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  • Sweeney Todd is a musical written by Stephen Sondheim in 1979.

  • Warning: Spoilers!

  • It tells the story of Benjamin Barker (Aka Sweeney Todd) returning to London to find his wife dead and his daughter locked up by Judge Turpin.

  • Seeking revenge with the help of Mrs. Lovett, Sweeney opens a barber shop to kill his customers, who are then baked into pies. Yum.

  • After playing on broadway for over a year and then the West end for half a year, it has sparked many important revivals, productions, and of course a movie.

  • It is regarded as Stephen Sondheim's best musical or even the best musical ever written.

  • In addition to being extremely entertaining, beautiful, thrilling, and witty; I believe it is one of the most compositionally complex musicals ever written.

  • In this video and in the next few, I will discuss a few of the techniques Sondheim uses to tell the story. In fact in this video, we'll literally just look at the first 6 measures of the musical.

  • First off, lets define two music terms: motif and leitmotif.

  • A motif is a recurring theme or idea that is symbolic to the story.

  • Literature uses this a lot, like how incest keeps recurring in Hamlet. Movies uses motifs too, like the spinning top in Inception.

  • And of course in music, motifs are prevalent.

  • A leitmotif is a musical theme that associates with a specific person, place, object, or idea (and etc).

  • This term was created by opera composer Richard Wagner in the 19th century.

  • . To help distinguish things in his sometimes 5-hour long operas, he would introduce these leitmotifs.

  • Check out a short video in the description box below introducing leitmotifs and showing examples.

  • These leitmotifs might not only be represented in the melody, it might be associated with the rhythm, the color, or even the instrument playing it.

  • Another Sondheim musical, Into the Woods, utilizes leitmotifs extensively.

  • The most important and most prevalent motif that Sondheim uses is a melody called 'Dies Irae'.

  • CBC has a great short video that is worth checking out;

  • the link is in the description box below. Basically it is a medieval hymn that is associated with death.

  • It is literally the song of death. It goes like this:

  • You've heard this theme before, because it is so prevalent in music and movies today.

  • . Just watch the clip please. We're only going to be focusing on the first phrase of the Dies Irae:

  • Sondheim basically uses this motif or the structure of this motif in almost every song.

  • The very first song reflects this very well.

  • Right off the bat, when the voice comes in there's no mistaking the dies irae melody. Have a listen:

  • Now have a listen of the dies irae again:

  • now listen to Sweeney again:

  • I mean, get rid of the first note, and change the second note up two pitches, and we have an identical replica:

  • Now lets really have a closer look at the Dies Irae in regards to pitch relationships.

  • We first start with a half step down (aka a minor second),

  • then it goes back up. we then jump three half steps (aka a minor third).then we go 2 half steps (aka a whole step, aka a major second) back up.

  • . Then 4 half steps down (aka a major third), then finally going back up 2 half steps to end the melody

  • It is worth noting that we've gone through every leap between one and four halfsteps, and we never made a leap larger than a third.

  • lets have a closer look at the beginning of the ballad. I bet you missed something!

  • The first three notes. These three notes quote the beginning of the dies irae.

  • One half step up, then one half step back down. However, this upside-down from what the dies-irae is,

  • which is instead goes down then up. This is what is known as an inversion.

  • Although it is a small inversion, you'll see the significance it has throughout the entire musical. Hold it, I'm not done!

  • The bass is playing this F# down here:

  • if I bring the F# up an octave, you can hear the dies irae's first four notes:

  • This is called octave displacement. This is when a note stays the same but moves across the range to a different octave.

  • So we've got the strings and clarinets playing the first dies irae motif:

  • But that's not the only thing that happens. Because we also have a counter-motif (played by the horn, harp, and cello):

  • Here's that by itself:

  • We have these three notes. And once again, if we move the bottom note, D, up an octave, we get this.

  • Another inversion! Instead of the dies irae's down one, up one, and down three; with these pitches we can do an up one, down one, and up three.

  • This is another hidden dies-irae that Sondheim had already hidden in the first dies irae.

  • Put the melody on top of that and we have three dies irae motifs simultaneously. That's just amazing.

  • That's all for this video. In the next videos, I promise, we will go way further into the musical and look at more than just a couple measures.

Sweeney Todd is a musical written by Stephen Sondheim in 1979.

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