Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccol
Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccol
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Indice
saggi
7 Deborah Burton
he Puccini Code
33 Cosimo Colazzo
Il linguaggio compositivo di Fernando Lopes-Graça: materiali e forma, innesti e
stratiicazioni
57 Jamuna Samuel
Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
83 Simone Caputo
Testi, contesti e funzioni: strutura musicale e retorica della morte nel requiem
rancese del primo Otocento
recensioni
133 Giorgio Sanguineti, he Art of Partimento. History, heory, and Practice,
Oxford University Press, New York 2012 (Dinko Fabris)
137 Allan F. Moore, Song Means: Analysing and Interpreting Recorded Popular Song,
Ashgate, Aldershot 2012 (Laura Leante)
Octatonic Serialism
in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
Abstract
Using as a case study the 1948 opera Il prigioniero, writen over ive years in Dallapic-
cola’s irst phase of twelve-tone writing, I investigate the unique interweaving of the
composer’s experimentation with the twelve-tone method, his seting of dramatic
text, and his manipulation of the octatonic collection. Ater discussing the impact
that the octatonic scale had on Dallapiccola during his early formation, I examine
how octatonic structures are built into the network of rows used in the opera, and
analyse excerpts that show how octatonic segmentations strongly support text set-
ting, in essence replacing tonality as a small- and large- scale organizing force.
Musicians, critics, and scholars oten allude to the lyrical quality of Luigi Dalla-
piccola’s twelve-tone music as well as its “Italianate” sound, distinguishing it from
the aesthetic of Second Viennese School serialism.1 hese traits are seen together
as tempering the composer’s idiosyncratic use of the twelve-tone technique in
his early, experimental, texted works, in which he gradually adopted the method,
I would like to thank Christoph Neidhöfer and Joseph N. Straus for reading earlier drats of this work,
and the journal’s anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments. I am also grateful to David Smey for
his expert preparation of musical examples.
1. John Waterhouse describes, for example, how in Liriche greche (1942-1945) «Dallapiccola’s dodecaphony,
here as in Il prigioniero (though to very diferent efect), has diatonicism absorbed into it, inherent in
the interval structures of the series. his fact, combined with the continued “sot and starry” quality
of the instrumentation, places these exquisite songs irmly in the line of succession of the Tre laudi
and worlds away from the Schoenbergian spirit» (J. Waterhouse, Dallapiccola Luigi, in Grove Music
Online, htp://www.oxfordmusiconline.com, accessed September 19, 2011). Fearn refers to a «very
Italian cantabilità» in describing the Liriche and explains that the «serial principle provided a focus
for the essentially lyrical and polyphonic nature of Dallapiccola’s musical expression» [2003, 93, 128,
130]. Fearn also cites René Leibowitz’s negative reaction to «hedonistic» tendencies in Dallapiccola’s
Liriche, and a resultant «sensuous Italianate lyricism» which represented a lack of commitment to the
Webernian mode [Leibowitz, 1947].
Jamuna Samuel
beginning with his 1937 Tre laudi songs and ending with the oratorio Job in 1950.2
In the last decade, several analytical investigations into Dallapiccola’s composi-
tional technique, such as those by Brian Alegant, Dana Richardson, and Raymond
Fearn, have contributed to a greater understanding of it, explaining the efective-
ness of his early use of the technique, and its evolution into the late style.3
Dallapiccola’s speciic employment of the twelve-tone method connects in-
extricably to his sophisticated text-seting techniques.4 Two-thirds of his overall
output sets text, as do all of his early compositions from 1916 to 1941. When in the
1940s Dallapiccola inally began to compose instrumental works, he reverted to a
tonal, neoclassical style, straying from the steady path toward twelve-tone writing
that characterized his texted compositions of the time.5 he writing of Liriche gre-
che in 1942 was an important milestone in terms of his decision to strictly use the
twelve-tone method. It was around this time that he began work on the opera Il
prigioniero [he Prisoner].6
While scholars have generally agreed that Dallapiccola was an important
“twelve-tone pioneer” in Italy, that his music drew on the octatonic scale, and that
he was a vocal composer whose texts were extremely important to him (to the
point that for Il prigioniero he wrote his own libreto), the speciic interweaving of
these three threads in his early experimental work has not yet been fully explored.
I contend that, in Il prigioniero, the persistent, strategic, and expressive manipula-
tion of subsets of the octatonic scale relates to critical and interrelated maters of
text seting – i.e., harmonic rhythm, phrase structure, and dramatic unfolding –ul-
timately contributing to the sense of “Italian lyricism” associated especially with
2. I adopt Brian Alegant’s division of the composer’s output into ive phases: preserial, to 1942; irst phase
of twelve-tone writing, 1942-50; second phase, 1951-55; third phase, 1956-60; and inal phase, 1960-72. See
Alegant [2010, 10-20].
