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Society for Music Theory

Tonal Function and Metrical Accent: A Historical Perspective


Author(s): William Caplin
Source: Music Theory Spectrum, Vol. 5 (Spring, 1983), pp. 1-14
Published by: {oupl} on behalf of the Society for Music Theory
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Tonal Function and Metrical Accent:
A Historical Perspective

WilliamCaplin

One of the most interesting and contentious issues in mod- Other theorists, however, believe that the innate stabilityof
ern music theory concerns the way in which functional har- tonic harmony naturally associates it with metrical strength.
monic progressionsrelate to the metrical organizationof mu- Yet the analyticalconclusions that these theorists draw from
sic. By functional harmonic progressions, I am referring this harmonic-metricrelationship vary widely. Some writers
primarilyto the motion within a given tonal region between look to the progressionof dominant to tonic as a major crite-
tonic and dominant harmonies (and occasionally, even tonic rion for establishingmetrical weight at higher levels of struc-
and subdominant).By metricalorganization,I mean the more- ture. For example, Carl Dahlhaus has argued that a theory of
or-less regularlyalternatingsuccession of accented and unac- "metrische Qualitat" (metrical quality) is based upon the
cented beats (also termed strong and weak beats) at one or premise that "the weight of a measure is primarilyfounded in
more levels of musical structure.Now, at least one prominent its harmonicfunction. The tonic should be valued as 'strong'
theorist maintainsthat there is absolutely no inherent relation and the dominantas 'weak.' "2Dahlhaus illustratesthis princi-
between a given harmonic progression and meter: Wallace ple with the cadential progression tonic-subdominant-
Berry, in his recent work Structural Functions in Music, argues dominant-tonic (Example 2). Inasmuch as the initial tonic
that "tonal function . . . is in and of itself metrically neutral." chordcan be viewed as a secondarydominantto the following
For instance, the harmonic progression of Example la "is subdominantharmony, the complete progression represents
not. . . more or less plausible" than that of Example lb.I the metricalqualityof weak-strong-weak-strong.Dahlhausun-
derstandsthis correlationof harmonyand meter to be an ana-
Example 1. Berry, StructuralFunctions in Music, p. 330 lytical norm against which irregular, though not nonsensical,
(a) (b) passagescan be identified.3
n I I I I

vt 11 2" ... das Gewicht eines Taktes [sei] primar in seiner harmonischen
Funktion begriindet. . . . Die Tonika soil als 'schwer,' die Dominante als
'leicht' gelten" ("Uber Symmetrie und Asymmetrie in Mozarts Instrumen-
talwerken,"Neue Zeitschriftfur Musik 124 [1963]:209).
lWallace Berry, StructuralFunctions in Music (Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 3See also Carl Dahlhaus, "Zur Kritikdes RiemannschenSystems," in Stu-
1976), p. 330. dien zur Theorieund Geschichteder musikalischenRhythmikund Metrik, by

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2 MusicTheorySpectrum

Example2 Sechter, Moritz Hauptmann,and Hugo Riemann, we can find


importantstatements positing a definite connection between
T-S-D-T tonic harmonyand metricalaccent. The attemptsof these theo-
rists to describe and explain the complexities of this relation-
(D-T) ship form a fascinatingchapter in the history of music theory,
one whose contents I wish to outline here.
weak- strong- weak- strong To begin, let us then turn to the very founding of modern
harmonictheory and examine the views of Jean-PhilippeRa-
A more cautious approachto the relationshipof tonal func- meau, who in his treatiseNouveausystemede musiquetheorique
tion and metricalorganizationis taken by Carl Schachter,who introduces an important discussion of how meter can help
admits that "downbeats and other important accents would define the tonal function of harmonicprogressions.5Rameau
seem to correspondto stable tonal events." But after analyzing opens his remarksby observingthat when we hear a single note
what he considers some important differences between tonal as a fundamentalbass, we also imagine at the same time its
stabilityand metricaldownbeats, Schachterconcludesthat this thirdand fifth. Furthermore,he claimsthat a fundamentalbass
"analogy. . . ought not to be overdrawn,"and that "contradic- not only generates a consonanttriad, but also gives rise to a to-
tions are so frequent that we can hardlyconsider them abnor- nality.6In isolation, an individualsound naturallyfunctionsas a
malities."Indeed, Schachterpresentssome actualmusicalpas- ton principal or note tonique, and the triad that is built upon
sages in which "it is precisely from the conflict between accent that note represents the tonal center of a key. Rameau is so
and tonal stability that the rhythmic effect of the excerpts convinced of the power of a single triad to express itself as a
comes." (Example 3)4 tonic thathe extends this capabilityto the triadsbuilton the two
An investigationinto the history of this controversialprob- other fundamental tones of a key-the dominant and the
lem reveals that a number of prominenttheorists in the eight- subdominant-and thus concludes that "each of the three fun-
eenth and nineteenth centuries also believed that tonal func- damental sounds that constitute a key can, as soon as each is
tion and meter directly interrelate. Within the writings of heardas a fundamental,communicateto us, in its turn, the idea
of its own tonality, since each of the sounds bears a consonant
Jean-PhilippeRameau, Georg Joseph (Abbe) Vogler, Simon
5Jean-PhilippeRameau, Nouveau systeme de musique theorique (Paris,
Ernst Apfel and Carl Dahlhaus, 2 vols. (Munich, 1974), 1: 185-87. The idea 1726 ; reprinted. Jean-PhilippeRameau: Complete TheoreticalWritings,ed.
that cadentialfunctionis related to higher-levelaccentuationalso findsexpres- ErwinR. Jacobi, vol. 2 [Rome, 1967]).
sion in the views of a numberof theoristsassociatedwith PrincetonUniversity: 6"Sinous ne pouvons entendre un Son, sans etre en meme tems frappezde
see Roger Sessions, TheMusicalExperienceof Composer,Performer,Listener sa Quinte & de sa Tierce,nousne pouvons, par consequent, l'entendre, sans
(Princeton,N.J., 1950), pp. 13-14; EdwardT. Cone, MusicalFormand Musi- que l'idee de sa Modulationne s'imprimeen meme tems en nous; ..." (ibid.,
cal Performance(New York, 1968), pp. 25-31; Arthur J. Komar, Theoryof p. 37). Rameau does not expressly refer to a tonalite, a term introduceda cen-
Suspensions(Princeton, N.J., 1971), pp. 155, 158; Robert P. Morgan, "The tury later by Fetis; rather, he uses the expression modulation, which in
Theory and Analysis of Tonal Rhythm," The Musical Quarterly64 (1978): eighteenth-centurytheory covered a variety of theoretical concepts, ranging
444-51. from simple melodic motion to the modern sense of "change of key." In the
4CarlSchachter,"Rhythmand LinearAnalysis," in TheMusicForum, vol. context of the passages considered here, the term clearly refers to a single key
4 (New York, 1976), pp. 319-20. or tonality.

