'Temperament,' by Stuart Isacoff, is a 2001 book telling the story of the gradual and longterm attack on Pythagorean harmony by Renaissance and post-Renaissance therorists and composers advocating many different tempered tunings. Conservative musical theory was based on string tuning for harmonies of first and fifth, and first and fourth. It was thrown into crisis by two concurrent developments: the late-arriving harmony of first and third (today as natural as air and sunlight) and the enlarged keyboard of the harpsichord. Properly tuned ones, threes, fours and fives went out of tune in the higher octaves.
Isacoff, a music educator and composer, shows that physicists and astronomers including Galileo, Kepler and Newton were actively interested and involved in the controversies over theories of musical tuning which raged across Europe in the 16th thru 18th centuries. He shows the evolution of harmony a prime actor both stimulating and being stimulated by new ideas in physics, mathematics, painting and architecture, and an attack on Church and Aristotelian legitimacy almost as serious as Copernicus' claim that the sun did not orbit the earth. Interestingly, Galileo's father was a musical theorist and scientist and an important figure in this story.
The harmony diagrams, all of an ocatave on the piano, are simple, clear and easy to understand. The book is written for a person who knows nothing about music and the keys of C or A are never mentioned. Any reader's familarity with Do Re Mi Fa So La Ti Do is utilized as that is how the keys are labeled and indeed the concepts are easy to understand. Together with well-known examples like the opening notes of Beethoven's Fifth and those of Wagner's Bridal Matrch, Isacoff skillfully ensures that anyone can understand the basic principles of harmony.
Occasionally the author's interpretations are facile and forced, as when he relates the development of persepective in painting directly to the need for temperament in music by saying "the composer wanted to have perspective on his music." But usually his observations are astute, he knows much, and the story is fascinating. As an artist and versed in art history, I learned interesting facts about Giotto and Brunelleschi I hadn't known before.
I'm in the midst of the 17th century right now, and will be writing more in a day or two. I am looking forward to the rest of the book and of course as a lover of Bach to his role in the story. I know from the table of contents that it goes all the way to Schoenberg. To be continued.
[This message has been edited by Chaszz (edited 04-30-2006).]
Isacoff, a music educator and composer, shows that physicists and astronomers including Galileo, Kepler and Newton were actively interested and involved in the controversies over theories of musical tuning which raged across Europe in the 16th thru 18th centuries. He shows the evolution of harmony a prime actor both stimulating and being stimulated by new ideas in physics, mathematics, painting and architecture, and an attack on Church and Aristotelian legitimacy almost as serious as Copernicus' claim that the sun did not orbit the earth. Interestingly, Galileo's father was a musical theorist and scientist and an important figure in this story.
The harmony diagrams, all of an ocatave on the piano, are simple, clear and easy to understand. The book is written for a person who knows nothing about music and the keys of C or A are never mentioned. Any reader's familarity with Do Re Mi Fa So La Ti Do is utilized as that is how the keys are labeled and indeed the concepts are easy to understand. Together with well-known examples like the opening notes of Beethoven's Fifth and those of Wagner's Bridal Matrch, Isacoff skillfully ensures that anyone can understand the basic principles of harmony.
Occasionally the author's interpretations are facile and forced, as when he relates the development of persepective in painting directly to the need for temperament in music by saying "the composer wanted to have perspective on his music." But usually his observations are astute, he knows much, and the story is fascinating. As an artist and versed in art history, I learned interesting facts about Giotto and Brunelleschi I hadn't known before.
I'm in the midst of the 17th century right now, and will be writing more in a day or two. I am looking forward to the rest of the book and of course as a lover of Bach to his role in the story. I know from the table of contents that it goes all the way to Schoenberg. To be continued.
[This message has been edited by Chaszz (edited 04-30-2006).]
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