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BAROQUE

c. 1600 - 1750
Style Characteristics
• Rise in idealism
(contrasts with “realism” of the Renaissance)

      • longing for perfection
• Ornamented artistic style
• Grandiose style and
  preference for high drama
• Desire for luxurious lives
    • led to higher poverty rates,
      higher levels of oppression
Advancement in Music
Rise in harmonic understanding
  • Figured Bass- special notation accompaniment
    • musicians improvised an appropriate harmony
    • basso continuo - at least 2 instruments
      • Bass line - bassoon/viola de gamba
      • Chords - harpsichord/lute/organ
  • Major and Minor tonalities are explored
  • Tuning system was standardized - Equal temperament - used equal
   mathematical “pure” intervals as tuning system

Rise in popularity of instrumental music
Development and advancement of instruments
Advancement in Music
• Rise of virtuoso musicians
Vivaldi - virtuosic violinist
Bach/Handel - virtuoso organist
Improvisation played a significant role
• Rise of vocal registers
Castrato = men castrated as boys, sing in higher vocal ranges
• Role of women rose once again
• Doctrine of Affections - adapted from the popularity of text painting
  Baroque codification of basic emotional states (or “affections”) aroused
by music.
New Secular Vocal
                Genres
Monody - “one song”
   • developed by the Florentine Camerata (group of writers,
       artists, musicians, and humanists)
     • solo song with instrumental accompaniment
     • high emotional power of text
     • The “new music” was considered the “expressive” style
     • used the Doctrine of Affections
     • one emotional state for the entire duration of the song
     • led to opera
Opera
   • marriage of all artistic styles (music, theater, poetry, art-set
       design/costumes)
Opera
Entire drama is performed through music
      • Composer: writes music
      • Librettist: writes text/lyrics (or libretto)
Recitatives - (plot advancement)
      • speech-like sections; frequent use of single/limited notes for lyrics.
      • Often performed by one or two characters
      • secco - Accompanied ONLY by continuo instruments; moves with great freedom
      • accompagnato - Accompanied by full orchestra; moves more evenly
Arias follow recitatives; lyric moments
      • popular, more memorable songs
      • emotional, melody driven.
      • DA CAPO ARIA - ternary (A-B-A) form; conventional and popular aria type
Several ensemble numbers (duets, trios, etc).
      • Chorus is used to back up the solo voices OR may function independently
Orchestra performs an overture before the opera. Often introduces melodies/themes from
the opera’s arias.
Italian Opera
Opera was born in Italy (First opera house = Venice)
      • Combination of Renaissance theatrical traditions & musical experimentation
       of the Florentine Camerata
     • 3 Acts
     • Plots
        • Greek mythology (typical subject)
        • history (later operas)
     • Italian operas gained popularity in Western Europe
Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643) - singer, gambist
     • perhaps greatest Italian composer in Baroque
     • wrote nine books of madrigals
     • first great master of opera
English Opera
• Masque - an early type of entertainment that combined vocal and instrumental
    styles with poetry and dance
•   England adapted the Italian model for opera and wrote libretto in English

Henry Purcell (1659-1695) - organist

                              • Dido and Aeneas (1689) among his first written in the English
                                  language
                              •   libretto: Nahum Tate
                              •   based on Virgil’s Aeneid
                              •   Known for its climactic final scene
                              •   recitative “Thy Hand, Belinda”
                              •   aria = “Dido’s Lament” - aka. “When I am laid”
                              •   5 measure ground bass - ostinato
New Sacred Vocal
                   Genres
Oratorio
     • Descended from religious “plays-with-music” of the Counter-Reformation
     • Like a sacred opera, but without costumes
     • Plots based on biblical stories
George Friderik Handel (1685-1759)
    • master of oratorios, cantatas, operas, orchestral suites, concerto grossi, and
      chamber music among others.
    • wrote his famous Messiah in 1742
Cantata: vocal solo + orchestra + basso continuo (optional chorus)
     • sacred vocal composition with instrumental accompaniment
     • multi-movement work (12-20 minutes in length)
     • based on biblical stories
     • many movements are based on chorales
J.S. Bach (1685-1750)
     • wrote 60 cantatas each year for 5 years, yet only about 150 have survived
New Instrumental Genres
Sonata
    • secular solo piece
    • opposite to cantata (something played; multi-
      movement)
Concerto
    • orchestral work with a featured soloist or solo group
Baroque Suite
    • multi-movement collection of dances of contrasting
      character and tempo
Keyboard works
    • preludes, toccatas, fugues, and sonatas
Concerto characteristics
Solo concerto - solo instrument (violin) with accompanying instrumental group
Concerto grosso - use of small chamber group (concertino) verses a larger
group (ripieno or tutti)
    • Bach’s 6 Brandenburg Concertos among the most popular representation of
      c.g.
                 • Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741) - b. Venice, violinist
                      • wrote operas, concertos, sonatas, and more.
                      • His best-known work is The Four Seasons
                         • 4 violin concertos depicting scenes appropriate to each season
                         • Each concerto (1-4) contains 3 movements (fast, slow, fast)
                         • example of program music = music intended to evoke something
                              “extra-musical”... in this case, the mood and character of each
                              season
                          •   each concerto is accompanied by a line from a poem
                          •   program music was inspired by word painting in Renaissance and
                              Baroque vocal works
                          •   Use of orchestral ritornello, or repeated sections (refrains)
Suite characteristics
Used popular dances from around Europe
    • allemande = German, quadruple meter, moderate tempo
    • courante = French, triple meter, moderate tempo
    • sarabande = Spanish, triple meter, stately tempo
    • gigue/jig = English/Irish, 6/8 compound meter, lively tempo
    • Optional dances
      • overture - opening piece
      • minuet
      • hornpipe
Forms (binary and ternary)
For solo instrument, chamber group, or keyboard (harpsichord)
Keyboard
Popular keyboards
         • Organ - produced sound by blowing air into pressurized tubes (or pipes)
         • Harpsichord - strings are plucked by quills
         • Clavichord - strikes the brass/iron strings with blades called tangeants
Keyboard forms
  * Free forms - harmony based with improvisational freedom
        • preludes - short piece based on continuous evolution of melodic and
          rhythmic figures; usually introduced a group of dance pieces (suites),
          chorales, or fugue
        • toccatas - virtuosic and sounds improvised
    • Strict forms - based on counterpoint (polyphony)
              • fugue
Well-Tempered Clavier by J.S. Bach: 2 volumes of organ music
Each volume contained 12 major pieces and 12 minor pieces
Fugue
                                Latin word fuga = flight
                                         flight
• Most were written for the organ (JS Bach was the leading “master” of fugue
    compositions)
•   Single theme used in entire piece by being presented throughout 2 or more melodic
    voices (usually 3 or 4 voices - SATB registers) = IMITATION

