fuging tune

fuging tune

      a form of hymnody developed by American composers of the so-called First New England school during the period of the American Revolution (1775–83).

      A typical fuging tune places the tune in the tenor voice and harmonizes it with block chords. In the next-to-last phrase, called the fuging section or fuge, each of the four voices enters in turn singing the tune or a slightly varied version of it. The last phrase is again chordal. The fuge, although all four parts follow each other in melodic imitation, is not a classical fugue but merely a passage that uses imitative writing.

      The term fuging tune is a shortened form of the English phrase “fuging psalm tune,” a type of hymn setting popular in England in the 17th and early 18th centuries. Minor features of style—angular melodic writing, rhythmic simplicity and precision, and diatonic harmony (i.e., little use of notes foreign to the composition's key)—and the placement of the fuging section in the next-to-last, not the last, line distinguish the American fuging tune from its British parent.

      James Lyon's collection Urania (1762) contains the first fuging psalm tune published in America. The first fuging tunes appeared in William Billings' Singing Master's Assistant of 1778. Other American composers such as Daniel Read, Timothy Swan, Jacob French, and Justin Morgan preferred writing this type of piece until around 1800; assertions that the style was crude relative to the works of European composers led to its decline in New England.

      But the fuging tune, carried to the west and south in various shape-note hymnals (which use a characteristic musical notation), remained popular outside of New England for at least another 50 years.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Fuging tune — The fuguing tune is a variety of Anglo American vernacular choral music. It first flourished in the mid eighteenth century and continues to be composed today.DescriptionFuguing tunes (often fuging tunes ) are sacred music, specifically,… …   Wikipedia

  • Fuging Tune —    An English or American hymn or metrical psalm characterized by structural imitation in at least one section. Typically, a quatrain would have its first two lines set in block chords, moving to a cadence. The third line would be set with… …   Historical dictionary of sacred music

  • Sacred Harp — singing is a tradition of sacred choral music that took root in the Southern region of the United States. It is part of the larger tradition of shape note music. The music and its notation The name of the tradition comes from the title of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Leading Sacred Harp music — The Sacred Harp musical tradition is unusual in choral music in that the task of leading it is not delegated to a single expert, but is rotated among participants. A number of customs related to leading can be traced to this democratic, non… …   Wikipedia

  • hymn — hymner /him euhr, neuhr/, n. hymnlike, adj. /him/, n. 1. a song or ode in praise or honor of God, a deity, a nation, etc. 2. something resembling this, as a speech, essay, or book in praise of someone or something. v.t. 3. to praise or celebrate… …   Universalium

  • Justin Morgan — (February 28, 1747 – March 22, 1798) was a U.S. horse breeder and composer. He was born in West Springfield, Massachusetts, and by 1788 had settled in Vermont. In addition to being a horse breeder and farmer, he was a teacher of singing; in that… …   Wikipedia

  • Music history of the United States during the colonial era — History of the United States Military Postal Diplomatic Expansionist Religious Industrial Feminist Music …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”