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Early Baroque Music

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Title: Early Baroque Music


1
CHAPTER 29
  • Early Baroque Music

2
  • Baroque a term generally used to describe the
    art, architecture, and music of the period
    1600-1750. Derived from the word barocco
    (Portuguese for a pearl of irregular shape),
    critics applied the term "Baroque" to indicate a
    rough, bold sound in music and excessive
    ornamentation in the visual arts.
  • Age of Absolutism The period of Baroque art
    roughly corresponds with what political
    historians call the Age of Absolutism. The theory
    of absolutism held that a king enjoyed absolute
    power by reasons of divine right. The pope in
    Rome, the Holy Roman Emperor, the kings of France
    and Spain, and, to a lesser extent, the king of
    England were the most powerful absolute monarchs
    of the seventeenth century.

3
St. Peter's Square
  • Much Baroque architecture, art, and music
    reflected and celebrated the absolute power of
    kings and popes, such as the vast palace of
    Versailles outside Paris and St. Peter's Square
    in Rome (text page 234). The music composed for
    such vast expanses could also be grandiose.
    Composers in Rome wrote choral works for up to
    fifty-three separate vocal parts, while the opera
    and ballet orchestra at Versailles sometimes
    numbered more than eighty instrumentalists.

4
Bernini's The Throne of St. Peter
  • Another characteristic of Baroque art and
    architecture is abundant decoration. In creating
    his Throne of St. Peter for the interior of the
    basilica in Rome, the sculptor Gian Lorenzo
    Bernini filled the vast spaces with twisting
    forms that energize the otherwise static
    architecture. Composers too created large-scale
    compositions, in which strong chordal blocks
    support highly ornamented melodic lines.

5
CHARACTERISTICS OF EARLY BAROQUE MUSIC
  • Artusi-Monteverdi Controversy A war of words in
    print initiated in 1600 by the conservative music
    theorist Giovanni Maria Artusi, who attacked
    Claudio Monteverdi for breaking many of the
    established rules of counterpoint. Monteverdi
    responded by affirming that the text and its
    meaning were to be held above purely musical
    procedure. He called his new text-driven
    approach the seconda pratica (second practice),
    which he distinguished from the more traditional
    prima pratica.
  • Doctrine of Affections The doctrine according to
    which different musical moods could and should be
    used to influence the emotions, or affections, of
    the listeners. A musical setting should
    reinforce the intended "affection" of the text.

6
  • Monody Term to describe compositions for an
    individual vocal line with accompaniment, such as
    solo madrigals, solo arias, and solo recitatives.
    A term derived from the Greek terms meaning "to
    sing alone," monody simply reflected the attempts
    of poets, scholars, and musicians to emulate the
    music of ancient Greece by making the words
    intelligible and enhancing their effect. The
    emphasis on solo voice quickly led to the
    emergence of the vocal virtuoso, the star of the
    court theater and operatic stage.

7
A Lady with Theorbo
  • Basso continuo commonly called "thorough bass"
    in England, it consists in a bass line that
    provided a never-ending foundation, or
    "continuous bass," for the melody above. Early
    in the Baroque period, the basso continuo might
    be played by a single solo instrument such as the
    lute or the theorboa large lute-like instrument
    with a full octave of additional bass strings
    (Fig. 29-4). Later, a low melody instrumentsuch
    as the viola da gamba, cello, or bassooncame to
    reinforce the bass line, while a chord-producing
    instrumentorgan, harpsichord, theorbo, lute, or
    guitarplayed the harmony above the bass.

8
  • Figured bass a numerical shorthand placed with
    the bass line that indicates which unwritten
    notes to fill in above the written bass note.
    Like a modern jazz pianist, the Baroque continuo
    player was to realize (play chords above) a
    figured bass at sight.

9
Major and Minor Tonalities
  • In the course of the seventeenth century, two
    scale patterns, major (the Ionian mode) and minor
    (the Aeolian mode), came to be employed to the
    virtual exclusion of all other church modes of
    the Renaissance and before. While earlier modal
    polyphony had emphasized triads only a second or
    third apart, the new tonal polyphony of the
    Baroque tended increasingly to construct chords
    upon notes a fourth or a fifth apart. In other
    words, in the Baroque period, modal harmony
    gradually gave way to tonal harmony.

10
Instrumental Color and Musical Dynamics
  • In the Baroque era, musicians privileged a great
    diversity of sound. A variegated ensemble in
    which a theorbo, viola da gamba, cornett,
    sackbut, violin, recorder, transverse flute,
    bassoon, cello, and harpsichord played together
    were not unusual, while the early Baroque
    orchestra was not yet dominated by the relatively
    new violin family. Moreover, it is around 1600
    that composers started to specify levels of
    volume in the music, at first simply writing
    piano and forte in the score.
  • Setting loud against soft, winds against strings,
    soloist against chorus, major against minorall
    these helped create the brilliant colors and
    strong contrasts that mark Baroque music.

11
Idiomatic Writing for Instruments and Voice
  • Baroque music welcomes for the first time truly
    idiomatic writing for both instruments and voice.
    Composers recognized that the violin, for
    example, can play a scale faster than a human
    voice can sing one. At the same time, they wrote
    vocal lines with starkly different levels of
    rhythmic activity and ornaments that underlined
    the acrobatic potential of the voice.
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