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THE BAROQUE ERA

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THE BAROQUE ERA 1600-1750 Journal Entry #8 Given what you know about the Renaissance, what new innovations and styles you do THINK are coming up in the Baroque era? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE BAROQUE ERA


1
THE BAROQUE ERA
  • 1600-1750

Journal Entry 8 Given what you know about the
Renaissance, what new innovations and styles you
do THINK are coming up in the Baroque era? How
will music progress from here?
2
Composer Research Paper Assignments
  • Emma Brown Sergei Rachmaninoff
  • Kieryn Beyerl Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
  • Phil Kosydor Franz Schubert
  • Aaron Brunnworth Antonio Vivaldi
  • Taimoor Aziz Henry Purcell
  • Alec Camp Richard Wagner
  • Sami Greytak Leonard Bernstein
  • Nate Novak John Williams
  • Ryan Kaminsky Aaron Copland
  • Anna Stamer Igor Stravinsky
  • Chris Pearson Johann Sebastian Bach
  • Nick Caban Louis Armstrong
  • Bilal Aziz Ludwig van Beethoven
  • Claire Chandler Frederic Chopin
  • Andrew Drake Scott Joplin
  • Blake Noud Andrew Lloyd Webber
  • Jacob Burns Claude Debussy
  • Kalyn Moore Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  • Dominique Flyte Felix Mendelssohn
  • Julian Harvey Carl Orff

3
THE BAROQUE WORLD
  • History
  • 1607 Jamestown founded
  • 1643-1715 Louis XIV reigns in France
  • 1692 Salem Witch Trials, Salem, MA
  • 1715-1774 Louis XV reigns in France
  • Literature
  • 1600 Hamlet (Shakespeare)
  • 1605 Don Quixote (Cervantes)
  • 1611 King James Bible
  • 1667 Paradise Lost (Milton)
  • 1719 Robinson Crusoe (Defoe)
  • 1726 Gullivers Travels (Swift)

4
THE BAROQUE WORLD, cont
  • Science
  • 1610 Galileo confirms that Earth revolves
    around the sun
  • 1687 Newtons Principia Mathematica
  • New approach to science based on mathematics
    experiment
  • Discovered mathematical laws governing bodies in
    motion
  • New inventions, improvements of medicine, mining,
    navigation, industry

5
THE BAROQUE WORLD, cont
  • Art
  • Effort to completely fill space
  • Emphasis on motion and drama
  • Potential of color, depth, contrasts of light and
    dark
  • Artists wanted to create totally structured worlds

6
THE BAROQUE WORLD, cont
  • Judith Slaying
  • Holofernes (1612)
  • Artemisia Gentileshi

7
THE BAROQUE WORLD, cont
  • 1623 Bernini
  • David Slaying
  • Goliath

8
THE BAROQUE WORLD, cont
  • 1653 Rembrandt
  • Aristotle with a
  • Bust of Homer

9
THE BAROQUE WORLD, cont
  • Age of Absolutism
  • Aristocracy very rich, powerful, lived in luxury
  • (Rest of population barely survived)
  • Splendid palaces, magnificent balls, events
  • Absolute power Duke of Weimar and Bach

10
THE BAROQUE WORLD, cont
  • Religious institutions also shaped style
  • Churches used the emotional and theatrical style
    of the day to make worship more
    attractive/appealing
  • Competing views Europe divided into Catholic and
    Protestant
  • Catholic France, Spain, Italy, Austrian Empire
  • Protestant England, Netherlands, Denmark,
    Sweden, Germany

11
BAROQUE STYLE
  • Baroque barroco irregularly shaped pearl,
    term of criticism
  • Highly decorated, elaborately ornamented
  • Emphasis on motion and drama

12
MAJOR COMPOSERS
  • Two giants George Frederic Handel and Johann
    Sebastian Bach
  • Bachs death 1750
  • Other important composers Monteverdi, Purcell,
    Corelli, Vivaldi

13
GENERAL BAROQUE MUSIC
  • Divided into 3 phases
  • Early 1600-1640
  • Middle 1640-1680
  • Late 1680-1750

14
GENERAL BAROQUE MUSIC, cont
  • Music composed for texts conveying extreme
    emotion, text ruled music
  • Stress on drama and text led to opera drama
    sung to orchestra accompaniment
  • Melodies imitated the rhythms/inflections of
    speech

15
GENERAL BAROQUE MUSIC, cont
16
GENERAL BAROQUE MUSIC, cont
  • Early Baroque Homophonic over polyphonic texture
  • Words were clearer with one melody over chordal
    accompaniment
  • Dissonance and contrasts of sounds were used to
    depict extreme emotions
  • Contrasts of sound examples
  • one solo singer against an entire chorus
  • Singers against instruments

17
GENERAL BAROQUE MUSIC, cont
  • Middle Baroque
  • New style spread from Italy all over
  • Church modes officially gave way to major and
    minor scales
  • Instrumental music important
  • Violin family most popular

18
GENERAL BAROQUE MUSIC, cont
  • Late Baroque
  • Most music heard today is from late Baroque
  • Dominant to tonic chords
  • Instrumental as important as vocal
  • Polyphonic texture returns

