The Analysis of Handel Variations as an Example for Brahms Variations

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  Sirin Akbulut Demirci
  Uludag University, Bursa, Turkey
  “Variations” is one of the main musical forms in compositional process. Johannes Brahms is one of the most important Romantic composers that used this form. Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel, Op. 24, (Op. 24, 1862) is a piece that Johannes Brahms wrote for solo piano in a highly creative style, which was classically arranged. Brahms took the theme from an aria in George Frederic Handel’s Harpsichord Suite in B-flat major, HWV 434 (1733). In Handel’s work, the original theme was turned into five variations. With the purpose of exploring chromatic possibilities after the piano was developed from harpsichord, Brahms made 25 magnificent variations with an extensive fugue in his work. The purpose of this work is to prepare an explanatory document for pianists who intend to perform this piece and who are not familiar with such work. Also, it is hoped that piano performers will find explanatory points in this composition (e.g., stylistic characteristics) through comparisons with his other variations and start performing it more frequently.
  Keywords: Brahms, variation, Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel
   Introduction
  “Variation” is one of the most frequently-used musical forms in the compositional process. Basically, this formal process may be described as taking the melody as the main theme (Gestalt) of a piece and repeating this melody while making changes in terms of voice leading, key (major-minor; minor-major), tempo, style, etc.. The main theme is often simple in musical understanding, but the ensuing variations tend to be more complicated. Actually, we can attribute this fact to the desires or instincts of composer to play games.
  Variation form has come across in many places inside other different musical forms; particularly in the most basic ones such as Lieds with leitmotivs that requires a change of the last line of the stanza. Then, differences flourish when “reprise” (repeat) is used in Suites.
  Actually, all movements in a Suite can be formed with the influence of a main idea (main melody). This thematic tie among movements is covered in varying a particular Gestalt. The basic examples of the “Variation Form” were derived from some dances that are included in Suites. As two examples: Chaconne and Passacaglia. In this type of usage, the theme is usually given to a bass register and is called an Ostinato-Theme. It repeats itself many times while the higher parts are in alternation, and at the end of this theme a fugue can appear as a conclusion. Variations have been seen as a more developed form in fugue and, they have been used in this process. For example, in Bach’s compositions, particularly in his art of fugue collection, Soggeto becomes as the maximum application of variations.
  During the 18th century, theme and variations with figurative ornamentation was very popular. Here it was seen that the theme was saved as Gestalt (without losing its elastic characteristic) but was ornamented with horizontal lines that circle around. This type of writing was called as “Ornamental Variation”.
  As the music was developed throughout the century, involvement in the process of theme development(Gestalt) increased. The change was in melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic tonal syntax. A theme can appear in different characters such as being “happy”, “sad”, “dramatic”, “humorous”, even a “military” one. The usage is called as Character Variations.
  Some composers’ imagination and their mastery skills of composing opened new ways many different quests in variations in time that it is extremely difficult to understand and to determine the main theme. Beethoven’s Diabelli Variations, Brahms’ Handel Variations, Haydn Variations, Paganini Variations, and Schoenberg’s Op. 31 Variations for Orchestra are the examples in which this form has become as a larger, longer, and more complicated form.
  “Theme and Variations” created a new understanding of developing the musical idea inside larger instrumental groups where at the final stage “a fugue” appears as a cognitive result of the entire piece. The differences between fugue and variation form is that they both use a main theme (occasionally with a subordinate one) that is reworked many times but the variation form has more free developmental process comparing with that of fugue’s stiffness. Composers such as Schoenberg and his pupils Berg and Webern used this compositional method applying the 12-tone scale inside the musical piece where the tone-row is repeated many times.
  Although the repetition of those 12 notes, the listener is no longer occupied with the repetitiveness of the familiar tune, because bearing the tones on mind becomes extremely difficult.
  In a summary, variation means embellishment of a theme that creates a form in which composers embraced from 15th century onwards. Variations can be applied in big-scaled structures like symphonies and sonatas composed for orchestra or chamber music and also these can be self-standing musical pieces entitled as “Theme and Variations”. Composers have mostly opted to use this form when writing works for solo instruments(especially piano).
  Brahms is one of the most important Romantic composers that used this form. Other than Brahms and Schumann, Chopin and Liszt also used Variation form. Brahms, who was called as “the savior of the music that has waited for a long time” by Schumann and one of his greatest friends, had three periods in his piano music: a symphonic period when he wrote his sonatas (most importantly his Third Sonata, Op. 5 in F minor); a technical period when he composed Handel and Paganini variations (Brahms—Handel Variations, Op. 24 in 1862, and Variations and Fugue Handel: On Handel’s Theme for Pianoforte); and finally, a poetic period, when he composed other pieces, particularly his Intermezzos (Op. 116-119).
  Brahms, who was a virtuoso, composed piano music with the use of thick but dark sonorities, with the need of strong hand skills, and with a technique that serves music. He put northern country’s dark and melancholic, faded atmosphere with sudden lights in his piano music in an extremely sentimental but measured and calm manner. At the same time, he used strong and tragic expression in his piano works in a magnificent way as he used in his symphonies. These two opposite sides in Brahms’ creative world (lyrical calmness and rebellion) can particularly be seen in his two piano concertos clearly (Tarcan, n.d., p. 18).
  The list of Brahms’ piano works in variation form is as follows: (1) variations on a Theme by Robert Schumann, F-sharp minor, Op. 9, Düsseldorf, 1854; (2) variations on his own theme, D Major, Op. 21 No. 1, Düsseldorf, 1856; (3) variations on a Hungarian Lied, D Major, Op. 21 No. 2; (4) variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel, Op. 24, Hamburg, 1861; (5) variations on a Theme by Paganini, Op. 35/I, Op. 35/II, Vienna, 1862-63; (6) variations on a Theme by Haydn, Op. 56; and (7) theme and variations, Op. 18/II, Hamburg-Bonn, 1860.
   Musical Analysis
  Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel, Op. 24 (1862), is a piece that Brahms wrote for solo piano in a highly creative style, which was classically arranged. This work was composed for Robert Schumann’s widow Clara Schumann, who was Brahms’ musical and personal advisor. It was written for her birthday in September 1861. After Brahms’ premiere in November 29, 1861 in Vienna, Clara played the Handel Variations at a recital in Hamburg.
  Brahms took the theme from an aria in George Frideric Handel’s Harpsichord Suite in B-flat major, HWV 434 (1733). In Handel’s work, the original theme was turned into five variations. With the purpose of exploring chromatic possibilities after the piano was developed from harpsichord, Brahms made 25 magnificent variations with an extensive fugue in his work.
  Aria
  