Main theme = SUBJECT
EXPOSITION = first large section- is over once all the voices have stated the SUBJECT
  in full
          • SUBJECT stated first in single voice; tonality established (I)
          • SUBJECT stated in a second voice = ANSWER (different register, 5 notes away
            V=dominant); meanwhile a counter-theme continues in the first voice
          • If there are 4 voices, another statement of SUBJECT and ANSWER occur while
            the first two continue to develop
EPISODES = are interludes that help relax the counterpoint.
FINAL STATEMENT = last declaration of SUBJECT and final cadence (tonic chord).
Contrapuntal Devices
Ways to alter the subject:
  • Augmentation = durations of note values are longer
  • Diminution = durations of note values are shorter
  • Inversion = subject’s melodic intervals move in
    opposite direction (same intervals); “upside down”
  • Retrograde = subject’s melody is presented
    “backwards”
  • Retrograde Inversion = backwards and upside
    down
Johann Sebastian Bach died in
1750, which also marked the end
    of the BAROQUE ERA

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Baroque power point

  • 2. Style Characteristics • Rise in idealism (contrasts with “realism” of the Renaissance) • longing for perfection • Ornamented artistic style • Grandiose style and preference for high drama • Desire for luxurious lives • led to higher poverty rates, higher levels of oppression
  • 3. Advancement in Music Rise in harmonic understanding • Figured Bass- special notation accompaniment • musicians improvised an appropriate harmony • basso continuo - at least 2 instruments • Bass line - bassoon/viola de gamba • Chords - harpsichord/lute/organ • Major and Minor tonalities are explored • Tuning system was standardized - Equal temperament - used equal mathematical “pure” intervals as tuning system Rise in popularity of instrumental music Development and advancement of instruments
  • 4. Advancement in Music • Rise of virtuoso musicians Vivaldi - virtuosic violinist Bach/Handel - virtuoso organist Improvisation played a significant role • Rise of vocal registers Castrato = men castrated as boys, sing in higher vocal ranges • Role of women rose once again • Doctrine of Affections - adapted from the popularity of text painting Baroque codification of basic emotional states (or “affections”) aroused by music.
  • 5. New Secular Vocal Genres Monody - “one song” • developed by the Florentine Camerata (group of writers, artists, musicians, and humanists) • solo song with instrumental accompaniment • high emotional power of text • The “new music” was considered the “expressive” style • used the Doctrine of Affections • one emotional state for the entire duration of the song • led to opera Opera • marriage of all artistic styles (music, theater, poetry, art-set design/costumes)
  • 6. Opera Entire drama is performed through music • Composer: writes music • Librettist: writes text/lyrics (or libretto) Recitatives - (plot advancement) • speech-like sections; frequent use of single/limited notes for lyrics. • Often performed by one or two characters • secco - Accompanied ONLY by continuo instruments; moves with great freedom • accompagnato - Accompanied by full orchestra; moves more evenly Arias follow recitatives; lyric moments • popular, more memorable songs • emotional, melody driven. • DA CAPO ARIA - ternary (A-B-A) form; conventional and popular aria type Several ensemble numbers (duets, trios, etc). • Chorus is used to back up the solo voices OR may function independently Orchestra performs an overture before the opera. Often introduces melodies/themes from the opera’s arias.
  • 7. Italian Opera Opera was born in Italy (First opera house = Venice) • Combination of Renaissance theatrical traditions & musical experimentation of the Florentine Camerata • 3 Acts • Plots • Greek mythology (typical subject) • history (later operas) • Italian operas gained popularity in Western Europe Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643) - singer, gambist • perhaps greatest Italian composer in Baroque • wrote nine books of madrigals • first great master of opera
  • 8. English Opera • Masque - an early type of entertainment that combined vocal and instrumental styles with poetry and dance • England adapted the Italian model for opera and wrote libretto in English Henry Purcell (1659-1695) - organist • Dido and Aeneas (1689) among his first written in the English language • libretto: Nahum Tate • based on Virgil’s Aeneid • Known for its climactic final scene • recitative “Thy Hand, Belinda” • aria = “Dido’s Lament” - aka. “When I am laid” • 5 measure ground bass - ostinato
