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In music, a canon is a contrapuntal ( counterpoint-based) compositional technique that employs a melody with one or more imitations of the melody played after a given duration (e.g., quarter rest, one measure, etc.). The initial melody is called the leader (or ''dux''), while the imitative melody, which is played in a different voice, is called the follower (or ''comes''). The follower must imitate the leader, either as an exact replication of its
rhythm Rhythm (from Greek , ''rhythmos'', "any regular recurring motion, symmetry") generally means a " movement marked by the regulated succession of strong and weak elements, or of opposite or different conditions". This general meaning of regular re ...
s and intervals or some transformation thereof. Repeating canons in which all voices are musically identical are called rounds—"
Row, Row, Row Your Boat "Row, Row, Row Your Boat" is an English language nursery rhyme and a popular children's song, often sung in a round. It has a Roud Folk Song Index number of 19236. Bing Crosby included the song in a medley on his album '' 101 Gang Songs'' (1961). ...
" and "
Frère Jacques "Frère Jacques" (, ), also known in English as "Brother John", is a nursery rhyme of French origin. The rhyme is traditionally sung in a round. The song is about a friar who has overslept and is urged to wake up and sound the bell for the m ...
" are popular examples. An accompanied canon is a canon accompanied by one or more additional independent parts that do not imitate the melody.


History


Medieval and Renaissance

During the
Middle Ages In the history of Europe, the Middle Ages or medieval period lasted approximately from the late 5th to the late 15th centuries, similar to the post-classical period of global history. It began with the fall of the Western Roman Empire ...
,
Renaissance The Renaissance ( , ) , from , with the same meanings. is a period in European history marking the transition from the Middle Ages to modernity and covering the 15th and 16th centuries, characterized by an effort to revive and surpass ide ...
, and
Baroque The Baroque (, ; ) is a style of architecture, music, dance, painting, sculpture, poetry, and other arts that flourished in Europe from the early 17th century until the 1750s. In the territories of the Spanish and Portuguese empires including ...
—that is, through the early 18th century—any kind of imitative musical counterpoints were called fugues, with the strict imitation now known as canon qualified as ''fuga ligata'', meaning "fettered fugue". Only in the 16th century did the word "canon" begin to be used to describe the strict, imitative texture created by such a procedure. The word is derived from the Greek "κανών", Latinised as ''canon'', which means "law" or "norm". In contrapuntal usage, the word refers to the "rule" explaining the number of parts, places of entry, transposition, and so on, according to which one or more additional parts may be derived from a single written melodic line. This rule was usually given verbally, but could also be supplemented by special signs in the score, sometimes themselves called ''canoni''. The earliest known non-religious canons are English rounds, a form first given the name ''rondellus'' by
Walter Odington Walter Odington was a 14th-century English Benedictine scientific and especially musical theory author. He is also known as Walter of Evesham, by some writers confounded with Walter of Eynsham, who lived about fifty years earlier, died not earlier ...
at the beginning of the 14th century; the best known is " Sumer is icumen in" (composed around 1250), called a ''rota'' ("wheel") in the manuscript source. The term "round" only first came to be used in English sources in the 16th century. Canons featured in the music of the Italian
Trecento The Trecento (, also , ; short for , "1300") refers to the 14th century in Italian cultural history. Period Art Commonly, the Trecento is considered to be the beginning of the Renaissance in art history. Painters of the Trecento included Giot ...
and the 14th-century ars nova in France. An Italian example is "Tosto che l'alba" by Gherardello da Firenze. In both France and Italy, canons were often featured in hunting songs. The medieval and modern Italian word for hunting is "caccia", while the medieval French word is spelled "chace" (modern spelling: "chasse"). A well-known French chace is the anonymous "Se je chant mains". Richard Taruskin describes "Se je chant mains" as evoking the atmosphere of a falcon hunt: "The middle section is truly a tour de force, but of a wholly new and off-beat type: a riot of hockets set to 'words' mixing French, bird-language, and hound-language in an onomatopoetical mélange." Guillaume de Machaut also used the 3-voice "chace" form in movements from his masterpiece ''Le Lai de la Fontaine'' (1361). Referring to the setting of the fourth stanza of this work, Taruskin says "a well-wrought chace can be far more than the sum of its parts; and this particular chace is possibly Machaut's greatest feat of ''subtilitas''." An example of late 14th century canon which featured some of the rhythmic complexity of the late 14th century ''
ars subtilior ''Ars subtilior'' (Latin for 'subtler art') is a musical style characterized by rhythmic and notational complexity, centered on Paris, Avignon in southern France, and also in northern Spain at the end of the fourteenth century.Hoppin 1978, 472 ...
'' school of composers is '' La harpe de melodie'' by Jacob de Senleches. According to Richard Hoppin, "This
virelai A ''virelai'' is a form of medieval French verse used often in poetry and music. It is one of the three ''formes fixes'' (the others were the ballade and the rondeau) and was one of the most common verse forms set to music in Europe from th ...
has two canonic voices over a free and textless tenor." In many pieces in three contrapuntal parts, only two of the voices are in canon, while the remaining voice is a free melodic line. In Dufay's song "Resvelons nous, amoureux", the lower two voices are in canon, but the upper part is what David Fallows describes as a "florid top line":


