Baroque Music (1600 – 1750)
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Transcript Baroque Music (1600 – 1750)
IGCSE Year 10
October 13th, 2009
Aristocracy was rich and powerful during the
17th century
The word baroque = bizarre, elaborately
ornamented
Filling up space with action and movement
◦ Contrasting light and dark
Three phases
◦ Early (1600-1640)
Italian composers created opera
Homophonic texture emphasized and unstable chords
◦ Middle (1640-1880)
Modes gave way to major and minor scales
New importance of instrumental music
◦ Late (1680-1750) **
Return to Polyphonic texture
Dominant to tonic chords
Instrumental music = as important as vocal
MOOD
RHYTHM
MELODY
DYNAMICS
◦ One piece = One mood usually
◦ Exception in vocal music – changes in emotions correspond to changes in
musical changes (but usually not suddenly)
◦ Continuity in rhythm
◦ Emphasis on the beat
◦ Also feeling on continuity (reoccurring)
◦ Elaborate and ornamental = not balanced
◦ Continuity – if shifts occur, usually sudden = TERRACED DYNAMICS
◦ Use of ORGAN or HARPSICHORD – no finger pressure control
◦ Clavichord = slight changes allowed = for amateur usage
TEXTURE
◦ Polyphonic
◦ Repetition of the melody in different voices
◦ Not all were polyphonic
CHORDS AND BASSO CONTINUO
◦ Chords – became more significant
◦ Sometimes composed melody to fit a chord progression
◦ BASSO CONTINUO and FIGURED BASS
WORDS and MUSIC
◦ Sometimes many notes for one syllable of text
Instruments in the violin family
10-40 players
Based on the basso continuo – harp and cello,
bass, or bassoon
Violins and violas
Woodwinds, percussion, brass were added only
some of the time – ie. when music was festive
Melody, rhythm and harmony was stressed
Movements that contrast
Movement = complete and independent, but
part of a larger work
ABA, AB, Undivided form = ALL COMMON
Contrasting sounds
Music written to order (mainly from churches
and courts, and opera companies)
Good pay and prestige of the music director
Job is at the call of the patron
Some had good relationships with their
patrons
◦ Ie. Corelli
Church also need music – organ or choir, or orchestra
Church music contributed to the prestige of the city
Music played in public, for taverns etc.
Usually musician jobs = handed down from father to
son
Women were not usually employed performers, but
many became musicians (ie. Caccini, Strozzi)
To become a musician = pass exam, or do other
non-musical requirements
Small group pitted against larger group
(Tutti)
2-4 soloists
8-20 in Tutti
◦ String instruments, harpsichord as part of basso
continuo
Usually in 3 movements (fast, slow, fast)
Usually the form of the first and last movement of concerto
grosso
Alternating between tutti and solo
TUTTI with a theme (ritornello)
Theme returns in different keys in fragments
End of the piece = ritornello in home key
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TR (home key)
Solo
TR (fragment)
Solo
TR(fragment)
Solo
TR(home key)
History of the Concerto:
Listening Notes:
The fugue: polyphonic composition on one
main theme: SUBJECT
Different melody lines (voices) imitate the
subject
TOP LINE – soprano voice, bottom is base
4-5 voices, but usually starts in single voice
Sometimes counter subject
Episodes with new material
Some are introduced by a prelude
Key Terms:
◦ Stretto
◦ Pedal Point
◦ Inversion
◦ Retrograde
◦ Diminution
Notes
Instrumental music grew in importance
Sonata = several movements for 1-8
instruments
TRIO sonatas: 2 high instruments, 2 for basso
Sonata da cheisa vs. Sonata da camera
Notes:
Late Italian Baroque – born in Venice
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Violin teacher, composer, conductor
Composed SOLO CONCERTOS – single soloist
and orchestra
Notes:
Known as the town musicians
Church organist, court organist, then
concertmaster
First wife died, leaving 3children – remarried
Cantor in Leipzig, he was a religious man
No opera, his vocal music – usually hymns
Polyphonic texture and rich harmony
Several melodic lines at once – chord
progression
Single idea per piece – twisting the inner
voices etc
Notes:
Same key but different tempo, meter, or
character
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Allemande
Couratne
Gavotte
Sarabande
Gigue
AABB
Balance and symmetry
Notes:
Opera
Chorale/Cantatas
Oratorios
Fusion of music, acting, poetry, dance, scenery, constumes
Began 1600
Orchestra and actors with conductor
LIBRETTO – text
Parts:
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Coloratura soprano
Lyric soprano
Dramatic soprano
Lyric tenor
Dramatic teno
Basso buffo
Basso profondo
ARIA
RECITATIVE
ENSEMBLE
CHORUS
PROMPTER
OVERTURE/PRELUDE
Camerata – ancient Greek tragedy
They rejected polyphony
Euridice by Peri earliest opera preserved
Orfeo by Monteverdi
1st opera house in Venice – 1637
Castrato
Late baroque – secco recitative/accompanied
recitatives
ABA da capo Arias
Early Baroque era
Wrote Orfeo
Music directer in Venice
Bridging the 16th and 17th century
Wanted emotional intensity in music
Used dissonances, tremolo and pizzicatos
Notes:
London, choirboy, then composer then
organist
English composer, wrote with all music forms
Wrote Dido and Aeneas
Homophonic textures and polyphony
Used GROUND BASS – repeated bass pattern
Libretto by Nahum Tate – inspired by Aeneid
by Virgil
Dido – Queen and Aeneas – king of Trojans
Aeneas lands in Carthage and falls for Dido
False messenger tells Aeneas to leave – Dido
suicides
Notes:
Music used often in churches – 4 hour services!
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Chorale: hymn tunes sung to German texts
- Usually one note to a syllable
- New music was often based on traditional melodies
- CHORALE PRELUDES before the hymn
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Cantata
- Piece that was sung
- usually for chorus, vocal soloists, organ and
orchestra
- Resembled the opera at the time
Notes:
Large scale for chorus, solo and orchestra
- No acting,based on biblical stories
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Choruses and arias, duets and recitatives
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Longer than cantatas and have story line
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Ie. Messiah
Italian opera and English oratorio
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Studied law in university
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Music director at for Hanover
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Wrote Rinaldo (opera)- success
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Favorite of Queen Anne
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Scapegoat of political struggles
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1741: Messiah
Late Baroque- just like Bach
His works are nearly always serious, based on
Roman and Greek history
English oratorios – stories from Old Testament
But not for the church, just for entertainment
The chorus was his focus!
Changes texture frequently
Sharp changes in mood – major and minor
Notes:
Notes Continued: