TY - JOUR
T1 - Starting in the middle
T2 - Auxiliary cadences in the Beatles' songs
AU - Wagner, Naphtali
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - Establishment of the opening tonic is one of the structural foundations of orthodox tonal practice regardless of period or genre. While this principle was almost always honoured, historically speaking, throughout the eighteenth century, nineteenth-century composers sometimes chose to deviate from it, as did the Beatles in the rather different context of twentieth-century popular song. The present discussion of non-tonic beginnings in the music of the Beatles is based primarily on the Schenkerian concept of the auxiliary cadence. In the first instance, it explores the nature of such cadences located either at the opening of a song, or at the beginning of one of its inner subdivisions. In addition to illuminating the functional significance of the absent tonic, the commentary also proceeds to evaluate its purpose as a rhetorical device intended to amplify the meaning of the sung text. During the course of the narrative, a number of important distinctions are drawn between auxiliary progressions and regressions, open and closed auxiliary units, and short-range and long-range auxiliary progressions. Among the various songs examined in some detail are: 'She Loves You', 'All My Loving', 'If I Fell', 'I'll Follow the Sun', 'Help!', 'Strawberry Fields', 'I Am the Walrus', 'Hello Goodbye' and 'Happiness Is a Warm Gun'.
AB - Establishment of the opening tonic is one of the structural foundations of orthodox tonal practice regardless of period or genre. While this principle was almost always honoured, historically speaking, throughout the eighteenth century, nineteenth-century composers sometimes chose to deviate from it, as did the Beatles in the rather different context of twentieth-century popular song. The present discussion of non-tonic beginnings in the music of the Beatles is based primarily on the Schenkerian concept of the auxiliary cadence. In the first instance, it explores the nature of such cadences located either at the opening of a song, or at the beginning of one of its inner subdivisions. In addition to illuminating the functional significance of the absent tonic, the commentary also proceeds to evaluate its purpose as a rhetorical device intended to amplify the meaning of the sung text. During the course of the narrative, a number of important distinctions are drawn between auxiliary progressions and regressions, open and closed auxiliary units, and short-range and long-range auxiliary progressions. Among the various songs examined in some detail are: 'She Loves You', 'All My Loving', 'If I Fell', 'I'll Follow the Sun', 'Help!', 'Strawberry Fields', 'I Am the Walrus', 'Hello Goodbye' and 'Happiness Is a Warm Gun'.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=60949405589&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/j.1468-2249.2006.00236.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1468-2249.2006.00236.x
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AN - SCOPUS:60949405589
SN - 0262-5245
VL - 25
SP - 155
EP - 169
JO - Music Analysis
JF - Music Analysis
IS - 1-2
ER -