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Boundaries, Space and Register in Beethovens Piano Music [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 384 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 56 music exx. and 45 graphs
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Sep-2025
  • Kirjastus: The Boydell Press
  • ISBN-10: 1783277998
  • ISBN-13: 9781783277995
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 384 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 56 music exx. and 45 graphs
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Sep-2025
  • Kirjastus: The Boydell Press
  • ISBN-10: 1783277998
  • ISBN-13: 9781783277995
Develops a new theory of space and register which will be essential reading for the music analyst, while offering radical new interpretations of canonical repertoire for the pianist, Beethoven scholar and informed listener.



This is the first book to demonstrate the significance of registral structure and spatial narrative in Beethoven's oeuvre across his stylistic evolution. Introducing a far-reaching new analytical method and theoretical framework to a substantial corpus of piano music including sonatas, variations and bagatelles, the book extends conventional notions of register, Beethoven's handling of the highs and lows of pitch, to the broader concepts of pitch boundaries and the shaping of sonic space. Tracing theories of register from Schenker to the present-day, Miller moves beyond these approaches in his discussions of what he terms "spatial analysis". Proceeding from simple to more complex forms in a broadly chronological sequence, the author describes 'spatial narratives' of each work by means of cutting-edge computational diagrams and close-to-the text commentary.

This book shows how linear patterns at extreme boundaries correlate with structural highpoints and divisions within musical forms, for instance sonata structures, forming striking large-scale connections within, and between, individual movements. Analysed are interactions of high and low boundaries through gestures such as registral bridges, registral shifts, and the distribution of climatic peaks and wide-spans. Equally central to Miller's study is the survey of keyboard instruments of Beethoven's day, keyboard choreography, and spatial expansion and contraction, reflecting pianistic virtuosity and expression. The mediation of structural and expressive aspects culminates in the physicality and spirituality of the late works interpreted with metaphorical symbolism.

Arvustused

With rigor and insight, Miller shows Beethoven probing sonic boundaries in his works while conveying a sense of the whole. He traces a provocative through-line in Beethoven, one that ultimately points beyond the earthly toward the celestial. * William Kinderman, Distinguished Professor, UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music * Meticulously objective but never aridly impersonal, exhaustively researched yet vividly communicative in style, Malcolm Miller's book sets a new baseline for the technical exploration and expressive interpretation of this endlessly fascinating music. * Arnold Whittall, Emeritus Professor of Music Theory and Analysis, King's College London * Modern pianos are regulated evenly from top to bottom. On fortepianos - with parallel string - we can clearly distinguish between the registers; top, middle and bass. They each have their unmistakable timbre. Throughout his life Beethoven followed the evolution of instruments, he personally knew the best piano makers. For him the instrument's singing tone was more important than its volume and brilliance. Much of Beethoven's piano music is metaphysical and indeed cosmic. The highest sphere of the keyboard represents the Heavens or the skies, in the lowest range we have the Earth and the Underworld. In this new book Malcolm Miller examines the ideas of register and space in Beethoven's complete solo piano works. It is a most valuable contribution to our understanding of this great master, highly recommended to students, scholars and Beethoven enthusiasts. * Sir András Schiff *

List of Illustrations
Key to Notational Conventions, Terminology and Diagrams
Foreword by Barry Cooper

Introduction

PART 1: Sonic Space Explorations: Concepts and Contexts

1. Register in the Analytical Literature: Limitations and Possibilities

2. The Analysis of Space and Register: Concepts and Methods

3. New Methods of Spatial Analysis in Action

4. Beethoven's Fortepianos and the Expansion of Range


PART 2: Shaping Sonic Space in Ternary, Rondo and Variation Forms

5. Shaping Space in the Seven Bagatelles Op. 33

6. Spatial Expansion in Beethoven's Piano Variations I: The 'Dressler' (1782)
to Op.34 (1802)

7. Spatial Expansion in Beethoven's Piano Variations II: The 'Eroica' Op. 35
(1802) to the 'Diabelli' Op. 120 (1819-23)


PART 3: Spatial Strategies in Multi-movement Sonatas

8. Space and Boundary in the 'Grande Sonate Pathétique' Op.13

9. Depth and Spatial Dialogue in Op. 27/ 1 & 2 and Op. 28

10. Spatial Narratives of Drama and Wit: Op. 31/2 - 3

11. Stretching Space and Breaking Boundaries I: Sonata in C Op. 53
'Waldstein'
12. Stretching Space and Breaking Boundaries II: Sonata in F minor Op. 57
'Appassionata'
13. Registral Pairs: Sonata in F Op. 54; Sonata in F Op. 78
14. Space and Narrative: Sonata in E flat Op. 81 'Les Adieux'


PART 4: Beethoven's Late Style and the Symbolism of Space

15. Space and Transcendence in the Late Piano Sonatas, Opp. 106, 109, 110,
111
16. Space and cyclic form in the Six Bagatelles I: Op. 126/1-3

17. Space and cyclic form in the Six Bagatelles II: Op.126/4-6

18. Epilogue: Towards a Theory of Space and Register

Bibliography

Index
MALCOLM MILLER is Honorary Associate and Associate Lecturer in Music at The Open University, UK, and Editor of Arietta, journal of the Beethoven Piano Society of Europe