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FORMAL DETERMINANTS IN THE SYMPHONIES OF ARNOLD BAX.RIVERS, JOSEPH LAROCHE, JR. January 1982 (has links)
The seven symphonies of Arnold Bax, written between 1921 and 1939, are the climax of a fruitful career of music composition. This study investigates the determinants of form in these works, considers some of the formal problems, and makes a correlation between form and style. The two primary formal determinants are thematic organization and textural formation. Other factors, such as rhythm, dynamics, timbre, register, and harmony, act on the thematic and textural process in a secondary way. Tonality sometimes plays an important formal role and is discussed in conjunction with thematicism and texture. Harmony, though an important aspect of Bax's style, frequently has an ornamental rather than structural significance. For the sake of generalization and comparison, formal patterns of individual movements are outlined. Formal patterns are described by simple diagrams of how themes appear in a movement as defined by textural formation. In some cases, these bear a resemblance to traditional formal models, though in an individual way. Formal patterns serve to show that Bax has definite formal shapes in mind. Bax, however, does not artificially impose these patterns on the music; instead, they arise from Bax's need for creative expression. A conclusion of this study is that textural-thematic contrast and variation are fundamental to the form and style of Bax's symphonies. Contrast, especially, is vital to Bax's romantic aesthetic, and variation is largely responsible for the variety of textural change and the evolution of thematic ideas. The Second Symphony is analyzed in some detail. In that work, a cyclical use of themes and motives provides an interesting study. Contrast and variation are very pervasive and result in a very individual and satisfying formal design.
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A song of war and victory : an edition, commentary, and analysis of the 1905 tone poem by Sir Arnold BaxLudden, Paul R. January 2006 (has links)
Many of the musical works composed by Sir Arnold Bax have been studied, edited, and performed in the fifty or so years since his death in 1953. Until recently, several of the earliest symphonic works have remained as original unedited manuscripts tucked away in private collections. This dissertation serves to partially remedy this obscurity by presenting the first edition of the 1905 tone poem, A Song of War and Victory as a practical and working score. It also provides a study comprising commentary, analysis, and a large section devoted to the correction of the many errors in the manuscript. This early work is now available to orchestras, conductors, and scholars in a performance edition. Within the commentary and analysis portions is a comparison study of the other extant early, and interestingly varied, symphonic works, complete with an appendix, comprising a complete edition of the 1904 set of variations aptly titled, Variations (Improvisations). Before this study, Bax's Variations was the only remaining unedited work from the early symphonic complete works. Therefore, this dissertation fills these notable, existing, gaps and completes the exposition of these earliest examples of the composer's work. / School of Music
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