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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: FRA-GAE |
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FUGUE (Lat. fuga, flight) , in music, the mutual "pursuit" of voices or parts. It was, up to the end of the 16th century, if not later, the name applied to two art-forms. (A) Fuga ligata was the exact reproduction by one or more voices of the statement of a leading part. The reproducing voice (comes) was seldom if ever written out, for all differences between it and the dux were rigidly systematic; e.g. it was an exact inversion , or exactly twice as slow, or to be sung backwards, &c. &c. Hence, a rule
The whole conception of fugue, rightly understood, is one of the most important in music, and the reasons why some contrapuntal compositions are called fugues, while others are not, are so trivial, technically as well as aesthetically, that we have II preferred to treat the subject separately under the general heading of CONTRAPUNTAL FORMS, reserving only technical terms for definition here. (i.) If in the beginning or " exposition " the material with which the opening voice accompanies the answer is faithfully reproduced as the accompaniment to subsequent entries of the subject, it is called a countersubject (see COUNTERPOINT, under sub-heading Double
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(ii.) Episodes are passages separating the entries of the subject.' Episodes are usually developed from the material of the subject and countersubjects; they are very rarely independent, but then conspicuously so. (iii.) Stretto, the overlapping of subject and answer, is a resource the possibilities of which may be exemplified by the setting of the words omnes generationes in Bach's Magnificat (see BACH). (iv.) The distinction between real and tonal fugue, which is still sometimes treated as a thing of great
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The term " answer " is usually reserved for those entries of the subject that are placed in what may be called the " complementary " position of the scale, whether they are " tonally " modified or not. Thus the order of entries in the exposition of the first fugue of the Wohltemp. Klay. is subject, answer, answer, subject; a departure from the usual rule
In conclusion we may remind the reader of the most accurate as well as the most vivid description ever given of the essentials of a fugue, in the famous lines in Paradise Lost, book xi. " His volant touch ,Instinct through all proportions, low and high, Fled and pursued transverse the resonant fugue." It is hard to realize that this description of organ-music was written in no classical period of instrumental polyphony, but just half-way between the death of Frescobaldi and the birth
'An episode occurring during the exposition is sometimes called codetta, a distinction the uselessness of which at once appears on an analysis of Bach's and fugue in the Wohitemp. Klay. (the term codetta is more correctly applied to notes filling in a gap between subject and its first answer, but such a gap is rare in good examples).of Bach. Every word is a definition, both retrospective and prophetic; and in " transverse " we see all that Sir Frederick Gore Ouseley expresses in his popular distinction between the " perpendicular " or homophonic style in which harmony is built up in chords, and the " horizontal
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