Implication-Realization
The Implication-Realization model of melodic expectation was developed by Eugene Narmour as an alternative to Schenkerian analysis centered less on music analysis and more on cognitive aspects of expectation. The model is one of the most significant modern theories of melodic expectation, going into great detail about how certain melodic structures arouse particular expectations.
History
Meyer applied Gestalt psychology principles to musical expectation, resulting in his ideas about completion, closure, and his Law of Good Continuation. In 1977, Narmour's book explicated problems he had with Schenkerian analysis and sketched ideas for a new model of analysis based on musical expectation as informed by the work of Meyer. Narmour mentioned a forthcoming book, The Melodic Structure of Tonal Music, but it did not appear. Much time passed without the alternative theory, but finally in 1989 Narmour published his I-R model, detailed in the 1990 and 1992 books.As of 2007, Narmour is working on a new book, which will extend the I-R theory to the parameters of harmony and rhythm and explore potential applications to the analysis of performance.
Theory
Narmour's I-R model was published in two separate books, dealing with "basic melodic structures" and "melodic complexity". Each book is quite complex; only a few key points are mentioned here. The Music Perception review by Ian Cross and the article by Schellenberg provide introductions to the theory.Basic melodic structures
General claims
The Analysis and Cognition of Basic Melodic Structures: The Implication-Realization Model begins with two general claims. The first is given by "two universal formal hypotheses" describing what listeners expect. The process of melody perception is based on "the realization or denial" of these hypotheses :- A + A → A
- A + B → C
The second claim is that the "forms" above function to provide either closure or nonclosure. Narmour goes on to describe the five melodic archetypes of his theory:
- process ' or iteration '
- reversal '
- registral return '
- dyad
- monad
P, D, and R only account for cases where registral direction and intervalic motion are working in unison to satisfy the implications. When one of these two factors is denied, there are more possibilities, the five archetypal derivatives:
- intervallic process '
From these foundations, the theory gets more detailed, and problems of style, pitch, harmony, rhythm, etc. are all discussed.
Five principles
Schellenberg's work has involved testing and simplifying specific implementations of the I-R model. His 1997 article gives an overview of the I-R theory that describes it in terms of five governing principles:- Registral direction
- Intervallic difference
- Registral return
- Proximity
- Closure
1. Registral direction
- Small intervals imply continuation of pitch direction
- Large intervals imply a change of direction
2. Intervallic difference
- Small intervals imply similar-sized realized intervals
- * When the registral direction changes, a "small" realized interval is defined as the original interval size +/- 2 semitones
- * In the absence of direction change, a "small" interval is the original interval +/- 3 semitones
- Large implicative intervals imply smaller realized intervals
3. Registral return
4. Proximity
- Small realized intervals are more implied than large intervals. Also, implications are stronger for smaller-sized intervals.
5. Closure
- Melody changes direction. That is, implicative and realized intervals are in different directions.
- A larger implicative interval is followed by a smaller realized interval.