Leonard Ratner
Leonard Gilbert Ratner | |
---|---|
Born | Minneapolis, Minnesota | July 30, 1916
Died | September 2, 2011 | (aged 95)
Nationality | American |
Education | University of California at Berkeley |
Known for | Developer of the concept of Topic theory |
Awards | Guggenheim Fellowship, Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Musicology |
Institutions | Stanford University |
Leonard Gilbert Ratner (July 30, 1916 – September 2, 2011), was an American musicologist, Professor of Musicology at Stanford University, He was a specialist in the style of the Classical period, and best known as a developer of the concept of Topic theory.[1][2]
Biography
[edit]Ratner was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota. After studying the violin and viola, and studying composition with Frederick Jacobi, Arnold Schoenberg, Ernest Bloch, and Arthur Bliss, he received a Ph.D. in musicology in from the University of California at Berkeley under Manfred Bukofzer, the first such degree to be given by that university.[3]
Career
[edit]In 1947, he joined the newly formed Department of Music at Stanford University, and continued there until his retirement in 1984 composing, teaching, and conducting research on music theory. He composed a chamber opera, The Necklace, and several chamber works. He taught composition and theory to advanced students and coached chamber music; he also taught elementary music appreciation courses for undergraduates, Stanford alumni, and the general public. He was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for1962, and elected as a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1998.
His research was devoted to emphasizing "sonata form's harmonic underpinnings as an antidote to the thematic perspective" [3] and developing a theory of musical period and form.
Publications
[edit]Books
[edit]- Music: The Listener's Art NY: McGraw-Hill. 1st ed. 1957; 2nd. ed 196; 3rd ed. 1977
- Harmony, Structure, and Style NY: McGraw-Hill, 1962
- Classic Music: Expression, Form, and Style NY: Schrimer, 1980
- Review by Jane Stevens, Journal of Music Theory 27 (1983)
- The Musical Experience: Sound, Movement, and Arrival NY:Freeman, 1983
- 'Romantic Music: Sound, and Syntax NY: Schrimer, 1992
- the Beethoven String Quartets: Compositional Strategies and Rhetoric Stanford: Stanford Bookstore, 1995
Academic journal articles
[edit]- "Harmonic aspects of Classic Form" Journal of the American Musicological Society 2 (3), Autumn, 1949 p.159-68
- "Eighteenth-Century Theories of Musical Period Structure" Musical Quarterly 42(4) Oct. 1956 p 439-454
- "On the nature and value of theoretical training" ("A Forum: Music theory for the Layman") Journal of Music Theory 3 (1959) 58-69
- "Approaches to Musical Historiography of the Eighteenth Century" Current Musicology 9 (1969) 154-57
- "Key Definition: A structural problem in Beethoven's Music" Journal of the American Musicological Society, 23(3) Autumn, 1970 472-83
- "Texture: A Rhetorical element in Beethoven;s Quartets" Israel Studies in Musicology 2 (1980) p. 51-62
- "Topical content in Mozart's Keyboard Sonatas" Early Music' 19 (4) (1991) 615-19
- "'Mozart's Parting Gifts" Journal of Musicology 18(1) Winter, 2001, 189-211
Other
[edit]- "Development" and "Sonata Form" in Harvard Dictionary of Music, 2nd ed., 1969.
- "Koch, Heinrich Cristoph" "Period" and "Riepel, Joseph" in New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 1980
References
[edit]- ^ William Caplin, "On the Relation of Musical 'Topoi' to Formal Function" Eighteenth-Century Music 11(1) March, 2005.
- ^ Raymond Monelle, The Sense of Music:Semiotic Essays Princeton Univ. Press, 2000
- ^ a b Kofi Agawu, "Leonard G. Ratner, 1916-2011" Ad Parnassum: A Journal of Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Instrumental Music 10 (19), April 2012, 190-194