Baroque

Both J. S. Bach and Handel featured canons in their works. The final variation of Handel's keyboard Chaconne in G major ( HWV 442) is a canon in which the player's right hand is imitated at the distance of one beat, creating rhythmic ambiguity within the prevailing triple time:


Classical

An example of a classical strict canon is the Minuet of Haydn's String Quartet in D Minor, Op. 76, No. 2. "Throughout its sinewy length, between upper and lower strings. Here is the superbly logical fulfilment of the two-part octave doubling of Haydn's earliest divertimento minuets":


Beethoven

Beethoven Ludwig van Beethoven (baptised 17 December 177026 March 1827) was a German composer and pianist. Beethoven remains one of the most admired composers in the history of Western music; his works rank amongst the most performed of the classic ...
's works feature a number of passages in canon. The following comes from his Symphony No. 4: Antony Hopkins describes the above as "a delightfully naïve canon". More sophisticated and varied in its treatment of intervals and harmonic implications is the canonic passage from the second movement of his Piano Sonata 28 in A major, Op. 101: Beethoven's most spectacular and dramatically effective use of canon occurs in the first act of his opera ''
Fidelio ''Fidelio'' (; ), originally titled ' (''Leonore, or The Triumph of Marital Love''), Op. 72, is Ludwig van Beethoven's only opera. The German libretto was originally prepared by Joseph Sonnleithner from the French of Jean-Nicolas Bouilly, ...
''. Here, four of the characters sing a quartet in canon, "a sublime musical wonder", accompanied by orchestration of the utmost delicacy and refinement. "Each of the four participants delivers his or her quatrain", "The use of canon to embody the differing perspectives of the participants a first glance seems odd, but the rigid form allows for some character differentiation and does in fact make a dramatic point". "Everyone sings the same music to very different words, sinking their private thoughts into musical or at least linear anonymity". "The softly padding gait, the dove-tailed perfection of the counterpoint, induce a trance that, carrying the protagonists outside Time, hints that there are realms of truth beyond the masks they pathetically or comically present to the world."


Romantic era

In the Romantic era, the use of devices such as canon was even more often subtly hidden, as for example in Schumann's piano piece "Vogel als Prophet" (1851). According to
Nicholas Cook Nicholas Cook, (born 5 June 1950COOK, Prof. Nicholas (John)’, Who's Who 2012, A & C Black, 2012; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2011 ; online edn, Nov 201accessed 9 April 2012/ref>) is a British musicologist and writer born in Athe ...
, "the canon is, as it were, absorbed into the texture of the music—it is there, but one doesn't easily hear it." Peter Latham describes Brahms' Intermezzo in F minor, Op. 118, No. 4 as a piece "rich in canons". In the following passage, the left hand shadows the right at the time distance of one beat and at the pitch interval of an octave lower: Michael Musgrave writes that as a result of the strict canon at the octave, the piece is "of an anxious, suppressed nature, ... in the central section this tension is temporarily eased through a very contained passage which employs the canon in chordal terms between the hands." According to Denis Matthews, " hatlooks on paper like another purely intellectual exercise... in practice it produces a warmly melodic effect."