3. See Alegant [2010]; Alegant and Levey [2006]; Richardson [2001]; and Fearn [1997, 1-15; 2003].
Also: Earle [2006; 2013], Sheehan [2008], Samuel [2005 and forthcoming]. Finally, several analytical
relections emerge in various essays in Nicolodi [2007].
4. See for example, in Alegant [2010], chapter 6, “An Mathilde: An Unsung Cantata” (pp. 155-225) and
chapter 7, “Parole di San Paolo: ‘A Performance under a Glass Bell’” (pp. 226-284). Also, I explore the
issue from several angles in chapter 3, “Music and Text”, of my doctoral dissertation [Samuel 2005,
122-248], in which I discuss the compositional treatment of repetition in text, the issue of musical
characterization and its relationship to twelve-tone techniques, the phenomenon of parole sceniche, and
the relationship between text and large-scale form. See also DeLio [1985].
5. Instrumental works in which Dallapiccola slowed or deviated from his “twelve-tone road” (unfolding
mainly in the realm of vocal works), include his Studio sul ‘Capriccio n. 14’ di Niccolò Paganini (1942),
Marsia (1942-3), Sonatina canonica (1942-3), Ciaccona, intermezzo e adagio per violoncello (1945), Due
studi per violino e pianoforte (1946-7), Due pezzi per orchestra (1947), and Frammenti sinfonici dal balleto
‘Marsia’ (1948).
6. I have explored the relationship between Dallapiccola’s text-seting and evolving twelve-tone technique
[Samuel 2006], and extended the discussion further, in a postwar direction [Samuel 2012].
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Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
the early works.7 It was the act of seting text that, in turn, helped the composer in
extending and developing his use of the twelve-tone technique even in a large-scale
genre such as opera. Compared to the small individual songs of the immediately
preceding Liriche, the opera presented a great challenge for a still new twelve-tone
composer both in terms of extending the technique to meet the demands of the
form and genre in a full orchestral seting, and in terms of establishing and main-
taining momentum and coherence over the course of a music drama that, in the
case of Il prigioniero, is arguably more psychological than plot-driven.
Dallapiccola was introduced to the idea of the octatonic or “alternating” scale
early on in his training.8 One of his main composition teachers, Vito Frazzi, pre-
sented a theory of the “alternating scale” in his 1930 booklet Scale alternate per
pianoforte, the irst systematic explanation of the scale in Italy [Frazzi 1930].9
Dallapiccola, in his subsequent essay on Frazzi published in 1937, highlighted his
teacher’s focus on the harmonic rather than melodic potential of the octatonic
scales:
In contrast to almost all his contemporaries, who based their music largely on linear
counterpoint, Vito Frazzi rests his inventions and his realizations upon elements of
nature that are almost exclusively harmonic. For him the concatenation of chords
remains always the foundation of every musical discourse [Dallapiccola 1980, 260].
7. Alegant coined the terms «octatonic serialism» and «twelve-tone octatonicism» to describe
Dallapiccola’s use of the octatonic scale in his twelve-tone writing. He traces it throughout the
composer’s entire twelve-tone output, and highlights a hexachordal ilter of the octatonic in conjunction
with Schoenberg’s inluence on Dallapiccola’s use of the twelve-tone technique. See, in Alegant [2010],
chapter 5, “Dallapiccola’s Idiosyncratic Approach to ‘Octatonic Serialism’” (pp. 109-154). Il prigioniero
is one of the two earliest works (its musical composition beginning in 1944, contemporaneous with the
Liriche greche of 1942-45, also featured in the chapter) that Alegant considers. However, I wonder if the
fact of it being a staged, dramatic work drove Dallapiccola to involve octatonicism – i.e. the need to be
intelligible and communicative for dramatic reasons, with which the octatonic organization can surely
help. He absorbed the technique and then carried into his later general style, to last, as Alegant argues,
throughout his second and third phases of composition (to 1972). I have noted the use of octatonicism
in his earlier Preghiera di Maria Stuarda of Canti di prigionia, particularly as related to its self-quotation
in the opera, in my dissertation [Samuel 2005, 1-12]. Earle also notes the use of the scale in the same
choral number [2013, 208-210]. He has also discussed octatonicism in the irst song of the irst song cycle
of the Liriche greche, i.e. “Vespro, tuto riporti” of Cinque rammenti di Safo [2006, 17-19, 23].
8. Michael Eckert presents details of Dallapiccola’s early exposure to the scale and examines linear melodic
manifestations of octatonic subsets. He interprets polarities within the rows, relating the subset qualities
to Dallapiccola’s own statement about such possible relationships among notes within the series [Eckert
1985].
9. See also Gianuario [1974]. Giorgio Sanguineti describes Frazzi’s writing as the irst «theoretical,
detailed and systematic description of the octatonic scale and its implications» [1993, 412]. While this
is not completely accurate (as, for example, Sylvia Kahan [2009] has shown, but see also fn. 15 below),
it is certainly true that Frazzi was probably the irst to draw such atention to it. Ernesto Consolo,
Dallapiccola’s piano teacher, wrote the scale ingerings and a few years later Dallapiccola’s composition
colleague at the conservatory, Paolo Fragapane, published an article on Frazzi’s scales, as Eckert notes
[1985, 35-36].
