{"title":"Jack Douthett’s letters","authors":"Richard Cohn","doi":"10.1080/17459737.2022.2157061","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This publication transcribes seven previously unpublished letters from Jack Douthett. The earliest four letters, from 1992–94, were written to John Clough, who was the Slee Professor of Music Theory at SUNY Buffalo from the early 1980s to 2001. They are hand-written, mailed by postal service, and are among the founding documents of the sub-field that emerged in the 1990s that has come to be known under the catch-all label of “neo-Riemannian theory.” The three remaining letters, word processed and circulated via email to a working group of researchers known informally as the “Buffalo group,” are from 1997 and 2000, and responded to emerging work of a remarkable cohort of PhD students then working on neo-Riemannian topics. The first three letters were the first of a flurry of eleven that were precipitated by some ideas that I sketched over lunch with John and Jack in late October 1992 at the Society for Music Theory annual meeting in Kansas City, and subsequently detailed in a written document that I mailed to them shortly thereafter.1 In that document, I defined (1) a “P relation” when two pitchclass sets are connected by single-semitonal displacement, for example {C, E, G} P {C, E, G }, (2) a “P property” for any Tn/TnI set class2 that contains P-related pairs, and (3) a “PP property” for any set class that partitions into cycles of three or more P-related pairs. These definitions, which are presented more systematically at the end of this introduction, supported my central finding: that the structures that co-anchor the European tonal system, major/minor triads and major/minor scales, together with their complements, uniquely possess the PP property (nontrivially).3 In that document, I also identified set classes with the PP property in universes with fewer than twelve elements, and advanced some theorems about the relation of the PP property to other properties and relations central to theories of atonality and diatonicism. Douthett’s first response, from 11/24/92, is primarily concerned with connections between my central finding and his research with Clough on maximally even sets (Clough and Douthett 1991). That letter is primarily algebraic, but ends with a graph-theoretic turn that is developed a few days later in the brief letter of 11/30/92, and emerges in mature form in the longer letter of 12/12/92, where the two graphs that became respectively known as “Cube Dance” and “Power Towers” are first described. These three letters, together with eight subsequent letters from the","PeriodicalId":50138,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Mathematics and Music","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Mathematics and Music","FirstCategoryId":"100","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/17459737.2022.2157061","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"数学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"MATHEMATICS, INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This publication transcribes seven previously unpublished letters from Jack Douthett. The earliest four letters, from 1992–94, were written to John Clough, who was the Slee Professor of Music Theory at SUNY Buffalo from the early 1980s to 2001. They are hand-written, mailed by postal service, and are among the founding documents of the sub-field that emerged in the 1990s that has come to be known under the catch-all label of “neo-Riemannian theory.” The three remaining letters, word processed and circulated via email to a working group of researchers known informally as the “Buffalo group,” are from 1997 and 2000, and responded to emerging work of a remarkable cohort of PhD students then working on neo-Riemannian topics. The first three letters were the first of a flurry of eleven that were precipitated by some ideas that I sketched over lunch with John and Jack in late October 1992 at the Society for Music Theory annual meeting in Kansas City, and subsequently detailed in a written document that I mailed to them shortly thereafter.1 In that document, I defined (1) a “P relation” when two pitchclass sets are connected by single-semitonal displacement, for example {C, E, G} P {C, E, G }, (2) a “P property” for any Tn/TnI set class2 that contains P-related pairs, and (3) a “PP property” for any set class that partitions into cycles of three or more P-related pairs. These definitions, which are presented more systematically at the end of this introduction, supported my central finding: that the structures that co-anchor the European tonal system, major/minor triads and major/minor scales, together with their complements, uniquely possess the PP property (nontrivially).3 In that document, I also identified set classes with the PP property in universes with fewer than twelve elements, and advanced some theorems about the relation of the PP property to other properties and relations central to theories of atonality and diatonicism. Douthett’s first response, from 11/24/92, is primarily concerned with connections between my central finding and his research with Clough on maximally even sets (Clough and Douthett 1991). That letter is primarily algebraic, but ends with a graph-theoretic turn that is developed a few days later in the brief letter of 11/30/92, and emerges in mature form in the longer letter of 12/12/92, where the two graphs that became respectively known as “Cube Dance” and “Power Towers” are first described. These three letters, together with eight subsequent letters from the
本出版物转录了杰克·杜特以前未发表的七封信。最早的四封信写于1992年至1994年,写给约翰·克拉夫(John Clough),他在20世纪80年代初至2001年期间担任纽约州立大学布法罗分校的音乐理论Slee教授。它们是手写的,通过邮政服务邮寄,是20世纪90年代出现的子领域的创始文件之一,后来以“新黎曼理论”的笼统标签而闻名。剩下的三封信,经过文字处理后,通过电子邮件发送给了一个非正式的“布法罗小组”的研究小组。这封信写于1997年和2000年,是对一群研究新黎曼主题的杰出博士生的回应。1992年10月下旬,在堪萨斯城举行的音乐理论学会年会上,我在与约翰和杰克共进午餐时勾勒出了一些想法,并在随后不久寄给他们的一份书面文件中详细说明了这些想法在该文档中,我定义了(1)当两个音调类集通过单半位移连接时的“P关系”,例如{C, E, G} P {C, E, G},(2)对于任何包含P相关对的Tn/TnI集class2的“P性质”,以及(3)对于任何划分为三个或更多P相关对的循环的集类的“PP性质”。这些定义,在本导言的最后更系统地呈现,支持了我的中心发现:共同锚定欧洲音调系统的结构,大调/小调三和弦和大调/小调音阶,以及它们的补语,独特地拥有PP属性(非平凡的)在那篇论文中,我还在少于12个元素的宇宙中确定了具有PP性质的集合类,并提出了一些关于PP性质与其他性质和关系的定理,这些性质和关系是无调性和全音阶理论的核心。Douthett的第一个回应是在1992年11月24日,主要关注我的中心发现和他与Clough关于最大偶数集的研究之间的联系(Clough and Douthett 1991)。这封信主要是代数的,但在几天后的1992年11月30日的简短信中以图论的转变结束,并在1992年12月12日的较长信中以成熟的形式出现,其中两个图分别被称为“立方体舞蹈”和“动力塔”。这三个字母,加上后面的八个字母
期刊介绍:
Journal of Mathematics and Music aims to advance the use of mathematical modelling and computation in music theory. The Journal focuses on mathematical approaches to musical structures and processes, including mathematical investigations into music-theoretic or compositional issues as well as mathematically motivated analyses of musical works or performances. In consideration of the deep unsolved ontological and epistemological questions concerning knowledge about music, the Journal is open to a broad array of methodologies and topics, particularly those outside of established research fields such as acoustics, sound engineering, auditory perception, linguistics etc.