Definition. A short, recognizable musical figure — smaller than a theme, often the building block from which themes are constructed.
A motif (or motive) is a short, recognizable musical figure — typically just a few notes long — that serves as the building block of larger musical structures. Themes are often built from motifs; entire movements can be developed from a single motif and its transformations.
The most famous example is the four-note opening of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony — short-short-short-LONG. This tiny motif (often described as ‘fate knocking at the door’) is woven through the entire symphony, appearing in countless transformations: rhythmic, melodic, harmonic, textural. The work is essentially an extended exploration of this single motif.
Motivic composition — building large structures from small motifs and their development — is a hallmark of Beethoven, Brahms, and especially Wagner (whose leitmotifs in the Ring cycle are essentially extended motifs representing characters and ideas). The technique gives music structural unity at the deepest level.
French/Italian, ‘motive’, from Latin motivus (‘of motion’).
Recognize motifs and play them consistently. When the same motif returns in different guises, the listener should hear the connection. Articulation, rhythm, and shape should make the motif recognizable across transformations.
A short, recognizable musical figure — smaller than a theme, often the building block from which themes are constructed.
French/Italian, ‘motive’, from Latin motivus (‘of motion’).
Recognize motifs and play them consistently. When the same motif returns in different guises, the listener should hear the connection. Articulation, rhythm, and shape should make the motif recognizable across transformations.
Motif is commonly abbreviated as motive.
Related terms include: Theme, Phrase, Development.
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