Conferences and Publications


PUblication

 
Credit: The University of Cincinnati

Credit: The University of Cincinnati

Mahler’s Programmatic Cadences: Identifying Cadential Formulas to Reinforce Narrative

Published in the 2018 Music Research Forum, University of Cincinnati Press. Visit their website at journals.uc.edu

Abstract:

Extant physical evidence of Gustav Mahler’s programmatic nature suggests a possible observation of certain musical elements to ascertain narrative meaning. Prior analysis has focused on musical elements such as tonal structure (Agawu, 1986), form (Monahan, 2011), thematic development, excessive, unique, and spatial instrumentation (Peattie, 2011), and many others in order to uncover or decipher Mahler’s narrative.

One important compositional element that remains noticeably absent from these analyses is Mahler’s cadential formulas. While Mahler has been criticized for utilizing “straightforward” tonal cadences, a study observing the orchestration at cadential moments notes a more nuanced manner (Sheinbaum, 2005). I contend that Mahler’s choice of cadence parallels the importance of other musical elements in relation to program. I consider cadences to be a pre-meditated element of Mahler’s compositional style explicitly selected to highlight his programmatic concepts. This approach offers further possible insight for correlating subtle compositional elements and underlying narrative.  

This research complements the well-documented programmatic nature of Mahler’s compositions. Through Mahler’s small collection of written programs, private writings, correlations between events in his personal and professional life and the compositions created around those events, and even abstract ideas from scholars, many narrative programs have been argued. By analyzing specific cadential moments in both Mahler’s symphonic and vocal writing, I offer additional evidence to reinforce some of the previously suggested narratives of his works.


Conference Presentations

 

The following is a list of my various research projects and the conferences where they have been presented.


The Language of Non-Musicians: Understanding Referential Meaning in American Popular Music

• Presented at Public Music Discourse: In Honor of the Bernstein Centenary at the University of South Carolina, March 2018

• Presented at the International Association for the Study of Popular Music Australia/New Zealand regional conference “Playing Along” in Hamilton, New Zealand, ” December 2018

Race and Anti-Patriotism in Leonard Bernstein’s 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue

• Presented at the 2019 American Musicological Society’s New England Winter Conference at Wellesley College, February 2019

• Presented at the 2020 College Music Society Pacific Southwest Conference at Northern Arizona University, March 2020

• Selected for presentation at the Society for American Music Annual Conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota, March 2020 (conference delayed due to COVID-19 virus)

Hidden Affectation in Franz Liszt’s Prometheus

• Presented at the Southern Graduate Music Research Symposium at Florida State University, September 2018

• Presented at the American Musicological Society Rocky Mountain Music Scholars Conference at the University of Texas El Paso, March 2019

The Programmatic Implications of Instrumentals in Concept Albums

• Selected for presentation at the 4th Biennial International Conference of the Progect Network for the Study of Progressive Rock at the University of Ottawa, May 2020 (conference delayed due to COVID-19 virus)