– 59 –
Jamuna Samuel
Frazzi presented the octatonic scales in the context of other “systems”, inclu-
ding the diatonic, whole-tone, and dodecaphonic ones:
Until now, the diatonic and whole-tone systems have been realized and perfected
because we have found their correspondents in the harmonic realm, while we still
have yet to complete the chromatic system; […] because we still have not found
the correspondent of this system in the harmonic realm [Frazzi 1930, cit. in Sangui-
neti 1993, 423].
2o Nucleo
A. C.
3o Nucleo
4o Nucleo
1o N.
?
w w #w ? w
(azzurro)
2o N.
w
(rosso)
3o N.
#w
4o N.
bw nw
w # œ œœ œœ
D. D. D. D.
# www # œœœ b b œœ b n œœ
D. D. D. D.
GRUPPO &
B.
1o N.
w
2o N.
? #w b w
3o N.
4o N.
w
(giallo)
D. D. D. D.
10. Sanguineti cites Prosperi [1977, 18-19]; he also discusses the contribution of Domenico Alaleona (1881-
1928), who compared and contrasted three systems, dodecaphony, “tetrafonia” (octatonicism) and
“esafonia” (based on the whole-tone scale), actually predating Frazzi’s discussion [Sanguineti 1993,
421; Suozzo 1991]. In his use of octatonicism, Dallapiccola may also have been reacting to its presence
in the works of other composers whom he admired, such as Debussy and Mussorgsky. hough he never
mentioned the scale in his writings about them, he did comment on their efective text setings and
creation of drama – issues that, as I will show, can relate to octatonic organization. He described seeing
Debussy’s Pelléas et Mélisande as his «irst musical shock» in 1919, ater which he did not even compose
for a couple of years, taking the time to absorb and explore that experience. A few years before beginning
Il prigioniero, he completed an edition of Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition for piano (1940). He
also pondered the two composers together, as evident in his discussion of their dramatic music in the
same breath, in his Per un’esecuzione de “L’enfant et les sortilèges” [Dallapiccola 1980, 273-281].
11. In discussing Dallapiccola’s music, Roman Vlad refers to Messiaen’s «mode of limited transpositions»
[1957, 41-42]. Vlad was the second person, ater Messiaen (1944), to mention the octatonic scale in
the music of Stravinsky [Vlad, 1978, 7-8, 17, 258-59]. Arthur Berger then capitalized on this observation
[1963], launching what is still a long-standing discussion on the issue; see Taruskin [1985, 73-74] for a
summary of the debate until then, and, more recently, the responses to Taruskin [2011] included in vol.
33 no. 2 (Fall 2011) of «Music heory Spectrum» (by Koi Agawu, Robert O. Gjerdingen, Marianne
Kielian-Gilbert, Lynne Rogers, Dmitri Tymoczko, Pieter C. Van Den Toorn, Arnold Whitall, and
Lawrence M. Zbikowski, with a inal response by Taruskin).
12. For nearly two decades, Eckert was the only scholar to have devoted a study exclusively to octatonicism
in Dallapiccola’s music. He pointed particularly to the 1940s’ works – including Il prigioniero – as
employing octatonic segments of row forms.
13. In his monograph on Webern, Allen Forte discusses this hexachord as well as all the other octatonic
subsets [1998, 13].
– 61 –
Jamuna Samuel
in this opera in forming connections among the rows, as will be discussed. As Ale-
gant points out, hexachord 6-27 can be transposed in order to create a complete
octatonic collection, and can be inverted to complete the aggregate.14 Perhaps it
was Frazzi’s emphatic derivation of the octatonic scale from diminished-seventh
chords that led Dallapiccola to focus on a hexachord so closely related to it.
Occasionally in Il prigioniero, complete or near-complete collections appear,
especially when a single octatonic harmony extends over two or more bars. But
more oten the sets are smaller: tetrachords, pentachords, or hexachords represent
one collection before changing to another. As I will show, these sets create recur-
ring octatonic harmonies, repeated progressions, closed paterns, and extended
palindromes. Harmonic areas, in particular, project the verbal text’s structures,
demarcating boundaries and creating continuities. Many relevant sets have both
diatonic and octatonic qualities, but the context to which they belong emphasizes
octatonic associations.15
14. Howard Hanson [1960] presents the hexachord in terms of tonal structures. Alegant [2010, 113-119]
refers to Robert Morris’s [1994] concept of complement union property, or CUP, to explain the
construction, in which case the CUP is [0369] + [03]. here are only two other octatonic hexachords
that can be similarly parsed, with the [0369] tetrachord combined with other dyads, [06] and [05], to
create sets, respectively, 6-30 (013679) and 6Z-50 (014679)/6Z-29 (023679). Alegant notes that 6-27
is prominent in Dallapiccola’s early twelve-tone works, whereas the other two gain prominence in the
middle and later works.
