Instrumental Transformations in Heinrich Biber's Mystery Sonatas
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Abstract
Each of Heinrich Biber's Mystery Sonatas features a distinct violin tuning. How do these scordatura relate to standard tuning? How might they affect the sonatas' musical organization and players' experience? Transformational voice-leading theory helps to reveal overlapping categories here: quintal scordatura include adjacent-string fifths, creating zones where notated and sounding intervals match; chordal scordatura, in which the strings realize a triad, involve more displacement. Psychological research on predictive processing and altered pitch feedback suggests that scordatura are most unsettling for players when they preserve aspects of standard tuning. Analyzing scordatura, then, shows how instruments function as spaces for musical action.
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