Post Tonal Music
When descussing post tonal music, we can’t use our normal letter names to talk about pitches anymore, because we aren’t working in any specific key. We will now label each note with a number (zero through eleven) starting with C as 0. A pitch class is all of the possible enharmonic equivalents of a note, labeled with a number. The numbers that we label pitch classes with are 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, t, and e. We substitute t and e for 10 and 11 because when we put pitch classes together, we will need to be able to differentiate these numbers from 0 and 1.
Pitch Class Sets
If we were to label scales using pitch classes, they would look like a string of numbers. For example, a major scale would be “0 2 4 5 7 9 e”. Any group of pitches is called a pitch class set. If we label the major scale using four-note pitch class sets, it would look like this: “0 2 4 5 0 2 4 5”. This shows that the major scale is actually two groups of four notes (0 2 4 5) that are the same.
Ascending Form
Let’s put this pitch class set into ascending form: 4692. The most basic and easiest way to put this set into ascending form would be by putting each number into ascending order: 2469. This is one version of ascending form, but we can also put the pitch “2” at the end of the set, and it will still be in an ascending order: 4692. This is still in ascending form because we don’t skip any tones as we move up. This is a way to invert chords. The other two ascending forms are 6924, and 9246.
Modulo 12
Usually when we count up, we count up to 10 before we start over. In serialism, we will think in base 12, or mod 12. This means that once we have numbers 12 or over, we can subtract 12 to find what number they are equivalent to (0 = 12). Think of it like military time. If the time is 13:00 and we need to translate that to what it would be in standard time, we would subtract 12 (13 - 12 = 1) 1:00 pm.
Transposition
Transposition in music is really just adding or subtracting the pitches by specific intervals. Therefore, if we want to transpose a pitch class set, we can simply add or subtract a number from all pitch classes in the set.
Refresher: what is a pitch class (pc)?
Refresher: what is a pitch class set (pcs)?
Notating pitch class sets
Modulo 12 arithmetic
Notating transposition
Transposing downward
Normal form/normal order
Breaking ties for ordering pitch class sets
Developing a method for normal form using (3,e,5,2,8)
Completely symmetrical pitch class sets don’t have a normal form, so we would just write it in ascending form with the smallest number at the bottom.
In post-tonal music, transposition is often associated with motion: Take a chord, motive, melody, and when it is transposed, the aural effect is of moving that chord, motive, or melody in some direction. That’s the effect here, in two disconnected passages from Debussy’s, La cathédrale engloutie:
The opening motive — comprising the notes B, D, E, or {11, 2, 4} — is transposed four semitones higher in m. 18, representing the cathedral’s slow ascent above the water. Transposing something preserves its intervallic content, and not only that, it preserves the specific arrangement of that thing’s intervals. When we hear the passage at m. 18 above, we recognize its relationship to the passage in m. 1 because the same intervals return, but starting on a different pitch.
Transposition is an operation — something that is done to a pitch, pitch class, or collection of these things — or alternatively a measurement — representing the distance between things. We represent it as Tn, where n represents the ordered pitch-class interval between the two things. To transpose something by Tn, add n to every element in that thing (mod 12). Given the collection of pitch classes in m. 1 above and transposition by T4:
The result is the pitch classes in m. 18. T4 {11, 2, 4} = {3, 6, 8}.
Alternatively, to determine the transpositional relationship between two things, subtract the first thing from the second. If the numbers that result are all the same, the two things are related by that Tn.
This is how I arrived at the T4 arrow label in the musical example above, by “subtracting” the pitch class integers of m. 1 from the pitch-class integers in m. 18.
Normal order (sometimes called normal form) has a lot in common with the concept of triad “root position.” Among other things, root position is a standard way to order the pitch-classes of triads and seventh chords so that we can classify and compare them easily. Normal order does the same, but in a more generalized way so as to apply to chords containing a variety of notes and intervals.
Normal order is the most compressed way to write a given collection of pitch classes. Often, you’ll be able to determine normal order intuitively using a keyboard or a clockface, but it’s good to learn a process that will always give you the correct answer.
For example, given {G-sharp4, A2, D-sharp3, A4}:
Occasionally you’ll have a tie in step 3. In these cases, write the ordering implied by each tie and calculate the interval from the first to the penultimate pitch class. The ordering with the smallest interval is the normal order.