Public and Private Modes of Musical Discourse

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A01=Lauri Suurpaa
Author_Lauri Suurpaa
Beethoven
Category=AVA
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Enlightenment aesthetics
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expression
Formenlehre
historical context
Mozart
musical form
Schenkerian analysis
structure
topic theory

Product details

  • ISBN 9780253075277
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2026
  • Publisher: Indiana University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Public and Private Modes of Musical Discourse brings a new contribution to discussions on the difference between the public and private layers of music, which have often centered on issues of stylistic expression such as genre, performance venue, texture, and phrase organization. Symphonies, for example, have historically been seen as public expressions of grandeur with a festive, powerful musical character, while sonatas were associated with the subtler emotions of chamber music and private audiences.

Author Lauri Suurpää offers an alternative starting point for the distinction between these modes, grounding the public-private distinction on structure and expression. Focusing on Joseph Haydn's London symphonies and late string quartets, Suurpää exposes the interplay of details and large-scale narrative and unveils a key aspect of the music—its interactions and dialogues between public and private modes of discourse. In structure, if a musical segment adheres to conventional patterns, it is public; if it deviates from them, it is private. In expression, if a musical topic refers to an object shared by a crowd, such as a fanfare announcing a battle, it is public; if a topic refers to emotions felt by an individual, it is private.

With sonata theory, form-functional theory, Schenkerian analysis, hypermetrical analysis, and approaching musical expression from the perspective of topic theory, layers of structure and expression are peeled back. Public and Private Modes of Musical Discourse offers a valuable new way into how we discuss eighteenth-century music.

Lauri Suurpää is Professor of Music Theory at the Sibelius Academy, University of the Arts Helsinki, Finland.

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