20th century to present

Stravinsky composed canons, including a '' Canon on a Russian Popular Tune'' and the Double Canon. Conlon Nancarrow composed a number of canons for player piano. (See Mensuration and tempo canons below.) Anton Webern employed canonic textures in his work; his Op. 16 work is a collection of five canons for soprano, clarinet, and bass clarinet.


Types

Considering the many types of canon "in the tonal repertoire", it may be ironic that "canon—the strictest type of imitation—has such a wide variety of possibilities". The most rigid and ingenious forms of canon are not strictly concerned with pattern but also with content. Canons are classified by various traits including the number of voices, the interval at which each successive voice is transposed in relation to the preceding voice, whether voices are
inverse Inverse or invert may refer to: Science and mathematics * Inverse (logic), a type of conditional sentence which is an immediate inference made from another conditional sentence * Additive inverse (negation), the inverse of a number that, when a ...
, retrograde, or retrograde-inverse; the temporal distance between each voice, whether the intervals of the second voice are exactly those of the original or if they are adjusted to fit the diatonic scale, and the tempo of successive voices. However, canons may use more than one of the above methods.


Terminology

Although, for clarity, this article uses leader and follower(s) to denote the leading voice in a canon and those that imitate it, musicological literature also uses the traditional
Latin Latin (, or , ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally a dialect spoken in the lower Tiber area (then known as Latium) around present-day Rome, but through ...
terms ''dux'' and ''comes'' for "leader" and "follower", respectively.


Number of voices

A canon of two voices may be called a canon in two, similarly a canon of ''x'' voices would be called a canon in ''x''. This terminology may be used in combination with a similar terminology for the interval between each voice, different from the terminology in the following paragraph. Another standard designation is "Canon: Two in One", which means two voices in one canon. "Canon: Four in Two" means four voices with two simultaneous canons. While "Canon: Six in Three" means six voices with three simultaneous canons, and so on.


Simple

A simple canon (also known as a round) imitates the leader perfectly at the octave or unison. Well-known canons of this type include the famous children's songs
Row, Row, Row Your Boat "Row, Row, Row Your Boat" is an English language nursery rhyme and a popular children's song, often sung in a round. It has a Roud Folk Song Index number of 19236. Bing Crosby included the song in a medley on his album '' 101 Gang Songs'' (1961). ...
and
Frère Jacques "Frère Jacques" (, ), also known in English as "Brother John", is a nursery rhyme of French origin. The rhyme is traditionally sung in a round. The song is about a friar who has overslept and is urged to wake up and sound the bell for the m ...
.


Interval

If the follower imitates the precise interval quality of the leader, then it is called a strict canon; if the follower imitates the interval number (but not the quality—e.g., a major third may become a minor third), it is called a free canon.


Contrapuntal derivations

The follower is by definition a
contrapuntal In music, counterpoint is the relationship between two or more musical lines (or voices) which are harmonically interdependent yet independent in rhythm and melodic contour. It has been most commonly identified in the European classical tradi ...
derivation of the leader.


Canon by inversion

An inversion canon (also called an ''al rovescio'' canon) has the follower moving in
contrary motion In music theory, contrapuntal motion is the general movement of two melodic lines with respect to each other. In traditional four-part harmony, it is important that lines maintain their independence, an effect which can be achieved by the judiciou ...
to the leader. Where the leader would go down by a particular interval, the follower goes up by that same interval.


Retrograde or crab canon

In a retrograde canon, also known as a ''canon cancrizans'' (Latin for
crab canon A crab canon (also known by the Latin form of the name, ''canon cancrizans''; as well as ''retrograde canon'', ''canon per recte et retro'' or ''canon per rectus et inversus'')Kennedy, Michael (ed.). 1994. "Canon". The Oxford Dictionary of Musi ...
, derived from the Latin ''cancer'' = crab), the follower accompanies the leader backward (in retrograde). Alternative names for this type are ''canon per recte et retro'' or ''canon per rectus et inversus''.


