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Haydn's Early life. Musical background until six years old- Folk songs and peasant dancesAge eight- Choirboy in the Cathedral of St. Stephen, dismissed when his voice changedGave music lessons, taught himself composition, took odd jobs until 1761Hired by the Esterh
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1. Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)
2. Haydn’s Early life Musical background until six years old- Folk songs and peasant dances
Age eight- Choirboy in the Cathedral of St. Stephen, dismissed when his voice changed
Gave music lessons, taught himself composition, took odd jobs until 1761
Hired by the Esterházys, the richest and most powerful of the Hungarian noble families
Composed for the Esterházys for 30 years
3. Haydn’s Under the Esterhazys’ Composed for performances in the palaces of the family, including Eszterháza, which had and opera house, a theater, two concert halls, and 126 guest rooms
Hired to compose music, conduct the orchestra, coach singers, oversee instruments and music library
Usually two concerts and operas per week, as well as daily chamber music
Word spread and Haydn became immensely popular
4. Haydn’s later life Visited London twice- One from 1791 to 1792 and again from 1794 to 1795
Composed twelve symphonies for his visited, now called the London Symphonies
Appearances in London were incredibly successful
Given an honorary doctorate from Oxford
Composed six masses and two oratorios in his late sixties
Died in 1809
5. Haydn’s Works Composed over 750 pieces and arranged over 300 songs, including:
104 symphonies
45 piano trios
2 oratorios- The Creations and The Seasons
Over 70 String Quartets
15 operas
14 operas
6. Haydn’s Style Robust and direct style
Much of the music has a folk flavor
Short, simple motifs are used to develop larger forms
Uses “humor” in music- sudden loud chords, false endings, inventive rhythmic section
Generally upbeat pieces
7. Trumpet Concerto in E-Flat Major, First Movement Written for the new keyed trumpet, which was not restricted in the notes it could play
Festive and radiant
Theme played by orchestra before being taken up by the trumpet
Evolves into a fanfare-like melody
8. String Quartet in E-Flat Major, Op. 33 No 2, Movement IV Nicknamed “The Joke”
In a Rondo form- ABACA
A section is in the tonic and is subdivided into aabaab
B begins in the subdominant (Ab), then moves to F minor, then back to Eb major for the second A
C is new, but does not modulate
What’s the Joke?
Haydn adds progressively longer pauses in the coda, making the audience think the piece is over