Structural Functions in Music Jemian Berry ReviewV12
Structural Functions in Music Jemian Berry ReviewV12
Structural Functions in Music Jemian Berry ReviewV12
12
und Rudolf Stephan, Band 28. Munich: Musikverlag Emil Katzbich-
ler, 1986. Stems from a 1985 dissertation at Freien Universitat
Berlin. Contains discussion and analysis of Nono's compositions.
3 Berry later acknowledges that intuition may have a place in performance. "The
awareness of deep structures can guide a performer's conduct through a piece, affording a
rational perspective that can ultimately become intuitive in the interpretive realization." (65)
196 Indiana Theory Review Vol. 12
tions, can enlighten interpretation by providing informed choices to the
performer. The variety of examples in the introductory chapters and the
in-depth discussion of three pieces demonstrate the wide applicability of
Berry's ideas. This book offers generalized guidelines and examples to
connect analysis and performance rather than definitive procedures that
must be carried out for every composition.
The reader may also question whether it is possible to codify the
elements of a good performance. Is there only one good performance
possible for each composition? Throughout the book, Berry answers this
question with an emphatically open-minded "No!" The analytic roads to
interpretation are numerous, and Musical Structure and Peiformance
explores many of these paths. The relationship between analysis and
performance is complex, and it must be understood that "there are many
plausible analyses of any piece and ... each may point to any number of
reasonable choices of tempo and articulation." (43) Berry writes later,
"the purpose of analysis is again less to plead for one interpretation or
another as truth . . . than to suggest how interpretive decision can be
conditioned variously by divergent analytical constructs ...." (83)
In considering which elements of analysis can be brought out in a
performance, Berry states that "every analytical finding has an implication
for performance." (44) Choosing which elements to emphasize and the
means of accomplishing this task during an interpretation is the subject of
Musical Structure and Peiformance. Berry reminds his reader that analysis,
like performance itself, consists of choices. "Every good analysis is a
rendition, a learned investigation ultimately more or less subjective ...."
(138) In summarizing the topic, Berry remarks that "the analysis that
ultimately guides performance is distilled: it is a selective determination
among inferred lines of structure that are a basis for the reasoned,
reasonable unity to which analytical inquiry ideally leads, and which in
turn is expressed in illumined, illuminating performance." (218)
Musical Structure and Peiformance is in ternary form: a preface and
two introductory chapters, three chapters of detailed analysis, and a
concluding chapter which brings back issues from the initial chapters. The
bulk is given to the central three chapters, each devoted to a particular
piece and its analytical implications for performance. Chapter 3 deals with
the Brahms Intermezzo in B-flat, Gp. 76, no. 4; Chapter 4 treats the Berg
Book Reviews 197
Four Pieces for Clarinet and Piano, Gp. 5, no. 3; and Debussy's "C'est
l' extase langoureuse," no. 1 of Ariettes oubliees is the subject of Chapter
5. The preface sets the stage for the book by outlining Berry's belief that
a good performance must be based on thoughtfully considered analysis.
The first chapter begins the formal discussion of the subject, putting it in
the context of current studies and defining some basic terms and
procedures. The questions in Chapter 2, "Questions Arising in the
Relations of Analysis to Performance," serve as models for questions to
raise in specific analyses rather than as a comprehensive set of analytical
procedures. The formulation of these questions is guided by the musical
examples which illustrate them. Although Berry does not arrange them
in this way, the twelve questions of this chapter can be grouped according
to whether they involve the foreground, middleground, or background of
a piece or whether they relate to another aspect of the composition. The
foreground questions concern correct notes, projection of motives, and
addition of dynamics; middleground questions include voice leading,
texture, formal process, grouping, tempo, and meter; the background
question is whether the tonal background of a piece can be portrayed in
a performance. The last two questions are about musical realizations of
non-musical implications, such as text, and gaining an understanding of
the piece's overall character through analysis. Berry returns to the
questions of Chapter 2 in his final chapter and concludes by restating his
thesis that an analytically-informed performance is the best performance.
