Teleological Strategies of Non-Tonal Music: The Case of György Ligeti’s Lux Aeterna

  • Miloš Zatkalik University of Arts in Belgrade, Faculty of Music, Department of Composition
Keywords: Ligeti, Lux aeterna, teleology, completion

Abstract

In Ligeti’s Lux aeterna micropolyphony and the lack of an apparent system of pitch organization comparable to functional tonality seem to preclude goal-directed processes of musical motion. Yet, this article will demonstrate the existence of goals and paths leading toward them on various levels (short-, medium-, and long-term). These teleological procedures include contextually establishing intonational centers as goals; directed linear motion; the completion of twelve-tone aggregates as well as the extension of the completion idea to other parameters. As a final observation, while goal-directed processes span the entire composition, some of them, in conjunction with the text, transcend the work itself, and project goals into infinity.

Author Biography

Miloš Zatkalik, University of Arts in Belgrade, Faculty of Music, Department of Composition

Miloš Zatkalik, M.Mus., composer and music theorist from Belgrade, Professor at the University of Arts in Belgrade, Faculty of Music. Formerly a visiting lecturer at the Universities of Novi Sad, Kragujevac, and Banja Luka. Lectured by invitation in Canada, Norway, the USA, Slovenia, Germany and Australia. Member of the University Senate. Presented papers on many scientific conferences. Published papers at home and abroad. Research areas: analysis of 20th-century music; relationships between music and narrative; psychoanalytic foundations of music analysis, goal-oriented processes in music. Author of the first Serbian electronic textbook on music analysis. Recent publications include a book on post-tonal prolongation. Representative of the Association in European Composers and Songwriters Alliance, formerly a long-time member of the Composers Association of Serbia Managing Board.

Published
2024-08-12