Well... This is probably a bit of an over-simlification.jancivil wrote:Well, right away (all I need is "harmonized by JS Bach" to know 'not modal')
Obviously by this time, tonality had established itself, but modality persisted in Germany a lot longer than it did elsewhere in Europe. Bach dealt with a lot of modal melodies, and there are certainly some of his settings which bring out this modal character.
It's not strictly "modal" in the same sense as the original melody is, but some Bach's settings are better to explain from a modal standpoint than a tonal one.
Interesting. I'll comment on this later.jancivil wrote: I'd have to analyze the first one in C. ...
Interesting.MadBrain wrote:I know that in theory the first example has a finalis on E, but my ear (given a tuning fork) is saying 'Tonic on A' and sees E as a dominant subordinate to A (it even has a Esus4-E suspension) and is hearing all sorts of A-minor harmony things like temporary modulations to the relative major (C). If you ignore the finalis on E, there's little difference between this and a tonal song in A minor to me.
Are you talking about the first example?jancivil wrote:Yeah, looking further at the score it must be A minor. I didn't hear that or see it in the first 8 bars (I wasn't digging the youtube), it keeps dodging. But the E chords tend to be dominant. IF he had in mind some theory of "E Final", it's nonetheless a half cadence in A minor as far as I care. There just is no feeling of E as tonic.
Absolutely. And this is the problem with looking at earlier music like this. - To our ears, the "tonal" aspects overshadow anything that might be considered "modal". Modern ears are very different from eighteenth-century ones though.jancivil wrote: to me, as a modern person.).
I think I wrote something earlier about Phrygian-mode pieces analysed as A minor by modern analysts; this has been fairly common. However, such an approach may be anachronistic and may not reflect how the music was interpreted at the time.
Looking at the first example, how often does an A minor chord occur in the first phrase of the melody?
How often does a G# resolve up to an A in this setting?
Do you think the answer to these questions is unusual for a piece "in A minor"?
You shouldn't have retracted your post, I was actually in the middle of praising it when I went back and couldn't find it. You had some astute observations there.stringtapper wrote:After playing it (I wasn't around a keyboard) I agree with the A tonal center, which is why I retracted my post. There is definitely more of a modal character to the first setting though.