when the pedal is
piano aesthetics between the early decades of the nineteenth century and the
final decades. Interestingly, though he refers to “the older piano schools,” (30)
century and those at the beginning. Hummel, who died in 1837, did not live
to see the iron-framed, cross-strung pianos that began to dominate the piano
market by the early 1860’s. The second chapter of Schmitt’s book includes
Figure 17.
Schmitt (33)
63
through sympathetic vibrations on the piano. Figure 17 shows one example by
the large C without allowing it to sound, and then strike the small c above,
strong and staccato, whereupon the tone c will sound clearly from the C
this demonstration would have been entirely lost on Hummel, for the simple
reason that on the pianos that existed during his lifetime the after-ring from
the silently held note would not have been very audible and would disappear
quickly. Sympathetic vibrations did not contribute to the overall sound nearly
as much as on the pianos that Schmitt was taking for granted, even with the
dampers raised. It is hardly surprising that Hummel, unlike Schmitt, did not
consider the damper pedal a basic tone-enhancing device. The piano tone that
vibrations from the undamped strings. Virtually every design feature that
those reverberations, whose effect on the tone is unlike that of any piano that
Schmitt assesses the shift in aesthetics between earlier generation and his own,
64
generation experienced changes in instrument-making that offered richness
and complexity of tone as a new resource, the creative potential of which had
ramifications for what he considers to be ideal ways of writing for the piano.
Though he considers the resonance and sustain of the piano to be its great
the piano are those in which the pedal may be liberally used without fear
these types of piano texture to the “older school”. He further claims that such
textures are “disappearing from the music of today” because they do not
Chief among the textures he considers problematic for using the pedal
voices contain notes either foreign to the harmony or sustained tones through
harmonic changes. Indeed, he even claims that scales themselves have gone
arpeggiated figures unless they occur in places that permit a change of pedal,
or if they appear in the treble register. (29-30) This outlook proceeds from a
belief that the pedal should be changed with every harmonic change unless
65
it occurs in the upper register of the piano where the strings are undamped
The use of the pedal in scale passages is least allowable when the
tones move with but moderate rapidity and equal strength in the
middle or lower portion of the piano; ... For this reason the pedal
can very rarely be employed in the older polyphonic music,
since it generally moves by regular steps of the scale … (55)
for the piano’s middle to low registers, where the resonance of overtones is at
its thickest. Aside from commenting on the dangers of scalar passages in the
lower register, he emphasizes the need for spacing between chord members in
of the composition.” From his point of view, any deviation from optimal
66
textural clarity constitutes a kind of special effect, which, though perhaps not
his own words, “Where absolute beauty of tone can be disregarded, much can
character.” (73)
melodies in the upper register may somewhat mitigate the “harsh” sound of
(56) may be pedaled through if “at any point one tone or chord be struck with
great force.” (58) The principle he promotes here is primarily a matter of focus.
it is pulled into focus by clearly projected tones. In his words, “the strongest
tone is, so to speak, the focus from which the tone-waves emerge, all the other
the clear presentation of the melody. Schmitt maintains that in some cases
forcefully marking out melodic notes provides focus and clarity to textures
According to Schmitt,
[p]layers who have the skill to bring the melody out clearly
soften many dissonances even without the pedal; the related
tones blend with the melody, while the others fade away. (57)
67
Another contemporary publication, Alexander Nikitich Bukhovstev’s
Guide to the Proper Use of the Pianoforte Pedals (1897), transmits many of the
same notions. Like Schmitt, Bukhotsev associates polyphonic music with older
the piano.
requirement for clarity of sonority in piano music: the separation of the bass
line from the rest of the texture. He claims, “[t]he use of the half pedal is
successful in proportion to the depth of the bass note, its distance from the
other voices, and the strength with which it is struck. In certain cases he
above a sustained bass note, but only “if no particular clearness and precision
of tone are required; but if, contrary to the highest artistic claims, a certain
Aleksandr Nikitich Bukhotsev, Guide to the Proper Use of the Pianoforte Pedals.
