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The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition. The Arts in the Renaissance . Europe becomes world powerWealth centralized in ItalyRulers used musicians to glorify themselves
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1. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition 14. The Renaissance The Renaissance (c. 14501600)
Means rebirth in French
Restored learning & values of ancient Greece & Rome
Rise of secular & instrumental music
1501, Music printing = accessible/demand
Interest in individual, human body
Greek philosophy = music affects body
2. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition The Arts in the Renaissance Europe becomes world power
Wealth centralized in Italy
Rulers used musicians to glorify themselves & their cities reputations
Europe (Italy!) laid foundation for Renaissance
3. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Humanism Study of humanities
Revive ancient learning
Alongside Christianity, had faith in humans to improve conditions and create great works of art
4. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Musicians in Renaissance Society Churches, cities, and courts
Court chapels
Trades of instrument building, printing, and music publishing
Merchant class music patrons
Amateur musicians
5. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Renaissance Musical Style Word painting: music reflects meaning of text
Vocal music dominates but rise of instrumental music
Variety of textures to capture different moods
Imitation, Paired imitation
Homophony, Homorhythm
Cantus firmus
Professional singers in church setting
6. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Renaissance Musical Style
Melody:
Stepwise (conjunct) motion
Moderately narrow range
Harmony
Less dissonance than medieval music
Consonant triad becomes the foundation of harmony
Rhythm
Duple meter common as triple meter
Sacred music = relaxed, w/o strong beats
Secular music = lively, syncopated
7. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Renaissance Musical Style
Color
More instrumental music survives than from the Middle Ages
Unaccompanied (a cappella) vocal music predominant
Texture
Imitative counterpoint
Four to five lines most common
Homophonic texture inserted for variety
8. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition 15. Renaissance Sacred Music The Early Renaissance Mass
Settings of Mass Ordinary
Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, Agnus Dei
Latin not vernacular
Early Masses based on Gregorian chant cantus firmus (fixed melody; other voices not fixed, can be composed from scratch)
9. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition The Motet in the Renaissance Sacred (usually)
Single Latin text
Written for 3, 4, or more voices
Cantus firmus
Used in religious service
10. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Josquin Des Prez (1455--1521)
Early career in Italy
Temperamental and egotistical personality
Composed about 17 Masses and 100 motets
Used a mix of imitation and homophony to reflect the texts
Imitation obscured the cantus firmus and the text
11. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Josquin: Ave Maria . . . virgo serena (Listening Guide) Renaissance motet
Combinations of voices and textures
Quotation of chant
Rest of work is newly composed
Imitative vs. homorhythmic sections
Final couplet: simple texture, example of humanistic spirit
12. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition The Late Renaissance Mass Martin Luther (14831546): Reformation
Lutheran Chorale: homophonic rhythm; vernacular texts; strophic form
Counter-Reformation (1530s1590s)
Council of Trent
Corruption of chant by embellishment
Use of certain instruments in religious services
Incorporation of popular music in Masses
Secularism of music
Irreverent attitude of church musicians
Pure vocal style that respected the integrity of the sacred texts
13. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Palestrina and the Pope Marcellus Mass Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (c. 15251594)
Italian composer that captured the counter-reformation style
Little dissonance
Clear phrasing
Preserved plainchant
Prolific composer: 100 Masses
14. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Palestrina: Pope Marcellus Mass, Gloria (Listening Guide) Satisfies the new strict demands of the Council of Trent
Probably performed a cappella
Written for six voice parts
Opens with a monophonic intonation
Choral sections are polyphonic
Text is clear and audible
15. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition 16. Renaissance Secular Music 1501, Moveable Type, Music Printing
Fostered creation & dissemination of music for amateurs
Vernacular styles emerged in certain regions
Music became more accessible
Easy to play
Easier to access
Music for amateur and professional musicians flourished
16. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Music in Court & City Life Professional musicians: courts and civic functions
Merchant class amateurs: played and sang at home
Lute, keyboard instrument in homes
Children taking lessons
Professional singers, esp. women
Chanson and madrigal
Francesco Petrarch (13041373)
Pierre de Ronsard (15241585)
17. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition The Chanson Burgundy and France in the 15th century
3 or 4 voices
Courtly love verses
Freer poetic structures
18. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Josquin: Mille regretz (A thousand regrets) Last year of composers life
Four-voice texture
Courtly love
Church mode
Homorhythm, imitation
Expressive text setting
19. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Instrumental Dance Music Period of growth
Publishing & printing
Increased secularization
Amateur musicians
Publishing centers: Venice, Paris, Antwerp
Instrumentation was unspecified
Used vocal music & improv
20. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Susato: Three Dances (Listening Guide) Set of three rondes from the 1551 Danserye collection
Instrumental dances published by Tielman Susato (c. 1515c. 1571)
Binary form (A-A-B-B)
Repeated sections with added improvised embellishments
21. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition The Italian Madrigal Chief form of Renaissance secular music
Italian courts
Text: short poem of lyric or reflective nature
Includes loaded words: weeping, sighing, trembling, dying, etc.
