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Classical Music in Vienna

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Title: Classical Music in Vienna


1
CHAPTER 44
  • Classical Music in Vienna

2
  • Vienna was the capital of the Holy Roman Empire
    and a melting pot of cultures. There the
    greatest musicians of the time found generous
    patrons among the many Viennese aristocratic
    families.
  • Viennese school a group of composers that
    includes Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Schubert,
    all of whom worked in Vienna at the height of
    their careers.

3
  • Neoclassical architecture an eighteenth-century
    style of architectural design that revived
    classical (especially Roman) architecture.
    Symmetrical units, long lines, and restrained
    ornamentation characterize this style.

4
  • The Classical style derives many of its
    characteristics from the galant style clarity,
    simplicity, formal balance, and naturalness.
    Between 1770 and 1820 the Classical style
    dominated Western art music, which for this
    reason has come to be known as "Classical" music.

5
Classical forms
  • Rounded binary ABA', where A ends in a new key
    (usually the dominant or relative major), B
    begins in the new key and gradually gives way to
    an altered reprise, A'. In the Classical period
    scherzos and minuets are almost always in this
    form.
  • Ternary ABA, where A begins and ends in the
    tonic and is repeated note for note after B,
    which modulates to complementary keys. Classical
    composers often used strict ternary form in the
    third movements of symphonies and string
    quartets.
  • Theme-and-Variations a theme that is
    subsequently varied melodically, harmonically,
    rhythmically, and/or by ornamentation.
  • Rondo a refrain (A) is set against contrasting
    material (B, C, or D), thus creating the pattern
    ABACA, ABACABA, or even ABACADA. It was usually
    employed in the last movements of sonatas and
    symphonies.

6
Sonata form
  • Sonata form is the most important formal
    innovation of the Classical period. Composers
    usually employed sonata form in fast (allegro)
    first movements of a sonata, quartet, or symphony.

7
Sonata form (cont.)
  • Exposition the first section of a movement in
    sonata form in which the primary thematic
    material is presented. It usually consists of a
    first theme in the tonic, a second theme in the
    dominant or relative major, and sometimes a
    closing theme.
  • Transition or bridge the passage that modulates
    between the tonic and the new key in the
    exposition.
  • Development the second section in which the
    themes of the exposition are varied and
    developed.
  • Retransition the end of the development which
    brings back harmonic stability (often in the form
    of a dominant pedal point).
  • Recapitulation the return to the thematic
    material of the exposition, varied to ensure that
    the second theme remain in the tonic key.
  • Coda Italian for "tail," an additional closing
    section sometimes appended to the recapitulation.

8
Classical genres
  • Symphony during the eighteenth century it
    replaced the solo concerto and concerto grosso as
    the leading genre of large-scale instrumental
    music. From the Classical period onward, the
    symphony formed the heart and soul of almost all
    orchestral concerts.
  • Concerto while the concerto grosso mostly
    disappeared, composers wrote solo concertos
    mostly for violin and piano.
  • Divertimento and serenade a musical diversion
    for various types of chamber ensembles
    characterized by a lighter style and a
    five-movement format fast/minuet and
    trio/slow/minuet and trio/fast. Both terms are
    used interchangeably.

9
Classical genres (cont.)
  • String quartet conceived by Haydn in the 1750s
    by adding a viola to the old Baroque trio
    texture, the string quartet featured four
    more-or-less evenly matched instrumental parts.
    Unlike the symphony and the concerto, it was
    designed for private ("chamber") performances.
  • Sonata a type of domestic instrumental chamber
    music in two, three, or, more rarely, four
    movements for soloist or small ensemble.
  • Sonatina Italian for "small sonata," it denotes
    a short and easy sonata, mostly intended for
    amateur aristocratic musicians.

10
  • Harmonie in late eighteenth-century Vienna, an
    independent wind band playing mostly harmony and
    not melody. It usually included pairs of oboes,
    French horns, bassoons, and clarinets.
  • Harmoniemusik music for a Harmonie.

11
The Classical orchestra
  • The orchestra between 1750 and 1820 experienced a
    significant growth as the performance of the
    symphony moved from the private salon to the
    public auditorium. Most of this increase
    occurred in the string section. The standard
    woodwind section now included pairs of oboes,
    clarinets, flutes, and bassoons, while trumpets
    and drums might be occasionally added in festive
    occasions. The typical "mid-size" orchestra
    counted between thirty-five and forty players.

12
  • Crook a small piece of pipe that altered the
    length of tubing, and consequently the pitch, of
    the natural horn and natural trumpet.
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