@inbook{e3b0b675660340aebe7968f3343217bc,
title = "The Tonal Game",
abstract = "The Tonal Game (Sect. 15.1) is a fallback strategy by which a transmitted score is processed as a major or minor key. The strategy consists of three main defaults, the order of which is motivated by the Economical Principle: a tonality (first major, then minor)—the only context-free default; a robust key; and finally, a key. Chopin{\textquoteright}s Mazurka, Op. 24/2, offers highly instructive examples of the Tonal Game at work, including a contextually motivated overruling of the very first default, a major tonality. Finally, Sect. 15.2 studies a possible connection between the extraordinary tonal richness of Chopin{\textquoteright}s Mazurka and the emergence early in the nineteenth century of “Tonality” as a notion of both synchronic and diachronic content, most notably in the work of Fran{\c c}ois-Joseph F{\'e}tis.",
keywords = "Contextual Input, Economical Principle, Modulative Path, Tonal Language, Tonal System",
author = "Eytan Agmon",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2013, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-642-39587-1_15",
language = "الإنجليزيّة",
series = "Computational Music Science",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
pages = "251--264",
booktitle = "Computational Music Science",
address = "الولايات المتّحدة",
}