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TonalFunctionand MetricalAccent 3

Example3. Schachter,"RhythmandLinearAnalysis,"p. 321

n
(a) t
I fi
(b) II tk
I H
..T ....
I)) I II
.,1

d5
[ PI
r-
-
?1 i-&j:IF
y9 Of,' M n) r I_
Mozart,Symphonyno. 41, Trioof Menuetto Beethoven,Sonata,op. 78

harmony."7But now Rameau is presentedwith a difficultsitua- originalidea, each of these consonant chords could be consid-
tion: how can the composer create a melody, accompaniedby a ered a tonic. On account of the effect of meter, though, only
progressionof triads, that remainsin one tonality?How can he those triadson the firstbeat of the measureareperceivedas ton-
avoid the impression of a constant, if only fleeting, change of ics, whereasthe chordson the upbeat of each measurefunction
key? For a solution to this dilemma, Rameau appealsto the ef- as subdominantsor dominantswithin the keys defined by the
fect of meter: tonics.
Theharmonyof the fundamental soundwhosetonalityone wishesto
introduceis insertedinto the firstbeat of the measure,becausethis Example 4. Rameau, Nouveau systeme, p. 38
firstbeatis the mostperceptibleof all. ... however,if I wantto go
intothekeyof one of the otherfundamental sounds,I willpreferably [F.B.] \;J XrJ ,J | | I I
assignthatsoundto the firstbeatof the measure.8
Rameau illustrateshis point with a fundamentalbass line that
representsa successionof triads(Example 4). Accordingto his At this point in his argument, Rameau now formalizes the
notion that a tonic triadrepresentsa point of repose by terming
7". .. chacundes trois Sons fondamentauxqui constituentun Mode, peut a thismomenta "cadence."The cadentialchordis alwaysa tonic,
son tour imprimeren nous l'idee de sa Modulation, des qu'il se fait entendre but the repose that it creates is made more-or-lesscomplete by
comme fondamental; puisque chacun d'eux porte une Harmonie egalement
the harmony that precedes it. In the "perfect cadence," the
parfaite(ibid.);translationsfrom Nouveau systemeare by the author, with ref-
erence to B. Glenn Chandler, "Rameau'sNouveau systemede musiquetheori- tonic is preceded by the dominant;the sense of conclusion, of
que: An Annotated Translationwith Commentary,"Ph.D. diss., IndianaUni- repose, is strongestbecause in descendinga fifth(fromthe dom-
versity, 1975. inantto the tonic) the fundamentalbass "returnsto its source."
8". . . c'est d'insererdans le premier Temsde cette mesure,l'Harmoniedu
In the "irregularcadences," the repose is less complete because
Son fondamentaldont on veut annoncer la Modulation;parce que ce premier
Temsest le plus sensible de tous: ... au lieu que si je veux entrerdans la Modu- the tonic is now preceded by the subdominant,whose funda-
lationde l'un des autresSons fondamentaux,je lui destinerayparpreferencece mental bass lies a fifth below. To exemplify these two kinds of
premier Tempsde la Mesure"(Nouveau systeme, pp. 37-38). cadences and the significantrole that meter plays in defining

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4 MusicTheorySpectrum

them, Rameau presents another successionof triads(Example muchas a dissonantchordlacksthe necessarysense of repose to
5) along with an analysisof the cadences that are thus created. be a tonic, the composer can mitigate the potential tonic func-
Notice that the same series of four notes found at the beginning tion of a given triad by adding to it a dissonance. And indeed,
of the passage-C, G, C, and F-is repeatedin the second half. this structuralfunction of dissonance becomes such an impor-
But as a resultof changingthe metricalplacementof the notes, tantpartof his theory that Rameau does not find it necessaryin
their respectivetonal functionschange as well. Each chord lo- anyof his latertreatisesever againto invoke the idea that meter
cated on an accented beat becomes a tonic; indeed, Rameau can play a role in the expression of tonality. Nevertheless, de-
specificallystates that measures one through three are in C, spite Rameau's failure to provide any serious explanationfor
measure four is in G, and measure five, in F.9 The harmonic the phenomenon that he describes and the minimal
analysisthat I have added below the example shows the chang- application-either compositionalor analytical-that he draws
ing harmonicfunctions. fromhis observations,his brief remarkson the relationshipbe-
tween tonal function and metrical accent in the Nouveau sys-
Example5. Rameau,Nouveausysteme,p. 39 temerepresenta significantfirstattemptin the historyof music
perfect irregular irregular perfect theory to confrontthis difficultissue of harmonic-metricinter-
cadence Icadence ) cadence Icadence action. 0
[F.B.]r* ' | ". I
\ "I Let us now examinehow, laterin the eighteenthcentury,the
[C: I V I IV I G:IV I F:V I] rathereccentricGermantheorist Georg Joseph (Abbe) Vogler
goes much furtherthan Rameau in relatingharmonicprogres-
sions to meter. In attemptingto discover the reason why a lis-
Now what are we to make of Rameau's statements and ex- tener sometimes perceives a metrical interpretationthat con-
amples? It is evident that he posits a definite relationshipbe- flictswith the notated meter, that is, the meter indicatedby the
tween tonic harmonyand metricalaccent. And this relationship
is meant to have a genuine musicalsignificanceinsofaras meter
has the power to clarifywhich harmonyfunctionsas a tonic in
'tHans Pischnersuggests that antecedents of Rameau's views on the rela-
ambiguoussituationsinvolving consonant triads. But unfortu- tionship of tonal function and metrical accent are found in the writings of
nately, Rameau provides no explanationfor this effect outside Charles Masson and Michel de Saint-Lambert (Die HarmonielehreJean-
of a vague reference to a "greaterperceptibility"that a chord PhilippeRameaus[2d. ed.; Leipzig, 1967], pp. 51, 124); it is difficultto verify
acquireswhen it is placed on a metricallystrong position. Fur- this claim, however, because Pischnerdoes not cite a single reference. To be
thermore,he ultimatelymakeslittlepracticaluse of his appealto sure, Saint-Lambertdoes refer to situations that call for the accompanistto
bringa dominantseventh on a weak beat followed by a tonic on the downbeat
meter in the resolutionof tonal ambiguity,for as soon as he in- of the next measure, but he describes this completely in the language of thor-
troducesthe notion of dissonanceinto his harmonicsystem, the oughbasstheory, that is, without any mentionof tonal function:"The tritoneis
need for meterto help definetonalityis largelyeliminated.Inas- accompanied by the octave and sixth when the following note descends a
fourth,being accompaniedby a perfect chordand fallingon the firstbeat of the
measure" ("Le Triton s'accompagne de l'Octave & de la Sixieme, quand la
9Rameaudoes not clearly specify the point at which the change of key oc- note suivantedescend d'une quarte, 6tant accompagn6ed'un accordparfait, &
curs, but he implies that the new key is confirmedat the downbeat of the mea- tombantsur le premiertems de la mesure.") (Michel de Saint-Lambert,Nou-
sure and that the precedingchord is reinterpretedas either a dominant(in per- veau traitede l'accompagnementdu clavecin, de l'orgue, et des autres instru-
fect cadences) or subdominant(in irregularcadences). ments[Paris, 1707;reprinted., Geneva, 1972], p. 14).