Ibid., 36.
68
This passage is revealing in that it equates “the highest artistic claims”
from sympathetic vibration. Both also note that playing the bass and/or the
melody more strongly can mitigate the effect. From this it is evident that
being promoted by these treatises, and that it was directly related to the
declares,
touch” (222) — dynamic contrast, possible on the piano but not on the organ
or harpsichord. This type of polyphony is different than the “older polyphonic
style” referred to in the other treatises cited. It is one in which the separate
layers of the texture are kept distinct and in a clear hierarchical order through
69
clear division between melody and accompaniment and the audibility of that
division to the listener. Whereas Christiani asserts that the melody “invariably
dynamic rank at all, excepting a negative one, that of being least important.”
the pianist to solve and, in a sense, eradicate for the listener. Rather than
the primary thematic line and make sure it is distinct from the rest of the
texture. As for textures in which two or more true melodic threads exist
70
the pianist to impose a hierarchy on the texture and be sure that it is clearly
apprehend it. Careful handling of the lower registers, and avoidance of close-
spacing and frequent non-harmonic tones, are acoustic strategies for taking
texture, for instance just one melodic voice, and subordinating the rest, the
pianist can minimize the buildup of sound allowing greater overall clarity. At
the same time though, this hierarchization is a way to draw clear boundaries
separating the various components of a texture, and to clearly define the role
and importance of each separate part. The music is thus packaged in a way
71
Brahms and textural ambiguity
of Brahms’s own views on these issues is scarce, but there are some hints
case, the String Quintet in G Major, Opus 111, the difficulties in balance and
the work, leading to an exchange between Brahms and Joseph Joachim. The
cellist premiering the work, Reinhold Hummer, complained that his opening
solo could not be heard properly because it was set underneath four other
string lines, all playing sixteenth notes sempre forte. Turning to Joachim for
Ultimately, the passage proved troublesome not only for the players but
also for Brahms himself. He did not acquiesce in Hummer’s opinion that the
upper strings should play the accompaniment piano, but still felt “the proper
strings would play forte until the entrance of the cello, at which point they
My information on this affair is drawn from Styra Avins, “Performing
Brahms’s Music: Clues from His Letters,” in Performing Brahms: Early Evidence
of Performing Style, ed. Michael Musgrave and Bernard Sherman, Musical
Performance and Reception (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 30-
34. See also, Avins, Johannes Brahms: Life and Letters, 674-678.
10 Avins, “Performing Brahms’s Music: Clues from His Letters,” 30.
11 Ibid., 30.
12 Avins, Johannes Brahms: Life and Letters, 676.
72
would drop down to mezzo-forte. Donald Francis Tovey, who was present
for the Joachim Quartet’s London premiere of the work, claims there was no
was no difficulty in hearing the violoncello with its theme in the lowest brass
under the Niagara of sound in the other four high-lying instruments, who
Brahms “accordingly opened the throttle of the pianoforte and let her rip and
roar. The cellist’s voice penetrated the din with the complaint, ‘Master, I can’t
hear myself at all’ — and Brahms barked back at him, ‘Lucky for you.’” (261)
Though the story was meant to convey Brahms’s famous sarcasm, it gives
another example of his obstinance with regard to a solo line being engulfed by
a “Niagara” of an accompaniment.
Tovey, in the case of the G Major Violin Sonata, Opus 78, also
of the development section [Figure 18], where the violin’s rolled chords
accompany the piano theme in the treble of the piano, Tovey caricatures
73
Figure 18.
