Music History Ch. 10

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Counter Reformation

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Counter Reformation through Venetian Opera

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Counter Reformation

  • much of Europe impacted

  • Roman Catholic church losing their place because of a large attraction to Protestantism (Avignon Papacy, corrupt Borgia and Bavoerini families)

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music of counter reformation

  • Franco Flemish, native born Italian composers ex. Josquin

  • Controversy in liturgy: wanted to return to pure chant instead of secular cantus firmus, wanted polyphony banned

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Council of Trent

  • from North Italy

    • cardinals of church, bishops of major European cities

    • spoke around and brought church back on track to being the leading Western world denomination

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Giovanni Pierreluigi da Palestrina

  • worked at Santa Maria Majorie (Maggiore) in Rome as well as St. Peter’s

  • wrote only masses and motets, no secular music

    • Roman polyphony and Palestrina style: unique characteristics

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Roman Polyphony/Palestrina Style

  • 5-6 voices, some 8 voice motets

  • imitation/overlapping polyphony

    • weak cadences in 3 voices at a time as others continue, and final, strong cadence of all voices at the end

  • very little dissonance - well prepared for if so, and always on weak beats

  • ranges of parts close together for unified sound

  • clarity of text: doesn’t overlap as much as Frenco Flemish masses, understanding of text

  • NO secular cantus firmus; from chant melody instead

  • NO accompaniment, all acapella

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Missa Pope Marcellus

  • written by Palestrina: his best-known mass

  • imitative, complex polyphony, acapella

  • sung at papal coronations

  • Latin

  • believed to be written for the coronation of King of France

    • allegedly convinced Council of Trent that polyphony was pure enough to stay

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Tomas Luis da Vittoria (Victoria: Italian version)

  • trained in Spain and worked in Rome

  • masses and motets: Palestrina style

  • showed difference between Spanish and Italian faith through his music: Spain much more somber and devout, less joyous

  • wrote “O Magnum Mysterium” (“O Great Mystery”)

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“O Magnum Mysterium” (O Great Mystery)

  • written by Vittoria

  • written for Christmas

  • about how animals are the most pure beings because the were the first to see Jesus born

  • ends with an alleluia

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Polychoral Music

  • more than one choir

  • from Flemish @ San Marco

  • most in antiphonal style: one choir would sing, then another, then all together

  • music more homophonic, written in block-like chords to help with time gap between organs

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Stile Concertato (concerted style)

  • brand new to Venetian School, spread throughout Europe

  • voices with instruments

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Giovanni Gabrieli

  • first to utilize dynamics; achieved by the number of musicians playing or singing

  • first Italian to write concerted music (adding instrument to voice)

  • first to use idiomatic writing (writing for specific instrument to show off qualities

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concerted motet

  • one of Gabrieli’s major categories

  • Latin, sacred choral composition with instruments

  • ex. “In Ecelisis”

  • cori (choirs) spezzati (separated): soloists (1 per part) in upper voices, choir in lower voices

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“In Ecelisis”

  • Gabrieli: concerted motet

  • processional piece into San Marco: event of thanks for sparing them from plague

  • 3 cornets, violin, 2 trombones, basso cantinuo (cello and organ), and choir

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sacred symphonies

  • written by Gabrieli: 3 volumes

  • for church use

  • instrumental

  • most of them in canzona form (from Flemish chanson; sections of instruments each with own theme)

  • ex. canzone “septimi toni a 8”

  • “sonata pian’e forte”

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canzone septimi toni a 8

  • Gabrieli

  • from volume 2 of sacred symphonies?

  • instrumental, canzona form for church

  • 8 instruments on the 7th tone, 2 groups of 4 instruments with organ

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sonata pian’e forte

  • gabrieli: considered his most important piece

  • from volume three of sacred symphonies

  • excellent representation of his dynamic use

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Monteverdi

  • major Italian composer

  • worked in Mantua for Gonzaga family

  • wrote “Vespers” in honor of Virgin Mary , also wrote operas (Orpheus)

  • took Gabrielli’s position in Venice as maestro decompella

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Baroque era

  1. means mishapen pearl

  2. elaborate, dramatic, and ornamental music, origination of opera

  3. began in Italy: patronage system, court and church

  4. age of absolute monarchies

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Italian and Venetian Government

  • Italy split up

  • Venice run by a council and doge (mayor), not as strictly intertwined with church

