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Variation (music)

In music, variation is a formal technique where material is repeated in an altered form. The changes may involve melody, rhythm, harmony, counterpoint, timbre, orchestration or any combination of these.

"Theme and Variations" redirects here. For the ballet by George Balanchine, see Theme and Variations (ballet).

Variation is often contrasted with musical development, which is a slightly different means to the same end. Variation depends upon one type of presentation at a time, while development is carried out upon portions of material treated in many different presentations and combinations at a time.[1]

Variation form[edit]

Variation forms include ground bass, passacaglia, chaconne, and theme and variations.[7] Ground bass, passacaglia and chaconne are typically based on brief ostinato motifs providing a repetitive harmonic basis and are also typically continuous evolving structures. Theme-and-variation forms are, however, based specifically on melodic variation, in which the fundamental musical idea, or theme, is repeated in altered form or accompanied in a different manner. Theme-and-variation structure generally begins with a theme (which is itself sometimes preceded by an introduction), typically between eight and thirty-two bars in length; each variation, particularly in music of the eighteenth century and earlier, will be of the same length and structure as the theme.[8] This form may in part have derived from the practical inventiveness of musicians; "Court dances were long; the tunes which accompanied them were short. Their repetition became intolerably wearisome, and inevitably led the player to indulge in extempore variation and ornament";[9] however, the format of the dance required these variations to maintain the same duration and shape of the tune.


Variation forms can be written as free-standing pieces for solo instruments or ensembles, or can constitute a movement of a larger piece. Most jazz music is structured on a basic pattern of theme and variations.[10]


Examples include John Bull's Salvator Mundi, Bach's Canonic Variations on "Vom Himmel hoch da komm' ich her, Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor, Violin Chaconne, and (D minor solo violin suite), Corelli's La Folia Variations, Beethoven's Diabelli Variations, the Finales of his Third "Eroica" and Ninth "Choral" Symphonies, the Finale of Brahms's Fourth Symphony, Variations on a Theme of Haydn, Op. 56, Elgar's Enigma Variations, Franck's Variations Symphoniques, and Richard Strauss's Don Quixote.[11] Both Schubert's Death and the Maiden Quartet and Trout Quintet take their titles from his songs used as variation movements.[11]


Chopin's Berceuse for piano, Op. 57, was first called Variantes, and consists of 16 continuous variations on a ground bass.

(Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini for piano and orchestra, and his variations for solo piano on themes by Chopin and Corelli),

Sergei Rachmaninoff

(Variations on "America", 1891),

Charles Ives

(Variations on a Nursery Tune for piano and orchestra, Op. 25, 1914),

Ernő Dohnányi

(Variations for Orchestra, Op. 31, and Theme and Variations, Opp. 43a and 43b),

Arnold Schoenberg

(Pulcinella: XV Gavotta con due variazioni, 1920; Octet: II Tema con variazioni, 1922; Ebony Concerto: III, 1945; and Variations: Aldous Huxley in memoriam, 1963–64),

Igor Stravinsky

(Act 1, Scene 4 and the beginning of Act 3 scene 1 of Wozzeck, Act 3 interlude in Lulu)

Alban Berg

(Thème et variations for violin and piano, 1932),

Olivier Messiaen

Theme, Variations, and Finale (1933),

Miklós Rózsa

(Variations on "I Got Rhythm" for piano and orchestra, 1934),

George Gershwin

(Variations, Op. 27 for piano, and Variations, Op. 30 for orchestra),

Anton Webern

(Harp Concerto in E: II, 1938),

Reinhold Glière

(including the Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge, 1937, and The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra [Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Purcell], 1946),

Benjamin Britten

(second movement of the Sonata for Violin and Piano, 1947–49, and Variations on a Theme by Hindemith, 1963),

William Walton

(part 1 of his Symphony No. 2: The Age of Anxiety, 1949, is a Prologue and 14 variations),

Leonard Bernstein

(Variazioni canoniche sulla serie dell'op. 41 di A. Schönberg, 1950),

Luigi Nono

Variations I–VIII (1958–67), Hymns and Variations, for twelve amplified voices (1979),

John Cage

String Quartet No. 4 "Ascent" (Variations on "Amazing Grace", 1973),

Ben Johnston

De grote variatie for organ (1975),

Frans Geysen

Variaciones sobre la resonancia de un grito, for 11 instruments, tape, and live electronics (1976–77),

Cristóbal Halffter

Variations for cello and rock band (1977),

Andrew Lloyd Webber

Forty-eight Variations, for two pianos (1976–80), and

John McGuire

Variations on "Happy Birthday" for orchestra (1995).

