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5 - Theoretical assumptions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2010

Simha Arom
Affiliation:
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
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Summary

At this point, we must set out the theoretical foundations of our method. We will first have to state a postulate. Any polyphonic piece of music can be looked at as a complex sound structure characterised by the superposition of a given number of coherently related monodies. This leads us to the following assumption: insofar as a polyphonic piece is based on a coherent structuring of all its parts, each of these parts must be coherent in itself. If this is true, each part should be playable separately, i.e., have its own individual existence in sound, just as it exists in the mind of the person who performs it. By this hypothesis, if we can isolate each part and determine the points at which it fits together with the others (or at least one other), we may assume that we have all the elements we need to reconstitute the polyphonic structure. For insofar as the relationships between parts, or between any part and the whole, are coherent, the number of linkage points must be relatively small. The whole can thus be reconstructed, even without the complete set. These interrelations are furthermore based on the principle that all the musicians performing a polyphonic piece will start to play or sing their parts, not simultaneously, but consecutively. This principle holds not only for traditional African music, but also for almost all known forms of orally transmitted polyphony. The only reference used by the individual musician will thus be the part of the musician (or one of the musicians) who has already come in.

The order of entry varies from one repertory to another. It may be fixed by tradition or remain undetermined. This should be ascertained during a preliminary investigation.

Type
Chapter
Information
African Polyphony and Polyrhythm
Musical Structure and Methodology
, pp. 105 - 106
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1991

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