1 / 9

Colonial Music

By Darius Smith. Colonial Music. What was Colonial music? .

bern
Download Presentation

Colonial Music

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. By Darius Smith Colonial Music

  2. What was Colonial music? • Colonial music was not so much music written in America before the Revolution as it was music that was brought here and helped define the people who were to make a new country. Understanding the music that early Americans chose to sing and play gives us a better understanding of the colonists themselves. Their music included dance tunes, folk songs and parodies, ballads, drum signals, psalms, comic opera arias, minuets and sonatas. Such music came from England, Scotland, Ireland, Germany, Italy, France, and Africa, and it was played on whatever instruments were useful.

  3. Important Concepts: • Colonial music involved both written and oral. Many people knew a large body of tunes by ear, and we frequently find new sets of words "composed" to fit these older tunes. Single melodies served a variety of functions—for example, "Over the Hills and Far Away" served as a theater song, a recruiting song, a dance tune, and a military march. Further, the popularity of specific pieces of music varied over time and by region, depending upon the flow of fashion and backgrounds of people living in a certain area.

  4. What instruments were used?

  5. Theater Music • Musical theater in the colonies was very popular. Most performed were ballad operas—compilations of familiar folk tunes with new words strung together by spoken dialogue to tell a comic story. The most famous of these was The Beggar's Opera, compiled in 1728 in London as a reaction to the Italian opera that was so popular among the wealthy in that city. The Beggar's Opera was performed in the colonies as early as 1750. Just as many people today will buy the sheet music and/or CD to a favorite movie or musical, so the colonists would bring home the music and words to songs in The Beggar's Opera and play and sing them at home.

  6. Dance Music • Music was also critical to the favorite pastime of the colonists—dancing. Dancing was usually accompanied by a single violin, but for special occasions there may have been 4 or 5 musicians.

  7. Church Music • The most varied sort of music in colonial America was related to the several religious denominations active here. The devout Congregationalist churches of New England encouraged the singing of psalms, anthems, and tunes. After 1720 paid singing masters taught church members to read from music, and a large body of unique compositions emerged, most notably by William Billings of Boston.

  8. Military Music • Two general sorts of military music are associated with early America, mostly during the late colonial period and Revolutionary period. A "Band of Music" consisted of professional musicians hired by officers to play contrapuntal music at parades, during meals, and for dancing.

  9. Bibliography • http://www.colonialmusic.org/Resource/DHessay.htm • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_history_of_the_United_States_during_the_colonial_era

More Related