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TonalFunctionand MetricalAccent 5

time signatureand the bar lines, Vogler concludes that such a To take just one example, he initiallyraises the question of
problemcan be traced back to an incorrectmetricalplacement how tonal function and meter relate while attemptingto justify
of the harmonies.He thus formulatesa single rule for harmonic the traditionalrule of setting the suspension dissonance on a
settingsthat a composer must alwaysfollow: strong metrical position.13Comparing Examples 6a and 6b,
Justas ... thetonictakesprecedenceoveritsdominantinimpression Vogler notes that the former case violates the rule because the
andstrengthon theear,so too is thefirsteighthnotestrongerthanthe harmoniesare poorly distributedwithin the measures: in the
second,andthe firstquarternote strongerthanthe second,andthe firstplace, the dominantarrivestoo earlyin measureone which,
firsthalfnoteor wholemeasurestrongerthanthe secondhalfnoteor because it is an odd-numbered,and hence accented, measure,
wholemeasure.Thetonicmustthusbelongto thestrongbeatandthe should contain only tonic harmony; in the second place, the
dominantto a weakbeat.11 tonic is incorrectlyset on the second half of measure two, be-
Here then is a remarkablestatement:Vogler describesboth cause this even-numbered,unaccented measure should be oc-
tonic harmony and metrical accent as possessing "emphasis" cupied only by dominantharmony. Moreover, the addition of
and "strength,"and these common attributesprovide the link dissonances,which"makethe strongestimpressionon the ear,"
between the two musical dimensions. Harmonic strength and rendersthe poor effect of the misplacedharmoniesall the more
offensive.14
weaknessshouldcorrespondrespectivelywith metricalstrength
and weakness; in passages where this relationshipis wanting, It can be questioned, however, whetherVogler has correctly
accountedfor the faulty placement of both the harmoniesand
"the ear must be offended."12 the dissonancesin Example 6a. The difficultythat Vogler en-
Needless to say, Vogler'srigidrule of compositioncan all too countersconcernsthe question of hierarchicallevels, for it can
easily be refuted by the overwhelmingevidence offered by ac- be observedthat whereasthe alternationof tonic and dominant
tual practice, where composers are clearly not bound at all by harmoniesoccursat the level of the full measure, the succession
Vogler's restrictionon the placement of harmonies. But more of preparation,dissonance, and resolution occurs at the half-
interestingthan this manifestweakness in Vogler's approachis measure level. Any statement about the misplacement of
the fact that when he tries to explain specific questions of har- chordsat one level, however, will not necessarilypertainto the
monic and metricaltheory or even to criticizepassagesfrom ac- location of the dissonances at a lower level. This point can be
tual compositions,Vogler consistentlymisapplieshis own prin- seen by placingVogler's correctedversion, Example 6b, in the
context of (say) an eight-measurephrase, such as that shown in
ciple of harmonyand meter in some respect or another.
Example 7.
""Gleichwie . . . der Haupton an Eindruck und Gewalt auf das Gehor 13Ibid.,pp. 35-38.
seinem fiinften vorgeht: so ist auch das erste Achtel starkerals das zweite, das 14SinceVogler does not use musicalnotation in Tonwissenschaft,Example
erste Viertel starkerals das zweite, der erste halbe oder ganze Schlag starker 6 is a realizationof the tablaturesystem that he presents:
als der zweite halbe oder ganze. Der erste Ton muBalso auf den starkenTheil
Example 6a: 9 8
. . .und der fiinfte Ton einem schwacherenzukommen" (Betrachtungender
MannheimerTonschule2 [April-May, 1780]: 368 [394]). (The page numberin
bracketsrefers to the reprintedition [4 vols.; Hildesheim, 1974].)
c ggc c gg c
12"Wennman nun an dem Plaz des fiinften Tones den ersten; an den Plaz
des ersten Tones den fiinften leget, ... so muBdas Gehor beleidiget werden" Example6b: 65985
(Tonwissenschaftund Tonsezkunst[Mannheim,1776, reprinted., Hildesheim, 7 43
1970], p. 37). CG C
G C

