Transcript Slide 1
MUSIC APPRECIATION
CLASS #2
The Baroque, part 1
CD #1, tracks 5-8
DEFINITION
1600-1750
Extravagant, complex, or bizarre, especially in
ornamentation
DEFINITION, CONTINUED
“Spacious, dynamic,
brilliant, colorful, theatrical,
passionate, sensual, ecstatic,
opulent, extravagant,
versatile and virtuoso.”
CULTURE
Turbulent change in politics, science, arts
Religious wars
Exploration of the New World
Rise of middle-class culture
Music making centered in the home,
church, and universities
Collegium musicum
400 500 600 700 800 90010001100 1200 1300 14001500 16001700 180 1900
0
WHAT IS THE “BAROQUE*” AESTHETIC?
Intense;
Complex;
Dense;
Opulent;
Extravagant.
THE SISTINE CHAPEL (MICHELANGELO)
ST. PETER’S
ADORATION BY SIR PETER PAUL RUBEN
MAIN MUSICAL IDEAS FROM BAROQUE:
Contrapuntal*
Grandeur
Complexity
Virtuosity*
IMPROVISATION*
Improvisation*
First musical “stars”
Intense competition.
William Goldstein master class
BAROQUE MUSICAL RHYTHM
Baroque rhythm*
Specific
Unrelenting
Dance
Formal Royal Court occasions
THE RISE OF THE VIRTUOSO* MUSICIAN
Technical improvements in instrument making
Composers challenging the performers
THE DOCTRINE OF THE AFFECTIONS*
One mood, or affection, per movement or piece
WOMEN IN BAROQUE MUSIC
More professional women were
singers & instrumentalists
Francesca Caccini
Barbara Strozzi
Faustina Bordoni
Francesca Cuzzoni
Elisabeth-Claude Jacquet de la Guerre
CONCERTO* & RITORNELLO*
Definition
Concerto*: to fight, to argue; a contest
Ritornello*: to return over and again
THE BAROQUE DANCE SUITE*
Suite: each movement is A-A-B-B
Allemande
Courante
Sarabande
Gigue (jig)
OTHER OPTIONAL DANCES
Minuet
Gavotte
Bourrée
Passepied
CONTRAPUNTAL DEVICES
Augmentation: longer time values
Diminution: shorter time values
Retrograde: backwards (starting from the last and going to the
first)
Inversion: turning the melodic intervals upside down
Retrograde inversion: original melody is played upside
down and backwards
CD #1, TRACK 5
Johann Pachelbel: “Canon & Gigue”
JOHANN PACHELBEL*
1653-1706
Composer
Teacher
Organist
DEFINITIONS
Canon*
Contrapuntal*
“Leader” melody*
“Follower” imitation*
Gigue*
Movement of a dance suite*
BASS LINE (28 REPEATS!)
“VOICES”
LISTEN FOR…
Repeating bass line*
“Leader” voice*
“Follower” voice*
Entrances of new voices
Harpsichord* accompaniment
CD #1, TRACK 6
Arcangelo Corelli: “Christmas Concerto”
Vivace -- Grave
ARCANGELO CORELLI
1653-1713
Crucial influence on violin music & technique
Accepted in aristocratic society
Extreme wealth
DEFINITIONS
Vivace*
Grave*
Lively, energetic
Slow, mournful
Concerto da chiesa*
3-part composition for the church
LISTEN FOR…
Significant tempo* changes
Dynamic* changes
Crescendo*
Decrescendo*
Contrapuntal* writing
Harpsichord* accompaniment
CD #1, TRACK 7
François Couperin: Premier Concert, “Prélude”
FRANÇOIS COUPERIN
1668-1733
Couperin le Grand
Famous musical family
Organiste du Roi
Ordinaire de la musique
de la chambre du Roi
DEFINITIONS
Prélude*
An introductory piece, able to be performed out of
context.
French Baroque*
Identified by unusually specific rhythm* and a
decorated melodic line.