Mensuration and tempo canons

In a mensuration canon (also known as a
prolation canon In music, a prolation canon (also called a mensuration canon or proportional canon) is a type of canon, a musical composition wherein the main melody is accompanied by one or more imitations of that melody in other voices. Not only do the voice ...
, or a proportional canon), the follower imitates the leader by some rhythmic proportion. The follower may double the rhythmic values of the leader (augmentation or sloth canon) or it may cut the rhythmic proportions in half (diminution canon). Phasing involves the application of modulating rhythmic proportions according to a sliding scale. The cancrizans, and often the mensuration canon, take exception to the rule that the follower must start later than the leader; that is, in a typical canon, a follower cannot come before the leader (for then the labels 'leader' and 'follower' should be reversed) or at the same time as the leader (for then two lines together would constantly be in unison, or parallel thirds, etc., and there would be no counterpoint), whereas in a crab canon or mensuration canon the two lines can start at the same time and still respect good counterpoint. Many such canons were composed during the
Renaissance The Renaissance ( , ) , from , with the same meanings. is a period in European history marking the transition from the Middle Ages to modernity and covering the 15th and 16th centuries, characterized by an effort to revive and surpass ide ...
, particularly in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries; Johannes Ockeghem wrote an entire mass (the ''
Missa prolationum The ''Missa prolationum'' is a musical setting of the Ordinary of the Mass by Johannes Ockeghem, dating from the second half of the 15th century. Based on freely written material probably composed by Ockeghem himself, and consisting entirely of ...
'') in which each section is a mensuration canon, and all at different speeds and entry intervals. In the 20th century, Conlon Nancarrow composed complex tempo or mensural canons, mostly for the player piano as they are extremely difficult to play.
Larry Polansky Larry Polansky (born 1954) is a composer, guitarist, mandolinist, and professor emeritus at Dartmouth College and the University of California, Santa Cruz The University of California, Santa Cruz (UC Santa Cruz or UCSC) is a public land ...
has an album of mensuration canons, ''Four-Voice Canons''. Arvo Pärt has written several mensuration canons, including ''Cantus in Memoriam Benjamin Britten'', ''Arbos'' and ''Festina Lente''. Per Nørgård's infinity series has a sloth canon structure. This self-similarity of sloth canons makes it "fractal like".


Other types

The most familiar of the canons is the perpetual/infinite canon (in Latin: ''canon perpetuus'') or round. As each voice of the canon arrives at its end it can begin again, in a '' perpetuum mobile'' fashion; e.g., "Three Blind Mice". Such a canon is also called a round or, in medieval Latin terminology, a
rota Rota or ROTA may refer to: Places * Rota (island), in the Marianas archipelago * Rota (volcano), in Nicaragua * Rota, Andalusia, a town in Andalusia, Spain * Naval Station Rota, Spain People * Rota (surname), a surname (including a list of peop ...
. '' Sumer is icumen in'' is one example of a piece designated rota. Additional types include the spiral canon, accompanied canon, and double or triple canon. A double canon is a canon with two simultaneous
themes Theme or themes may refer to: * Theme (arts), the unifying subject or idea of the type of visual work * Theme (Byzantine district), an administrative district in the Byzantine Empire governed by a Strategos * Theme (computing), a custom graphical ...
; a triple canon has three.


Double canon

A double canon is a composition that unfolds two different canons simultaneously. A duet aria, "Herr, du siehst statt guter Werke" from J. S. Bach's Cantata BWV 9, '' Es ist das Heil uns kommen her'' features a double canon "between flute and oboe on the one hand and the soprano and alto voices on the other. But what is most interesting in this movement is that the very attractive melodic surface of the canon belies its dogmatic message by offering a moving simplicity of tone to indicate the comfort that particular doctrine provides for the believer. Canonic devices often bear the association of strictness and the law in Bach's work."