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6 Music Theory Spectrum

Example 6. After Vogler, Tonwissenschaftund Tonsezkunst, p. 36

(a) I
(b) I I I
j_-;
- 2
d IJ j4 j
ld 4<

94 J fJ J ' J ' J- O

: .
r"7Jri

Example7
I I
1o 2 3 d 4 5 6 j 1 8
,j
-9 " " o0 8 f8

(. a' a, 0 13

C: I 112 V6 I V I V I

After the initial tonic in measure one, all of the remaining tonic throughout his writings. Moreover, he often misapplies his rule
chords fall on even-numbered, and hence unaccented, mea- in other ways as well. For instance, in one passage he misinter-
sures in violation of Vogler's principles. Yet, at the same time, prets the key in which the music is set; in another, he confuses
each of the dissonances is prepared on a weak beat, sounded on dominant harmony with the establishment of a dominant tonal
a strong beat, and resolved on a weak beat, fully compliant with region. Even more interesting are several situations in which he
the traditional rule. Therefore, Vogler's appeal to the tonal uses his rule (unsuccessfully, I believe) to explain the metrical
function of harmonic progressions for explaining the metrical placement of chords within the circle of fifths sequence.15
location of the suspension dissonance is misdirected. The prob- Thus considering Vogler's failure to provide convincing appli-
lem with the harmonic placement of Example 6a is not one that cations of his one harmonic-metric principle, it is little wonder
involves whether the chords are tonics or dominants, but rather that his dogmatic ideas on the relationship of tonal function and
it is the general syncopation of the individual chords, regardless
of their harmonic content, that causes the disturbance in the '1Fora more complete examination of Vogler's difficultiesin applyinghis
passage. rule of harmonyand meter, see William Earl Caplin, "Theories of Harmonic-
The mistake of confusing hierarchical levels, as seen in this last Metric Relationshipsfrom Rameau to Riemann" (Ph.D. diss., University of
example, is repeated by Vogler on a number of other occasions Chicago, 1981), chap. 4.

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TonalFunctionand MetricalAccent 7

meter had little influence on succeeding theorists.16 In fact, I ever, leaps of an ascending fourth or descending fifth are the
have yet to discover any other theorist who goes so far as most decisive."18Unfortunately, Sechter does not explain why
Vogler in insistingthat tonic and dominantfunctionshave a de- a descending fifth progression of the fundamentalbass is the
terminatemetrical location; to do so, of course, would run di- most powerful articulatorof metrical strength. So a complete
rectlycounter to the empiricalevidence offered by actualcom- interpretationof his views must go beyond what he himself has
positions, where these harmonies are freely placed on any offered. Nevertheless, in one way Sechter does provide the ba-
metrical position. Nevertheless, the notion of an important sis for a likely explanation when he notes early in his treatise
connection between tonic function and metrical accent per- that all descending fifths are "imitations"of the V-I cadential
sisted throughoutthe nineteenth century and found important progression(1:17) and specificallyshows that a dominant-tonic
expression in the writings of three of its leading music relationshipis announced at each step in the circle of descend-
theorists-Simon Sechter, Moritz Hauptmann, and Hugo ing fifths(Example 8).
Riemann. Thus, in the rest of this study, I wish to examine how AlthoughSechterstopsshortof connectingsuchdominant-to-
these thinkersapproachedthe problemthat had interested Ra- tonic motion directlyto meter, it is not difficultto presumethat
meau and so obsessed Vogler in the precedingcentury. a notion of tonal function as an expression of metrical accent
In his monumental treatise Die Grundsitze der musikalischen lies at the heart of his observations. Unlike Vogler, Sechter
Komposition, Simon Sechter, the foremost theorist of mid- does not insist that all tonic harmoniesbe placed on metrically
nineteenth-century Austria, devotes a complete chapter to accentedpositions. Rather, he takes a more subtle approachby
"The Laws of Meter in Music," wherein he offers instructions characterizingthe descending-fifthmotion of the fundamental
to the composer for insuringthat the downbeat of each mea- bass as the most metricallydecisive harmonicprogressionand
sure is clearly articulated by the succession of harmonies.'7 uses this observationas a guide for the composer, not as a strict
Among his principles for the correct metrical placement of requirementof compositionalpractice.
chordsis one that touches upon the relationshipof tonal func- Writingat aboutthe sametime as Sechter,butfroman entirely
tion and meter. In rankingthe metricaldecisiveness of various differenttheoreticalorientation, MoritzHauptmannalso finds
fundamental-bassprogressions, Sechter notes, "Leaps of a an importantrelationshipbetween tonal function and metrical
thirdare weak, but leaps of a fourth or fifth are decisive; how- accent. But the nature of this relationshipis difficultto inter-
pret because of the very abstractmode of Hauptmann'sargu-
16Forexample, Gottfried Weber, who is highlyindebted to Vogler on many mentation. Hauptmannformulates his theory of music from a
issues, does not at all discuss any special principlesfor the metricalplacement
of tonic and dominantharmonies. 18"MattsindTerzenspriinge,entscheidendaber die Quarten-und Quinten-
'7SimonSechter, Die Grundsatzeder musikalischenKomposition, 3 vols. spriinge;der Quartsprungaufwartsund der Quintsprungabwartssind aber am
(Leipzig, 1853-54), vol. 2, chap. 1. entscheidendsten"(ibid., 2:19).

Example 8. Sechter, Grundsdtze der musikalischen Komposition,


2:26

:( rrF F I- I F Ir -I r r i I
>
I
r I 11
Tonic, Dominant, Ton., Dom., Ton., Dom., Ton., Dom., Ton., Dom., Ton., Dom., Ton., Dom., Tonic, etc.

