First Prize: Marta Beszterda
Prize: $1,000.
Abstract:
This essay is the first chapter from my PhD dissertation titled: âThe âFirst Ladyâ and the âStalinist Agentâ of Polish Music: The Musical Labour of GraĆŒyna Bacewicz and Zofia Lissa During the Shaping of Contemporary Art Music Culture in Poland (1925â1975).â The dissertation as a whole explores the relationship between gender, identity, musical labor, and womenâs agency in mid-century Poland. I focus on lives and careers of two key female figures who shaped the countryâs contemporary music culture: composer GraĆŒyna Bacewicz (1909â69) and musicologist Zofia Lissa (1905â80). Throughout their careers, Bacewiczâs and Lissaâs creative, intellectual, administrative, and care-labour depended on, challenged, and reinforced prevailing ideas about gender roles in music and academia in Polish interwar and postwar society. Simultaneously, their lives provide a case study to examine agency that women composers and musicologists exerted with changing politics of gender and national belonging.
In the awarded chapter, I analyze beliefs and practices around womanhood and work ethic shared by Bacewicz, her mother Maria ModliĆska, and her teacher Nadia Boulanger. I consider the Warsaw positivism movement provenience of ModliĆskaâs values around work and womanhood as influential in shaping Bacewiczâs extraordinary dedication and perseverance in pursuing a composing career as a woman. Moreover, I demonstrate parallels between Boulangerâs and Bacewiczâs practices of self-fashioning as an âexceptional woman.â Previous analyses of the Bacewicz-Boulanger relationship have not gone beyond the context of Boulangerâs overall relations with her Polish students and the role that the French mentor played in Polish musical culture more broadlyâin particular, how her visits to Warsaw in the fifties and sixties constituted a form of cultural diplomacy in the Cold War era (Bohlman and Pierce 2020). To date, researchers have not considered how the role that Boulanger played for Bacewicz might have differed from the experience of Bacewiczâs male colleagues. Based on my analysis of Bacewiczâs memoir and archival correspondence, I argue that the lineage between the two composers surpasses the boundaries of neoclassical style and of simply being comparably unique figures within their respective milieus. Although it encompasses both of these associations, it is also a lineage that was built on their shared strategy of cultivating âexceptionalismâ to survive under the male-dominated status quo. Drawing on feminist approaches by Rachel Lumsden (2017) and Kimberly Francis (2015), this chapter is a case study on women and gender in musical modernism, interwoven with Polish mid-century debates around nation, music, and gender.
Second Prize: Jonathan Lindhorst
Prize $500
Abstarct
First codified in 1982 by queer Dutch composer Peter Schat (1935-2003) and later significantly expanded by New Zealand composer Jenny Mcleod (1941-2022), tone-clocktheory (TCT) is a largely unexplored post-tonal theory that provides a new framework forengaging with the whole of chromaticism. Both a harmonic system and chromatic âmap,â
TCT presents twelve previously uncategorized âchromatic tonalitiesâ which are derived from the twelve possible atonal triads (Allen Forteâs trichordal set classes), labelled as âhours,â and organized around a circular clock face. Using a transpositional operation called âsteering,â these triadic sets can then be expanded to assemble a non-repeating twelve- tone harmonic field based on its interval-class, each with its own distinct âharmonic flavour,â offering innovative approaches for composition and an alternative system of harmonic analysis to
Allen Forteâs pitch-class set theory.
Despite being in existence for more than 40 years, TCT has remained obscure, with few existing texts that clearly outline its functionality while also remaining true to its unique notational nomenclature and terminology. This article seeks to solve that issue by presenting the theoretical framework of both Schatâs earlier âclassicâ tone-clock theory, and McLeodâs later expansion in one easily digestible article, and serve as an introduction for anyone who wishes to engage with TCT at a deeper level.Keywords: Jenny McLeod, Peter Schat, Tone-Clock, steering, intervallic prime form,
chromatic tonality, Tone Clock Pieces, Michael Norris, Erik Fernandez Ibarz, Allen Forte, pitch-class set.