15. Dmitri Tymoczko has argued for a grouping of the diatonic and octatonic scales into part of the
same four-scale family [1997]. In a later essay Tymoczko mentions hexachord 6-27, used regularly by
Dallapiccola, as being, besides a typical octatonic hexachord, a subset of the harmonic minor scale
[2002, 70]. In my discussion, each octatonic collection is labeled according to its irst two pitch classes,
starting on 0. So OCT1,2 includes pitch classes 124578TE, OCT0,2 pitch classes 0235689E, OCT 0,1 pitch
classes 0134679T. George Perle was the irst to use this type of labeling [1985, 200].
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Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
16. Dallapiccola presents Glorious but without naming it or assigning it the priority of Freedom, Prayer, and
Hope [1974]. here is one more identiiable linear row, used sparingly, and associated with the Mother’s
dream in her Prologue (bb. 39-43), though it does not igure in this analysis. Kämper makes note of it
also, within his larger discussion of the entire opera [1985, 105-128]. Mark Schultz identiies and names
the Lamp row (Lampada) [1984].
17. Dallapiccola [1947, 142]. he vocal score of Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero (edited by Pietro Scarpini) is
published by Edizioni Suvini Zerboni (ESZ 4464), SugarMusic S.p.A. (Milano), and the excerpts are
– 63 –
Jamuna Samuel
source structures that help the drama to unfold and are associated, in some cases,
with repeated “theatrical words”.
Ex. 3a. L. Dallapiccola, Il prigioniero, Prologue, bars 1-9. Roelandt twelve-tone combination or-
ganized around octatonic harmonies, circling through the three collections.
Ex. 3b. he irst four order numbers of Prayer P8 (i) are verticalized to form the opening chord
A of Roelandt (ii).
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Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
Ex. 4. L. Dallapiccola, Il prigioniero, Scene 1, bars 198-201. Brother combination, as irst sung by
prisoner.
With “theatrical words” I translate the original Italian expression parole sce-
niche, as used with respect to Verdi’s operas and termed so by the nineteenth-cen-
tury composer himself, whom Dallapiccola revered, as atested by his numerous
essays. heatrical words carry a certain dramatic weight and recur throughout the
opera. In Il prigioniero such words include “hope” (speranza), “freedom” (libertà),
“brother” (ratello) and “son” (iglio).18 he directness of these words, the clarity
of their presentations and repetitions are part of Dallapiccola’s strategy to remove
all artiice from the libreto of his opera, and to communicate efectively with the
public – exactly as Verdi intended them to. Fabrizio Della Seta, in discussing pa-
role sceniche with respect to Verdi, suggests an extension of the concept to include
the idea of musica scenica or, I translate, “theatrical music”. «heatricality» – he
writes – «is a general criterion, vague and precise at the same time. […] Rath-
er than speaking of a “theatrical word” as a musical fact it would be simpler to
postulate a concept of “theatrical music”, never expressed because if it existed, it
belonged to its interior discourse» [Della Seta 1994, 272]. Dallapiccola accom-
plishes such a “theatrical music” by text/music techniques that relate to his use of
the octatonic scale but that also have their roots in Verdi’s modus operandi, which
was however of course rooted in tonal harmony.
he opera presents a dramatic picture of psychological sufering, exploring
the idea that hope can be torture, indeed, that it can in fact inlict a despair even
18. Antonio Trudu notices the emphasis of these words, though without relating them to a historical
tradition, the concept of parole sceniche, or the musical aspects of the opera [1997, 295].
– 65 –
Jamuna Samuel
19. For example, as the mother’s prologue closes with her describing an unsetling premonition of her son’s
execution, the Roelandt combination returns (bb. 117 f). It returns again at the end of scene 3, just before
the prisoner reaches the door of seeming escape (b. 796 f.). Fearn discusses this motif and much more
in his commentary on the opera [2003, 115-27].
20. See Dallapiccola [1974]. he composer points to this particular use and text of the row in describing it.
– 66 –
Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
it. Ex. 3b shows how the verticalized opening tetrachord of Prayer is the same as
the irst chord of Roelandt.21
Ex. 5. L. Dallapiccola, Il prigioniero, Scene 1, bars 241-244. Prayer P8, as sung by the prisoner,
with associated line of prayer.
