Transcript classic

Music of the Classical Period
(1750-1820)
“Classical” Defined
A “classic” is any supreme accomplishment of lasting
appeal (for example a movie classic or classic rock
song)
 “classical” music (lowercase “c”) usually refers to any
music that is NOT rock , jazz, folk, or popular
 “Classical” music (uppercase “C”) refers to music
written between 1750-1820, which exhibits some of the
artistic ideas found in “Neoclassic” visual art and
architecture

– In visual art and architecture, “Classical” Art refers to Greek
and Roman antiquity
Classicial Historical Highlights
Age of Enlightenment; using reason to solve
social problems
 Age of violent upheavals - French & American
Revolutions, Napoleonic Wars
 Political power shifts from noble courts and
church to the newly empowered middle class

– Composers move from high-class servants to free-lance, selfemployed artists
Classical Artistic Highlights

New emphasis on balance and clarity of
structure
– Neoclassic Architecture and Painting
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firm lines & clear structure
balance & symmetry
moralistic subject matter
Greek & Roman references
Arts meant to please and entertain rather than
instruct: new emphasis on naturalness &
pleasing variety
– Rococo artists: Watteau; Fragonard
Upper Belvedere, Vienna 1721-22
Temple of Love at Versailles, 1775
David,
Mars
disarmed
by Venus,
1824
Fragonard
–The
Reader
Classical Music Genres

Vocal Music Genres
– Opera

Instrumental Music
Genres
– Orchestral Music
• Symphony
• Concerto
– Chamber Music
• String Quartet
• Serenade
Classical Musical Highlights
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New emphasis on pleasing variety
– Highly flexible rhythms (i.e. all different lengths of short and long notes)
– More difference between musical ideas within a single movement or
piece
– Introduction of crescendo and diminuendo into varied dynamic changes
New emphasis on naturalness
– Demand for simplicity and clarity in melody and harmony
– Use of secular pop/folk “tunes” in art music
– More melody & accompaniment (homophonic) textures
– New emphasis on morality, common people, and everyday life in OPERA
Example:
– W.A. Mozart’s Act 1, Scene 1 from Don Giovanni
Opera
Sung theatrical work
 Staged with costumes and sets
 Example: WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART Act 1,

excerpt from Opening Scene from Don Giovanni
Classical Music Style Characteristics
Timbre
End of basso continuo; evolution of standard orchestra with all four “choirs”;
strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion; transition from harpsichord to piano
Rhythm
Emphasis on flexibiliy and naturalness; unexpected pauses; syncopations;
frequent changes from long to short note patterns
Melody
Tuneful, easy to remember; folk-like, often “borrowed”; balanced and
symmetrical phrase lengths; tend to be rounded
Form
New emphasis on symmetrical structures and clear formal designs; new
emphasis on rounding; new emphasis on multi-movement instrumental
works; widespread use of Sonata form
Dynamics
Widespread use of gradual dynamic changes (I.e.crescendos &
diminuendos); transition from harpsichord to piano
Texture
Basically HOMOPHONIC MELODY & ACCOMPANIMENT but flexible;
sudden appearances of small bits of imitative polyphony
Harmony
Less dense; simpler and more stretched out harmonic progressions; gradual
abandonment of basso continuo
Mood
Emphasis on variety and contrast
Karlskirche, Vienna 1716-33
Petite Trianon at Versailles, 1726-68
Wolfgang
Amadeus
Mozart
Ludwig
Van
Beethoven