  Figure 1. Aria.
  As taken from Handel’s work, the theme consists of two sections: The first section goes from the tonic function to the dominant function; and the second section goes back from the dominant function to the tonic function (see Figure 1). It carries its name Aria out of respect for Handel. With starting from the first measure the three notas which were circled in red in Figure 2 will appear in all variotions. The most significant characteristic of the theme is the productive motive that consists of a dotted eighth with a trill plus two notes in value of 32’s.
  


  Figure 2. Aria 1st measure.
  Variation 1
  We see in this variation (see Figure 3) that the theme changes from its original version and turns into two sixteenth plus one eighth pattern. The theme is heard with an accent on weak beats.
  


  Figure 3. Variation 1.
  In the dominant function, we see a move in a connected order that was used in almost all fermatas during Cembalo age (see Figure 4).
  


  Figure 4. Variation 1.
  Variation 2
  This time, the theme is spread into triplets for the right hand while there are eighths in middle and low parts for the left hand. Here, the player has to resolve the two-against-three rhythmic problem. As a contrast to the quick and humorous character of the first one, a lyrical construction is presented in this variation. The theme is given on the main beats. Please follow the red circles (see Figure 5).
  


  Figure 5. Variation 2.
  Variation 3
  There is a dialogue between the high parts in both right and left hands in the third variation. The character here is scherzando again. The theme now is hidden on the weak beats (see Figure 6).
  


  Figure 6. Variation 3.
  Variation 4
  In this variation, the modules to turn into 16ths with auftakt (upbeat) to come out and szf (sforzando) chords that are punctuated on the weak beats. What is surprisingly amazing is to hear and to understand Brahms’increasing volume in this material in octaves sometimes into unisons and sometimes into chords rather than the“motto” of simple duplication of the main theme (see Figure 7).
  


  Figure 7. Variation 4.
  Variation 5
  This is the expected variation in a minor key (minore) in classical manner. It appears like a Romanza that is in the right hand but the construction is contrapuntal. The right hand and left hands make an anti-line in an equal-vocal part. The theme is hidden between those two lines. Please follow the red line (see Figure 8).
  


  Figure 8. Variation 5.
  Variation 6
  A minor and contrapuntal usage continues here. The octaves that we see here in both hands create a double-voiced canon driven out from the theme (see Figure 9).
  


  Figure 9. Variation 6.
  Variation 7
  In this variation (that the composer called “con vivacita”), Brahms returns to a major system again. The tune is like a fanfare. The main motive of the theme (see Figure 2) is in the middle part (follow the red lines) (see Figure 10).
  


  Figure 10. Variation 7.
  Variation 8
  The Ostinato figure in B-flat in left hand answers the double-part contrapuntal writing. The auftakt here has a crucial importance that designs the theme within its rhythmical modification which turns this melody into a dotted figure pf the motive. The first set ends with this variation (see Figure 11).
  