  • 9. New Sacred Vocal Genres Oratorio • Descended from religious “plays-with-music” of the Counter-Reformation • Like a sacred opera, but without costumes • Plots based on biblical stories George Friderik Handel (1685-1759) • master of oratorios, cantatas, operas, orchestral suites, concerto grossi, and chamber music among others. • wrote his famous Messiah in 1742 Cantata: vocal solo + orchestra + basso continuo (optional chorus) • sacred vocal composition with instrumental accompaniment • multi-movement work (12-20 minutes in length) • based on biblical stories • many movements are based on chorales J.S. Bach (1685-1750) • wrote 60 cantatas each year for 5 years, yet only about 150 have survived
  • 10. New Instrumental Genres Sonata • secular solo piece • opposite to cantata (something played; multi- movement) Concerto • orchestral work with a featured soloist or solo group Baroque Suite • multi-movement collection of dances of contrasting character and tempo Keyboard works • preludes, toccatas, fugues, and sonatas
  • 11. Concerto characteristics Solo concerto - solo instrument (violin) with accompanying instrumental group Concerto grosso - use of small chamber group (concertino) verses a larger group (ripieno or tutti) • Bach’s 6 Brandenburg Concertos among the most popular representation of c.g. • Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741) - b. Venice, violinist • wrote operas, concertos, sonatas, and more. • His best-known work is The Four Seasons • 4 violin concertos depicting scenes appropriate to each season • Each concerto (1-4) contains 3 movements (fast, slow, fast) • example of program music = music intended to evoke something “extra-musical”... in this case, the mood and character of each season • each concerto is accompanied by a line from a poem • program music was inspired by word painting in Renaissance and Baroque vocal works • Use of orchestral ritornello, or repeated sections (refrains)
  • 12. Suite characteristics Used popular dances from around Europe • allemande = German, quadruple meter, moderate tempo • courante = French, triple meter, moderate tempo • sarabande = Spanish, triple meter, stately tempo • gigue/jig = English/Irish, 6/8 compound meter, lively tempo • Optional dances • overture - opening piece • minuet • hornpipe Forms (binary and ternary) For solo instrument, chamber group, or keyboard (harpsichord)
  • 13. Keyboard Popular keyboards • Organ - produced sound by blowing air into pressurized tubes (or pipes) • Harpsichord - strings are plucked by quills • Clavichord - strikes the brass/iron strings with blades called tangeants Keyboard forms * Free forms - harmony based with improvisational freedom • preludes - short piece based on continuous evolution of melodic and rhythmic figures; usually introduced a group of dance pieces (suites), chorales, or fugue • toccatas - virtuosic and sounds improvised • Strict forms - based on counterpoint (polyphony) • fugue Well-Tempered Clavier by J.S. Bach: 2 volumes of organ music Each volume contained 12 major pieces and 12 minor pieces
  • 14. Fugue Latin word fuga = flight flight • Most were written for the organ (JS Bach was the leading “master” of fugue compositions) • Single theme used in entire piece by being presented throughout 2 or more melodic voices (usually 3 or 4 voices - SATB registers) = IMITATION Main theme = SUBJECT EXPOSITION = first large section- is over once all the voices have stated the SUBJECT in full • SUBJECT stated first in single voice; tonality established (I) • SUBJECT stated in a second voice = ANSWER (different register, 5 notes away V=dominant); meanwhile a counter-theme continues in the first voice • If there are 4 voices, another statement of SUBJECT and ANSWER occur while the first two continue to develop EPISODES = are interludes that help relax the counterpoint. FINAL STATEMENT = last declaration of SUBJECT and final cadence (tonic chord).
  • 15. Contrapuntal Devices Ways to alter the subject: • Augmentation = durations of note values are longer • Diminution = durations of note values are shorter • Inversion = subject’s melodic intervals move in opposite direction (same intervals); “upside down” • Retrograde = subject’s melody is presented “backwards” • Retrograde Inversion = backwards and upside down
  • 16. Johann Sebastian Bach died in 1750, which also marked the end of the BAROQUE ERA