Songs and Basic History MUS 501 Midterm F PDF
Songs and Basic History MUS 501 Midterm F PDF
Songs and Basic History MUS 501 Midterm F PDF
The Baroque period is divided into three major phases: early, middle, and late.
Overlapping in time, they are conventionally dated from 1580 to 1650, from 1630 to 1700,
and from 1680 to 1750
Baroque Monody
Alessandro Grandi: O quam tu pulchra es pg452
Alessandro Grandi (1590[1] – after June 1630, but in that year) was a northern Italian composer
of the early Baroque era, writing in the new concertato style. He was one of the most inventive,
influential and popular composers of the time, probably second only to Monteverdi in northern
Italy.
- Giulio Caccini(1550-1618)
- Vedro ‘I mio sol is part of over 2 dozen of solo voices with basso written in or
before 1590.
- Nuove musique
- Early baroque, Florentine
- Solo Madrigal(Madrigal, secular polyphonic song)
- Monody
- 1590
- Basso can be played on any instrument available(Basso: lute, harpsichord, organ, lower
strings).
- Melody line originally written in movable C clef.
- Through Composed, not strophic.
- Text Setting: Syllabic vs melismatic→ This particular piece is syllabic, one note per every
syllable.
- he wrote out embellishments - did not trust others to improvise
- Repats text in higher pitch to add dramatic effect. Heightened repetition.
- Caccini writes pit the embellishments
- He annotated ornaments because he did not trust others to improvise
appropriately.
- Melisma on word death(muoia) dramatic effect. Melisma on Aurora at the end
- Basso continuo player was allowed to take liberties with his part, some improvisation
was involved in the performance of this style of music
- Different types of ornaments. Baroque trills vs classical trills
- Anything in brackets was added by editor as well as dotted lines
- Time signature is 2/2
- Poem: Written by Allessandro Guarini
- Each poetic line is set as a separate phrase, ending with a cadence, sustained note, or
pair of notes.
- Meaning of poem: Unrequited love, someone whose feelings are not reciprocated.
WEEK 3:
Claudio Monteverdi: Madrigals and Vespers
Monteverdi(1567-1643) was born in Cremona, Italy. His father was a chemist, a practicing
barber surgeon (which was not completely legal at the time) and his mother passed away when
Claudio was rather young. Monteverdi was an extremely prolific composer even as an
adolescent. By 16, he had multiple publications from various printing houses around Italy. By
1600, Monteverdi was well established as a composer on the international stage. For the next
40 plus years he worked as an innovator and refiner of musical styles, including the first fully
realized opera “L’Orfeo”.
WEEK 4:
Origins of Opera:
Peri: Le musiche sopra l’Euridice
Jacopo Peri (20 August 1561 – 12 August 1633), known under the pseudonym Il Zazzerino,[1] I
was an Italian composer and singer of the transitional period between the Renaissance and
Baroque styles, and is often called the inventor of opera. He wrote the first work to be called an
opera today, Dafne (around 1597), and also the first opera to have survived to the present day,
Euridice (1600).
Orontea is an opera in a prologue and three acts by the Italian composer Antonio Cesti with a
libretto by Giacinto Andrea Cicognini (revised by Giovanni Filippo Apolloni). The first
performance took place in Innsbruck on 19 February 1656. Orontea was one of the most
popular Italian operas of the 17th century.
WEEK 5:
Italian Baroque (other than Monteverdi):
WEEK 6:
Oratorio and Sacred Concerto
- The word oratorio is taken from the same word which originally meant “prayer hall.”
Such buildings were brought into existence under the Congregation of the Oratory. This
was a religious reform movement in the Catholic church where several priests or lay
brothers lived together in mutual charity but without the formal vows of monastic life.
They met in these oratorio buildings, which were normally located adjacent to a church.
The oratorio building was carefully designed as a setting for community experiences that
are distinct from regular liturgy, yet conducive to the goals of religion. Oratorio buildings
were rectangular in shape, normally without transepts and usually seated 200-400
people. They were acoustically optimal not only for lectures but for music as well. The
16th century oratorio Santa Lucia del Gonfalone in Rome, (est. 1544-1547) now
regularly used as a concert hall, is a prime example of these exemplary acoustics. It was
also the birthplace of the oratorio as a musical genre.
