Book Cover
Book
Author Antokoletz, Elliott.

Title The music of Béla Bartók : a study of tonality and progression in twentieth-century music / Elliott Antokoletz
Published Berkeley : University of California Press, [1984]
©1984

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  780.924 Bartok Art/Mob  AVAILABLE
Description xviii, 342 pages : illustrations, music ; 26 cm
Contents The musical language of Bartók : historical backgrounds. Folk- and art-music sources ; Orientation toward French, Russian, and Folk-music sources : nonfunctional bases in pentatonic, modal, and whole-tone constructions ; Use of symmetrical pitch collections by Russian, French, and Hungarian composers ; Russian nationalists : symmetrical properties of the dominant-ninth chord ; Russian nationalists, Debussy, and Stravinsky : symmetrical properties of nontraditional as well as traditional (pentatonic and modal) pitch constructions ; Russian nationalists, Scriabin, and Kodaly : symmetrical partitions of the octatonic scale ; Late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Germanic influences : symmetrical organization of chromatically related keys ; The Schoenberg school : symmetrical formations as the basis of progression in free-atonal compositions ; Berg and Webern : total systematization of the concepts of the interval cycle and inversional symmetry in dodecaphonic serial compositions -- Harmonization of authentic folk tunes -- Symmetrical transformation of the folk modes -- Basic principles of symmetrical pitch construction -- Construction, development, and interaction of intervallic cells -- Tonal centricity based on axes of symmetry -- Interaction of diatonic, octatonic, and whole-tone formations -- Generation of interval cycles
Analysis Hungarian music Bartók, Béla 1881-1945
Music
Notes Includes indexes
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 331-333)
Subject Bartók, Béla, 1881-1945.
Bartók, Béla, 1881-1945 -- Criticism and interpretation.
Bartók, Béla, 1881-1945. Works.
Musical intervals and scales.
Tonality.
LC no. 82017352
ISBN 0520046048
0520067479
9780520046047
9780520067479