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The Classical Style 17501820

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1787 - Vienna dislikes Don Giovanni. Leopold dies during the composition of D.G. ... Act I: Leporello's catalogue aria. Act I: Duet (Don and Zerlina) Symphony ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Classical Style 17501820


1
The Classical Style (1750-1820)
  • Background
  • belief in progress
  • reason, not custom or tradition, was the best
    guide for human conduct
  • middle-class vs. aristocracy
  • American French Revolutions
  • changes in visual art
  • rococo light colors, curved lines, graceful
    ornaments
  • neo-classical firm lines, clear structure,
    moralistic subject matter

2
The Classical Style (1750-1820)
  • Changes in music
  • Preclassical period (ca.1730-1770) - transitional
  • Carl Phillip Emanuel Bach (1714-1788)
  • Johann Christian Bach (1735-1782)
  • style galant concentration on simplicity and
    clarity
  • Classical
  • term borrowed from visual art
  • refers to influence of Greek and Roman models
  • no such reference in music

3
Characteristics of Classical Style
  • Contrast of mood
  • Flexibility of rhythm
  • Basically homophonic texture
  • Balanced, symmetrical, tuneful melodies
  • Dynamics and the Piano
  • End of Basso Continuo
  • The Classical Orchestra
  • Strings - 1st/2nd violin, viola, cello, double
    bass
  • Woodwinds - flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon (2
    each)
  • Brass - 2 French horns, 2 trumpets
  • Percussion - 2 timpani

4
Classical Forms
  • Instrumental compositions
  • 4 movements that contrast in tempo and character
  • 1. Fast
  • 2. Slow
  • 3. Dance-related
  • 4. Fast
  • symphony
  • string quartet
  • sonata
  • Contrasting themes in movements
  • Balance within larger structure of movement

5
Composer, Patron, and Public in the Classical
Period
  • Social Trends and Classical Composition
  • Effects on musicians
  • More people with more
  • Middle Class influence
  • public concerts
  • pieces for amateur musicians
  • comic opera
  • familiar tunes in serious music
  • Vienna
  • seat of Holy Roman Empire
  • one of the music centers of Europe
  • aristocrat winter quarters
  • outdoor music

6
Sonata Form
  • Exposition (may be preceded by Introduction)
  • First theme in tonic key
  • Bridge - modulation to new key
  • Second (contrasting) theme in new key
  • Closing section in key of second theme
  • Development
  • new treatment of themes modulations to different
    keys / retransition
  • Recapitulation
  • First theme in tonic key
  • Bridge
  • Second theme in tonic (or parallel major) key
  • Closing section in tonic / (may be followed by a
    coda)

7
Classical Forms
  • Theme and Variations
  • theme repeated over and over with alterations
    melody, rhythm, harmony, accompaniment, dynamics,
    or tone color each time
  • A(theme) - A(variation 1) - A (variation2) -
  • use of countermelody
  • Minuet and Trio
  • often used as 3rd movt. / 3/4 usually in
    mod.tempo
  • Minuet Trio Minuet
  • A B A
  • aba cdc aba
  • da capo
  • scherzo - faster than minuet

8
Classical Forms
  • Rondo
  • as an independent piece or a movement
  • often serves as a finale
  • A B A C A (B A)
  • sonata-rondo
  • B A - development - A B A
  • Symphony
  • 4 movements - FSDF - attributes of each movement
  • Concerto
  • 3 movements - FSF
  • double exposition
  • cadenza

9
Classical Chamber Music
  • Characteristics
  • designed for intimate setting of a room (chamber)
  • 2-9 musicians, with one player to a part
  • lighter sound than orchestral music
  • musicians work as a team
  • no conductor
  • Types
  • String Quartet
  • 2 violins, viola, cello
  • usually 4 mvts. - FSDF or FDSF
  • Sonata for Violin and Piano
  • Piano Trio (violin, cello, piano)
  • String Quintet (2 violins, 2 violas, cello)

10
Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)
  • Background
  • Born in Rohrau, Austria
  • musical background until age 6 - folk songs and
    peasant dances
  • sent to a relative to receive basic music lessons
  • age 8 - choirboy at St. Stephens Cathedral in
    Vienna
  • had no composition or instrumental lessons
  • upon his voice change - dismissed from St.
    Stephens
  • barely stays alive by teaching lessons for 8
    years
  • also took odd jobs
  • Haydns talent gradually noticed by aristocracy
  • music director for court of a Bohemian count
  • age 29 (1761) - enters service of Esterházy family

11
Haydn and the Esterházy Family
  • 1761-1790 - most of Haydns music composed for
    the Esterházys, richest and most powerful
    Hungarian noble family
  • Eszterháza - familys palace in Hungary
  • opera house, theater, 2 concert halls, 126 guest
    rooms
  • Haydns responsibilities as musical director
  • compose all music requested by patron
  • conduct 25-member orchestra
  • coach singers
  • oversee instrument conditions and music library
  • two concerts and two opera performances weekly
  • daily chamber music
  • 150 pieces with baryton part for Nicholas
    Esterházy