- An extended musical drama using biblical text Why was oratorio created? Opera was
forbidden during lent, oratorios were not staged works like operas. But use the same
format as an opera. How is oratorio different from opera? No staging at all. Text is
biblical, opera is Greek tragedy. The oratorio as a musical genre reflected the
Counter-Reformation zeal to attract the broad populace to the church. Most oratorios
were written in the Italian language for this reason (oratorio volgare). A notable exception
was the situation at the important oratorio associated with church of San Marcello in
Rome. Here the aristocratic membership (Arch-Confraternity of the most Sacred Christ)
commissioned all oratorios to be written in Latin (oratorio latino).
LUtheran Historia
- In Protestant Germany, the idea of a sacred musical drama was rooted in the Lutheran
historia, a story of Christ It is often associated with Christmas or Easter, taken from the
Bible, set to music, and performed in a church. The musical format was austere,
involving an alternation of unaccompanied reciting tones sung by soloists and
unaccompanied choral polyphony.
- The German Sacred Concerto
Schütz:
- Schutz(1585-1672) German composer
- Unlike Scheidt and Schein, Schütz rarely used the chorale in his sacred
compositions. combined the Venetian polychoral style in his writing with the new
cutting edge genre of monody, adding in solo numbers along with his antiphonal
choral works. His compositions were affected by the 30 Years War which cut
down his performing forces. Kleine Geistliche Konzerte are for only a few voices
and use the theatrical recitative style – O lieber Herr Gott. After the 30 Years
War, he was able to write for much larger forces
- The influence of Venice on the southern German courts caused several
prominent German musicians to study the style of the Venetian School. Johann
Hermann Schein, Hans Leo Hassler, Samuel Scheidt, and Heinrich Schütz went
to Venice to study this style of composition and copied Gabrieli’s combination of
instruments and voices. They often combined the tradition of Lutheran Chorales
with the Venetian Style in their sacred works.
WEEK 7:
Keyboard Suites in 17th Century France
The harpsichord is the preferred instrument. Figuration is borrowed from the style of lute playing
(style luthe) also known as ‘Broken Style’ (style brisé) Ornaments are used extensively – called
agréments. What are the reasons for using these ornaments? Suites begin with an unmeasured
prelude – explores the key and harmonic possibilities.
Suites are collections of dance movements:
- Most common
- Allemande
- The time signature is 4/4 or 2/2. Italian markings are often Allegretto, Moderato,
Allegro Moderato. It is characterized by a one note up-beat (usually a 16th note),
and often a flow of continuos running 16th notes throughout.
- Courante:
- The time signature is 3/4, 3/2, 3/8 or 6/4. Italian markings are often Allegro,
Vivace (for the Italian version of this dance) and Moderato (for the French
version). It is characterized by light texture and rapid figures. The name actually
means running. The French version often shifts from triple to simple meter.
- Sarabande(in 3, accent in 2)
- The time signature is 3/2 or 3/4. Italian markings are often Ag\dagio or Lento. It is
characterized as a Spanish dance, chordal in texture, usually without upbeat and
often a prolonged or accents note on the second beat.
- Gigue:
- The time signature is 6/8 or simple time in triplets. Italian markings are often
Allegro, Vivace, presto. This dance has British origins and is in compound time.
- frequently added:
- The Chaconne,
- Gavotte:
- The time signature is 4/4 or 2/2. Italian markings are often Allegro, Allegro
Moderato. It is characterized as a French dance, usually with two quarter note
upbeats, so the phrase begins and ends in the middle of a measure.
- Minuet(in 3):
- The time signature is 3/4 or 3/8. Italian markings are often Moderato grazioso,
Andante. It is characterized as a French dance with an unhurried tempo and
graceful.
France:
Elisabeth-Claude Jacquet de la Guerre(522) – Suite #3 in A-minor.
- Elizabeth Jaquet
- Came from family of musicians
- Nickname was the small wonder, child prodigy
- She started performing from a very young age
- Accredited for being the first woman to write an opera in France
- Keyboard suite #3 in A minor
- 1687, keyboard suite
- During this time the keyboard suite was written for amateur musicians.
- prelude + 6(7?) dances
- Prelude is very improvised
- Prelude was also used to tune instruments that can be re-tuned easily
- 4 slurs on the second system is indicating that those notes need to be sustained.
- We can see some mordents.
- There are different tonal movements, starting with Am, moving to Em, to C, etc.
moving until it gets back to Am
- 1st dance: Allemand: german dance. moderate tempo, with pick up.
