It may be one of music’s fundamental properties, but the art of penning a memorable melody has long proved a notoriously elusive one. Stephen Johnson reveals the story – and the secrets – behind the humble tune

By Stephen Johnson

Published: Thursday, 23 February 2023 at 12:00 am


For Haydn it was ‘the melody’ that was ‘the charm of music, and that which is most difficult to produce’. For Mozart, melody was ‘the very essence of music. When I think of a good melodist I think of a fine race-horse. A contrapuntist is only a post-horse.’

As he edged closer to atonal serialism, Stravinsky insisted that ‘what survives every change of system is melody.’ More poignantly, arch-modernist Schoenberg confessed that ‘there is nothing I long for more intensely than to be taken for a better kind of Tchaikovsky. People should know my tunes and whistle them.’

What is a melody?

Almost certainly, readers will have firm feelings as to what constitutes ‘melodious’ and ‘unmelodious’ music, and indeed what a good melody or ‘tune’ sounds like – and it’s safe to say that in most cases it’s likely to be closer to Tchaikovsky than Schoenberg. But if I were to ask you to define ‘Melody’, or to say what constitutes a ‘good’ melody… It seems this is another of those cases where we know what it is when we hear it, but saying exactly what it is we’ve just heard is another matter. 

Let’s pause for a moment, however. One thing may have already struck readers raised in non-Western cultures: all those composers quoted above clearly see ‘melody’ (or, in Schoenberg’s case, ‘tune’) as a distinct element within the larger framework of ‘music’.

In fact, such a distinction does seem to be a relatively local phenomenon – in time as well as place. Go back to the literature of Ancient Greece, routinely described as ‘the cradle of Western civilisation’, and the root words ‘melodia’ and ‘melos’ are normally used to signify ‘singing’ and ‘song’, in ways that often suggest they are interchangeable with what we would now call ‘music’ in general.

So if the iTunes use of the word ‘song’ to describe any kind of musical work – from Schubert’s The Trout to a whole act of Wagner’s Parsifal – rouses you to fury, you could try comforting yourself with the thought that, consciously or not, iTunes is merely restoring the term to classical usage.

Thirty years ago, I remember being captivated by the singing of a young Turkish muezzin, his languorous chant phrases drifting out over the sea from the mosque in what was then a tiny fishing village. Lovely as it was, one felt that it could have stopped or started at the beginning or end of any its phrases – the length of which were probably determined as much by the singer’s lung capacity as by any purer aesthetic considerations. No criticism intended: that very timelessness was essential to the mesmerising beauty of it all. 

When did melodies first start appearing?

Something similar can be sensed in the earliest recorded music of Western Europe, Roman Catholic plainchant, where rhythm, phrase length and tonal rise-and-fall typically follow natural speech patterns of the sung text. But in some cases, something closer to what most of us would call ‘a melody’ is starting to emerge.