Dallapiccola, from the very start of the opera, establishes a direct connection
between row-derived processes and the strong role (metrical and otherwise) that
he assigns to octatonic harmonies as prominent sonorities. By establishing this
association between octatonicism and serialism, the composer prepares the audi-
ence for the entry of the vocal line (see Ex. 6) in which the same association efec-
tively supports the delivery of the text. Symbolizing the bell in Ghent whose ring
would signify freedom for the prisoner, Roelandt is the opening and most dramatic
motive of the opera, returning at key structural and dramatic points throughout.22
Strongly theme-like, it consists of two parallel four-bar phrases grouping into two
motives (see Ex. 3a: bb. 1-3 and b. 4 respectively, then a varied repetition in bb. 5-6
and bb. 7-10). Each of these measure groups presents the aggregate.
he irst chord of Roelandt relates to the Prayer row, presenting octatonic har-
monies.23 As seen in Ex. 3a, this chord A, set-class 4-18 (0147) (its relationship to
Prayer shown in Example 3b) is transposed a whole step to form chord B; chord
C difers slightly, but still forms an octatonic subset, i.e., set class 4-13 (0136). Each
chord of this opening bar represents a diferent octatonic collection: chord A be-
longs to OCT1,2, B to OCT0,1, and C to OCT0,2. he second motive of the phrase,
21. Kämper suggests that the vertical tetrachord of Roelandt was unfolded to form the Prayer row [1985, 111].
Kämper may have been taking a cue from Dallapiccola’s ordering of the musical examples in which ex.
1 is Roelandt while ex. 5 presents the Prayer row [Dallapiccola, 1974]. Or, perhaps, he assumed that the
vertical construction was pre-conceived, given that the (0147) chord appeared in the earlier in Canti di
prigionia, already verticalized (see b. 4 of the opening Prayer of Mary Stuart, as I have discussed [Samuel
2005, 7-8]).
22. Signiicant appearances of Roelandt in the opera, besides the opening of the Prologue, are: at the end
of scene 1 (bb. 256 f.), as the mother intuits that she embraces her son for the last time; at the start of
scene 3 (bb. 646 f.) before the prisoner atempts his escape and prays one last time: «Signore aiutami
a camminare»; and at the end of scene 3 (bb. 794 f.) as he arrives at the exit that should lead him to
freedom and repeats the same line of prayer. hus, this theme acquires great symbolic meaning over
the course of the opera, functioning as a signpost even as it seems to contain in its brief duration the
essential afect of the entire opera.
23. his construction, and similar ones, has been termed a type of «cross-partition» by Alegant [2010, 132];
see also Alegant [2001] and my own identiication and categorization of several types of cross-partitions
occurring throughout Il prigioniero [Samuel 2005, 261-287].
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Jamuna Samuel
Ex. 6. L. Dallapiccola, Il prigioniero, Prologue, bars 9-12. he mother’s entrance features recur-
ring octatonic harmonies from Roelandt, among larger octatonic segmentations.
presenting a second aggregate, coincides with the curtain’s rise (b. 4), as indicated
in the score («the curtain rises immediately, disclosing a black curtain»). It con-
sists of chords labeled in the example D, E, F, with C returning at the end of the
bar. he chords again rotate among the octatonic collections with OCT1,2 which
is (again) the irst and controlling harmony. he second four-bar phrase, bb. 5-8,
is a rhythmically and metrically varied version of the irst, and continues to em-
phasize chord A. Dallapiccola in fact keeps this chord strong in terms of metrical
placement, emphasizing its pitches and making it the controlling harmony of the
opening phrase, with chords B and C forming a double-neighbor igure around it.
his primacy of OCT1,2 continues into the entering vocal line.24
Besides its relationship to Roelandt, the Prayer row is related to two other li-
near rows as well. As shown in Ex. 2a, Prayer divides into two hexachords of self-
complementary set class 6-27 (013469). his same hexachord also gives rise to the
Glorious and Lamp rows, shown in Ex. 2d and 2e. Beyond the common shared
hexachord among the three rows, and considering the speciic contours associa-
ted with them throughout the score, there are other, smaller similarities among
the three rows. All of them, for example, begin with interval-class 3 (minor third)
and share a general arch-shape. In Prayer, in fact, two smaller arches sit within
the larger arch (ONs 1-6; ONs 7-12) but Lamp and Glorious have nearly parallel
24. he continuity drat shows that Dallapiccola adjusted the metre for the inal version to keep chord
A metrically strong, as I have discussed [Samuel 2005, 40-42]. he drat is held at Pierpont Morgan
Library, New York.
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Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
contours. In all three rows, at P0, the note B forms the apex pitch. In both Prayer
and Glorious, the nadir, order number 12, is B. hese rows all have the speciic
pitch-class groups [0369], or C diminished seventh, in the irst hexachord, and
[147T], or C diminished seventh, in the second, both members of set class 4-28
(0369). To each of these diminished-seventh chords, a minor third is adjoined,
creating 6-27 (013469). he adjoined minor thirds vary from row to row, but the
diminished-seventh chords remain ixed in pitch. Both Glorious and Prayer rows
divide into set classes 5-31 (01369) and 7-31 (0134679),25 whereas both Prayer and
Lamp contain the all-interval, octatonic tetrachord 4Z-15 (0146) – in Prayer, ONs
9-12; in Lamp, ONs 6-9. Finally, the Lamp and Glorious rows share a similar oc-
tatonic trichordal content, i.e., multiple instances of set classes 3-2 (013) and 3-7
(025), and one of 3-11 (037).
