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Contents List of Figures Preface Introduction. Theoretical and Meta-Theoretical Issues Basic Goals and Assumptions Building and Testing Theories Six Criteria for Evaluating Theories 1. Schenker and the Quest for Accuracy Fux and Strict Counterpoint 'The Heinrich Maneuver' 'The Complementarity Principle' 2. Semper idem sed non eodem modo Conceptual Origins Prototypes Transformations Levels Fallout 3. What Price Consistency? Sequences Reconsidered Sequences and Counterpoint Analytical Implications 4. Schenker and 'The Myth of Scales' Modes and Scales in Traditional Theory Schenkerian Theory and Scales Schenkerian Theory and Modal Inflections Schenkerian Theory and Exotic Inflections Schenkerian Theory and the Emergence of Functional Tonality 5. "Pleasure is the Law" The Limits of Schenkerian Theory Debussy, "C'est l'extase langoureuse" Debussy, "La mort des amants" Schenkerian Theory and Twentieth-Century Tonality 6. Renaturalizing Schenkerian Theory Schenker and Naturalization Schenkerian Theory as a Model of Expert Functional Monotonal Composition Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index
Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication:
Schenkerian analysis.
Tonality.