No. 1 (Nursery Rhymes, First Set, JW 5/16)

by Leoš Janáček

Modern Character Piece Advanced
Composed 1924
Published 1925
Duration 1 min

Instrumentation

Clarinet in B♭ Mezzo-soprano Piano

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Musical Terms (2)

  • Moravian music English
    The folk musical tradition of Moravia, the eastern region of the Czech Republic where Janáček was born, lived, and worked throughout his life. Janáček spent decades collecting and transcribing Moravian folk songs and dances, and their influence permeates every aspect of his musical language: the short asymmetric phrases, the modal harmonies, the abrupt rhythmic shifts, the oscillating figures between two adjacent notes. Unlike Bartók or Kodály, Janáček did not quote folk tunes directly in his art music but absorbed their spirit so thoroughly that his own language became indistinguishable from it.
    Recognising the folk roots of Janáček's piano style helps explain what might otherwise seem like quirks: the irregular phrase lengths (folk song does not fall into neat four-bar groups), the tendency to circle around a single pitch (a characteristic of Moravian melody), and the modal rather than functional harmonic progressions. These are not idiosyncrasies to be corrected but essential features of the style.
  • speech melody English
    Janáček's term (in Czech: nápěvky mluvy — 'speech tunes') for the musical motives he claimed to derive from the natural melodic contours of Czech speech and everyday sounds. He notated these motives obsessively throughout his life — the cadence of a greeting, the rhythm of a vendor's cry, the shape of a birdsong. He believed these speech melodies were the direct expression of a person's inner emotional state, and should form the basis of a natural musical language. The theory underpins the vocal writing in all his operas and the piano music's characteristic short, repeated motivic cells.
    Janáček's piano motives behave like speech: they arrive without preparation, repeat insistently, and cut off suddenly. Rather than long melodic lines, you'll find short gestures — a falling third, a turning figure, a two-bar phrase repeated at different registers. Play them as utterances with their own internal logic, not as fragments of a larger melody waiting to arrive.

Practice No. 1 (Nursery Rhymes, First Set, JW 5/16)

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