Baroque Music (1600
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1600-1750
Baroque
Scientific Discovery
Galileo
Newton
Giant Composers
J. S. Bach
Handel
Baroque: Three Periods
early:
opera
homophonic texture
middle:
instrumental music
late:
polyphony
Characteristics of Baroque Music
Unity of Mood: a piece usually expresses
one mood
Rhythm:
patterns are repeated through out
the beat is emphasized
Melody: repeated
Baroque Dynamics
Terraced Dynamics:
alternation between loud and soft dynamics
organ and harpsichord could not crescendo
Basso Continuo
Common type of accompaniment
Bass line with improvised chords
cello or bassoon on bass
harpsichord or organ on harmony
Basso continuo
The Baroque Orchestra
small (10 to 40 players)
basso continuo and violin family strings
brass, woodwinds and percussion used
occasionally
tone color was subordinate to the melody,
rhythm or harmony
The Baroque Orchestra
Baroque Forms
movements: a piece that sounds fairly
complete and independent but is part of a
larger composition.
Music in Baroque Society
Music written to order: demand for new
music.
Main source of diversion in the courts of the
aristocracy.
Music Director’s job
Pay and prestige were high
compositions were performed
Still a servant of the patron
Music in Baroque Society
Church musicians
earned less than the court and lower status
supplemented with weddings and funerals
Town musicians
Opera houses
The Elements of Opera
opera: a drama in which some or all of the
lines are sung to an orchestral accompaniment
libretto: the text of the opera
librettist: the one who writes the libretto
overture or prelude: the orchestral
introduction to an opera
Opera Singing Styles
aria: a song for solo voice with orchestral
accompaniment
recitative: a vocal line that imitates speech,
accompanied by basso continuo
ensembles: compositions for two or more
singers
Opera Origins
Florentine Camerata
Attempt to recreate the Greek tragedy
singing followed the rhythm and pitch
fluctuations of speech
○ homophonic: soloist and simple chordal
accompaniment (basso continuo)
○ polyphony rejected because it would obscure the
text
Early operas:
based on the Greek myth
Euridice by Jacopo Peri, the earliest opera
that has been preserved.
Orfeo by Claudo Monteverdi, the first great
opera
Early operas:
Written for nobility:
1637 first public opera house in Venice (San
Cassiano)
Use of castrato
male hero
women's roles only in church-dominated areas
Claudio Monteverdi
b. Cremona, Italy
Court of Mantua, singer, violinist, director
Composer at St. Mark's Cathedral in Venice
The Baroque Sonata
a composition in several movements for one
to eight instruments (during the early
baroque)
any instrumental soloist with basso continuo
trio sonata
two melodic instruments
basso continuo
Antonio Vivaldi
The Red Priest
Antonio Vivaldi - Life
son of violinist at St. Mark's in Venice
priest - "The Red Priest”
Violin teacher, composer, conductor at girl's
orphanage
forgotten after his death
best known for his 450+ concerti and
concerti grossi
The Concerto and Concerto Grosso
Concerto: piece for instrumental soloist,
string orchestra, and basso continuo
Concerto Grosso: piece for instrumental
soloists, string orchestra, and basso
continuo
The Concerto Grosso: Performers
Soloists
between two and four
best paid, better players
tutti
String orchestra
basso continuo
harpsichord
cello
The Concerto Ritornello form
Three Movements
1. fast: ritornello form: based on
alternation of tutti and solo sections
2. Slow
3. fast & ritornello form
The Four Seasons
Four concerti for violin and orchestra
Summer
Fall
Winter
Spring
Listening: "La Primavera",
(Spring) Movement one.
Spring has arrived, and full of joy
The birds greet it with their happy song.
The streams, swept by gentle breezes,
Flow along with a sweet murmur.
Covering the sky with a black cloak,
Thunder and lightning come to announce the
season.
When all is quiet again, the little birds
Return to their lovely song.
