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INTRODUCTION

                Perhaps the two most influential theorists in music and language are Heinrich Schenker and Noam Chomsky. Both were looking for a universal root to human aural communication. Their process was to distil the articulated, aural surfaces of music and language to find a root upon which each aural iteration was constructed. I believe that this root is reflected in all levels of aural communication in a self-similar fashion and is understood through the cultural training humans receive from birth onwards and to a lesser extent a genetic propensity. If there is a universal root to aural communication it becomes possible to map the iteration of one form of aural communication onto another form; in this case the aural iteration of poetry onto the aural iteration of music.

                There are three common areas between music and language that are important to my thesis:

                1. Both are primarily aural media;

                2. Both have highly sophisticated representations of the aural media;

                3. Both have understood rules of well-formedness, which may be understood culturally, historically or in the context of a unique iteration.

Area three is the most important to my thesis.

                Music and language operate on surface and structural levels. For instance: when listening to or reading a story it is possible assume that there will be an understandable unfolding of events. What we are hearing is the surface level, are descriptive passages structured to flesh out a deeper level, which may be simple enough to encapsulated in one sentence, such as "Boy meets girl, boy looses girl, girl finds boy". When listening to music it is possible assume similar things, for example: a series of musical passages may be strung together to flesh out as simple an idea as three descending scale tones, as shown by Schenker's Ursatz.

                The ways in which textual or musical passages are organised follow highly detailed systems which are, in the vast majority of cases, descriptive rather than prescriptive and understood as systems long after the fact. Examples of descriptive systems are the sonnet form in poetry and the sonata form in music. An example of a prescriptive system is the serial style of musical composition.

                This thesis sets out to show:

                1. That a poem's sonic structure can be used to create a musical structure; and

                2. That a poem's aural expression can be used to create a musical expression.

                Much of the text below concerns the discussions of theorists and composers who have well developed interests in tying music and language together. There are also some analyses of compositions that use language as a basis for, or as an integral part of, the composition. The purpose of my exploration into the works of others is to inform the compositions I am submitting, not to create models on which to base my compositions.

                The links between music and language given below show the fertility of the language/linguistic approach to musical understanding, in its broadest sense. However there are areas that do not seem to have been explored or used to their fullest extent; these areas centre on the aural nature of music and speech. Noting that music and speech exist in the aural domain seems obvious and trivial to say the least, but it is this similarity that holds great promise in generating novel strategies for musical composition.

                To explore this belief I look first at using the phonemic structure of a poem as a basis for a number of musical compositions, assuming that the structural rules defining the relationships of phonemes will translate into a set of rules defining the relationships of notes in a musical composition and create a sense of cohesion in the compositions.

                Next I use a reading of a poem as a basis for a musical composition. This process assumes that the inherent aural structure of the poem as expressed through it's reading will produce an effective structure for musical composition. By digitally altering and enhancing the sound of the reading, a musical composition is realised.

                Finally I use the aural/intonational aspects of a poetry reading to provide a setting for the reading of a poem, the purpose being to enhance the emotional impact of that poem.

                It is important to remember that throughout this document I take poetry and music to be exclusively aural expressions and that any written notation of either art form, while being extremely useful in this work, is considered to be ancillary to my thesis.