Readers familiar with Berry's earlier work will recognize many ideas
in Musical Structure and Peiformance. Berry indicates that much of this
book is based on theories expounded in Structural Functions in Music. In
the earlier book, performance applications were of great issue in the final
chapter on rhythm and meter. Berry's ideas have since developed, and he
has found ways to express analytic understanding of all musical elements
as performance suggestions. Textural, harmonic, melodic, and motivic
features can be brought out by an alert and sensitive interpreter.
The two primary areas where performers have license are tempo and
articulation. "The things a performer can do in interpretation are indeed
essentially matters of tempo and articulation." (3) The performer has
control over tempo in two ways: first, the rate of the entire work, and
second, adjustments that are necessary in sections of the piece depending
198 Indiana Theory Review Vol. 12
on local conditions. Articulation has a strong effect on musical character
through various inflections, punctuations, lengths, and grouping. Pitch
connections and formal structure are brought out through articulation and
tempo. It is curious that the license of dynamic inflection is not granted
on an equal basis with tempo and articulation. While overuse of this
license would be especially noticeable, it seems that dynamic contrast is
a definite part of performance practice.
According to Berry, it is much easier for performers to work with
foreground elements; after all, the foreground is the ongoing musical flow.
But throughout the book, he gives a great deal of attention to
middleground events and continually tries to bring out connections that
go beyond the surface. The possibilities of connecting midlevel events
such as motives, harmonies, and texture are raised repeatedly. Berry
notes that it is more difficult to realize the background structure in
performance but holds that it is somewhat possible in shorter works.
4 Wallace Berry. "Formal Process and Performance in the 'Eroica' Introductions," Music
Theory Spectrum 10 (1988): 3-18.
5 See, for instance, Heinrich Schenker, "The Largo of J.S. Bach's Sonata No.3 for
unaccompanied Violin [BVW 1005]," trans. John Rothgeb, Music Forum 4 (1976): 141-160;
Edward Cone, Musical Form and Musical Performance (New York: Norton, 1967); Janet
Schmalfeldt, "On the Relation of Analysis to Performance: Beethoven's Bagatelles Op. 126,
Nos. 2 and 5," Joumal of Music Theory 29/1 (1985): 1-31.
Book Reviews 205
seasoned knowledge or experience should not be gainsaid. Highly skilled
technical abilities are certainly important to a performer, but cannot be
the basis of masterful performance. Technique alone is incapable of
dealing with tricky passages of interpretation or complex questions of
balance.
Fred Maus has proposed an alternative to the analysis-based model
of performance. 6 He suggests that performance is analogous to
composition and that works may be delivered as freshly developing. The
performer's role is to present the piece as though it is continuously
unfolding rather than as a preconceived system of foreknown
relationships. Instead of the performer choosing between analyses of
many elements, the performer reveals the composition as one possibility
among many of working out the material. This model has its intriguing
features: performers would not become bogged down in myriad details of
what to bring out and what to ignore; the performance would have a
fresh, improvisatory air. Indeed such an approach might prove to be more
closely allied with the act of listening. This is certainly an area to be
explored further.
Still, even if the relation between analysis and performance bears
reexamination, Musical Structure and Performance is a valuable book. It
collects many of this important theorist's ideas and presents them in
relation to music in a variety of styles. It identifies many of the issues of
deriving performance from analysis and posits an open-minded attitude
that there is more than one path to a beautiful performance. The
questions of Chapter 2 will provide food for thought and future study for
many years.
Many will benefit from this book. Certainly, theorists who have
followed Wallace Berry's ideas for years will be interested in his
continuing development. Theorists will benefit from his graphic analyses
as well as his broadminded approaches. This book encourages theorists
to pursue performance goals as a valid outcome of their studies.
Performers will benefit from this book, especially those who are working
on the pieces discussed therein. Performers who take their art seriously