Mirror canon

In a mirror canon (or canon by contrary motion), the subsequent voice imitates the initial voice in inversion. They are not very common, though examples of mirror canons can be found in the works of Bach, Mozart (e.g., the trio from Serenade for Wind Octet in C minor, K. 388/384a), Anton Webern, and other composers.


Table canon

A table canon is a retrograde and
inverse Inverse or invert may refer to: Science and mathematics * Inverse (logic), a type of conditional sentence which is an immediate inference made from another conditional sentence * Additive inverse (negation), the inverse of a number that, when a ...
canon meant to be placed on a table in between two musicians, who both read the same line of music in opposite directions. As both parts are included in each single line, a second line is not needed. Bach wrote a few table canons.


Rhythmic canon

Olivier Messiaen employed a technique which he called "rhythmic canon", a polyphony of independent strands in which the pitch material differs. An example is found in the piano part of the first of the '' Trois petites liturgies de la présence divine'', where the left hand (doubled by strings and maracas), and the right hand (doubled by vibraphone) play the same rhythmic sequence in a 3:2 ratio, but the right hand adapts a sequence of 13 chords in the sixth mode (B–C–D–E–F–F–G–A–B) onto the 18 duration values, while the left hand twice states nine chords in the third mode. Peter Maxwell Davies was another post-tonal composer who favoured rhythmic canons, where the pitch materials are not obliged to correspond. The notion of rhythmic canon transfers Messiaen's idea of mode of limited transposition from the domain of pitch to the domain of time: Computational methods for finding rhythmic canons, both infinite and finite, with arbitrary generative rhythmic patterns were developed in the 2000s with further generalization to so-called "rhythmic fugues" with a few generative rhythmic patterns.


Puzzle canon

A puzzle canon, riddle canon, or enigma canon is a canon in which only one voice is notated and the rules for determining the remaining parts and the time intervals of their entrances must be guessed. "The enigmatical character of a uzzlecanon does not consist of any special way of composing it, but only of the method of writing it down, of which a solution is required." Clues hinting at the solution may be provided by the composer, in which case the term "riddle canon" can be used. J. S. Bach presented many of his canons in this form, for example in '' The Musical Offering''. Mozart, after solving Father Martini's puzzles, composed his own riddles, K. 73r, using Latin epigrams such as ''Sit trium series una'' and ''Ter ternis canite vocibus'' ("Let there be one series of three parts" and "sing three times with three voices"). Other notable contributors to the genre include
Ciconia __NOTOC__ ''Ciconia'' ( ; ) is a genus of birds in the stork family. Six of the seven living species occur in the Old World, but the maguari stork has a South American range. In addition, fossils suggest that ''Ciconia'' storks were somewhat mo ...
, Ockeghem, Byrd, Beethoven, Brumel, Busnois, Haydn, Josquin des Prez, Mendelssohn, Pierre de la Rue, Brahms,
Schoenberg Arnold Schoenberg or Schönberg (, ; ; 13 September 187413 July 1951) was an Austrian-American composer, music theorist, teacher, writer, and painter. He is widely considered one of the most influential composers of the 20th century. He was as ...
, Nono and Maxwell Davies. According to Oliver B. Ellsworth, the earliest known enigma canon appears to be an anonymous ballade, "En la maison Dedalus", found at the end of a collection of five theory treatises from the third quarter of the fourteenth century collected in the Berkeley Manuscript. Thomas Morley complained that sometimes a solution, "which being founde (it might bee) was scant worth the hearing", cited, inter al., by . J. G. Albrechtsberger admits that, "when we have traced the secret, we have gained but little; as the proverb says, ' Parturiunt montes, etc.'" but adds that, "these speculative passages ... serve to sharpen acumen".


