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The Musico-Poetics of the Flat Submediant in Schubert's Songs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

Abstract

Composers' increasing and increasingly evocative use of chromatic mediants during the first few decades of the nineteenth century is arguably a hallmark of early Romantic harmony. The apparent association in Schubert's songs between ♭VI and the representation of utopia, fantasy, reverie, dreams and other positive, other-worldly states has been noted by many scholars. However, the fact that he also occasionally employed ♭VI to portray darker sentiments is rarely commented on and questions the degree to which the ♭VI harmony itself acts as a positive, other-worldly signifier. This article accounts for these various opposing uses and proposes that surface voice-leading details (ones that are often overlooked by Schenkerian and neo-Riemannian approaches) are key to understanding the musico-poetics of ♭VI in Schubert's songs.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2019 The Royal Musical Association

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Footnotes

I would like to thank Jeanice Brooks, Suzannah Clark, Mark Everist, Harold Krebs, Danuta Mirka, Susan Wollenberg and the anonymous readers for this journal for their helpful comments and advice during various stages of this article's development.

References

1 In this article ♭VI refers to the key or chord whose keynote or root lies a major third below the home keynote, regardless of the mode of the home key and any accidental required by the key signature (thus, for example, C major is ♭VI in relation to the keys of E major and E minor). Furthermore, this article is solely concerned with tonicizations of ♭VI and cases where a harmony is classed as ♭VI in relation to the home key, rather than with fleeting surface occurrences of ♭VI or instances where a harmony acts as ♭VI only in relation to a secondary key.Google Scholar

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6 The core triadic transformations of neo-Riemannian theory are the ‘Parallel’ (P), ‘Relative’ (R) and ‘Leading-tone exchange’ (L). P transforms the mode of a triad by changing the third but keeping the root and fifth unchanged (for example, C major becomes C minor, and vice versa); R transforms a triad to its relative (for example, C major becomes A minor, and vice versa); and L substitutes the root of a major triad for its leading note, or the fifth of a minor triad for the note a semitone higher, while retaining the other two pitches (for example, C major becomes E minor, and vice versa). These transformations can be combined: for example, a PL transformation combines a P transformation and an L transformation in that order (for example, C major becomes A♭ major, but not vice versa). The P and L transformations are considered ‘maximally smooth’ as they involve minimal voice-leading work, requiring just one pitch class to move by a semitone. Hexatonic cycles are discussed in Richard Cohn, ‘Maximally Smooth Cycles, Hexatonic Systems, and the Analysis of Late-Romantic Triadic Progressions’, Music Analysis, 15 (1996), 9–40, and in Cohn, Audacious Euphony: Chromaticism and the Triad's Second Nature (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), chapter 2.Google Scholar

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23 Schubert uses the German augmented-sixth chord with relative frequency when modulating out of ♭VI, but in most cases it is placed in root position and resolves to a dominant-functioning tonic chord in second inversion, so that the bass outlines a motion ♭. Examples include ‘Der Flug der Zeit’ (D.515), ‘Der Neugierige’ (no. 6 from Die schöne Müllerin, D.795) (considered below), ‘Mein!’ (no. 11 from Die schöne Müllerin, D.795), ‘Bei dir allein’ (D.866, no. 2) and ‘Glaube, Hoffnung und Liebe’ (D.955).Google Scholar

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26 Like Stein and Spillman's reading, David Beach's, Lawrence Kramer's and Youens's interpretations of the potential ‘yes' and ‘no’ answers take their cue from the question at the end of the poem, ‘Does she love me?’, rather than the protagonist's earlier stated intention to ask the stream if his heart has lied to him. See Beach, David, ‘An Analysis of Schubert's “Der Neugierige”: A Tribute to Greta Kraus’, Canadian University Music Review / Revue de musique des universités canadiennes, 19 (1998), 69–80 (p. 75); Lawrence Kramer, Franz Schubert: Sexuality, Subjectivity, Song (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 140–1; and Susan Youens, Schubert: Die schöne Müllerin (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1992), 42, 83.Google Scholar

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29 Ibid., 253.Google Scholar

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36 E♭ major (I) is replaced by its parallel minor, E♭ minor, which moves to its own relative major, G♭ major, which in turn is treated as the dominant of C♭ major (♭VI).Google Scholar

37 Suzannah Clark has similarly argued (in relation to instrumental music) that one must be attentive to how the harmony is actually presented at the surface of Schubert's music. See Clark, Analyzing Schubert (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011), 195.Google Scholar

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