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music of Baroque era

  • instrumental and vocal are equal

  • idiomatic writing

  • non-liturgical/non-sacred: for entertainment and ameteurs, for listening: private concerts at the court

  • palestrina style and acapella singing; roman polyphony no longer important

  • concerted music (stile concerto- voice and instrument)

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the 2 baroque styles

  • stile antico: palestrina/roman polyphony: music dominates text; rules of harmony apply

  • stile moderno: monody: text dominates music; rules of harmony express text, measures line up with textual phrases

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Artusi

  • italian music theorist

  • wrote “The Imperfections of Modern Music” following Monteverdi’s “Crula Amarili” (Book 4)

    • monteverde responded in book 5, stating that Artusi does not understand that the two styles of music must exist together

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Cruda Amarili

  • piece found within a book written by Monteverdi

    • 4th of a series: books with mostly madrigals

  • roman polyphony

  • good poetry and music

  • about a perfect woman who is cruel

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academy

  • group of individuals with a shared interest

  • same as symposium during Greek era

  • best known: Florentine camerata lead by Court of Bardi

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Giromo Mei

  • friend of Ct. Bardi and a scholar

  • “On the Musical Modes of the Ancients”

  • organized musical events for the Bardis

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“On the Musical Modes of the Ancients”

  • treatise by Giromo Mei

  • dedicated to Ct. Bardi

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opera in Florence

  • intermedio: short, Greek musical story in between each act of a spoken play: performed by camarata

    • camarate believed that Greek plays were to be sung because of poetic structure

  • opera: plural of opus

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florentine opera

  • writers: Peri, Caccini, Rinuccini

  • story from Greek tragedy; provides life lesson

  • text dominates music (seconda practica), stile recitavio (monody)

  • monody: solo vocal line and sparse chorded accompaniment

  • usually 2 central characters

  • little use of chorus, prologue sung by muse

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Julio Caccini

  • camerata member; singer

  • “Le Nuove Musiche” (new music, seconda practica)

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“Le Nuove Musiche”

  • treatise by Caccini

  • new music, seconda practica

  • explaining monody as well as a manuscript including examples

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Peri

  • “Euridice” - first opera

  • Story of Euridice’s death and Orpheus losing her again after a failed attempt to bring her back from the underworld

  • Monteverdi set it for Gonzaga family as “Orfeo” - music over theater

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Solo Madrigal

  • Monteverdi

  • monody

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Monteverdi’s Orfeo

  • he was closely associated with the camerata and interested in bringing back Greek tragedy as a musical entity

  • based on Florentine ideals

  • 5 acts of toccata (overture - section of music played three times) and prelude (toccata, prelude, opera)

  • fully orchestrated, full chorus

  • soloists: Orpheus, Euradice, Pluto, Char…, Sylvia

  • new character: muse - music; gave summary of story (prologue)

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strophic air

  • ex. orfeo’s song about leaving earth to find E. from underworld

  • not an aria, different from monody

  • emotional response with a melodic melody

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Roman Opera

  • exclusively for nobility and church hierarchy

  • subject: biblical stories (sacred), comedic relief every now and then due to serious topics

  • greater use of chorus than Florentine’s

  • no prologues

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Roman Aria

  • through-composed short song

  • more development, more lyrical

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Stefan Landi

“Sant Alessio” - Roman opera about a martyr

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Venetian Opera

  • subject: Roman history (true stories)

  • “Deax ex Machina” (devil in machinery): great special effects

  • up to 4 main characters and 4 minor characters

  • less technical solos, lyrical melody and more popular songs/familiar melodies

  • fully developed overture (features themes of opera)

  • dominant use of castrato: leading male roles in soprano range

  • comical scenes for comedic relief

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Teretro San Cassiano

  • 1st public opera house - Venice

  • Empressario: manages shows, artistic director

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castrato

  • leading male singers (Venice)

  • boys castrated before puberty to keep a high-pitched voice

  • ex. Ferenelli

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Ferenelli

  • real name: Carlo Broschi

  • most known castrato of 17th century

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countertenor

one who has a natural bass voice, but full control of falsetto/head voice

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The Coronation of Poppea

  • Venetian style opera by Monteverdi (historical)

  • M Nero (emperor), M Poppea (mistress), m Octavia (emperess), m Seneca (senator/Nero’s mentor)

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Burney

  • one of the first musicologists

  • Tried to find origins of castrata but couldn’t

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