On Straus Through a Synthesis of Webern and the Greek Tetrachord, Part LXII
Tetrachords, Genera, and the Interval-Space Character: A Webern-Greece Synthesis Peter Thoegersen A recent excursion into Joseph Straus’s Introduction to Post-Tonal Theory sent me down a productive path — not because Straus’s framework applies directly to polytempic polymicrotonality, but because examining where it breaks down clarifies what a more appropriate methodology might look like. Straus is writing about the 12-note chromatic aggregate. His set-class catalog, his interval vectors, his normal and prime form algorithms — all of it is predicated on a closed 12-element universe. Within that universe, it is rigorous and useful. The question I found myself asking was: what survives transplantation to an n-note microtonal aggregate, and what collapses under its own weight? The answer is that the relational machinery survives. Normal form, prime form, the Tn and TnI operations — these work identically modulo any n. The interval vector as a similarity metric still functions. W...