EDITORIAL
Topics and Schemata
Danuta Mirka
Bienen School of Music, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA
danuta.mirka@northwestern.edu
Keywords: topics; schemata; markedness; troping; Joseph Haydn; Haydn Piano Sonata H52/i
In my Introduction to The Oxford Handbook of Topic Theory I asked, ‘What are musical topics?’. In
answer, I posited that topics are conventions, yet they do not subsume all kinds of conventions:
‘Other conventions, subsumed under this concept by other authors, are not topics’. Among them
are contrapuntal-harmonic schemata. If schemata are not topics, they can, nevertheless, combine
with topics ‘into more or less stable amalgam[s] that are conventional in their own rights’
(‘Introduction’, in The Oxford Handbook of Topic Theory, ed. Danuta Mirka (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2014), 2). This idea was developed by Vasili Byros in the same volume with ref-
erence to the schema–topic amalgam made up of the le–sol–fi–sol and the ombra (‘Topics and
Harmonic Schemata: A Case from Beethoven’, in The Oxford Handbook, 381–414) and by
William Caplin in the following chapter, dedicated to the lament topic (‘Topics and Formal
Functions: The Case of the Lament’, in The Oxford Handbook, 415–452).
In the wake of the volume’s publication, the expressive qualities of schemata and their interaction
with topics have been explored by other authors. In two articles, one of them published in this jour-
nal, John A. Rice presented two schemata that he called the Heartz and the Morte, and proposed
that the Heartz is ‘not only . . . a schema but also . . . a topic’, in that it conveys ‘a sweetness and
tenderness characteristic of a certain strain of the galant style’ (‘The Heartz: A Galant Schema
from Corelli to Mozart’, Music Theory Spectrum 36/2 (2014), 318, 315). By contrast, the Morte is
an emblem of lament and thus akin to ombra (‘The Morte: A Galant Voice-Leading Schema as
Emblem of Lament and Compositional Building-Block’, Eighteenth-Century Music 12/2 (2015),
164). Olga Sánchez-Kisielewska established a link between the ‘sacred hymn’ topic and the
Romanesca schema, yielding what she calls a sacred Romanesca (‘Interactions between Topics
and Schemata: The Case of the Sacred Romanesca’, Theory and Practice 41/1 (2016), 47–80, and
‘The Romanesca as a Spiritual Sign in the Operas of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven’, in Singing
in Signs: New Semiotic Explorations of Opera, ed. Gregory J. Decker and Matthew R. Shaftel
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2020), 163–191). Nathaniel Mitchell came up with the
Volta, a schema which has no strong topical implications, yet frequently performs a dramatic func-
tion as a gesture of culmination (‘The Volta: A Galant Gesture of Culmination’, Music Theory
Spectrum 42/2 (2020), 280–304). And, again in this journal, Ewald Demeyere touched upon the
affective implementations of a schema consisting of a dominant pedal accompanied by a chromatic
descent (DPCD) (‘Yet Another Galant Schema: The Dominant Pedal Accompanied by a Chromatic
Descent’, Eighteenth-Century Music 19/2 (2022), 173–199).
Two of these authors framed the relation between schemata and topics in terms of that between
syntax and semantics. Although independent in principle, ‘syntax and semantics interface in what
cognitive linguists call a syntax–lexicon continuum’ and lead to the emergence of form–meaning
pairs: ‘The musical equivalents of form–meaning pairs are schema–topic amalgams’ (Byros,
‘Topics and Harmonic Schemata’, 382, 383). Accordingly, the sacred Romanesca is a ‘fluid amalgam
between musical syntax and semantics’ (Sánchez-Kisielewska, ‘Interactions between Topics and
Schemata’, 65). This raises the question of the conditions under which such amalgams are possible.
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press
Eighteenth-Century Music (2023), 20/2, 129–135
doi:10.1017/S147857062300012X
https://doi.org/10.1017/S147857062300012X Published online by Cambridge University Press