Musical
Textures
The study of
musical texture grew out of the investigation of multi-strata works which
formed the basis of my dissertation. One of the thesis chapters describes the use of musical
periodicities to form textural passages and strands, and explains that even in
textural passages which do not utilize periodicities, the periodic template can
be a useful grid for reference of density (both "vertical" and "horizontal").
The article
"Periodicity
and Musical Texture", written for a book Aspects of Musical Texture is adapted from relevant parts of
the thesis, and reflects my thoughts on the matter in 1997, with a few updates.
In these
preliminary stages of investigation, the textural passages studied are those
which appear to the listener as a single fabric with no single component (such
as melody) clearly recognizable. At
present, a study is being made of the various possible configurations of
texture according to their most salient perceptual characteristics. This study is illuminated by passages from
real musical contexts within the well-known repertoire of Western classical
music to be used as models. Due to
copyright reasons, most of these cannot be made available on the web in score
or auditory format, but some will be included in the Tool Kit.
Module II of the Armchair Researcher focusses on musical texture and gesture, and they are further explored by the Interactive Multimedia Playroom project.