19
BAROQUE MUSIC (SHMRFT)
  • Sound
  • Unity of Mood
  • Usually expresses one basic mood throughout (but
    not in vocal music)
  • Emotional states represented joy, grief,
    agitation, called affections
  • Specific rhythm/melodic patterns became
    associated with specific moods

20
(SHMRFT) cont
  • Harmony
  • Chords increasingly important
  • Chords gave prominence to the bass, which is the
    foundation of a chord
  • Basso continuo accompaniment made up of a bass
    part usually played by two instruments
  • a keyboard plus a low melodic instrument like
    cello or bassoon

21
  • Harmony, cont
  • Basso continuo played in left hand, while right
    hand creates chords based on numbers written in
    the music, called figured bass
  • Example pg. 129

22
(SHMRFT) cont
  • Filling in chords according to figured bass is
    called realization
  • Figured bass only specifies basic chords
  • Performer has great freedom
  • Also saved time for busy Baroque composers
  • Also saved paper, which was very expensive

23
(SHMRFT) cont
  • Figured bass is the shorthand system that leads
    to song lead sheets and jazz improvisation of
    today

24
(SHMRFT) cont
  • Rhythm
  • Patterns repeat throughout piece
  • Created forward momentum
  • Forward motion rarely interrupted
  • Beat emphasized more than Renaissance

25
(SHMRFT) cont
  • Melody
  • Repeated throughout piece, melodies heard again
    and again throughout
  • Character of the melody remains constant
  • Continuous expanding, unfolding, and unwinding of
    melody
  • Sequences used
  • Ornamentation
  • Hard to sing and remember

26
LISTENING FOR ORNMENTATION
  • Sonata da chiesa, Op. 5, No. 1
  • Arcangelo Corelli
  • Also listen for harpsichord

27
(SHMRFT) cont
  • Dynamics
  • Volume level stays constant for long time
  • Terraced dynamics sudden shifts in dynamics
  • Organ, harpsichord, clavichord narrow dynamic
    changes
  • Organ and harpsichord incapable of gradual
    dynamic changes
  • Clavichord very small piano-like instrument
  • Capable of gradual dynamic changes, but only
    within small range (ppp-mp)

28
LISTENING FOR TERRACED DYNAMICS
  • Hallelujah Chorus from Messiah
  • George Frederic Handel
  • Listen for trumpet and timpani

29
(SHMRFT) cont
  • Texture
  • Early Baroque homophonic
  • Late Baroque usually polyphonic
  • Soprano and Bass most important
  • Imitation
  • Some vocal pieces may switch texture for change
    of mood

30
SHMRFT, cont
  • Texture, cont
  • Music depicts specific meanings (word painting)
  • heaven high, hell low, grief
    descending chromatic scale
  • Words emphasized by writing many rapid notes for
    a single syllable of text - mellismas
  • Technique also demonstrated singers virtuosity

31
LISTENING TO MELLISMAS
  • Evry Valley Shall Be Exalted from Messiah
  • George Frederic Handel

32
THE BAROQUE ORCHESTRA
  • 10-40 players
  • Based on instruments of violin family
  • Main parts
  • Basso continuo harpsichord cello or bass
    bassoon
  • Upper strings 1st and 2nd violins violas

33
  • Use of woodwind, brass, percussion varied
  • Other instruments could be added recorder,
    flute, oboe, trumpet, horns, trombone, timpani
  • Trumpet timpani joined in for festive music

34
LISTENING FOR FESTIVE TRUMPET
  • Gloria from Gloria in D Major
  • Antonio Vivaldi

35
  • Different than modern orchestra
  • 4 groups of instruments
  • Trumpet was different, no valves
  • Difficult to play, associated with royalty
  • Trumpeters were the top of the orchestra ladder
  • Treated like military officers

36
BAROQUE FORMS
  • movement a piece that sounds fairly complete
    and independent but is part of a larger
    composition
  • each movement
  • has its own themes
  • comes to a definite end
  • is separated from the next movement by a brief
    pause

37
  • 3-Part ABA
  • 2-Part AB
  • Through-composed
  • Always contrast between bodies of sound
  • Examples
  • alteration between small and large groups of
    instruments
  • Voices and instruments

38
VOCABULARY
  • Galileo
  • Newton
  • Baroque
  • Ornamentation
  • Opera
  • Affections
  • Basso continuo
  • Figured Bass
  • Realization
  • Terraced dynamics
  • Sequences
  • Clavichord
  • Orchestra

39
GROUP PRESENTATIONS
  • Isaac Newton Baroque Dance Famous Baroque Operas
  • Alec Camp Dominique Flyte Chris Pearson
  • Aaron Brunnworth Claire Chandler Nate Novak
  • Taimoor Aziz Emma Brown Ryan Kaminsky
  • Nick Caban Julian Harvey Blake Noud
  • Galileo Baroque Royal Courts
  • Bilal Aziz Phil Kosydor
  • Jacob Burns Kalyn Moore
  • Kieryn Beyerl Andrew Drake
  • Anna Stamer Sami Greytak
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