Fred Lerdahl Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Fred Lerdahl, Fritz Reiner Professor of Musical Composition at Columbia University, is a composer and musicologist, most well known for his work on music theory regarding pitch space and cognitive restraints on compositional systems or "musical grammar"s.
Lerdahl's "Cognitive Constraints on Compositional Systems" cites Pierre Boulez's Le Marteau sans Maître (1954) as an example of "a huge gap between compositional system and cognized result," though he "could have illustrated just as well with works by Milton Babbitt, Elliott Carter, Luigi Nono, Karlheinz Stockhausen, or Iannis Xenakis". In semiological terminology this may be called gap between the poeitic and esthesic processes. To explain, and eventually to help end, this Lerdahl proposes the concepts of musical grammars, "a limited set of rules that can generate indefinitely large sets of musical events and/or their structural descriptions." He further divides this into compositional grammar and listening grammar, the latter being "more or less unconsciously employed by auditors, that generates mental representations of the music". He divides the former into natural and artificial compositional grammars. While the two are historically and fruitfully mixed freely, a natural grammar arises spontaneously in a culture while an artificial one is a conscious invention of an individual or group in a culture and the "gap" may only exist between listening grammar and artificial grammars. To begin to understand the listening grammar Lerdahl and Ray Jackendoff created a theory of musical cognition, A Generative Theory of Tonal Music (1983) ISBN 026262107X. This theory is outlined in the essay, and constraints on artificial compositional grammars are quoted below:
"I find this conclusion both exciting and - initially at least - alarming...the constraints are tighter than I bargained for."
"My second aesthetic claim in effect rejects this ['progressivist'] attitude in favour of the older view that music-making should be based on 'nature'. For the ancients, nature may have resided in the music of the spheres, but for us it lies in the musical mind."
This is an Article on Fred Lerdahl. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Fred Lerdahl "Cognitive Constraints on Compositional Systems"
Constraints on event sequences
Constraints on underlying materials
Pitch Space
He concludes, "Some of these constraints seem to me binding, other optional. Constraints 9-12 are essential for the very existence of stability conditions. Constraints 13-17, on the other hand, can be variously jettisoned." Examples given are South Indian music which doesn't modulate and isn't equally tempered (13 & 14) and music such as that of Claude Debussy, Béla Bartók, and others which "have developed consonance-dissonance patterns directly from the total chromatic." (14-17)Comprehensibility and value
To these ends he proposes the use of the terms "complexity" and "complicatedness", complexity positively being hierarchical structural richness, and complicatedness neutrally being musical surfaces which contain "numerous non-redundant events per unit time...All sorts of music satisfy these criteria - for example, Indian raga, Japanese koto, jazz, and most Western art music. Rock music fails on grounds of insufficient complexity. Much contemporary music pursues complicatedness as compensation for a lack of complexity. In short, these criteria allow for infinite variety but only along certain lines."External links
Source