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8 Music Theory Spectrum

dialectical point of view, wherein every stage in the develop- ates between entities that express a positive or negative unity.
ment of a harmonic and metrical system begins from a state of For example, within his theory of harmony, a major triad is
unity [thesis], to which an element of opposition [antithesis] ap- considered to be positive, whereas a minor triad is negative (p.
pears; a third element [synthesis] then emerges to reconcile the 34); likewise, within meter, a metrical unit made up of an
opposition and to bring into being a new state of unity at the accent followed by an unaccent is positive; however, the re-
next stage of the system. Thus, in the case of harmony, Haupt-
verse sequence, that is, an upbeat motive, is negative (pp. 248-
mann finds the interval of an octave to represent unity; the fifth
creates an opposition to this unity and the third unifies this op- 49). Like the previous relationship between harmonic intervals
and metrical quantities, this new connection of major-minor
position, creating at the same time a new unity, the major
triad.19The metrical manifestation of the same dialectical de- modality with metrical accentuation is also purely conceptual,
velopment involves the duple meter as a unity, the triple meter for a meaningful musical relationship here is inconceivable:
as an opposition, and the quadruple meter as a reconciliation of Hauptmann is in no way suggesting that downbeat metrical mo-
this opposition (pp. 223-29). tives naturally occur in a major mode or that upbeat motives
With the statement "Meter only repeats what harmony has are more appropriately used in a minor mode.
already set forth," Hauptmann makes it clear that relationships When Hauptmann addresses the question of how harmonic
between harmony and meter are not merely incidental, but progressions relate to metrical organization, he once again in-
rather, fundamental to his theory of music.20 But needless to vokes the contrasting concepts of positive and negative, the lat-
say, the relationship between intervals and meters that Haupt- ter of which he now terms a "relative":
mann thus establishes is entirely abstract and devoid of any spe-
The firstmetricaldeterminationis the successionof a firstand second,
cifically musical meaning. Indeed, he expressly denies that "in a positive and relative, an accented and unaccented .... Harmony
a triple meter we ought to perceive the interval of a fifth, . . . also has in the notion of succession its positive and relative, . . .
and in a duple meter to perceive an octave, . . . and in a quad-
namely, the relation of a dominant or subdominanttriad to its tonic
ruple meter, a third.'"2 Rather, these harmonic and metric triad.... The metrically positive corresponds directly to a tonic
phenomena are associated with each other by virtue of their chord, and the metricallyrelative correspondsto the upper and lower
mutual expression of the same dialectical concept. dominants.22
In addition to these three logical components of unity, op-
Unlike the fully abstract harmonic-metric connections dis-
position, and unified opposition, Hauptmann also differenti- cussed before, the relationship of triads and accentuation that

19MoritzHauptmann, Die Natur der Harmonik und der Metrik(Leipzig, 22"Dieerste metrischeBestimmungist aber die der Folge eines Ersten und
1853), pp. 22-23. Zweiten, eines Positivenund Relativen, des Accentuirtenund Nichtaccentuir-
20"Eswiederholtsich in der Metriknur, was die Harmonikschon dargelegt ten: ..
hat: . . . " (ibid., p. 291). Englishtranslationsare by the author,with reference Auch die Harmoniehat im Begriffe der Folge ihr Positivesund Relatives. .
to Moritz Hauptmann, The Nature of Harmony and Metre, trans. W. E. .als die Beziehung eines Dominantaccords,-des Ober- oder
Heathcote (London, 1893). Unterdominant-dreiklang,-zu seinem tonischen Dreiklang . . ." (ibid., pp.
2"So wenig uns nun zugemuthet werden soil, im dreitheilig-gegliederten 371-72). "Einem tonischen Accorde . . . entspricht direct das metrisch-
Metrum eine Klangquint . . . zu vernehmen, ebenso . . . im zweigliedrigen Positive . . .; dem Accorde der Ober- oder Unterquint . . das metrisch-
Metrumeine Octav, . . und im viergliedrigenMetrumeine Terz; .. "(Har- Relative . . ." (ibid., p. 376). Although Hauptmannsimply asserts here that
monik und Metrik,p. 240). the tonic triadexpresses a positive and that the upper and lower dominantsex-

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TonalFunctionand MetricalAccent 9

Hauptmannnow drawscan have a true musicalrealization,in- The same series of consonant chords may assume metricallythe most
asmuchas it is possible to associate these two musicalphenom- variedforms and, thereby, can also be most manifoldlydifferentwith
ena directlywith each other in a compositionalcontext: a tonic respect to their inner meaning. . . . And if we continue with further
triadsin more advancedmetricalformations ... we may be led to the
harmonycan be an accented event, and a dominant, an unac-
cented one. But as he continues with his discussion, Haupt- greatestdiversityof harmonic-metricmeaning.23
mann insists that all combinations of triads and metrical posi-
Unfortunately,Hauptmanndoes not spell out whatsuch an "in-
tions are usable in a musical work. It is not "contradictoryto ner meaning" of harmony and meter might be. Again, this
rational meaning" if a harmonic relative is combined with a
metricalpositive, or vice versa (p. 372). meaningmay be purelyconceptual,in the sense of the common
meaningsharedby an octave and duple meter or that by a major
Clearly, Hauptmannrealizes that an approachsuch as that triadand a downbeatmotive. But it is also possible that Haupt-
taken by Vogler is false, because tonic harmonies are not mannhas in mind a more specificallymusicalmeaning, one that
confined to metrically strong positions. And Hauptmann is informsa harmonicprogressionat the time that it obtainsa met-
ever carefulthroughouthis writingsto avoid makingclaimsthat ricalinterpretation.In other words, Hauptmannmay very well
contradictmusicalpractice;indeed, he is so cautiousin this re- be suggestingthat we perceive varyingaesthetic effects arising
spect that it becomes difficult to assess the actual musical out of the many metrical arrangementsof triads. And thus by
significanceof the relationshipthat he findsbetween tonal func-
tion and meter. On the one hand, Hauptmannmay understand specificallyrelating metrical accent with tonic harmony as ex-
this relationshipto be merely conceptual and thus implyingno pressinga "positive unity," the placement of this harmonyon
that metricalposition can be regarded as a kind of harmonic-
musicalrealizationwhatsoever;on the other hand, he mightbe
metric norm against which other combinations, ones that are
hinting that the varying metrical placements of harmony and nonethelessmusicallyintelligibleand aestheticallypleasing,can
melody produce a perceived aesthetic effect based upon a nor- be distinguished.Unfortunately,Hauptmann'sremarksremain
mative connection of tonic harmony and accent. This idea is at such a high level of abstractionthat a definite conclusion
suggestedwhen he notes that whereas the metrical placement about the true musicalsignificanceof his ideas cannot be made
of triadsmay be unrestricted,the effect that they have in rela- on the sole evidence of his text.
tion to meter is not merely neutral: One thing is certain though: Hauptmannhimself may have
been reluctantto drawmusicalconclusionsfrom the logical re-
press a relative, he provides no additional justificationor explanation for his
claim. Indeed, he does not once refer to this meaningof the triadsin the entire lationshipthat he had established, but his most importantsuc-
firstpartof his treatise devoted to harmony. Rather, in a chapteron "The Ma- cessor, Hugo Riemann, had no such hesitation. Indeed,
jor Key," he shows how an individualtriad representsunity, how the relation- Riemannlauncheshis career as a music theoristby reformulat-
ship of this triad to its upper and lower dominantsrepresentsopposition, and ing Hauptmann's abstract conceptions into more specifically
how the emergence of this triad as a tonic of a key representsunity of opposi-
tion (pp. 25-30). Furthermore,in chapters on the progressionsof chords and
on the cadence, Hauptmann discusses the dialectical meanings of individual 23"DieselbeconsonanteAccordreihekann metrischverschiedensteGestalt
notes within the chords but makes no reference to the meanings of triads as a annehmen und wird dadurch auch ihrer inneren Bedeutung nach aufs Man-
whole. Consequently, Hauptmann'sassertionthat the tonic harmonyis a posi- nigfaltigste verschieden sein konnen. ... so wird eine fernere Dreiklangs-
tive, to which the upper and lower dominantsare relative, comes as an entirely fortsetzungin weiterer metrischerFormation. . . zu grossterVerschiedenheit
new idea, one that he does not integrate into his general theory of harmony. harmonisch-metrischer Bedeutung fiihren konnen" (ibid., p. 373).