Elaborate use of canon technique

* Josquin des Prez, ''Missa L'homme armé super voces musicales'', Agnus Dei 2: One voice with the words 'ex una voce tres' (three voice parts out of one), a mensuration canon in three voices. * Josquin des Prez, ''Missa L'homme armé sexti toni'', Agnus Dei 2: two simultaneous canons in the four upper voices, and at the same time a crab canon in the two lower voices. *
Johann Sebastian Bach Johann Sebastian Bach (28 July 1750) was a German composer and musician of the late Baroque period. He is known for his orchestral music such as the '' Brandenburg Concertos''; instrumental compositions such as the Cello Suites; keyboard wo ...
's '' Goldberg Variations'' contains nine canons of increasing interval size, ranging from unison to ninth. Each canon additionally obeys the overall structure and harmonic sequence common to all variations in the composition.


Contemporary canons

In his early work, such as ''
Piano Phase ''Piano Phase'' is a minimalist composition by American composer Steve Reich, written in 1967 for two pianos (or piano and tape). It is one of his first attempts at applying his "phasing" technique, which he had previously used in the tape piece ...
'' (1967) and '' Clapping Music'' (1972), Steve Reich used a process he calls phasing which is a "continually adjusting" canon with variable distance between the voices, in which melodic and harmonic elements are not important, but rely simply on the time intervals of imitation.


See also

* '' Canon'', a 1964 animated representation of a musical canon * Pachelbel's Canon


References


Sources

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


Further reading

* Agon, Carlos, and Moreno Andreatta. 2011. "Modeling and Implementing Tiling Rhythmic Canons in the OpenMusic Visual Programming Language". '' Perspectives of New Music'' 49, no. 2 (Summer): 66–91. * Andreatta, Moreno. 2011. "Constructing and Formalizing Tiling Rhythmic Canons: A Historical Survey of a 'Mathematical' Problem". ''Perspectives of New Music'' 49, no. 2 (Summer): 33–64. * Blackburn, Bonnie J. 2012. "The Corruption of One Is the Generation of the Other: Interpreting Canonic Riddles". ''Journal of the Alamire Foundation'' 4, no. 2 (October):182–203. * Cooper, Martin. 1970. ''Beethoven: The Last Decade''. London and New York: Oxford University Press. * Davalan, Jean-Paul. 2011. "Perfect Rhythmic Tiling". '' Perspectives of New Music'' 49, no. 2 (Summer): 144–197. * Johnson, Tom. 2011. "Tiling in My Music". ''Perspectives of New Music'' 49, no. 2 (Summer): 9–21. * Lamla, Michael. 2003 ''Kanonkünste im barocken Italien, insbesondere in Rom''. 3 vols. Berlin: Dissertation.de—Verlag im Internet. . * Lévy, Fabien. 2011. "Three Uses of Vuza Canons". '' Perspectives of New Music'' 49, no. 2 (Summer): 23–31. * Messiaen, Olivier. ''Traité de rythme, de couleur, et d'ornithologie (1949–1992). I-II'', edited by Yvonne Loriod, preface by Pierre Boulez. Paris: Leduc, 1994. * Schiltz, Katelijne, and Bonnie J. Blackburne (eds.). 2007. ''Canons and Canonic Techniques, 14th–16th Centuries: Theory, Practice, and Reception History. Proceedings of the International Conference Leuven, 4–5 October 2005''. Analysis in Context: Leuven Studies in Musicology 1. Leuven and Dudley, Massachusetts: Peeters. . * Ziehn, Bernhard. ''Canonic Studies: A New Technique in Composition'', edited and introduced by Ronald Stevenson. New York: Crescendo Pub., 1977. .


External links


Anatomy of a Canon


schillerinstitut.dk (in English) * ttp://strangepaths.com/canon-1-a-2/2009/01/18/en/ Visualization of J. S. Bach's crab canon(requires
Adobe Flash Adobe Flash (formerly Macromedia Flash and FutureSplash) is a multimedia software platform used for production of animations, rich web applications, desktop applications, mobile apps, mobile games, and embedded web browser video players. Flash ...
)
Software ''SonneLematine'' to produce canons

Electro-Acoustic Music Dartmouth.edu: Larry Polansky's Four Voice Canons
* , on " My Favorite Things" {{Authority control Polyphonic form Classical music styles