A Study in Dissonance and Harmony
It was a cold Monday morning in March 1901 at the Conservatoire de l'Élysée, a prestigious conservatory of music for women cloistered high in the French Alps, far from the distractions of city life and isolated from the paths of men. It attracted the most talented young female musicians from all over Europe.
The head of the composition faculty, Nathalie Poitier, called all of her students to the main auditorium where the annual gala had taken place the previous Friday evening. It was an imposing room with the high, arched ceilings of a cathedral and ornate dark wooden walls embellished with complex carvings of scenes from the history of women in music from Hildegard of Bingen to Clara Schumann. At the center of the stage stood an Érard concert grand piano personally donated by the great Cecile Charminade.
Nora Carter, a promising new composition student, 20 years of age from Cardiff, Wales, had recently won the conservatory's famed composition competition. The rules of the contest were simple: the previous year's winner was ineligible to compete and was tasked with composing an eight-measure theme. The students received the theme early on a Monday morning in a sealed envelope and had 48 hours to write a piano sonata based on it. A jury of esteemed composers from outside the conservatory reviewed the anonymized scores and voted on a winner; the jury returned the scores and written feedback to Professor Poitier, who returned all the scores except the winner's to the students. The month after the competition, the winning score would be published in a widely distributed music magazine and performed at the conservatory gala the same day as the magazine hit the stands. That performance attracted critics from as far away as Paris, Berlin, and London; it could put a young composer on the map and start an international career.
Friday night's gala was the first time anyone other than the jury or the magazine publishers had heard or seen the winning composition. Everyone expected Professor Poitier to praise young Nora for her accomplishment, but the professor's demeanor was distinctly rigid and stoic. It seemed odd for the occasion.
She thanked everyone for joining her in the auditorium and called Nora to the front. Nora rose with an air of elated pride. She was from a poorer family than many of the conservatory's students and was there on a full scholarship. Relatively new to the serious study of composition, she had previously focused on violin performance, but her compositional talent was apparent. Still, everyone was surprised that she won until they heard the winning piece performed; its beauty captivated them all. Nora was having a moment.
Professor Poitier opened the recently published magazine to the winning score and placed it on the piano. She addressed Nora in a flat, emotionless tone. "Nora, this work that you submitted was complex and sophisticated; it was so polished, so mature, it is astounding that it was composed in 48 hours by someone as young as 20, especially by someone who only recently began transitioning her studies from performance to composition."
"Thank you Professor. That means so much."
"The closing theme. So clever. It's based on a retrograde of the assigned theme, yes?"
"Yes, Professor."
"Oh sorry, my mistake, it was an inversion, not a retrograde. Isn't that right?"
Nora looked confused for a moment but then nodded, "Yes of course."
"Nora, could you sing the closing theme for us? It's so beautiful."
She sang, but Professor Poitier looked back at her blankly. "Hmm, well, that's not quite what you wrote. Close, but not exactly." The esteemed Professor sat at the piano and played the closing theme of the winning composition at the piano. Everyone looked at each other confused.
The young composer's previously proud posture began to shrink. "I wrote it very quickly, Professor," she replied.
"Yes, much more quickly than you've written anything else since you've been here."
"Time pressures can have that effect, Professor."
"Of course. And this bass line under the closing theme when it's played a second time in the recapitulation, so chromatic." She played it on the piano. "The bass line is a transformation of the opening notes of the main theme. Fascinating counterpoint. How would you describe it?"
"It's, um, counterpoint, madam."
"Oh yes, of course it is. I just said that. What kind of counterpoint?"
"I'm... it's...very contrapuntal counterpoint, madam."
"Oh yes, it's a double canon at the third over an augmentation in inversion of the opening six notes recast as a basso ostinato, so 'very contrapuntal counterpoint indeed,' isn't it?"
"Yes, that's correct madam."
"You don't know the names of these very sophisticated techniques you used?"
"I suppose not, madam. I approached it very intuitively."
"Well, your gift for writing intuitively is why you're here. But I must say, technical sophistication of this caliber...doesn't often happen by accident."
"Madam, please forgive me if this is untoward, but may I ask what you're suggesting?"
"Nora, this work sounds an awful lot like another of my students, doesn't it?"
The professor played the closing theme again, accentuating the chromatic lines and subtle dissonance. Then she played a theme from a recent composition that Geneviève Laurent had previously published. Everyone in the room recognized the stylistic similarities.
Geneviève was the oldest student in the studio at 25, a daughter of nobility, and a graduate student with a solid international reputation already underway. She was the shining star of the composition studio, the Professor's lead assistant instructor, and the personal tutor to most of the younger composers in the studio, including Nora.
Geneviève was the previous year's competition winner and the creator of this year's opening theme. She was well known for her sophisticated mastery of linear chromaticism and counterpoint, far above the technical acumen of any other student. She had a personal, distinctive style, an inimitable sound, a unique artistic voice--an artistic voice that sounded like the closing theme from this year's winning sonata. There could be no doubt about what the Professor was insinuating.
"Geneviève's works inspire me, Professor. I can't deny the influence of her style," Nora stated in defeated tones, her voice beginning to crack.
"Oh yes, of course--no denying her brilliance is there?"
Geneviève's face turned pale and she looked straight ahead, her large brown eyes not making contact with anyone.
"Geneviève, dear, isn't this lovely?" The Professor played another excerpt from the winning composition. "Wouldn't you say this is one of your finer works?"
Eventually, Nora looked to Geneviève as if to seek guidance. Their eyes locked silently as everyone fixed their gaze upon them.
Nora opened her mouth and tried to speak, but nothing came out.
Geneviève subtly shook her head no.
Nora tried to speak again and could only muster "I, ... please, Professor, I, ... we..."
Geneviève interrupted her. "Nora wrote...." After a pause she continued, "most of it."
Nora initially gave Geneviève a look of disbelief, but Geneviève silently assured her with her eyes and a calming hand gesture that she was stepping up to assume full responsibility. She would never throw Nora to the wolves.
The professor glared at Geneviève in silence, unable to hide the satisfied expression of a chess master checkmating a worthy adversary.
"Most of it?" she asked.
"I helped.... I helped a great deal."
All eyes fell upon her.
"Dearest Geneviève, you won this competition last year, so you were familiar with the rules, were you not?"
"Yes, Professor."
"And was it your understanding that the rules allowed for outside help?"
"No, Professor."