John Williams

Although the first isolated example emerged in the 14th century, works in theme-and-variation form first emerge in the early sixteenth century.[12] Possibly the earliest published example is the diferencias for vihuela by Luis de Narváez (1538).[8] A favorite form of variations in Renaissance music was divisions, a type in which the basic rhythmic beat is successively divided into smaller and smaller values. The basic principle of beginning with simple variations and moving on to more elaborate ones has always been present in the history of the variation form, since it provides a way of giving an overall shape to a variation set, rather than letting it just form an arbitrary sequence.


Keyboard works in variation form were written by a number of 16th-century English composers, including William Byrd, Hugh Aston and Giles Farnaby. Outstanding examples of early Baroque variations are the "ciaccone" of Claudio Monteverdi and Heinrich Schütz.[13] Two famous variation sets from the Baroque era, both originally written for harpsichord, are George Frideric Handel's The Harmonious Blacksmith set, and Johann Sebastian Bach's Goldberg Variations, BWV 988.


In the Classical era, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote a great number of variations, such as the first movement of his Piano Sonata in A, K. 331, or the finale of his Clarinet Quintet. Joseph Haydn specialized in sets of double variations, in which two related themes, usually minor and major, are presented and then varied in alternation; outstanding examples are the slow movement of his Symphony No. 103, the Drumroll, and the Variations in F minor for piano, H XVII:6.[8]


Ludwig van Beethoven wrote many variation sets in his career. Some were independent sets, for instance the Diabelli Variations, Op. 120, and the Eroica Variations in E major, Op. 35. Others form single movements or parts of movements in larger works, such as first movement of the Piano Sonata No. 12, Op. 26, or the variations in the final movement of the Third Symphony (Eroica). Variation sets also occur in several of his late works, such as the slow movement of his String Quartet No. 12, Op. 127, the second movement of his final Piano Sonata No. 32, Op. 111, and the slow third movement of the Ninth Symphony, Op.125.


Franz Schubert wrote five variation sets using his own lieder as themes. Amongst them is the slow movement of his string quartet Death and the Maiden D. 810, an intense set of variations on his somber lied (D. 531) of the same title. Schubert's Piano Quintet in A (The Trout, D. 667) likewise includes variations on his song The Trout D. 550. The second movement of the Fantasie in C major comprises a set of variations on Der Wanderer; indeed the work as a whole takes its popular name from the lied.


In the Romantic era, the variation form was developed further. In 1824, Carl Czerny premiered his Variations for piano and orchestra on the Austrian National Hymn Gott erhalte Franz der Kaiser, Op. 73.[14] Frédéric Chopin wrote four sets for solo piano, and also the Variations on "La ci darem la mano" from Mozart's opera Don Giovanni, Op. 2, for piano and orchestra (1827). A further example of the form is Felix Mendelssohn's Variations sérieuses.


Johannes Brahms wrote a number of sets of variations; some of them rely on themes by older composers, for example the Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel (1861; piano), and the Variations on a Theme by Haydn (1873; orchestra). The latter work is believed to be the first set of variations for orchestra alone that was a work in its own right, rather than part of a symphony, suite or other larger work.[15] Karl Goldmark's Rustic Wedding Symphony (1875) starts out with a set of variations as its first movement. Antonín Dvořák's Symphonic Variations (1877) and Edward Elgar's Enigma Variations (1899) are other well-known examples. Anton Arensky's Variations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky (1894) is among his most popular compositions.


Variation sets have also been composed by notable twentieth-century composers, including


An unusual option was taken in 1952 with the Variations on an Elizabethan Theme, a set of six variations on Sellenger's Round for string orchestra, in which each variation was written by a different composer: Lennox Berkeley, Benjamin Britten, Arthur Oldham, Humphrey Searle, Michael Tippett, and William Walton.


Graham Waterhouse composed a trio Gestural Variations in 1997 and Variations for Cello Solo in 2019, and Helmut Lachenmann composed a trio Sakura-Variationen on the Japanese song in 2000.


A significant sub-set of the above consists of variations on a theme by another composer.

Improvised variations[edit]

Skilled musicians can often improvise variations on a theme. This was commonplace in the Baroque era, when the da capo aria, particularly when in slow tempo, required the singer to be able to improvise a variation during the return of the main material. During this period, according to Nicholas Cook, it was often the case that "responsibility for the most highly elaborated stage in the compositional process fell not upon the composer but upon the executant. In their instrumental sonatas composers like Corelli, Geminiani, and Handel sometimes supplied the performer with only the skeleton of the music that was to be played; the ornamentation, which contributes crucially to the music's effect, had to be provided by the performer." Cook cites Geminiani's elaboration of Corelli (see above) as an example of an instance "in which the composer, or a performer, wrote down a version of one of these movements as it was meant to be played."[4]