Music: sets text expressively (madrigalisms)
Instruments double or substitute for the voices
Three phases of the madrigal
First phase (c. 15251550)
Second phase (c. 15501580)
Third phase (c. 15801620)
22. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Italian Madrigal
Through-composed: new music for every line of poetry, no repetition, only contrast.
Text chosen by renowned poets
Mostly on topics of love, sex, and wit that could charm, surprise, amuse, and entertain
Initially employed 4 voices but five voices became the norm by mid-sixteenth century (one singer per melodic line)
Written less to be performed in front of an audience, and more for the enjoyment of the singers themselves at social gatherings
Declamation of text
Imagery, Expressivity, Characterization, Dramatization, and later Vocal Virtuosity!
23. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Italian Madrigalists
Early Madrigalist
Jacques Arcadelt (1507 1568)
Uses a mixture of textures to express texts
Adrian Willaert
Mid-century Madrigalists
Cipriano de Rore (1507 1568)
The use of texture, rests, inflection and interval to express text
Used chromaticism
Later Madrigalists
Luca Marenzio (1553 1599)
Carlo Gesualdo (1561 1613)
Extreme diatonic and chromatic contrast intensified text, dissonance and consonance, homophonic and imitative, slow-moving and active
24. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Jacques Arcadelt, Il bianco e dolce cigno Il bianco e dolce eigno
Cantando more. Et io
Piangendo giung al fin del viver mio.
Stran e diversa sorte,
Chei more sconsolato,
Et io moro beato.
Morte che nel morire,
Mempie di gioia tutte di desire.
Se nel morir altro dolor non sento,
Di mille mort il di sarei contento
25. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Carlo Gesualdo, Io parto e non piu dissi Io parto e non piu dissi che il dolore
Privo di vita il core.
Allor proruppe in pianto e disse Clori
Con interrotti omei:
Dunque ai dolori io resto. Ah, non fia mai
Chio non languisca in dolorosi lai.
Morto fui, vivo son che I spirti spenti
Tornaro in vita a si pietosi accenti.
26. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Monteverdi and the Madrigal Claudio Monteverdi (15671643)
Italian
Renaissance and Baroque Eras
Eight books of madrigals
27. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Monteverdi: Ecco mormorar l'onde (Listening Guide) Courtly poem by Torquato Tasso
Exaggerated contrasts of delight and despair
Expressed musically with word painting
Images include waves, rustling leaves, birds' song, etc.
Five-voice texture
Style inspired by the famous ensemble of professional women singers
Concerto delle donne (Ensemble of the Ladies)
Contrast between high and low voices foreshadows Baroque techniques
28. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition The English Madrigal English further developed the Italian madrigal
Homophonic rhythms with imitative fa la la refrain sections
Simpler and lighter in style
Thomas Morley, John Farmer, etc.
29. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Farmer: Fair Phyllis (Listening Guide) Cheerful mood
Sectional repetitions
Contrapuntal imitation
Contrasting texture (homorhythmic, polyphonic)
World painting
30. The Enjoyment of Music 10th Edition Morley: My Bonny Lass She Smileth Cheerful mood
Primarily homorhythmic texture
Imitative falala section
Strophic with falala refrain