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10 MusicTheorySpectrum

musical principlesof harmonic-metricinteraction. In his very As Riemanndevelops this idea of thetic accent in the course
firstpublication,a fascinatingarticleentitled "MusikalischeLo- of his essay, there are some indicationsthat this logicalrelation-
gik," Riemannproclaimsthat he "will seek to carryon [Haupt- ship between tonic and accent may be purely abstract in a
mann's]theoryby beginningwhere he leaves off, namelyby ap- Hauptmanniansense.27But a closer examinationof Riemann's
plied harmony and meter."24 According to Riemann, descriptionsuggests that he might also be referringto a genu-
Hauptmanndeveloped theories of absoluteharmonyand abso- inely musical connection of harmonyand meter. By mention-
lute meter and, in so doing, created a gap between theory and ing the "peacefuland fully emotionless"progressionsof chords
practicethat can be correctedonly by realizingthat "harmony most appropriateto a "strictchurchstyle," Riemann seems to
and meter go hand in hand; one requires the other."25Thus be describinga performancesituation that avoids any kind of
Riemann proceeds to describe a metrical system at once in outside accentuationthat might be impartedby the performer.
terms of a harmoniccontext, and he establishes a relationship Under such circumstances, the tonic chord "impresses itself
between the tonic harmony of the cadential progression and upon us," and we "desireits return."In other words, Riemann
metricalaccentuationas expressions of the dialecticalconcept specifiesthe appropriateconditions underwhich the tonic har-
of thesis. (Riemann also discussesthe harmonic-metricexpres- mony itself would create, so to speak, its own metricalaccentu-
sions of antithesisand synthesis,but these remarksdo not per- ation. This idea is furtherimpliedby Riemann'sexplicit prefer-
tainto the issue at hand.) Thus, in connectionwith the emphasis ence for the term Hervortreten over Hervorhebung: the former
associatedwith the firstbeat of a measure, he notes that, carriesan associationof emphasis arisingfrom within, the lat-
ter, of emphasisimposed from without.
Strictly speaking . . . this is not an emphasis [Hervorhebung]but
ratheronlya steppingforth[Hervortreten].... Despite his declared intentions to render Hauptmann'sab-
Thusin the caseof peacefulandfullyemotionlessprogressions of stractionsmore concrete, Riemann does not actuallydiscussin
alternatingchords,the thesis,the firsttonic,is thatwhichchieflyim- this articleany practicalapplications-either for the composer,
pressesitselfuponus andof whichwe thereforebecomefondandde- the performer, or the analyst-that this relationshipbetween
sire a return. ... I would like to call the accent of the beginningtime tonal function and metrical accent might yield. But in his first
elementthe theticaccent,whichis especiallywidespreadin the strict major treatise on harmony, Musikalische Syntaxis, Riemann
churchstyle,butwhichcannotfreeitselffroma certainmonotony.26 presentsthis same correlationof harmonyand meter in a some-
what more definite compositional and analytical context.28
24"AufMoritzHauptmannsHarmonikfussend . ., werde ich suchen, eine Withinthe course of developing a system of harmonicdualism,
Fortfuhrungseiner Theorie zu geben, indem ich da anfange, wo er aufhort, inspiredby the theories of Arthurvon Oettingen, Riemannen-
namlichbei der angewandtenHarmonikund Metrik"("MusikalischeLogik,"
reprintedin Hugo Riemann, Praludien und Studien [3 vols.; Leipzig, 1895-
1901],3:1). Accent der Erstzeitigkeit den thetischenAccent nennen, der besonders im
25"Harmonikund Metrikgehen Hand in Hand, eins bedingt das andere . strengen kirchlichenStil der verbreitetste ist, eine gewisse Monotonie abcr
"(ibid., p. 11). nichtlos werden kann" (ibid., pp. 13-14).
26"Strengenommen ist das aber keine Hervorhebung,sondernnurein Her- 27See,for example, Riemann'sdiscussion(p. 18) of the rhythmthat opens
vortreten;... the last movement of Beethoven's Piano Sonata, op. 14, no. 2, where his refer-
Bei ruhigemund vollig leidenschaftslosemFortgangedes Akkordwechsels ence to harmonyand meter is simply metaphoricaland not based at all on the
ist also die These, die erste Tonika das uns sich zunachstEinpragende,welches actualharmoniccontent of the passage.
deshalbvon uns lieb gewonnen und zuriickverlangtwird .... Ich mochte den 28HugoRiemann, MusikalischeSyntaxis(Leipzig, 1877).