Violin Sonata in G Major, Opus 78
Development
Did Brahms set the opening themes in the G Major Quintet and the F
himself alludes to his own predilection for low-lying vocal lines in an 1857
he was also often reluctant to push his accompaniments wholly into the
74
even independent, element and sometimes to move it canonically in relation to
dynamic balance that were altogether different from the kind of textural
and composition, as cited above. Though the quotations from Brahms and
his acquaintances are not specifically concerned with solo piano music,
they do give some idea of his general attitude towards the relationship
between melody and accompaniments. Moreover, his piano music provides
75
not possible, and textures where the boundaries separating melodic lines
from the accompaniment are somewhat blurred. The thick rolled chords in
Variation 13 of his Opus 24 Variations,17 for example, are precisely the kind
chromatic line in the C Sharp Minor Capriccio, opus 76, no.5,18 is a prime
example of stepwise motion in the lower register that ensures that semitones
will be mingled where the pedal is used. The B Minor Ballade, Opus 10,
no.4,19 and the B Minor Intermezzo, Opus 119, no.1,20 provide examples
Romanze, Opus 118, no.5, and the E Flat Major Intermezzo, Opus 117, no.1,21
shows the problems often inherent in attempting to use voicing of the type
been issues of balance and pedaling, and their possible relation to the greater
transparency of the various kinds of pianos built in the first half of the
to a recording of Beethoven sonatas for cello and piano by Anner Bylsma and
17 Chapter 1, Figure 2.
18 Chapter 1, Figure 3a.
19 Chapter 1, Figure 1.
20 Chapter 1, Figure 15.
21 Chapter 1, Figure 11a.
22 See for example Bernard Sherman’s interview with Malcolm Bilson in
Bernard Sherman, Inside Early Music: Conversations with Performers (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1997), 297-314.
76
Malcolm Bilson,23 Bernard Sherman concludes that “[t]he period instruments
solve balance problems that modern pianos create in these works, making
it clear that Beethoven would have written the piano parts differently for a
modern grand.”24 It is true of all pianos from the first half of the nineteenth
century, albeit to varying degrees, that the tone is clearer and decays more
remark epitomizes a belief held by many who perform on period pianos. The
longer in use because of problems of textural clarity, support the belief that the
way composer handled issues of register and chord spacing in piano music.
resonance transforms what should be clear textures into something thick and
for his piano music. For decades, scholars have maintained that his handling
of the bass register was largely determined by his “strong leanings”25 towards
by Johann Baptist Streicher (circa 1868), given to him in 1872 and kept in his
23 Beethoven: Sonatas for Fortepiano and Cello, vols. I & II, Malcolm Bilson and
Anner Bylsma (Nonesuch CD#79152, 1992).
24 Sherman, Inside Early Music, 313.
25 Cai, “Brahms’s Pianos,” 59.
26 Ibid., 62.
77
Vienna flat until the end of his life. This piano, like pianos from the first half
of the century, did not have the cross-stringing, one-piece cast-iron frame, or
the heavy, rigid case found on Steinway-type pianos from the early 1860’s to
the present day, and so would indeed have had a quicker decay and a more
pianos because of the latter’s more complex overtone pattern in the lower
Steinway piano, emulated to varying degrees by rival piano makers until their
78
on an instrument like the Streicher, Brahms’s music comes
cleaner and clearer, the thick textures we associate with his work,
the sometimes muddy chords in the bass and the occasionally
woolly sonorities, lightened. Those textures, then, are not a fault
of Brahms’s piano composition.29
Robert Pascall also invokes this idea in reference to Brahms’s chamber music
including piano:
These writers agree that to perform Brahms’s piano music on the modern
79
sound quality he was most used to and preferred”33, a “sound ideal clearly
textural clarity, specifically with regard to the melody being clearly audible.