Musicians of the Classical era also could improvise variations; both Mozart (see Mozart's compositional method) and Beethoven made powerful impressions on their audiences when they improvised. Modern listeners can get a sense of what these improvised variations sounded like by listening to published works that evidently are written transcriptions of improvised performances, in particular Beethoven's Fantasia in G Minor, Op. 77,[16] and Mozart's Variations on an Aria by Gluck, K. 455.[17]


Improvisation of elaborate variations on a popular theme is one of the core genres of jazz. According to William Austin, the practice of jazz musicians "resembles the variations on popular songs composed for the keyboard at the end of the 16th century by Byrd, Bull, Sweelinck and Frescobaldi, more than the cumulative variations of Beethoven and Brahms."[18] Generally, the theme used is stated quite explicitly at the outset. However, some jazz musicians employ a more oblique approach. According to Gamble, "Charlie Parker's performance of Embraceable You can be appreciated fully only if we are familiar with the tune, for unlike many jazz performances in which the theme is stated at the beginning, followed by improvisations on the theme, Parker launches almost immediately into improvisation, stating only a fragment of the tune at the end of the piece."[19] Coleman Hawkins' famous interpretation of "Body and Soul" shows a similar approach. "On 11 October 1939, Coleman Hawkins went into New York's RCA studios with an eight-piece band to record the 1930 composition Body and Soul. It was already a favourite among jazz musicians, but nobody had ever played it like this. Pianist Gene Rodgers plays a straight four-bar introduction before Hawkins swoops in, soloing for three minutes without playing a single note of the tune, gliding over the chord changes with such harmonic logic that he ends up inventing bebop."[20]


Improvisation by means of spontaneous variations, ornaments, embellishments and/or alterations to a melody is the basis of most sub-Saharan African music (traditional and pop) extending from melody and harmony to form and rhythmic embellishments.

Composer tributes (classical music)

Developing variation

Inversion

Matrix (music)

Strophic form

Traditional sub-Saharan African harmony

Tune-family

Apel, Willi (1962), .

Harvard dictionary of music

Austin, William (1966), Music in the 20th Century, London: Dent.

Biba, Otto, , archived from the original on 5 March 2009, retrieved 21 December 2008

American Symphony Orchestra: Dialogues and Extensions

(1990), Mozart in Vienna, New York: Grove Weidenfeld, ISBN 0-8021-1009-6.

Braunbehrens, Volkmar

Cook, N (1990), Music, Imagination and Culture, Oxford: Clarendon Press.

(2002), What to Listen for in Music, Revised edition of an authorized reprint of a hardcover edition published by McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York: Signet Classic., ISBN 0-451-52867-0.

Copland, Aaron

Drebes, Gerald (1992), , Schütz-Jahrbuch, 14: 25–55, archived from the original on 3 March 2016.

"Schütz, Monteverdi und die "Vollkommenheit der Musik" – "Es steh Gott auf" aus den "Symphoniae sacrae" II (1647)"

Gamble, T. (1984), "Imagination and Understanding in the Music Curriculum", British Journal of Music Education, 1 (1), Cambridge University Press.

Hodeir, André (2006), Pautrot, Jean-Louis (ed.), , Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, ISBN 978-0-472-09883-5.

The André Hodeir Jazz Reader

Irmer, Otto von (1986), "Preface", Beethoven: Klavierstücke, Munich: G. Henle.

Lewis, J. (17 June 2011), "Coleman Hawkins records Body and Soul: Number 14 in our series of the 50 key events in the history of jazz music", The Guardian.

McCorkle, Donald M., Variationen uber ein Thema von Joseph Haydn (Norton Scores ed.),  0-393-09206-2.

ISBN

Mellers, Wilfrid (1964), Music in a New Found Land: Themes and Developments in the History of American Music, London: Barrie and Rockliff.

Mellers, Wilfrid (1983), Beethoven and the Voice of God, London: Faber.

Raymar, Aubyn (1931), "Preface", in Bowen, York (ed.), Mozart: Miscellaneous Pieces for Pianforte, London: Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music.

Sisman, Elaine (2001), "Variations", in ; Tyrrell, John (eds.), The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.), London: Macmillan Publishers.

Sadie, Stanley

White, John David (1976), The Analysis of Music, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall,  0-13-033233-X.

ISBN

Ehrhardt, Damien (1998), La variation chez Robert Schumann. Forme et évolution (Diss. Sorbonne 1997), Lille: Presses Universitaires du Septentrion,  2-284-00573-X

ISBN

Nelson, Robert U. (1948), The Technique of Variation; A Study of the Instrumental Variation from Antonio de Cabezón to Max Reger, University of California Publications in Music, vol. 3, Berkeley: University of California Press.

Classical Music Pages: Variation

Variations on Greensleeves