  Figure 11. Variation 8.
  Variation 9
  The theme is in right hand in this variation (see Figure 12), and it seems like a Hungarian Rhapsody which has an orchestral color. The main compositional technique style lies on contrapuntal writing. At the same time, legato that we can face in many others his compositions octaves are typical examples for Brahms’ virtuosic side with his introvert personality.
  


  Figure 12. Variation 9.
  Variation 10
  In this variation (see Figure 13), pianists are forced to interpret the music that requires good wrist technique. Here, we see an “Agrément” that reminds us of the early French Baroque Period. The theme, which is supported with chords that are broken on strong beats, builds a new rhythmical design encompassed with triplets.
  


  Figure 13. Variation 10.
  Variation 11
  We see a three-part work in the first half of the variation (see Figure 14). There is a response with 16th notes in left hand to the melody written with eighth plus quarter notes in right hand. Embraced once again with the old genre of Baroque Period.
  


  Figure 14. Variation 11, first half.
  In the second half of this variation, we see four-part writing instead of three. For the theme, please see the red lines in Figure 15.
  


  Figure 15. Variation 11, second half.
  Variation 12
  In this variation (see Figure 16), the left hand exposes the melody from the main theme without any significant modifications. The right hand theme provides motion with the syncopations and flowing motives with 16th notes above.
  


  Figure 16. Variation 12.
  Variation 13
  In this variation (see Figure 17), “Largemente”, as in the ninth variation, once again we can hear the familiar rhapsodic tune written in a minor key. The micro-cellar motives are used once in the upper-voice and then below it as voice-leading inverted figure.
  


  Figure 17. Variation 13.
  Variation 14
  This variation has great technical difficulties and consists of sixths groups. The theme is hidden once (follow the red circles) and then presented openly. The non-legato in left hand makes the piece even more difficult to perform this variation (see Figure 18).
  


  Figure 18. Variation 14.
  Variation 15
  The Auftakt presented here is a motive that will be verified in the following variations as F and B flat melodic skips. It is double-voice free contrapuntal writing (see Figure 19).
  


  Figure 19. Variation 15.
  Variation 16
  The characteristic trait of this variation is holding the same F-B-flat motive that was used before but now it is used in a descending way (see Figure 20).
  


  Figure 20. Variation 16.
  Variation 17
  The theme presented in left hand as a descending arpeggio with staccato notes in right hand. The F used in variations 15 and 16 is reversed as B flat-F (see Figure 21).
  


  Figure 21. Variation 17.
  Variation 18
  In this variation (see Figure 22), the left hand continues to use the main theme while the right hand turns the figurative process into 16th-note values in descending motion within legato articulation.
  


  Figure 22. Variation 18.
  This time, the 16th-system in left hand is a type of accompaniment (actually, the contrapuntal line continues); in the right hand, the motion that includes the theme which began in the previous measure continues as response(please compare Figures 22 and 23). The second set ends with the Variation 18.
  


  Figure 23. Variation 18, 2nd measure.
  Variation 19
  The first variation of the last set that is composed in 12/8 meter has a very special character that requires attention. The theme is in left hand and every voice is repeated in a smaller unit. It is ornamented with Baroque-style mordents (see Figure 24).
  


  Figure 24. Variation 19.
  Variation 20
  There is chord and legato work in octaves in the following one (see Figure 25). The most important characteristic of this variation is its chromatic structure. It creates a huge contrast with that of the previous one.
  


  Figure 25. Variation 20.
  Variation 21
  As in the previous variation, yet with another tune, we see Brahms as the “Northern Romantic”. This variation has the color of Brahms’ favorite northern ballade. The first half of the third set ends with this variation(see Figure 26).
  


  Figure 26. Variation 21.
  Variation 22
  Here we see a short break. After the heavy and tiring style of the first 21 variations, we witness Brahms’most poetic and musical moments as sweet and beautiful tunes in a music box (see Figure 27).
  


  Figure 27. Variation 22.
  Variation 23
  This variation that is in the second half of the third set, gives the piece its final mood (see Figure 28). The composer requires that the variation be played in a vivace and fiery style. The theme is spread out over one-and-a-half measures. This pattern is also used in other variations.
  


  Figure 28. Variation 23.
  Variation 24
  This is a typical example of Brahms’ technically demanding virtuosic style that locks hands with thick tone on the piano (see Figure 29). Here, the difficulty is the synthesis of aggressive chords used in the Romantic Period, and transparent, quick, and connected scales from the Classical Period.
  


  Figure 29. Variation 24.
  Variation 25
  We feel the completion of the piece in the last variation. This variation reflects the upcoming slow-chord technique in his Piano Concerto No. 2, Op. 83. The theme is on strong beats and repetition is used (see Figure 30).
  