For example, Cai writes, “The textures Brahms chooses for the late piano
pieces ... reveal his clarity of intent to produce a defined, balanced piano
mean one that is balanced so that all parts are easily apprehensible, where
the accompanimental parts do not interfere with the projection of the main
melodic lines. For Cai, the clear delineation of melodic material is a priori an
important objective in Brahms’s piano writing. She asserts that “the problem
80
13 from Opus 24, because he believed this was the register in which they
project most clearly is dubious. In the Capriccio, were pianists to thin out
the accompaniment in the opening measures, and project the melodic line,
they would to a certain extent eradicate the contrast between the initially
thrust of the work is based. If one is sensitive to the way Brahms uses register,
such directions one can recognize when he doesn’t intend melodic clarity.
when she invokes “the pianos of Brahms’s time”. She gives the impression that
the modern-type piano was not a piano “of Brahms’s time”; but, instruments
very much like those that are standard today had begun to dominate the
European piano market by the early 1860’s,36 Assuming that Cai is referring
to pianos like those of Erard and Streicher, which predate the Steinway
these and modern grand pianos are inaccurate. One of the fundamental
differences between the modern grand and the pianos of the 1850’s and ‘60’s
is its concentrated tone and greater capacity for projecting individual lines.
In fact, it is far easier to make an individual voice shine out above the rest of
the texture on a Steinway than on any other piano in history; indeed, this is
one of its great strengths. Its countervailing weakness is that because of its
slow decaying tone and complex overtone pattern one is forced to underplay
36 The London exhibition of 1862 was a widely publicized success for the
American firms of Steinway and Chickering and led to imitation of their
pianos by many important European firms. This includes Johann Baptist
Streicher who won a medal at the 1867 Paris exhibition for an instrument that
was essentially an exact replica of American instruments shown at the 1862
exhibition. Ludwig Bösendorfer followed suit and exhibited a cross-strung
iron-framed piano of his own at the 1873 exhibition in Vienna. See Ehrlich, The
Piano: A History, 56-62. Also 214-219.
81
background material, and consciously project melodic lines for audibility, to
an extent that had never been necessary before. The great strength of a more
transparent piano, like an 1860’s Streicher or Erard, is that one can play all
the voices at a more equal dynamic level without sacrificing the distinctness
of any individual part. These pianos do not have the concentrated tone
with which to project any single melodic voice as distinctly as the modern-
type piano can, but their overall transparency makes this kind of voicing
unnecessary. It is true that the fundamental pitches in the tenor register are
clearer on the earlier pianos; however, on either type the treble register has
the brightest and most piercing sound, and is usually the most easily heard,
performance has long been to seek out and perform on instruments that the
in general use during the composer’s lifetime. In the case of Brahms, this
yields a long and diverse list that includes numerous pianos that predate
the modern grand as well as modern pianos. Presented with this complex
the list of “appropriate” pianos (1) through conjectural links between the
music and specific characteristics of certain pianos, and (2) by using historical
of piano manufacture during his lifetime. In the first case, this has led to the
82
second it has led to equally dubious historical investigations, characterized
Brahms, like all pianists who lived in the second half of the nineteenth
Hiller, and my worthless self play Streichers.”38 As for his feelings towards
these pianos, a letter from 1873 to his friend Adolf Schubring, the critic, states,
“I consider Streicher to be good and reliable [...] I like them quite a lot in a
room, and for myself, even now, cannot get used to the local grand pianos in
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seems to have been in 1880.40 Styra Avins has pointed out that Brahms’s letters
he made efforts on numerous occasions to secure either one or the other for
occurring during his lifetime, nor does it provide any example of Brahms
of Brahms’s music, the list is once again diverse. Hans von Bülow, one of
the century’s most distinguished piano virtuosos, who worked closely with
from its earliest days, even advising the firm on its design. Clara Schumann,
music, became enamored with an over-strung, iron framed piano during the
grand that she bought in 1879 and kept to the end of her life.
