Quijote mentioned what he called a myth, in these words: "Tonality already contained within itself the seeds of its own destruction". As he intends to start a thread to elucidate the truth that may be contained in it or to proof its complete falsehood, here goes some thought as a preliminary to his promised thread. Because I asked him to develop on the subject and, if he could, give some references.
Before tonality music was modal. And it was so during the entire Antiquity and the age that followed. It seems obvious that the rise of major and minor meant a loss of liberty in music. There were now to tyrants: the bar line and the tonic. In the old era the was infinite metric flexibility. And a great number of modes. Tonality was contained in these modes in a diluted form. And in many cases, there were strong tonal implications. Among the twelve (or fourteen) modes were two, the Ionian and Aeolian, which survived to become the basis of our tonal system. I read somewhere that it was the development of polyphonic styles and the increasingly harmonic nature of those styles that brought about the fall of the modal system.
Says Eric Salzman, Twentieth-century Music, An Introduction, 2nd ed, 1974: "The growth of equal temperament, chromaticism, and modulation had made possible the historical rise of functional tonality in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and destroyed it in the twentieth; thus tonality contained within itself from the start the seed of its own destruction". The Tristan and Debussy were natural outgrows of the tonal period. The Tristan dilutes the tonality into chromatism. Debussy uses tonality in complex ways. Tristan paved the way to the second Vienesse School.
I think composers just got tired and chose other tracks. The post-romanticism could be called hyper-romanticism. Seen at a distance, the creations of that period seem hollow and inflated, a thing that could have been perceived by some composers at the turn of the century (XIX-XX).
Before tonality music was modal. And it was so during the entire Antiquity and the age that followed. It seems obvious that the rise of major and minor meant a loss of liberty in music. There were now to tyrants: the bar line and the tonic. In the old era the was infinite metric flexibility. And a great number of modes. Tonality was contained in these modes in a diluted form. And in many cases, there were strong tonal implications. Among the twelve (or fourteen) modes were two, the Ionian and Aeolian, which survived to become the basis of our tonal system. I read somewhere that it was the development of polyphonic styles and the increasingly harmonic nature of those styles that brought about the fall of the modal system.
Says Eric Salzman, Twentieth-century Music, An Introduction, 2nd ed, 1974: "The growth of equal temperament, chromaticism, and modulation had made possible the historical rise of functional tonality in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and destroyed it in the twentieth; thus tonality contained within itself from the start the seed of its own destruction". The Tristan and Debussy were natural outgrows of the tonal period. The Tristan dilutes the tonality into chromatism. Debussy uses tonality in complex ways. Tristan paved the way to the second Vienesse School.
I think composers just got tired and chose other tracks. The post-romanticism could be called hyper-romanticism. Seen at a distance, the creations of that period seem hollow and inflated, a thing that could have been perceived by some composers at the turn of the century (XIX-XX).
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