Spring Concerto
Three movements
fast, in ritornello form
slow
fast
Johann Sebastian Bach
Johann Sebastian Bach (16851750)
b. in Eisenach, Germany
long line of musicians
four sons became musicians
Arnstadt: Church organist
Muhlhausen: Church organist
Weimar: Court organist/conductor
Cöthen: Court organist/conductor
The Fugue: terminology
a polyphonic composition based on one
theme called a subject
written for three, four or five voices
labeled SATB whether sung or played
the different voices imitate the subject
Subject: the melody or theme of a fugue
theme: a short melody used to build a
larger composition
The Fugue: terminology
the answer is the subject in the dominant
countersubject:
a different melodic idea
which always appears with the subject
episode: transitional section
stretto: close imitation.
pedal point: a single held-out tone, usually
in the bass
Bach in Leipzig - duties
Cantor at St. Thomas Church
music at four municipal churches
rehearsed, conducted, and composed and
extended work for each Sunday
Music education of 55 students at St.
Thomas School
Oversaw stadtpfeiffers (Musicians’ Guild)
Bach in Leipzig - duties
director of Leipzig Collegium Musicum
student organization
weekly concerts at a coffeehouse
Organ performer and technician
greatest organist and composer of organ fugues
known for improvisation: music created at the
same time as it is performed
Bach
Deeply religious (Lutheran)
20 children by two wives
Blind from cataracs
Today is Buried in St. Thomas Church
Forgotten at his death
Mendelssohn, 1829, St. Matthew Passion
Bach - Church Cantatas
most of his vocal music if sacred
No difference between sacred and secular
forms
used operatic forms such as aria and
recitative in sacred cantatas
Italian Concerto
French Suite
All genres except opera
The Chorale and Church Cantata
chorale: hymn tune sung to a religious text
chorale prelude: a short composition played
by the organist and based on a hymn tune
cantata: for chorus, vocal soloists, organ
and small orchestra
Cantata
written for chorus, vocal soloists, organ and
small orchestra.
text from the Bible or familiar hymns
used to reinforce the sermon
half-hour
included choruses, recitatives, arias, and duets.
(all are also found in opera)
Bach composed about 295 cantatas
Cantata No. 140: Mvt. 4, the
tenor chorale
uses ritornello form
contrast of string ritornello and slow chorale
melody
Bach - St. Thomas Church
George Friderick Handel
George Frideric Handel
b. Halle, Germany (one month before Bach)
Hamburg: opera
Italy
Elector Georg Ludwig of Hanover
Handel in London
favorite of Queen Anne
Royal Academy of Music - Italian Operas
English Oratorios after failure of Italian
Opera
Blind - from cataracs
Buried in Westminster Abbey
Handel - Music
Instrumental
suites
organ concerti
concerti grossi
Vocal Music
39 Italian operas
Oratorios (mostly in English)
The Oratorio
a
large-scale composition for chorus,
vocal soloists, and orchestra
uses choruses, arias, duets, recitatives, and
orchestral interludes
chorus acts as commentary
last approximately 2 hours
The Oratorio
set to a narrative text
no acting or scenery
most are biblical
originally performed in prayer halls called
oratorios
Handel - Oratorios
generally Old Testament
for the paying public, not church
have plots, but no scenery or acting
chorus is the focus
Messiah - Three Acts
Christmas
"Ev'ry Valley Shall Be Exalted"
○ aria for tenor
○ use of word painting
“For unto Us a Child Is Born”
○ Rondo form
○ borrowed from an Italian duet "No, I will not trust you, blind love,
cruel Beauty! You are too treacherous, too charming a deity!”
○ little difference between sacred and secular styles
○ no copyright laws
Easter
Hallelujah Chorus
Homophony
Monophony
Polyphony
Chorale
Fugue
Pedal
Pentecost
“I know my Redeemer liveth”
over 50 selections
Handel - Perennially popular
Westminster