[SMT-PAIG] Expressive shaping of sound

John Lawrence johnyilawrence at gmail.com
Fri Apr 30 12:05:15 PDT 2021


	John, 

	Regarding covers and the like: Victoria Malawey has some great discussion of how vocal timbre affects meaning in different covers in Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” in Chapter 2 of A Blaze of Light in Every Word. If mashups interest you too, I recommend Kyle Adams's article "What Did Danger Mouse Do?," which is about The Grey Album. 

	Regarding Shostakovich: I've actually twice taught a class session on the question of sincerity vs. sarcasm in the finale of Shostakovich's Fifth. (I try to teach comparative recording analysis in most of my classes for non-majors, especially, since they find that more accessible than most of the more standard topics, such as form.) I provided a little bit of background on the issue, and then gave them Bernstein's and Rostropovich's recordings, asking them to identify and discuss the moments where the performances seem to reflect divergent attitudes towards the emotional content of the music. However, I didn't tell them that Bernstein takes the music at face value and Rostropovich is being ironic. And most of my students have thought it was the other way around! They interpreted Rostropovich's labored coda as representing struggle towards triumph, and they found Bernstein's fast tempo to be too glib to represent genuine triumph (like someone faking / going through the motions). 

	Regarding the general phenomenon of performances altering the perceived content of classical music: Dorottya Fabian’s article "Analyzing Difference in Recordings of Bach’s Violin Solos with a Lead from Gilles Deleuze" explores a wide array of parameters worth considering (although, I must admit, my perception of Grumiaux’s and Milstein’s styles is the reverse of hers). And at the risk of self-aggrandizement, I'll mention that this general issue was one of the main topics of my dissertation (specifically with regards to how lines seems to interact with each other). I'm happy to send you the relevant chapters.

	John Lawrence

> On Apr 30, 2021, at 12:48 PM, paig-request at lists.societymusictheory.org wrote:
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>   1. Expressive shaping of sound (John Paul Ito)
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> Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 30 Apr 2021 16:47:58 +0000
> From: John Paul Ito <itojp at cmu.edu>
> To: "paig at lists.societymusictheory.org"
> 	<paig at lists.societymusictheory.org>
> Subject: [SMT-PAIG] Expressive shaping of sound
> Message-ID: <07390B3B-E0BA-4BDD-8A59-BE451E0DA604 at contoso.com>
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> 
> Hi everyone,
> 
> With apologies to those of you who will have seen my full message on SMT Discuss, I wanted to bring one small, targeted request to this group.
> 
> I?m looking for literature on the topic of the way in which specific performance inflections can steer the meaning and expression of music in one direction or another.  For example, how might a performance of Shostakovich?s Fifth Symphony take a position on its being either triumphant or sarcastic?  Or, how can a cover or a remix of a pop song change meaning and expression in relation to the original?  I?d be happy to hear about insightful discussions of any kind, including in magazine articles, record reviews, etc.
> 
> Thanks for any leads, and hope you?re all well,
> 
> John
> 
> *PS: Please get enough sleep. Missing sleep knocks down your immune system. Even mild sleep deprivation makes it more likely to get a cold virus. (Google it?)
> I?ll be adding this tag to my emails until it seems like this message is getting out enough.
> 
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