Sunday, April 28, 2013

Classical


Classical music is normally used to describe a variety of western musical styles from the ninth century to the present, especially the sixteenth and seventeenth to the nineteenth. However the classical period falls between the Baroque and Romantic periods. The texture is clearer than Baroque music and less complex. It is mostly homophonic melody above the chordal accompaniment, but has no counterpoint. The variety and contrast within a piece becomes more pronounced than before. The melodies tended to be shorter than the ones that were seen in the previous period the importance was given to instrumental music, the main type were the sonata, trio, string quartet, symphony, concerto, serenade and divertimiento. All though the sonata developed and became the most important form, being used to build up the first movement of most large-scale works, as well as single pieces. 

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Baroque Instruments


Strings
Violino piccolo
Violin
Viol
Viola
Viola d'amore
Viola pomposa
Tenor violin
Cello
Contrabass
Lute
Theorbo
Archlute
Angélique
Mandolin
Guitar
Harp
Hurdy gurdy
Woodwinds
Baroque flute
Chalumeau
Cortol (AKA Cortholt, Curtall, Oboe family)
Dulcian
Musette de cour
Baroque oboe
Rackett
Recorder
Bassoon
Brasses
Baroque trumpet
Cornett
Horn
Serpent
Sackbut
Keyboards
Clavichord
Tangent piano
Fortepiano – early version of piano
Harpsichord
            Organ

1680-1760


The line that divides the middle and late Baroque is a matter open to debate. One is that it could go from 1680 to 1720, because there was no on synchronized transition. However the important time that the transition was evident was when the Baroque music was fully absorbed that tonality was a principal structure.

 The transition between Baroque and the early Classical era is bordered by the mixture of competing ideas and attempts to unify the different demands of tastes, economics and worldview.

Friday, April 26, 2013

1630-1680


The middle Baroque is separated from the early Baroque, because of the systematic thinking to the new style and a gradual institutionalization of the forms and norms, especially in Opera. This period in the Baroque is defined by the emergence in the cantata oratorio, and opera during the 1630s. The ways of the new concept of Baroque came from the melody and harmony that elevated the status of the music to one of equality with the words.
The florid, coloratura monody of the early Baroque gave way to simpler, more polished melodic style that was usually in a ternary rhythm. Those melodies were built from short, cadentially delimited ideas that were often based on stylized dance patterns drawn from the sarabande or the courante. The harmonies in those times were also simpler than in the Early Baroque Period. These harmonic simplifications also led to a new formal device of the differentiation of recitative and aria. The theory that was supported in the time was identified by the increasingly harmonic focus of musical practice and the creation of formal system of teaching.
Music was an art and it converted into one that needed to be taught in an orderly manner. This however had no bearing at all on the theoretical work of Johann Fux. He systematized the strict counterpoint characteristics of earlier ages in his Gradus ad Paranassum. 

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

1580-1630


The transition from Renaissance to Baroque music began in 1580 by a group of poets, musicians and humanists in Florence. This group rejected the idea based their ideals on Classical, especially ancient Greek, that valued the discourse and oration in their musical drama.  As they rejected the contemporary use of polyphony and focused on monody, they came to the realization that these ideas marked the beginning of Opera. Those in turn turned out to be somewhat of a catalyst for Baroque music.  The musical theory that is seen widespread is the use of the Figured Bass. It developed the importance of harmony as the linear underpinnings of polyphony. Harmony was the end result of counterpoint. The composers of the time began to concern themselves with harmonic progressions, and also employed the triton that was seen as an unstable interval. It created dissonance. In this period harmony was focused in tonality, not in modality as was in the Renaissance. At the end it all lead to the idea that chords, rather then notes could provide a sense of closure, it was one of the fundamental ideas that became known as tonality. 

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Baroque


Baroque music began in the 1600 and went on until the mid-1700. In this period the creation of tonality was witnesses and composers as well as performers used more elaborate musical ornamentation. They also made changes in the musical notation and developed new instrumental playing techniques. The baroque music expanded the size, range, and complexity of instrumental performances, and also established opera, cantata, oratorio, concerto, and sonata as musical genres. Many of the musical terms and concepts of those days are seen in modern life. 