Like the Bechstein pianos favored by Bülow, this piano shares many
84
Figure 19
Grotrian-Steinweg Grand
In possession of the Städtisches Museum Braunschweig
later acquired appeared in Europe, and the list of pianos either of them had
important venues for touring virtuosi like Bülow and Schumann. Often, the
85
relationship with important local venues, providing pianos for concerts with
venue. Such was the case for the Broadwood firm and St. James’s Hall in
London. This venue, which was the site of the Monday and Saturday Popular
Concerts through the second half of the nineteenth century, with frequent
majority of the concerts. The same could be said of the Bösendorfer piano and
Brahms and the performers who first championed his music, had to be able to
separate the piano into two mutually exclusive groups, the “period piano”
year after Brahms was born, to give some idea of the sound-quality he was
used to and preferred, and which therefore is most appropriate for his piano
the instrument; a piece that he claims “is particularly apt for our purpose.”
42 Pascall, Playing Brahms: A Study in 19th-Century Performance, 9.
86
Pascall explains that Brahms had the Erard’s rate of decay in mind, which was
However, his 1834 Erard piano was built nearly 60 years before this Intermezzo
There is nothing to support this claim other than the fact that Brahms
lived in Vienna from the 1860’s on. Evidence of Brahms’s familiarity with
but modeled after the American Steinway) is hardly lacking. Not to mention
the fact that both Streicher and Bösendorfer also manufactured pianos
within Vienna exhibiting many of the design features that distinguish the
American Steinway: namely, the complete iron frame and overstringing of the
43 Malcolm Bilson has contended the opposite view of this very passage. “At
the slow speed Brahms asks for, it is quite easily realizable, even on the richest
modern piano.” Sherman, Inside Early Music: Conversations with Performers, 308.
44 Cai, “Brahms’s Pianos and the Performance of His Late Piano Works,” 59.
87
Brahms Conrad Graf Piano.”45 Pollens’s article is devoted to the Conrad Graf
piano owned by the Schumanns, on which Brahms played for them such
compositions as his Scherzo, Opus 4, and his three piano Sonatas, Opp. 1,
2, and 5. Because of this Pollen concludes, “it is thus the piano most closely
associated with his three Sonatas and Scherzo.”46 What does the phrase “most
closely associated with” mean? Of these works, all but the Opus 5 Sonata had
1853. The criteria for the “most appropriate” piano implied in the arguments
written quite differently. But Schumann’s Graf piano did not influence the
were performed during the 1850’s. We might just as well “closely associate”
the Scherzo with whichever of Liszt’s pianos the work was played on during
Brahms’s visit to Weimar earlier in 1853, or the C Major Sonata with whatever
on the modern piano’s sound, but they have remained bound to those very
premises espoused in the compositional/performance treatises cited above
88
the presumption that the dense saturation of the lower register, and seemingly
the same time, but without supporting documentary evidence, they assume
that Brahms himself held these views; an assumption that is the basis for
treatises, which at least allow that a composer might use pervasive density
This is not to say that Brahms’s use of such textures was specifically
aesthetic span four decades, from the Opus 10 Ballades (1854) to the Opus 119
register, across these decades which saw major changes in piano design,
his music and the changing instruments. Though his idiosyncratic manner
of writing for the instrument was established in works that predate the
modern piano, it does not follow that it was eventually compromised by, or
as suggested by the writers quoted above, rendered incompatible with the
pianos than any other half-century in the history of piano music. This is a
situation quite unlike that of Mozart, for example, who owned one piano
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which he took with him for his own public concerts. Rather than suggesting
should understand that his writing was inspired by his own idealized concept
of artistic piano playing. This is an important distinction that allows for the
flexibility of his aesthetics against the background of the changing piano and
and expanded over time, influenced by experiences with new piano designs
artists.
perhaps the most easily defined, because a clear division can be made on the
pianos with both types of action throughout the second half of the century.