LISTEN FOR…
Trill*
Mordent*
Contrapuntal* and melodic writing
Consistent rhythm*
CD #1, TRACK 8
Antonio Vivaldi: “The Four Seasons”
Spring Allegro
ANTONIO VIVALDI*
1678 (Venice) – 1741 (Vienna)
Father/Son violinists
Innovative composer
Form (Sonata* or
“Sonata Allegro”*)
Woodwind*
Virtuoso* violin technique
VIRTUOSO!*
"Vivaldi
played a solo – so splendid! -to which he appended a cadenza*
which really frightened me, for such
playing has never been nor can be: he
brought his fingers up to only a
straw's distance from the bridge,
leaving no room for the bow-- and
that on all four strings with
imitations and incredible speed."
VENICE
City/state
Social and cultural capital of Italy
Tourism
Festivals required music
Christmas
Carnival
VIVALDI THE TRAVELER...
Work as performer
Amassed great wealth
poorly invested
International success
Paris, Amsterdam^, Vienna, Rome and Dresden
1ST PROFESSIONAL* MUSICIAN
Appointment (Patronage*)
Church and/or state
Music Publishing
Dedications*
VIVALDI THE PRIEST...
“The Red Priest”
Asthma?
Weekly musical opportunities
THE OSPEDELE DELLA PIETA*
“Hospital of Pity (Compassion)”
...as it looked then...
AND TODAY...
THEATER....
JOB DUTIES
Teacher
Violin, viola, flute, oboe, harpsichord and voice
Composer
Two concerti* every month for public performances
PERFORMANCES
Most famous & admired orchestra in all of Venice!
Highly competitive market
Popularity, fame and fortune
Large, heavy curtains.
Why?
WHO ARE THE GIRLS?
Orphans?
Illegitimate?
Physically challenged?
DEPARTURE...
Why?
Popularity
Travel
Duties included Mass
Love?
VIVALDI THE LOVER...
Anna Giro
30+ years difference
Accomplished singer
Scandal!
VIVALDI’S MUSIC
Prolific
500 concerti*, 40 cantatas*, 52+ operas*, 60+ sacred
works
Where is all the rest?
Who claims ownership?
VIVALDI AND OPERA*
Six opera houses in Venice
Intense competition
Diversion from sacred* music
Profit
Ownership
Fame
Social aspect
INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC
Attention to individual, unique timbre* of each
instrument
Unusual and new instruments
SONATA* (OR, “SONATA ALLEGRO”)*
Three
parts
Allegro* (Fast)
Adagio* or Andante* (Slow)
Allegro* (Fast)
“THE FOUR SEASONS”* 1718-1720
"The Contest of Harmony and Invention”*
Program music*
Four violin concerti*
Three movements each
PROGRAM MUSIC*
Non-vocal (instrumental only)
Musical depiction of a non-musical event, person
or thing.
Todentanz (The Dance of Death)
Franz Liszt
Don Quixote
Richard Strauss
The War of 1812 (“The 1812 Overture”)
Peter Tchaikovsky
“SPRING” (1ST MOVEMENT)
Springtime is upon us.
The birds celebrate her return with festive song,
and murmuring streams are softly
caressed by the breezes.
Thunderstorms, those heralds of Spring, roar,
casting their dark mantle over heaven,
Then they die away to silence, and the birds take up
their charming songs once more.
“SPRINGTIME IS UPON US...”
Ritornello*
Part A
Part B
Complete
Partial
Variations
“...THE BIRDS CELEBRATE HER
RETURN WITH FESTIVE SONG...”
Flutes
High Violin
Ritornello
“...MURMURING STREAMS...BREEZES…”
Low strings
Ebb/flow motion
Ritornello
“...THUNDERSTORMS... ROAR...”
Thunder
Orchestra
Lightening
Violinist
Virtuoso displays
Question and Answer
Ritornello
“...THE BIRDS TAKE UP THEIR
CHARMING SONGS ONCE MORE...”
Flutes
High strings
Ritornello
LEGACY....
Died penniless in 1741
Musically obsolete
Forgotten by the musical world for almost two
hundred years
20TH CENTURY DISCOVERIES
1926
Monastery in Piedmont (region), Italy
14 folios
1930
300 concertos for various instruments nd
18 operas
100+ vocal-instrumental piece
RV NUMBERS
Peter Ryom
Ryom Verzeichnis
« Ryom’s Numbers »
Répertoire des oeuvres d'Antonio Vivaldi
Completed in 1977