In sum, Dallapiccola establishes multiple associations among the three rows,
basing them on shared octatonic features and other factors. He does so for a dra-
matic purpose. heir naming in fact does not match any “theatrical word”, as in
the case of Hope, Freedom, and Brother, and thus the intramusical association re-
places, so to speak, the extramusical one.26 he fact that the other two main linear
rows, Hope and Freedom, representing key themes in the opera’s story, lack the
same octatonic colour as the other three is, in this context, signiicant. Hope is
characterized by a relatively more chromatic unfolding than the others (Ex. 2b);
Freedom, instead, is highly diatonic, especially in the way it is employed in the
opera (Ex. 2c). It is associated with the evil jailer (his main aria is set to Freedom).
he other main twelve-tone combination, Brother, also associated with the jai-
ler, is also characterized by a strongly tonal sound, though the vertical triads and
one linear motive technically do form octatonic subsets (its irst appearance in
scene 1 is shown in Ex. 4). he prisoner, in this moment, is explaining to his mo-
ther, during her inal visit, how much he appreciated the jailer’s kindness. He cites
how the jailer addressed him as “brother”, and how meaningful that was to him in
his desperate circumstances.
he coniguration of the pitches includes two sustained root-position minor
triads, set class 3-11 (037). Indeed, the motive becomes associated with the jailer’s
evil, in particular his giving false hope and comfort to the prisoner regarding an il-
lusory future of freedom.27 Both diatonic and octatonic, the B-minor triad present
in Brother belongs to OCT0,2. It moves by T1 to the C minor triad, within OCT0,1.
25. In Prayer, ONs 1-5 form 5-31, ONs 6-12, 7-31; in Glorious the order is reversed: ONs 1-7 form 7-31; ONs
8-12, 5-31.
26. Koi Agawu’s distinction between introversive and extroversive semiosis for instrumental music [1991]
might be comparable to Dallapiccola’s use of rows here.
27. his association of tonal structures with falsity recalls Berg’s use of a C major chord in Wozzeck to
represent the concept of money (Act II, Scene 1, bb. 143 f.).
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Jamuna Samuel
he irst horizontal trichord (seting the word “ratello”, or “brother”) forms octa-
tonic 3-3 (014), the most important trichord for the entire opera. But the second
linear trichord, 3-1 (012), turns away from the diatonic and octatonic, toward the
chromatic. It is followed in fact by a chromatic (and non-diatonic, non-octatonic)
twelve-tone row, Hope, three times in close succession (scene 1, bb. 201 f.).
he octatonic qualities embedded in the source rows and combinations help
to give rise to harmonies that in turn shape text-seting in signiicant ways. his is
the case from the very beginning of the opera. In the opening vocal phrase (Ex. 6),
phrase structure and continuity are achieved thanks to octatonic segmentations
recurring from the opening instrumental material. Ater the dramatic instrumen-
tal opening of the opera (Ex. 3a), the mother enters stage with an angst-ridden line
unfolding Prayer RI0. he accompanimental chords in bb. 9 and 10 form sets 4-13
(0136) and 4-18 (0147) respectively (sets familiar from the immediately prece-
ding, strident Roelandt chords), both belonging to OCT1,2. he melody meanwhile
presents order numbers 12-6 of the linear row, unfolding set class 7-31 (0134679),
also in OCT1,2. Bars 11 and 12 continue rotating through octatonic harmonies 4-18
(0147) in OCT0,1 and 4-13 (0136) in OCT0,2, while the melody completes the row.28
he harmonic segmentations, together with the melodic pitches that they sup-
port, create larger octatonic supersets, with a progressively thinning texture: 6-27
(013469) (OCT1,2) in bb. 8-9 moves to 5-19 (01367) in b. 10 (still OCT1,2), whereas
5-32 (01469) (OCT0,1) in bb. 11-12 moves to 4-13 (0136) (OCT0,2) in b. 13, this last
familiar from the earlier Roelandt. he octatonic structure of the passage, bb. 9-12,
reinforces the construction of the text. he line breaks down into a symmetrical
ABA form (see Tab. 1).
Tab. 1. ABA structure of opening line of text.
A B A
Ti rivedrò, mio iglio! Ti rivedrò...
I will see you again, my son! I will see you...
he seting segments this tripartite line into two phrases: ab + a’. he irst two
segments, AB (Ti rivedrò, mio iglio!), melodically a dramatic rising leaping con-
tour, are set, as mentioned, by one septachord within one octatonic collection
(OCT1,2), the strong closing boundary corresponding to the exclamation point in
the text and its demarcation of a clear syntactical close (b. 10). he last segment alo-
ne is set instead to one entire hexachord and two collections in succession (OCT0,1
– OCT0,2) as it leaps downward (contour: + / - / + / -), the accompanimental
28. Eckert presents the vocal melodic line’s division into two diferent octatonic collections, corresponding
to the two phrases of text [1985, 36].
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Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
29. his theatrical word is particularly important because the prisoner is never otherwise named throughout
the opera.