Friday, April 19, 2013

Renaissance Intruments


Instruments of the Renaissance

Brass
    Slide Trumpet
     Cornett
     Trumpet
      Sackbut

Strings
     Viol
      Lyre
      Irish Harp
      Hurdy Gurdy
      Cittern
       Lute
     Harpsichord
      Virginal

Percussion
      Tambourine
     Jew’s Harp

·        Woodwinds
o   Shawn
o   Reed Pipe
o   Hornpipe
o   Bagpipe
o   Panpipe
o   Transverse Flute
o   Recorder

1534-1600


Late Renaissance is represented in Venice through the years of 1534 to 1600. An impressive polychoral style that was developed, it gave Europe some of the grandest, most sonorous music composed until that time. It contains a multiple choirs of singers, brass and strings in different spatial locations in the Basilica, San Marco Di Venezia (Venetian School).
The cultivation of European Music in the Americas began in the late 16th century soon after the arrival of the Spanish and the conquest of Mexico.

Friday, April 12, 2013

1467-1534


Middle Renaissance music went from 1467 to 1534. It started to be printed using a printing press. Music printing had a mayor effect on how music. Entering the end of the 15th century secular music had become more complex, in the manner that it correlated with the stunning detail that was seen in the paintings of that time. In the first decades of the next century music felt in a tactus (sort of like the modern time signature) of two semibreves-to-a-breve and three semibreves-to-a-breve. In the 16th century there was also another trend of simplification. 

Saturday, April 6, 2013

1400- 1467


Early Renaissance was between the years of 1400 and 1467. In this period the complex devices of the Medieval Era were gradually dropped. Such as isorhythm, that being the organization of fixed pattern of pitches with a repeating rthyminc pattern. And extreme syncopation, that involves a variety of rhythms which are in some ways unexpected which an off-beat tunes or musical piece. This resulted in a more limpid and flowing style, what they lost in rhythmic complexity it gained in rhythmic vitality becoming a main feature around the mid-century. 

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Renaissance


It was the music that was written in Europe, it started around XIV century, ending the Medieval Era. Compare to other aspects of the Renaissance, Music wise it started a 100 years later then other disciplines. It focused in the humanist thought; the recovery of literary and artistic heritage of ancient Greece and Rome. In this era music increasingly freed from the constraints of the church as well in range, rhythm, harmony, form, and notation, becoming a way of personal expression. In the Renaissance era both secular and sacred music survived in quantity, vocal and instrumental. The amount of musical diversity in styles that originated in that time are seen in the years that come. 

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Organum (Medieval Period)


Ending the 9th century experimenting began with the adding of other parts to the chant, it was generally a voice in parallel motion. This was called Organum and it represented the beginning of harmony and of counterpoint. The most significant creation was the ‘florid organum’ around 1100, in which the original tune would be sung in long notes while an accompany voice would sing many notes to each one of the original. Most of the music from the medieval period is anonymous. Some of the names may have been poets and lyric writers and the tunes might have been composed by others. Some of the few known composer are Pope Gregory I, Godric, Odo of Cluny and Tutilo. 

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

The Chant



Early Medieval Music was before 1150 beginning with the chant, which is a monophonic sacred form to represent the earliest known music of the Christian Church. It developed differently in different countries, though the most important ones were Rome, Hispania, Gaul, Milan and Ireland. Each region developed its own chant and costumes for celebrations. Around 1011 AD, the Roman Catholic Church wanted to standardize the Mass and Chant.  Rome was the religious center of Western Europe, while Paris was the Political center.  The Gregorian chant is the term that it is known as. By the 12th and 13th centuries the Gregorian chant had surpassed the other western chant traditions, with the exception of the Ambrosian chant in Milan and the Mozarabic chant in a few Spanish chapels.