Aspects of Villa-Lobos’s Tonal Style in Some of His Studies for Guitar

The goal of this paper is to shed new light on selected strategies that characterize the tonal style of the first nine studies of the set by means of examining Villa- Lobos’s treatment of tonality from a perspective that takes into account the role of large-scale structure. I focus on three broad to...

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Main Author: Gabriel Navia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Estadual do Paraná 2020-12-01
Series:Revista Vortex
Subjects:
Online Access:http://periodicos.unespar.edu.br/index.php/vortex/article/view/3970
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spelling doaj-5324220646bc446b8cf1bce3d304cfa22021-02-10T17:11:06ZengUniversidade Estadual do ParanáRevista Vortex2317-99372020-12-0183131https://doi.org/10.33871/23179937.2020.8.3.1.12Aspects of Villa-Lobos’s Tonal Style in Some of His Studies for GuitarGabriel Navia0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2512-2621Universidade Federal da Integração Latino-AmericanaThe goal of this paper is to shed new light on selected strategies that characterize the tonal style of the first nine studies of the set by means of examining Villa- Lobos’s treatment of tonality from a perspective that takes into account the role of large-scale structure. I focus on three broad tonal effects that characterize the style of the selected studies, examining in detail some of their specific realizations. I demonstrate how 1) tonal madness may be associated with the deformation of tonic and dominant functions, 2) tonal ambiguity emerges from the presence of opposing tonal forces within the same musical space, and 3) tonal coloring is achieved through chromatic voice-leading, tonally oriented parallelism, and the substitution of standard tonal events. The theoretical foundation combines Schenkerian theory with aspects of Joseph Straus’s interdisciplinary studies on musical modernism and disability (2018) and Daniel Harrison’s harmonic theory on 19th- and early 20th-century chromatic music (1994).http://periodicos.unespar.edu.br/index.php/vortex/article/view/3970modernismtonic madnesstonal pairingtonal ambiguitychromatic counterpoint
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gabriel Navia
spellingShingle Gabriel Navia
Aspects of Villa-Lobos’s Tonal Style in Some of His Studies for Guitar
Revista Vortex
modernism
tonic madness
tonal pairing
tonal ambiguity
chromatic counterpoint
author_facet Gabriel Navia
author_sort Gabriel Navia
title Aspects of Villa-Lobos’s Tonal Style in Some of His Studies for Guitar
title_short Aspects of Villa-Lobos’s Tonal Style in Some of His Studies for Guitar
title_full Aspects of Villa-Lobos’s Tonal Style in Some of His Studies for Guitar
title_fullStr Aspects of Villa-Lobos’s Tonal Style in Some of His Studies for Guitar
title_full_unstemmed Aspects of Villa-Lobos’s Tonal Style in Some of His Studies for Guitar
title_sort aspects of villa-lobos’s tonal style in some of his studies for guitar
publisher Universidade Estadual do Paraná
series Revista Vortex
issn 2317-9937
publishDate 2020-12-01
description The goal of this paper is to shed new light on selected strategies that characterize the tonal style of the first nine studies of the set by means of examining Villa- Lobos’s treatment of tonality from a perspective that takes into account the role of large-scale structure. I focus on three broad tonal effects that characterize the style of the selected studies, examining in detail some of their specific realizations. I demonstrate how 1) tonal madness may be associated with the deformation of tonic and dominant functions, 2) tonal ambiguity emerges from the presence of opposing tonal forces within the same musical space, and 3) tonal coloring is achieved through chromatic voice-leading, tonally oriented parallelism, and the substitution of standard tonal events. The theoretical foundation combines Schenkerian theory with aspects of Joseph Straus’s interdisciplinary studies on musical modernism and disability (2018) and Daniel Harrison’s harmonic theory on 19th- and early 20th-century chromatic music (1994).
topic modernism
tonic madness
tonal pairing
tonal ambiguity
chromatic counterpoint
url http://periodicos.unespar.edu.br/index.php/vortex/article/view/3970
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