Saturday, August 24, 2019

Foote and Spalding, Modern Harmony (1905) (2)

Foote and Spalding's chapter on the ninth chords is distinctive for its generous number of examples from the repertoire, examples that show clearly the range and character of their own stylistic sources and assumptions.* One can see this already in their first page (p. 158). In Lohengrin below, G5 is strongly emphasized by position and duration, achieving the same kind of "climax coloration" that we found in American songs of the same period (see my essay Dominant Ninth Harmonies in American Songs around 1900: link). As with Wagner, Schubert moves the ninth (but ascending) over a stable dominant bass. The two brief excerpts from Beethoven are common instances from the era of the minor dominant ninth.

The next three examples are also concerned with the minor dominant ninth chord.


Amy (Mrs. H. H. A.) Beach's "Fireflies," no. 4 from Four Sketches, op. 15 (1892), has many dominant ninths, both major and minor. This short passage comes less than twenty bars from the end. Something of the flavor of the whole can be gotten by a slightly larger excerpt (see below). "Walküre" is a striking resolution of the minor dominant ninth, with ninth in the alto and fifth moving upward chromatically. "Parsifal" is a passing major ninth within a wedge shape: F-F#-G in the top voice, F-E-Eb in the bass.

Further comment on Amy (Mrs. H. H. A.) Beach, op. 15n4. Below is a slightly larger excerpt (bars -18 to -10). The passage quoted by Foote and Spalding is boxed; instances of the dominant ninth are circled: all but the last are understood as major dominant ninth chords, but see my final comments and the figure below the score. For the moment, notice the strongly marked direct resolution of the ninth in bars -11 to-10. The tonic reached in bar -10 is the final chord, prolonged by figuration to the end.

Here is a reduced view of the harmony and voice leading:


Obviously, this reduction isn't as good as it could be, since the move major-dominant-ninth to minor-triad is problematic. The composer "sneaks in" a minor ninth just before the chord change, and thus it would have been better to notate the entire example as follows:


Beach's "Fireflies" is one of those rare compositions before 1900 in which the dominant ninth is strongly motivic. Here is the opening, the ninth chords marked (minor in bars 1-2, 8; major in 5-6).


And here is a reduction of the harmony and voice leading:

More of Foote and Spalding's repertoire examples will appear in a subsequent post.

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* Such generosity was not typical earlier in the 19th century, but I should point out that by the end of the century multiple examples from the repertoire were commonly used, either for practical compositional or analytical purposes, as with Foote and Spalding, or as examples of historical practices.

Reference:
Arthur Foote and Walter Spalding, Modern Harmony in its Theory and Practice (1905). Source: Internet Archive; digital facsimile of a copy in the UCLA library.