12
Joseph Haydn
  • Advantages and disadvantages of patronage
  • Personal characteristics of Haydn
  • good-humored and unselfish
  • cared about personal interests of his musicians
  • early 1780s - met Mozart, became close friends
  • Haydns popularity grows while serving the
    Esterházys
  • 1790 - Nicholas dies - Haydn free to go to London
  • Salomon / London symphonies
  • servant to celebrity

13
Joseph Haydn
  • 1795 - returns to Vienna
  • new agreement with Nicholas Esterházy II
  • one mass composed each year (6 written)
  • wrote two oratorios
  • The Creation
  • The Seasons
  • 1809 - dies at age 77
  • during time of Napoleons occupation of Vienna
  • memorial service of Viennese with French generals
    and an honor guard of French soldiers

14
Haydns Music
  • pioneer in development of symphony and string
    quartet
  • use of folk tunes / original folk-like melodies
  • master of theme development
  • musical jokes
  • 104 symphonies
  • many known by nicknames
  • 68 string quartets
  • may have invented the string quartet
  • Other works - piano sonatas, piano trios,
    divertimentos, concertos, operas, masses.

15
Haydns Music
  • Symphony No. 94 (Surprise)
  • key, form, tempo, notable features of each
    movement
  • Trumpet Concerto in E-flat Major

16
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
  • born in Salzburg, Austria
  • age 6 - playing the harpsichord and violin,
    improvising fugues, writing minuets,
    sight-reading perfectly
  • compositions as a child
  • age 8 - 1st symphony
  • age 11 - 1st oratorio
  • age 12 - 1st opera
  • Leopold Mozart (father) shows off his son
  • age 6-15 - Mozart tours Europe almost half the
    time
  • Empress Maria Theresa of Austria
  • Louis XV of France
  • George III of England

17
Mozart
  • Visit to Sistine Chapel
  • age 15 - return to Salzburg - under patronage of
    Prince-Archbishop Colloredo
  • only given subordinate seat in orchestra
  • lack of initiative
  • insubordinate / requests for dismissal
  • 1781 (age 25) - goes to Vienna to be free-lance
    musician
  • concerts attended by the emperor and nobility
  • married Constanze Weber
  • friendship with Haydn

18
Mozart
  • 1786 - Vienna loves The Marriage of Figaro
  • 1787 - Vienna dislikes Don Giovanni
  • Leopold dies during the composition of D.G.
  • Mozarts popularity deteriorates
  • 1791 -
  • The Magic Flute
  • Requiem
  • commissioned by Count Walsegg
  • strange messenger
  • thought he was writing his own Requiem
  • dies of rheumatic fever - December 5, 1791

19
Mozarts Music
  • More than 600 compositions
  • K. Köchel number
  • Mozarts output catalogued by Ludwig von Köchel
  • Most notable
  • concertos
  • operas (mostly comic)
  • piano sonatas
  • Requiem

20
Mozarts Music
  • Don Giovanni
  • unique blend of comic and serious opera
  • characters / plot
  • Act I Introduction
  • Act I Leporellos catalogue aria
  • Act I Duet (Don and Zerlina)
  • Symphony No. 40, K.550
  • key, form, tempo, notable features of each
    movement
  • Piano Concerto No. 23 in A Major 1st mvt
  • Requiem Dies irae

21
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)
  • Background
  • born in Bonn, Germany into a family of musicians
  • Johann (father) comes home from tavern late and
    makes Ludwig practice at the keyboard until
    morning
  • age 16 improvises for Mozart in Vienna
  • mother dies, father becomes an alcoholic
  • age 18 becomes legal guardian of two younger
    brothers

22
Beethoven
  • 1792 (almost age 22) studies with Haydn in
    Vienna
  • Haydn neglects Beethoven / secretly goes to
    another teacher
  • 1st 7 years in Vienna very productive
  • rebels against social convention
  • age 29 1st signs of deafness appear
  • 1803-04 3rd Symphony dedication
  • Bonaparte ---- becomes ---- Eroica

23
Beethoven
  • self-educated
  • drifter in romantic relations
  • earns money through publishing
  • never in the service of aristocracy
  • 1809 paid by three Austrian nobles to stay in
    Vienna
  • age 44 stops playing piano in public, but
    continues to conduct
  • 1815 Casper dies
  • becomes coguardian of nephew, Karl
  • 5-year custody battle
  • Karl attempts suicide / Beethoven shattered

24
Beethovens Music
  • expands range of pitch and dynamics
  • works and reworks music during composition
  • expands forms (i.e. 50-minute 3rd Symphony)
  • continuity between contrasting movements
  • resemblance of themes in separate movements
  • movements linked w/o pause
  • expands sonata form
  • development section
  • develops themes in coda
  • scherzo preferred over minuet
  • larger instrumentation for orchestra
  • uses choir in 9th Symphony

25
Beethovens Music
  • Piano Sonata in C minor, Op. 13 (Pathétique)
  • key, form, tempo, notable features of each
    movement
  • Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67
  • key, form, tempo, notable features of each
    movement
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