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complexity. In the present day one refers to “the modern piano,” because of
cast-iron frame, cross-stringing, large felt hammers, and the use of some
kind of double escapement repetition action. One may refer to such pianos as
“Steinway-type” pianos because they follow the basic recipe of the formula
that began with the Steinway pianos of the 1860’s and ‘70’s. In connection
with piano making during the second half of the nineteenth century, the
piano makers who emulated most, if not all, of Steinway’s design features,
and “conservative” makers who continued to make pianos that were either
straight-strung, had a more limited use of iron in the frame, had a single
all these features. The latter group held the belief that in gaining the added
power and brilliance of tone one lost other, more important, aspects of the
piano’s sound: for example, a sweet, non-percussive sound, that more closely
49 Leon Botstein, “Music and It Public: Habits of Listening and the Crisis of
Musical Modernism in Vienna, 1870-1914” (Dissertation, Harvard University,
1985), 564-565.
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The Bösendorfer piano has typically been cited in the Brahms
Brahms had in mind, though even in his own time Ludwig Bösendorfer
Botstein explains,
design innovations, many of which, like the Steinway piano, were dedicated
to sustaining the tone, and increasing power and resonance.50 One such
soundboard for the purpose of enriching the tone without the use of wooden
ribs. 51
was the duplex scale. This is the bisecting of the upper strings by an iron bar
known as the “capo tasto” so that part of the string would vibrate from being
struck by the hammer, the other sympathetically, enhancing the overall sound.
Nevertheless, he did not disagree with the basic idea of enhancing the sound
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system of aliquot stringing.52 Julius Blüthner is recognized for implementing
this innovation, where extra, non-speaking, strings are run alongside the
strings struck by the hammers so that they will enhance each tone through
scheme; however, one of his most innovative and famous piano designs,
“Imperial” grand piano has extra notes added to the extreme bass and extra
strings, without keys or hammers to strike them, to the extreme treble. The
purpose was not necessarily that they be played; in fact, the bass notes had
a cover that could be pulled over them so as to not confuse pianists. Rather,
this design was another innovation directed towards harnessing the extra
maintain the individuality of his own company, and to preserve the sound
ideals that had been its basis since the first half of the nineteenth century.
Thus, this firm managed to be both progressive and conservative at the same
time. The pianos of Carl Bechstein, on the other hand, were cross-strung and
iron-framed almost from the start and, like the Steinway, designed primarily
for greater power and brilliance. For this reason, Bechstein is generally
the performance practice literature. Nevertheless, the Bechstein piano did not
have the duplex scale in Brahms’s time (nor does it today), did not have as
thick or rigid a case as the Steinway, had smaller, less dense hammers, and had
52 Ibid., 588.
53 The first Bechstein “Imperial” was unveiled in 1900.
54 See Botstein “Music and its Public,” 568-69, 585.
93
a somewhat different repetition action. Therefore, the late-nineteenth-century
instrument,” embodying traditions that have since become obsolete. This can
pianos that were being made during the later part of the nineteenth century.
careful to specify what one means by “modern piano.” The term has taken
Bösendorfer. In the last several decades the term has often been used to
Conclusion
decades and the final decades of the nineteenth century. Spanning the length
worlds and yet at the same time belong exclusively to neither world. As the
piano treatises in the later decades of the century are based to a large extent on
the managing of overtones and resonance, it is clear that the shift in aesthetics
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was related to the increased power of late-nineteenth-century pianos.
style” during the 1880’s and 1890’s. Furthermore, he did not abandon many
of the textural devices that can be found in piano works at the beginning
to a nineteenth-century pianist.
attempt to intuit what it was they admired in these instruments, and more
importantly, how they might have handled them. It is likely that the pianists of
after having first spent many years practicing and performing on a wide range
of other pianos, would have handled them quite differently then subsequent
95
century pianos other than the Steinway-type is the potential for these
key weight, and projection must have led to a more nuanced and flexible
conception of balance than necessary for musicians only using one type of
must look beyond the kind of clarity that marks the rise of the modern style
at the turn of the century and has persisted as an aesthetic doctrine ever
help in this endeavor. But in order for such investigations to be valuable, they
imaginatively.
96
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