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The Renaissance. What was the Renaissance?. Period following the middle ages (1400-1600) “Rebirth” of classical Greece and Rome Began in Italy Moved to northern Europe. Causes of the Renaissance. Lessening of feudalism Church disrespected Nobility in chaos
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What was the Renaissance? • Period following the middle ages (1400-1600) • “Rebirth” of classical Greece and Rome • Began in Italy • Moved to northern Europe
Causes of the Renaissance • Lessening of feudalism • Church disrespected • Nobility in chaos • Growth of Middle Class through trade • Fall of Constantinople • Greek scholars fled to Italy • Education • Nostalgia among the Italians to recapture the glory of the Roman empire
Objectives During the middle ages • Find God • Prove pre-conceived ideas During the Renaissance • Find man • Promote learning
Northern and Late Renaissance • RELIGION/POLITICS – Reformation; much political & religious violence • IDEAS – a skeptical Humanism • ART – a realism of everyday life: PORTRAITS, LANDSCAPES; oil painting • MUSIC – conservative perfection (Palestrina) & new approaches (madrigals)
Renaissance • 1st period to name itself and say nasty things about earlier times:“Gothic” & “Dark Ages” • Term means “Rebirth” • Looking back to Classical culture – Ancient Greece and Rome
Middle Ages - people were parts of a greater whole; members of a family, trade guild, nation, or Church Renaissance - human beings first began to think of themselves as individuals
Timeline • Guttenberg Bible—1456 • Columbus reaches America—1492 • Leonardo da Vinci: Mona Lisa—c. 1503 • Michelangelo: David—1504 • Raphael: School of Athens—1505 • Martin Luther’s 95 theses—1517 • Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet—1596
Humanism • Pursuit of individualism • Recognition that humans are creative • Appreciation of art as a product of man • Basic culture needed for all • Life could be enjoyable • Love of the classical past
Renaissance Man • Broad knowledge about many things in different fields • Deep knowledge of skill in one area • Able to link areas and create new knowledge
Realism That painting is the most to be praised which agrees most exactly with the thing imitated. - Leonardo da Vinci
Names! Artists known by name – 1st contemporary art historian (1550) • Individuality celebrated in this era
Shakespeare Part of a general revival of theater, which we need to mention now, because OPERA is about to develop in the Baroque period. HAMLET - 1602
Church is still the biggest power structure • Beginning of banking • Private fortunes & power • Starts in Italy – specifically Florence
Josquin Ave Maria . . . MichelangeloDavid DonatelloDavid Michelangelo Raphael Leonardo REFORMATION Renaissance timeline 1400 1500 1600
Summary – Italian Renaissance • POLITICS – Italian city-states; power from money • EARLY RENAISSANCE – Florence • HIGH RENAISSANCE – Rome • ART – Classical ideals revived; BIG 3 • IDEAS – Humanism returns • MUSIC – Josquin & imitative counterpoint
Add a third active line that goes well with the cantus firmus and the other line Add a nice active line that goes well with the cantus firmus The Old Way Start with a bit of chant – a cantus firmus
The Emerging Way? Still very “linear” in conception, especially in its emphasis on IMITATIVE COUNTERPOINT, but more “vertical” in organization? (Careful control of dissonance; favoring triads.)
Basic structure • Words dominate • Tone painting
Printed in part-book or opposing-sheet format • Originated in Italy Printing Printing • English madrigal • lighter & simpler Printing Printing • Intended for amateur performers (after dinner music)
Josquin (to the tune of the Beatles’ “Michelle”) Josquin, the Man, Wrote smooth counterpoint as no one can, That guy Josquin.
Josquin Desprez • 1st “Great Composer” glorified by contemporary and following generations • new approach to composition?
Musical Notation • Invented to publish books of music • Invented instruments • Instrumental arrangements appeared
The Reformation 1517 • Martin Luther – a composer himself • Effort to reform creates new church • Sides with rulers against peasant revolts • Printing press disseminates The Word • Boost to individualism • Consequences for music: Mass gone; hymns
Giovanni Palestrina • Adult life in Rome • Choirmaster, singer,/ director of music • Reactionary period • Church suppressed music that did not enhance words of the Mass • Polyphony was distracting • Works were conservative
Giovanni Palestrina • Wrote over 100 masses • Gregorian chant • Mass in Honor of Pope Marcellus • Influenced later music • Buried in St. Peter’s Basilica • “The Prince of Music”
Palestrina Chant a source of musical materials (revival & last gasp of cantus firmus technique) Very refined; no text painting Repetition avoided “16th Century Counterpoint” still taught today – why? To teach control, focus & line We usually celebrate innovators in history – Palestrina was a consolidator and perfecter of a soon-to-fade style
Palestrina – a story The Church was about to ban polyphonic music from the church, because it obscured the sacred text. In response, Palestrina then composed the Missa Papae Marcelli, which, depite its 6-part texture, features very clear text-setting. The powers-that-be heard its merit & beauty and music was SAVED! Charming story, often told, but alas not true.
Secular Music • New instruments • Chansons favored in the court • Courtly Love • Madrigals • Poetry and Music
Music at Court Dances • Instrumentation unspecified; usually a consort (group) of a family of instruments of uniform timbre • Dances are collected into suites (Baroque) which evolve into symphonies (Classical)
Instrumental Music • Still subordinate to vocal music • Used more often to accompany voices • Sometimes played adapted vocal music alone • Published music stated that parts could be sung or played • Dancing became ever more popular • Composers did not specify instrumentation
Music at Court Madrigals Origin of term obscure A type of song for multiple voice parts Text is a rhyming poem, usually with sections of repetition & is usually about Love
Music at Court Madrigals • Popular-at-court-&-wealthy-homes music • In Italy and England • Participatory, not passive music • text-painting • importance of words homorhythmic texture