Robert Simpson's Late Symphonism: An Analysis of Simpson's 10th Symphony through the Interpretation and Analytic Implementation of His Five Symphonic Principles

Project: PhD Project

Project Details

Description

The focus of my research has been on developing a bespoke analytical framework, based on Simpson's five symphonic principles (Simpson (ed.), 1967), with which to provide a comprehensive and wide reaching analysis of his largest symphonic work, the 10th Symphony (1989). The five principles, from much earlier in Simpson's career, are an attempt to define the essence of a 'true symphony'. While they are/were controversial in their attempt to prescribe symphonic value on existing symphonic works, as an insight into Simpson's thinking on symphonism, they can be an evocative tool in the analysis and understanding of his own symphonies. In my development of an analytical framework based on these principles, the most significant elements of my analysis involves: organic prototype theory (Montgomery, 1992), structural rhythm (Phillippo, 2000), formal theory, and interval wedge analysis.

Layman's description

My project presents a comprehensive and wide reaching analysis of Robert Simpson's 10th Symphony (1989).
Short titleRobert Simpson's 10th Symphony
StatusActive
Effective start/end date1/10/2230/09/26

Keywords

  • Robert Simpson
  • Symphonism

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