![]() Michael Talbot – Fugue Forum |
| Fuga maestosa for four voices, for keyboard added by Michael Talbot |
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The pdf and midi files of this piece may be downloaded HERE This is one of two fugues that I so far written that adopt the rhythm and relentless onward tread of a chaconne. The other belongs to a set of eight fugues I have written on subjects that expressly imitate baroque dance rhythms, but this one is only implicitly a chaconne. The ostentatiously non-contrapuntal bare octaves that characterize the subject on its last appearance are perhaps the clearest of the gestures I make towards the traditional chaconne form. There are some seventeenth-century allusions in this fugue, particularly to the style of Buxtehude, but they exist alongside other elements are almost nineteenth-century (take, for instance, the unexpected and rather ‘fruity’ ‘French’ Sixth introducing (improbably!) the return to the tonic of the subject in bar 74, an almost Brucknerian gesture. In a way, I think, the seventeenth century has more in common with the nineteenth than with the eighteenth, having a liking for passionate but disruptive expression. But I must not exaggerate: mostly, as usual, the early-to-mid eighteenth century is the temporal locus of the style and, most certainly, of the form, which is rather conventional – textbookish, even – in most ways. One respect in which I conform to orthodoxy is in making the episodes fairly distinct in character from one another, although one could say, perhaps, that bars 94–101 revisit earlier territory in a slightly disguised way. I rarely use close imitation with displaced accents (per arsin et thesin, as those fond of latinized Greek used to say), but the canonic imitation at the distance of a minim beat in bars in bars 88–93 more or less works. It was not pre-planned: it simply occurred. The episodes, mostly short, are concertante in spirit, even though they maintain the rhythmic stereotypes of the subject, with its frequent emphasis on the second beat. Bars 78–80 introduce the device of hemiola (accenting two bars of 3/2 metre like one of 3/1 metre) – but no more than is needed to offer a brief respite from the prevalent rhythm as well as a sense of acceleration. As usual, I employ an invertible countersubject (which although contrasting with the subject shares with it the emphasis on the second beat), but am prepared to abandon it when it would get in the way of another idea, as in bars 102–106, which are my favourite passage in the piece (for even composers are allowed to like some parts of their own pieces more than others!). The pdf and midi files of this piece may be downloaded HERE
15 October 2008
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