Humorous Script Oppositions in Classical Instrumental Music

Author:

Palmer James K.1

Affiliation:

1. University of British Columbia

Abstract

Most of us can recall chuckling, or even laughing out loud, at a humorous musical passage and perhaps recalling how much that experience increased our enjoyment of the music. This article focuses on musical humor in passages from instrumental works by Joseph Haydn, Michael Haydn, and Mozart. In the most general sense, musical humor arises when composers play with established conventions of musical discourse by writing something incongruous according to the stylistic context.I begin by briefly discussing the role of contrast in establishing musical humor in both historical and modern writings. I then introduce a strategy by which Classical composers created musical humor. I call this strategy “script opposition,” following linguistic theories of verbal humor. In my analytical discussion, I explain how “valence shifts” between implications of “high” and “low” create script oppositions, and demonstrate how these valence shifts are produced primarily by musical topics, but are bolstered by formal functions and cues in other musical parameters. My analytical and theoretical approach to musical humor draws on recent studies of musical topics, form, and communication in the Classical style, as well as concepts from recent linguistic theories of verbal humor.

Publisher

Society for Music Theory

Subject

Music

Reference130 articles.

1. Agawu, Kofi. 1991.Playing with Signs: A Semiotic Interpretation of Classic Music. Princeton University Press.

2. Agawu, Kofi. 1999. “The Challenge of Semiotics.” InRethinking Music, edited by Nicholas Cook and Mark Everist, 138–60. Oxford University Press.

3. Allanbrook, Wye J. 1992. “Two Threads Through the Labyrinth: Topic and Process in the First Movements of K. 332 and K. 333.” InConvention in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Music: Essays in Honor of Leonard G. Ratner, edited by Wye J. Allanbrook, Janet M. Levy, and William P. Mahrt, 125–71. Pendragon Press.

4. Allanbrook, Wye J. 2002. “Theorizing the Comic Surface.” InMusic in the Mirror, edited by Andreas Giger and Thomas J. Mathiesen, 195–216. University of Nebraska Press.

5. Almén, Byron. 2008.A Theory of Musical Narrative. Indiana University Press.

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