Transcript document
The Renaissance
Instruments
String Instruments
The
th
Lute—Pre-16
Century
Plucked
(Other related instruments: vihuela, guitar,
cittern, bandore, orpharion mandora and
mandolin)
Lute
Lute
The Viol Family—Late 15th Century
Included different sizes, requiring different
methods of performing
Viola da braccio (“Viol of the Arm”)
Viola da gamba (“Viol of the leg”)
Have fretted fingerboards and six strings
Viol
The Violin Family—Middle 16th Century
Slower to develop than viol
Still Different Sizes
No Frets
4 strings
Viol
Violin
Wind Instruments
Woodwind
The Recorder-Late
th
14
Century
Pitched in ranges similar to human voice
(soprano, alto, tenor and bass)—(by the
end of 15th century)
Original instruments in one piece
(currently several)
Holes covered (or uncovered) to change
pitches
Recorder
The Chalumeau-Early Clarinet (hence
the name of the lower clarinet
register)
Recorder with a reed
Late 16th Century
The
th
Shawm—14
Century
Double-Reed
Early Oboe
Like Recorder had a holed-system
Pitched in ranges similar to human voice
Shawm
The Crumhorn (Krumhorn)-Capped (Covered) Double-Reed
Early Bassoonish instrument
Like Recorder had a holed-system
Pitched in ranges similar to human voice
Crumhorn
The Curtal-
Double-Reed
Most closely related to the bassoon
Like Recorder had a holed-system
Made by folding shawm in half
Has bores (tubing) inside the casing that we see
Pitched in ranges similar to human voice
Racket is related instrument (tightly-sound
cylindrical bores inside casing)
Curtal
p.138
Racket
The Bagpipes and Bladder Pipes
Well, they did all the other stuff that has
been mentioned and held the air with a
bag or bladder.
Bladder Pipe
Bagpipe
Wind Instruments
Brass
Brass Instruments
Most were limited to a single key
Changed by slurring between registers
(within harmonic series)
The Trumpet
Slide or Straight
The Sackbut
Predecessor to the Trombone
Used a slide
Sackbut
The Serpent Horn
Large Curved Brass Instrument in the
shape of, um…a serpent!
Changed notes with holes
Predecessor of the Tuba
Curtel
Serpent
Percussion Instruments
Not a whole lot has changed
They were still struck
The Long Drum
Tambourine
The Long Drum and the Short Drum?
Keyboard Instruments
The Organ
Featured multiple registers (several sets of
pipes)
Smaller organs required the performer to
operate the bellows with one hand while
playing with the other
Larger organs allowed a second person to
operate the bellows, allowing the
performer to use both hands
Portative-Table top Organ
Claviorganum, 1598
Made by Laurentium Hauslaib
Nuremberg, Germany
Regal, 1575
Two-Person Organ
(Pipes not shown)
The Harpsichord—
Late 14th Century
Played as a either a solo or accompanying
instrument
Different stops or pulls allowed the player
to access different octaves on the same
keys AND to play different dynamics
(Keys were reversed—white vs. black)
Harpsichord
The Clavichord—
Early 15th Century
Small solo or home practice instrument
Strings hit with hammer (inside)
Allowed change in dynamics with finger
pressure
Clavichord (Germany, 1710)
The Renaissance
Instrumental and Dance Music
Instrumental Music
4
Types:
– Intabulations
– Variations
– Freely Composed/Abstract Works
– Dance Music
Intabulations
Arrangement of a vocal work for plucked
string instruments or keyboard
Often times from a chanson (or related
work)
Included lute, guitar, vihuela, cittern,
pandora, harpsichord
First publication devoted entirely to
keyboard music Frottole intabulate da
sonare organi, was published in Rome in
1517 by Andrea Antico
Variations
Theme and Variation
Theme is presented…and then it is varied
(with ornamentation and embellishment).
Often times motive statement and
restatement techniques are used.
♫3:10 (Cabezon, 1510-1566, Harpsichord)
Freely Composed/Abstract
No established form
Important genres:
– Ricercar
– Fantasia
– Tocatta
Freely Composed/Abstract
♫Bonus:5 (Spinacino, 1507, Lute)
Ricercar-Italian, “To research, to seek out”
– “Seeks out” more or thematic idea
– Runs and passagework
– Dramatic pause
– Rubato feel (freely, varying tempo)
♫3:10 (Gabrieli, 1589, cornets and sackbuts)
LATER:
– Mainly pervading imitation and very similar to
style and form of motets
Freely Composed/Abstract
Toaccata-Italian toccare, “to touch”
Lightly touching piano keys (moving passages)
Freely constructed and unrelated to any
preexistent material
Fantasia-Fantasy on composers imagination
Similar to toccata
Implores the use of most techniques described
thus far (pervading imitation, theme and
variation, motive restatements, etc.)
Dance Music
♫3:11-12 (Praetorius, 1612, Various)
Provided as dance music
Several types, distinguishable:
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Pavane: slow, courtly dance (two)
Passamezzo: Like pavane, but lighter step
Bourree: Lively (two)
Salterello: Lively (usually follows slower dance)
Galliarde: More Lively than salterello…requires leaps from
dancers
Volta: vigorous, turning dance (Italian voltare “to turn”)
Branle: Line dance
Moresca: Dance influenced by “Moorish” styles (Northern
Africa and Spain)
Rondo: Round Dance large group in a circle—lively tempo