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TonalFunctionand MetricalAccent 11

counters a problem confronted by Rameau at the very begin- The accented beat . . . always has precedence over the unaccented
ningof harmonictheory: how can the tonal center of a progres- one;. . . thatis, theunaccentedbeatappearsto followorprecedethe
sion of harmonies be determined? And like his French accentedone andthusto be relatedto it;the accentedbeathasa simi-
larmeaningto the tonicchordin a harmonicprogression.It is there-
predecessor, Riemann appeals to the force of meter for defin- foreconceivablethata progressionappearsmoreeasilyunderstand-
ing tonic function in cases of ambiguous harmonic progres- ableif thetonicchordoccurson an accentedbeat.30
sions: "We must therefore come to the conclusion that in the
case of all two-chord progressions, the metrical accentuation It is interestingto observe that Riemannno longerspeaksof any
decides which chord is to be consideredthe actualtonic."29As specialemphasisassociatedwith an accentedbeat andtonic har-
an example, he compares two differentmetricalsettings of the mony, but instead now refers to the common meaning shared
same chord progression(Example 9) and notes that in the first by these phenomena. He thus continues strongly in the tradi-
case, the F-majortriad is accented and thus becomes the tonic tion of Hauptmannby appealingto categories of musicalcom-
in relationto the other chords;whereas in the second case, the prehension,but even more than his predecessor,Riemannsug-
unaccented F triad is merely a "chord of mediation" and the gests that this relationshipof tonic harmonyand metricalaccent
entire progressionshould be understoodin C major. is an aestheticnorm, one that has at least a minimalapplication
in compositionand analysis.
Unfortunately, Riemann develops his idea no further and
Example9. After Riemann,MusikalischeSyntaxis,p. 82 does not really clarifyhow this principleof harmonyand meter
(a) -v
_ (b)- - is to function within a more comprehensiveanalyticalsystem.
Indeed, in some of his later writings,he seems to reversehis po-
J- 1-4
I . sitionentirelyon the relationshipof harmonyand accentuation.
. 9, ___1X J 'AA I'oq
-
O-) P* q-6 _6 I In his majorstudy on principlesof musicalphrasing,Musikalis-
che Dynamik und Agogik, Riemann proposes that the funda-
9 J r r 1,
J J
mental dynamic of the "metrical motive" consists first of a
steady growth, a becoming, a "positive development." This is
then followed by a passingaway, a dyingoff, a "negativedevel-
In attemptingto account for this effect of meter, Riemann opment."31In more concrete musical terms, the metrical mo-
offers an explanation that goes beyond Rameau's rather mea- tive contains a fluctuationin tonal intensity characterizedby a
crescendo to a "dynamic climax" and a subsequent decre-
ger commentson the "greaterperceptibility"that an accentcan
impartto a chord:
30"Dergute Takttheil ... hat immer den Vorzug vor den schlechten ...
d.h. die schlechtenerscheinenihm folgend oder vorausgehend,also auf ihn be-
29"Wirmiissen daher zu dem Schlusse kommen, dass bei alien zweiklangi- zogen, er ist von ahnlicherBedeutung wie der thetische Klang in der harmon-
gen Thesen die metrische Akcentuation entscheidet, welcher Klang als der nischen These. Es ist daher begreiflich, dass eine These desto leichter ver-
eigentlichthetische, . . ist" (ibid., p. 79). In Syntaxis,Riemann uses the term standlicherscheint, wenn sie die Tonika auf dem guten Takttheilbringt; ..."
These to mean the establishment of a tonic through a progressionof chords. (ibid., p. 76).
The thetischerKlangor thetischerAkkord is the actualtonic harmony(ibid., p. 31HugoRiemann, MusikalischeDynamikundAgogik (Hamburg, 1884), p.
15). 11.

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12 MusicTheorySpectrum

scendo. When Riemannturnsto the issue of how harmonicpro- dynamicclimaxis meantto representa metricalaccent, then the
gressionsare to be expresseddynamically,we learnthat the mo- relationbetween harmonyand meter presented here is exactly
tion from a tonic to a dominantrepresentsa harmonicbecom- the opposite of that proposed in his earlier works, where the
ing, a positive development, and that the return back to the tonicharmony,not the dominant,is linked to the accentedbeat
tonic is a passing away, a negative development. Thus, "the of a metricalunit. Has Riemann now completely changed his
simpleconnectionof both factorsmust be the crescendofor the view? Or can some way be found to reconcile these apparently
harmonic positive and diminuendo for the harmonic nega- opposingpositions? I believe that furtherexaminationreveals
tive."32As illustratedin Example 10, the dominantharmonyis an answerto these questions.
thereforedirectlyassociatedwith the dynamicclimaxof a metri- Despite the strongevidence suggestingthat the "dynamiccli-
cal motive. max" is Riemann's reformulationof the traditional"metrical
accent," he discusses a number of anomalous situations that
Example 10 point to a fundamentalincongruityof these two concepts. For
example, in his treatmentof syncopation, Riemann firstraises
dynamicshading: the possibilityof "displacing"the dynamic climax away from
the event following the bar line (p. 52), and he returnsto this
positive negative
idea of dynamicdisplacementwhen consideringthe effects of
harmony.Thus, in some of his examples (Example 11), the dy-
namicclimax, which is associatedwith the dominantharmony,
T-D - D-T is moved back from the metricalaccent, and Riemanndoes not
suggestat all that this displacementin any way upsets the basic
metricalorganization,as indicatedby the barlines.34
greatestintensification
Thus we could perhaps conclude that, despite a number of
statementsto the contrary,Riemann'stheory of dynamicshad-
There is much evidence throughoutRiemann'streatise that ing is not a theory of meter at all, in that it is not a theory of
the dynamicclimax, the moment of greatest intensity, corres- metricalaccent, but ratherthat it is exclusivelya theory of per-
pondsto the primarymetricalaccentof a measureas definedby formance. Therefore, the relationshipthat he draws between
the traditionaltheory of meter. For example, Riemann notes harmony and dynamics must not be compared in the same
early in his treatise that "the bar line indicates the position of terms with his earlier speculationson the connection between
the dynamicclimaxof the motive. The note that follows the bar tonal functionand metricalaccent. In fact, the two apparently
line always forms the strong point of the motive."33But if the conflictingpositions actually complement each other: if tonic
harmonynaturallyexpresses itself as metricallyaccented, or at
32". . . die schlichte Verbindungbeider Faktoren muss das crescendo fur least possesses some intrinsicaccentuation,then it is unneces-
das harmonisch-positiveund das diminuendo fur das harmonisch-negative
sein;..." (ibid., p. 186).
sary, and perhaps even undesirable, for the performerto add
33". . der Taktstrich[anzeigt]die Stelle des dynamischenHohepunktsdes
Motivs. ... Die dem Taktstrichfolgende Note bildet stets den Schwerpunkt 34Riemannhas added the crescendo-decrescendosigns to these examples in
des Motivs" (ibid., pp. 12-13). orderto indicatehis understandingof their dynamicshading.