30. «I see him! I recognize him! (He wears a black bowtie.) / he golden leece at his throat glistens
sinisterly». he inal word of this pair of lines is not included here, «Avanza» (he advances); it belongs
to a separate gesture, detached and nearly two bars later from the rest, in the context of clear word
painting.
31. Other Ballata lines, beyond these irst two, also depend on octatonic segmentations for such projection
of poetic syntax. For example, lines 26 and 27, bb. 77-80, correspond to a single complete syntactical
unit and are set to a closed octatonic progression. Line 33, bb. 98-102, a dramatic quotation of the king,
is set to a series of three octatonic harmonies, to which the orchestra responds with a mirror image of
the octatonic harmonic progression, which also functions as a climactic punctuation, concluding the
Ballata and returning the action on stage from a memory of the past back to the present tense.
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Jamuna Samuel
Ex. 7. L. Dallapiccola, Il prigioniero, Prologue, bars 63-67. Two three-chord paterns of octato-
nic segmentations set the irst pair of lines of the mother’s Ballata.
harmonies replace tonal functions in creating the sense of phrase and projecting
the two-line unit of the closed poetic form.
Ater the dramatic prologue, saturated with octatonic segmentations, and an
intervening intermezzo (discussed below), the prisoner inally enters in scene 1.
he drama ensues with a sung dialogue between him and his mother. Extremely
lyrical duet phrases alternate with the prisoner’s solo recitative-like narration in
which he recounts past events and ponders his predicament. Ex. 8 presents one
such phrase, bb. 220-229, seting ive lines shown in Tab. 3 as aligned with the ro-
tating of octatonic collections.
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Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
Ex. 8. L. Dallapiccola, Il prigioniero, Scene 1, bars 220-229. Closed octatonic harmonic progres-
sion delineates phrase structure and boundaries of this passage.
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Jamuna Samuel
In this passage, while Freedom I10 unfolds the melody, a twice-reiterated patern
of octatonic harmonies (OCT1,2 – OCT0,2 – OCT0,1) supports it. he harmonic
circling closes with a inal OCT1,2 segmentation, giving the sense of a closed pro-
gression demarcating the ten bars as a separate section, right before one of the
most dramatic and memorable moments of the opera (the irst presentation of the
Brother motive in bb. 198 f., subsequently repeated several times). Most striking-
ly, three times the change of octatonic collection corresponds to the stress on the
penultimate syllable of the lines, which is the main accent in any eleven-syllable
line (a typical line length since opera’s beginnings in the seventeenth century,
also known as the endecasillabo). he change in octatonic collection thus acquires
a metrical function, in the same way that a change of harmony on a signiicant
strong accent works for tonal music.
he mother’s emotional response to the prisoner’s account of his physical suf-
fering interrupts and completes the prisoner’s Freedom I10 unfolding, and then im-
mediately begins Lamp I0 (order numbers 1-6) in OCT0,1 (b. 226). he I0 row, in
turn, is continued by the prisoner (order numbers 7-12), the change of character
aligning with a change in harmony, to OCT1,2.
Even more imbued with a sense of closure are the symmetrical harmonic struc-
tures, including palindromes, of various types appearing frequently in Dallapic-
cola’s works.32 One such passage is designed around a central theatrical word,
“hope”, around which the entire progression is symmetrical in terms of octatonic
progression. It occurs in the irst chorale intermezzo (bb. 126 f.), immediately
ater the Prologue, the irst pitch actually cuting into the mother’s inal climactic
note of her solo. he sudden contrast in text (sacred Latin) is paralleled by an
equally sudden one in vocal forces and instrumental texture (to chorale homo-
phony). Tab. 4 outlines the octatonic features presented in Ex. 9. Octatonic pro-
gressions throughout the seting of the irst two lines of the chorale are formed by
clear verticals, emphasizing, on the whole, OCT0,1 and OCT1,2, and set classes 4-18
(0147), 4-25 (0268), whereas line three highlights 4-27 (0258). In a reference to
earlier music, the “lament” tetrachord unfolds beneath line three, in the form of a
descending chromatic motion from D to A.
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Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
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Jamuna Samuel
Ex. 9. L. Dallapiccola, Il prigioniero, First Chorale Intermezzo, bars 126-149. Octatonic harmo-
nies form a palindrome in which the centre harmony supports the theatrical word “hope”.
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Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
he irst, last, and centre harmonies, underlined, all belong to the collection
OCT0,1. he centre harmony (the ith chord) sets the word of most dramatic im-
portance in the verse –speravimus (“we hoped”) of line two.33 his word is also set
apart because it is presented irst polyphonically (with the preceding word que-
madmodum) and then repeated homophonically in b. 140, a repetition framed by
rests and unobscured by any orchestral atack. In fact, the orchestral pitches that
accumulate to this point sustain into the culminating vocal presentation of the
word speravimus. his is the irst time that the theatrical word “hope” appears in
the opera, subsequently playing an increasingly important role at various crucial
junctures in the drama.
