Continuous Variations
 
  - General:
  
    - Usually based on short themes, in the range of 2-4 measures
    
- Two primary types:
    
      - Passacaglia - variation using a melodic line
      
- Chaconne - variation using a harmonic line
    
 
- In practice, these two terms were somewhat interchangeable
    
- Used extensively during the Baroque period
    
- The terms ostinato and ground have also been applied to these types
    of compositions
  
 
- The Theme:
  
    - Passacaglia themes usually consist of motion from the tonic to the
    dominant pitch, frequently by descending, stepwise motion
    
- The basic progression of a Chaconne will consist of movement from tonic
    to the dominant, often followed by resolution back to tonic. This basic
    progression is usually embellished or prolonged in some fashion.
    
- The theme, whether melodic or harmonic, will appear consistently throughout
    the composition in adjacent statements.
    
- A passacaglia theme is usually in the bass voice, but may change position
    in the texture during the course of the variations
    
- The theme is usually not altered to any great extent throughout the
    composition, typically only surface embellishments.
  
 
- The Variations:
  
    - After the initial statement, each repetition of the theme is considered
    a new variation.
    
- The primary means of variation is altering the material accompanying
    the theme, not the theme itself.
    
- Each variation typically consist of the use of embellishing figures,
    or the introduction of new melodic/rhythmic material.
    
- Often variations will be grouped through the use of similar motives,
    creating a larger scale form within the composition.
  
 
- Analytical Considerations:
  
    - Study the theme carefully. Identify its primary melodic and/or harmonic
    materials. What are its main characteristics?
    
- How many iterations of the theme are used? Number them and mark where
    each iteration begins.
    
- Does theme change (either melodic alterations or additional harmonies)
    over the course of the composition? If so, how? Does a melodic theme always
    remain in the same voice?
    
- If the theme is melodic, how do the implied harmonies change? Often
    the same melodic material will be harmonized in different ways, creating
    a sense of harmonic variation.
    
- Are variations grouped in some manner? If so, how? Does this create
    a sense of large scale form or shape for the composition?
    
- Does the composition modulate (some won't)? If so, where and how?
    
- What makes this form continuous is a sense of flow created by the upper
    voices over the ostinato, linking the variations in a smooth manner and
    creating a sense of overall shape. How is this sense of flow, or continuity,
    from variation to variation created (listed below are some of the possibilities)?
    
      - The ostinato ends on the dominant, linking it to the next statement
      
- The upper voices retain dissonances, even if the final harmony is tonic
      
- Continuity of rhythmic motion through the cadence
      
- Continuity of an idea from one variation to the next, possibly ignoring
      the phrase structure of the ostinato, thus, linking adjacent statements
      
- The melodic cadence occurring at a different point than the ostinato
      cadence, creating an overlapping phrase structure
      
- Varying the harmony as much as possible
      
- Avoiding authentic cadences and tonic harmonies
      
- Creating large scale shape by changes in texture or changing the position
      of the ostinato within the texture
      
- Creating a sense of textural and rhythmic intensification through the
      use of rhythmic acceleration and changes in textural density in different
      sections of the composition