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TonalFunctionand MetricalAccent 13

Example 11. Riemann, Musikalische Dynamik und Agogik, p. 188 metric interactionwere not sufficientlydeveloped during this
periodso that a theoristfelt himselfcompelledto treatthe topic.
It appears, then, that we have heard only from those theorists
who believed in some genuine correlationbetween these har-
(a) monic and metricphenomena.
mji. I At the other extreme of the spectrum,a theoristcan be con-
Il:R i i f i Ii . I I t 1f 1 II
vinced that metrical accent and tonic harmony are so power-
rrrr r U - - LT P
fully interrelated that they must always be coupled in actual
musicalpractice. Such a theorist would arguethat just as a sus-
pension dissonancemust alwaysbe placed on the downbeatof a
Beethoven, Sonata, op. 31, no. 1 measure, so too must a tonic fall at all times upon a metrical
accent. This, of course, is the view advocated by Vogler
(b) throughouthis writings, a view whose inadequaciesare so ap-
f[ .I .'=
0=J= "7 =J ^ 4 J parentas to requirelittle refutation.
Between these two extremes lies a variety of possible posi-
V
6^ 1-.9 tions on the extent to which harmonyand meter relate and the
Jfz actualconsequencesto be drawnfrom this relationship.For ex-
Beethoven, Sonata, op. 57 ample, a theorist may recognize a conceptual or metaphorical
connectionbetween the phenomena without exactly specifying
what musical results thereby arise. Thus Hauptmann relates
anyspecialintensificationto the tonic chord. Indeed, a more in- tonic harmonyto metricalaccent as a mutualmanifestationof a
terestingand expressiveaestheticeffect would be createdby im- logicalcategoryof perceptionbut specificallystates that any ac-
partingdynamicstressto the dominantharmonyin orderto off- tual combinationof harmonicprogressionsand accentualpat-
set the accentscreated by the tonic harmony. ternshas equal syntacticalvalidityin a musicalwork. And even
This attemptto reconcileRiemann'scomplexviews bringsto when he claimsthat varyingarrangementsof harmonieswithin
a close my surveyof how earliertheoriststreat the relationship a metricalscheme yield different "innermeanings,"it remains
of tonal function and metrical accent. The results can now be unclearwhetherhe is referringto a specific,musicalmeaningor
summarizedby delineatingthe spectrumof possiblestancesthat rathera general, metaphysicalone.
a theoristcan take when confrontingthis problematicissue. At Less abstractare the views of Rameau and Sechter; both of
one extreme, a theorist can simply deny that any kind of rela- these theorists propose a relationshipbetween tonic harmony
tionshipexists;this would appearto be WallaceBerry'sposition and metrical accent that has distinctly musical consequences.
when he states that tonal function is metricallyneutral. But of For Rameau, this correlationof harmonyand meter manifests
the major eighteenth- and nineteenth-centurytheorists, I have itself in the ability of an accent to determine tonal function in
not yet discoveredany who explicitlyreject the notion that har- cases of ambiguousprogressionsof consonanttriads.For Sech-
monicprogressionshave metricalconsequences. This is not en- ter, this same harmonic-metricrelationshipproducesquite the
tirely surprising, however, because questions of harmonic- opposite results, whereby it is the motion from dominant to

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14 MusicTheorySpectrum

tonic that is used by the composer to determine, or at least to apparentlyconflictingviews can actually be regardedas com-
articulatedecisively, the intended metricalaccent. patible, wherebythe inherentaccentuationof tonic harmonyis
The views of Hugo Riemann, which represent the most balancedby a performedaccentuationof dominantharmony.
complex attitudetowardthis issue, also lie between the two ex- To conclude, the historicalevidence clearlyindicatesthat al-
treme positions mentioned before. Starting his career with thoughsome of the most importanttheorists of the eighteenth
rather abstract Hauptmannian principles of musical logic, and nineteenth centuries recognized a significantrelationship
Riemann develops an incipient notion of tonal function as an between tonic harmonic function and metrical accentuation,
expression of metrical accent, one that recalls Sechter's con- they achievedlittle consensuson the natureof this relationship
cern with the metrical articulationof harmonic progressions. andthe musicalconsequences-be they compositional,analyti-
Riemannthen appliesthis idea more concretelyalong lines sug- cal, or generallyaesthetical-that follow from it. And as noted
gested by Rameau, wherebymetricalplacementis seen as deci- at the very beginning of this study, this lack of general agree-
sive for clarifyingan ambiguoustonal function. Finally, in his ment continues to haunt present-dayinquiriesas well. I would
theory of musical phrasing, Riemann seems to contradictthis hope, then, that this examinationof the historicalrecordmight
relationshipbetween harmony and meter by associating the help to throw into relief some of the many problems that re-
dominantharmony,not the tonic, with the dynamicclimaxof a main to be solved and to stimulate further investigation into
metricalmotive. I suggested, however, that insofaras dynamic this controversialissue of music theory.
climaxis not a determinantof metricalaccent, then Riemann's

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