Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-1-2018
Abstract
An integral feature in many of Scriabin's late musical narratives is the presence of an atonal problem-a musical event that threatens a harmony which the piece is based on. I offer a new interpretation of Scriabin's late music, in which the idea of an atonal problem becomes a defining feature of his style (after op. 58). This atonal problem is defined as a non-chord tone, which disrupts the balance of the collection (octatonic, whole-tone, or Mystic) which the work is based on. Drawing from Schoenberg's concept of a tonal problem and from Straus's expansion of this concept in Disability Studies in music, I use Scriabin's piano miniatures to show that, within each work, a single pitch class always stands out registrally, dynamically, and/or rhythmically, and becomes an important staple of Scriabin's late style. Thus, the accommodation of this "wrong" note no longer represents that pitch class as a disruptive note, but rather it adds to the unique aspect of that work.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Music Theory Online
Recommended Citation
Bazayev, I. (2018). Scriabin's atonal problem. Music Theory Online, 24 (1) https://doi.org/10.30535/mto.24.1.1