Il prigioniero is saturated by further uses of the octatonic scale in the service of
text and drama in addition to those discussed above. For example, the irst chorale
intermezzo continues, beyond the palindrome examined in Ex. 9, to unfold simul-
taneous and overlapping linear octatonic collections in its imitative vocal texture
(bb. 150 f.).34 he second chorale intermezzo shares a similar harmonic structure,
since octatonic progressions related to the Roelandt combination recur, work-
ing as harmonic support for vocal lines (bb. 823-834).35 Some “pure” octatonic
passages – frenetic repetitions of an unfolded 6-27 hexachord cycling through the
diferent collections – correspond to dramatically tense moments (for example,
in bb. 536 f.).36 Dallapiccola creates diferent harmonic rhythms with octatonic
subsets, in the service of text and drama, for example with the prolonged use of
a single collections creating stasis [Samuel 2005, 109-119]. here are many more
examples of octatonicism shaping the text-seting and beyond [ibid., 57-108].
If it was Frazzi’s inluence that led Dallapiccola to internalize the octatonic scale
to the extent evident in the above analyses, it was, I believe, an efort to advance
33. «Have mercy upon us, O Lord, / as we hope in you. / Your saints are clothed in justice / And they exalt
you».
34. Eckert notes this passage in his discussion [1985, 37-38] and I analysed it in detail, showing also the
interaction between the vertical and horizontal segmentations [Samuel 2005, 93-96].
35. Alegant also discusses these bars and extends the analysis to include the climax of scene 4 [2010,
136-140].
36. Eckert mentions in passing a similar passage at bb. 757-84 [1985, 38]. An analysis appears of bb. 536-553
in my dissertation [Samuel 2005, 97-99] and in Alegant [2010, 132-136].
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Jamuna Samuel
musical progress that brought him to adopt this scale in conjunction with the
twelve-tone serial method – a system disparaged by his teacher. But it was in the
service of text, i.e. a sophisticated atention to the details of text-seting, that Dal-
lapiccola sculpted octatonic segmentations and harmonies into the surface of the
music, aligning the resulting musical structures with verbal syntax and meaningful
word compounds, ultimately creating large-scale dramatic arches.
Octatonicism had thus a dual function for Dallapiccola (as it emerges from Il
prigioniero) of looking both backward and forward. Its use is rooted in the past,
since octatonic harmonies acquire some of the organizing functions of tonality
and are strictly tied to text-seting techniques. But it also advances musical moder-
nism in the composer’s agenda, in that it presents a radically diferent syntax than
harmonic tonality (one centred on the cycling of the collections) while being as-
sociated with twelve-tone processes. Octatonicism ofered Dallapiccola a way to
soten the potentially harsher and looser harmonic aspects of twelve-tone music,
working as a small- and large-scale organizing force that bridges the unfolding of
the diferent rows. In sum, by providing continuity, luency, and a sense of balance
and symmetry in association with a carefully organized verbal text, octatonicism
contributed to that sense of “Italianate lyricism” that characterized Dallapiccola’s
early twelve-tone music, and that has been oten commented on by scholars, as
noted at the beginning of this essay.
hough Dallapiccola’s serialism continued to evolve substantially in the subse-
quent two decades ater the completion of this opera into a less accessible style,
his use of octatonicism in association with verbal text remained a fundamental
part of his compositional technique. While his adoption of the twelve-tone tech-
nique became more rigorous and reined, the use of the octatonic scale in the ser-
vice of text seting – developed during his early, isolated, experimental use of the
technique in Il prigioniero – remained a constant, deining characteristic of the
composer’s musical works.
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Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
References
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Press, Rochester, NY.
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«Music Analysis», 25/1-2, pp. 39-87.
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view», 46/1, pp. 35-48.
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Frazzi V. (1930), Scale alternate per pianoforte. Con diteggiature di Ernesto Consolo, A.
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Chigiana», 41, Siena.
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Jamuna Samuel
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Octatonic Serialism in Luigi Dallapiccola’s Il prigioniero
Abstract
Il saggio si concentra sull’opera Il prigioniero (1948), composta da Dallapiccola
nella prima fase di adozione della scritura dodecafonica, per prendere in esame il
particolare intreccio di relazioni che collegano la sperimentazione del metodo do-
decafonico alla resa del testo drammatico e all’utilizzo di insiemi otatonici. Dopo
aver messo in luce l’infuenza esercitata dalla scoperta delle scale otatoniche sulla
formazione di Dallapiccola, l’autrice evidenzia come tali struture siano perfeta-
mente incardinate all’interno della rete di serie dodecafoniche utilizzate nell’ope-
ra. Atraverso l’analisi di alcuni passaggi si dimostra anche come le segmentazioni
otatoniche siano fortemente legate alla resa del testo verbale; ino ad acquisire un
ruolo fondamentale, e sostitutivo della tonalità, nell’organizzazione struturale su
piccola e ampia scala.
– 81 –