  Figure 30. Variation 25.
  The Fugue
  The root of the cell in the subject here was taken from the theme. Please follow the red lines (see Figure 31):
  


  Figure 31. Fugue 1st and 2nd measures.
  At second measure the Coda for the subject starts (see Figure 32). However, the point that must be paid attention to here is the repetition of the theme cells (follow the red line).
  


  Figure 32. Fugue 2nd measure.
  The answer shows that the fugue is real. This counter-subject has an ascending motion that characterized the contrast between those poles (see Figure 33).
  


  Figure 33. Fugue 3rd measure.
  This part is a four-part study. The main technical problem is in thirds in right hand in a parallel motion (see Figure 34).
  


  Figure 34. Fugue 7th measure.
  This time, we see sixths instead of thirds in the same manner that is parallel, which requires different fingerings (see Figure 35).
  


  Figure 35. Fugue 12th measure.
  The four-part writing here can be compared with the style of Baroque-period Cembalo pieces (see Figure 36).
  


  Figure 36. Fugue 13th measure.
  This time the quest for the legato with thirds and sixths coming out with chords (see Figure 37).
  


  Figure 37. Fugue 40th measure.
  The legato and syncopated octaves (that can be called an interlude, although it includes the theme) reminds listeners of the sixth variation. The red circled part is not the subject of the fugue but the model of the variation(see Figure 38).
  


  Figure 38. Fugue 51st and 52nd measures.
  Part exchange (see Figure 39) the octavas in Figure 38 changed from left hand to right hand in high register.
  


  Figure 39. Fugue 57th measure.
  Fermata (see Figure 40) was made in music with repeated notas.
  


  Figure 40. Fugue 67th, 68th, and 69th measures.
  The second part of the fugue begins. Brahms’ favorite technical elements including legato, sixths and thirds were used together (see Figure 41).
  


  Figure 41. Fugue 75th measure.
  Octaves are heard as bells in right hand in this part of the fugue (see Figure 42).
  


  Figure 42. Fugue 82nd and 83rd measures.
  The example above shows how it could be reversed in Figure 43.
  


  Figure 43. Fugue 87th measure.
  The main idea of developing this section continues while it is used in terms of perpetual descending line with thirds (see Figure 44).
  


  Figure 44. Fugue 90th measure.
  A more improved form of the same musical idea; this time, bombastic octaves are on the stage (see Figure 45).
  


  Figure 45. Fugue 91st measure.
  In the Coda of the fugue, the theme is heard in left hand for the last time (see Figure 46).
  


  Figure 46. Fugue 96th measure.
   Conclusions
  In the analysis of this work by Johannes Brahms (Op. 24), a brief description was given through the use of basic analytical tools that can provide a better understanding for piano players while they perform such music.
  First, this study clearly states that the main purpose was to reach as many performers at any level without using complex analytical explanations. Second, the piece was divided into more significant parts that included characteristic and technical issues which many pianists may encounter during their careers. Among these, particular sections which include homophony or counterpoint, thematic exchanges between left and right hands, and stylistic tendencies which turn every variation into a character piece can be included.
  The third and the final aim of this study was to provide connections between Baroque ideas with that of Romantic expression. Brahms, who was considered as one of the neo-classical composers in the late 19th century had a very unique style that blended those two different epochs and gave tremendous possibilities to understand 19th century piano music.
   References
  Aktüze, ?. (2003a). Reading music (Müzi?i okumak) (Vol. 4, 1st ed.). ?stanbul: Pan Publishing.
  Aktüze, ?. (2003b). Understanding music-encyclopedic music dictionary (Müzi?i anlamak ansiklopedik müzik s?zlü?ü) (2nd ed.).?stanbul: Pan Publishing.
  Hoider, A. (2003). Genres and forms in music (Müzikte türler ve bi?imler). (?. Usmanba? Trans.). (1st ed.). ?stanbul: Pan Publishing.
  Tarcan, H. (n.d.). Piano literature class notes (Piyano edebiyat? ders notlar?) (Unpublished teacher’ notes).
  Yener, F. (1997). Music guide, piano and chamber music (Müzik k?lavuzu, piyano ve oda müzi?i) (1st ed.). Ankara: Bilgi Publishing.
   Editor’s Acknowledgement
  All manuscripts submitted to Journal of Literature and Art Studies are usually reviewed by at least one member of the editorial board members. This commits them to up to 12 assessments each year and the Editor thanks them for so generously giving their time and advice. The Editor is also grateful to many other assessors who have helped in 2011.
  At the same time, every manuscript submitted to Journal of Literature and Art Studies is refereed by at least 2 outside experts in the field. The Editor and the Editorial Executive Committee gratefully acknowledge the considerable time and help the reviewers gave during 2011. The Editor thanks very much for their advice and for their promptness in dealing with the manuscripts.
  The Editor also thanks for the understanding, support and help from our authors, readers and other people and agencies.
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