- In binary form
- Duple meter
- Use of ornaments
- Finish with a major 3rd?
- 2nd dance: Courante
- French dance
- Triple meter, moderate
- Always starts with up beat
- Tends to switch between 6/4 and 3/2
- Key movement: Am-Em-C-Am
- Binary
- 3rd dance: Sarabande
- Originated from central america
- It’s in triple meter
- Binary
- Introduced in france during 17th century
- One of the most popular dances of the time
- 4th dance: Gigue
- Triple meter
- Chaconne
- French
- Rondo
- Short repeating bass line
- chaconne-couplet….
- Each couplet gets more active
- Gavotte
- Binary
- Menuet
- Rounded binary(ABA’)
French Operatic Style Conventions: • Operas are normally in 5 acts (convention from theatre)
• Operas begin with an overture in two or more parts 1) stately dotted rhythms 2) short fugal
material • After the overture normally followed a Prologue with allegorical characters who make
references to the King & his court policies. • Arias/Recitatives flow more smoothly into one
another than in Italian opera and do not contrast as sharply (more like arioso)
• Instead, choruses, ballets and instrumental pieces grouped together were the main musical
interest.
WEEK 8:
Spain and the New World
De Araujo: Los coflades de la estleya
- Juan de Araujo (1646–1712) was a musician and composer of the Early to Mid
Baroque.[1] Araujo was born in Villafranca, Spain. By 1670 he was nominated maestro
di cappella of Lima Cathedral, Peru. In the following years he travelled to Panama and
most probably to Guatemala. On his return to Peru, he was hired as maestro de capilla
of Cuzco Cathedral, and in 1680 of Sucre Cathedral (then the Cathedral of La Plata) in
Upper Peru (now in Bolivia), where he stayed until his death, and where he trained up to
four notable música criolla composers including Blas Tardío de Guzmán.
- Araujo tells us that his villancico Los coflades de la estleya is a “ negritos a la Navidad
del Señor ” (an African American piece for the birth of our Lord). There are hundreds and
hundreds of Christmas villancicos in this negrito style, as they were enormously popular
- Villancico
- Late 17th century
- Motet,
- 1570
- Missa O magnum mysterium
- Kyrie
- Imitation mass
- 1580
- Paired imitation
- Maximun variety of texture by the use of homophony and changing number of voices(bar
16-26)
- False relation: F natural followed immediately by F sharp in another voice. Bar 20-21.
Expressive vocabulary..
- most famous composer of the Spanish Renaissance, Tomás Luis de Victoria was born in
Ávila; his earliest musical training was as a boy chorister at Ávila Cathedral. In 1565
(after his voice had changed), Victoria received a grant from Philip II to attend the
German College in Rome to continue his studies.
-
de Padilla: Missa Ego Flos Campi -Kyrie
- juan gutierrez de Padilla: Missa Ego Flos Campi -Kyrie
- He was born in Málaga, Spain but moved to Puebla, Mexico, in 1620 to compose music
in the New World.
- Padilla, whose Mass "Ego flos campi" forms the centre-piece of this programme, was
born in the Andalucian city of Málaga, and was maestro de capilla in Jerez and Cádiz,
before travelling to Puebla to take up the post of cantor and assistant to Fernandes. He
taught singing and violón-playing, and also managed an instrument-making workshop,
selling bajónes (bass dulcians) and chirimías (shawms) across the whole country. The
conservative, formal style was regarded as a reflection of the ancient splendour and
solemnity of the holy Mass, but Padilla brings the old forms to life with driving rhythms
and sparkling syncopations. Just as the composer himself left Spain to make his home in
the New World, his musical style was grounded in the traditions of the siglo de oro and
then nurtured by the colours and rhythms of Central America.
- Ego flos campi is a so-called "parody mass" - the polyphony is created by myriad
re-workings of material from an extant motet. In this case, the original motet has not
survived, but Padilla's techniques can be observed in other parody masses he wrote,
based on his own motets. Certain memorable melodic phrases and harmonic sequences
recur as motives, especially at the beginning and end of each movement, but often with
the counterpoint inverted or subtly transformed. Sometimes the voices combine in
genuine eight-part writing; more often they are separated into two antiphonal choirs,
exchanging short phrases in catchy speech-rhythms. In Ego flos campi, Padilla takes
considerable liberties with the liturgical text