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New Genres and Styles in the Age of Rationalism

New Genres and Styles in the Age of Rationalism. Three styles of vocal music. Marco Scacchi (ca. 1600 to ca . 1685) — writer on music, classified types of vocal music in letter of 1648: stylus ecclesiasticus — church music stylus cubicularis — chamber music stylus theatralis — opera.

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New Genres and Styles in the Age of Rationalism

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  1. New Genres and Styles in the Age of Rationalism

  2. Three styles of vocal music Marco Scacchi (ca. 1600 to ca. 1685) — writer on music, classified types of vocal music in letter of 1648: • stylus ecclesiasticus — church music • stylus cubicularis — chamber music • stylus theatralis — opera

  3. The creation of opera Predecessors • Greek drama • Liturgical drama • Madrigal dialogue and madrigal comedy • Pastoral — poetic play with music, popular in sixteenth century • Intermediobetween acts of dramas — included songs, pantomime, dances • theatrical context allowed for very elaborate stagings • poets also important madrigal poets • Torquato Tasso (1544–1595)—Aminta (1573) • G.B. Guarini (1538–1612)—Il pastor fido (1590)

  4. Studies of Greek drama • Camerata in Florence under leadership of Count Bardi • Girolamo Mei in Rome concluded Greeks sang throughout dramas • Style was understood to be monophonic and speechlike • Plots taken from Greek mythology

  5. Early operatic experiments • Jacopo Peri (1561–1633) — first completely composed drama — Dafne(1594, perf. 1598) • pastoral by Ottavio Rinuccini (1562–1621) • only fragments extant — two by Jacopo Corsi (1561–1602), Peri’s patron, andfour by Peri • Emilio de’ Cavalieri (ca. 1550–1602)—first extant, completely composed play—Rappresentativo di anima e di corpo (Rome, 1600) • sacred allegory, idealized drama, first score printed with figured bass

  6. Euridice, 1600 • First intact, genuine opera • Original production for wedding in Florence of Henry IV of France and Maria de’ Medici (commemorated in paintings by Rubens) • Pastoral text by Rinuccini • Music by Peri, who probably sang Orfeo’s role • Produced by Corsi • Staged by Cavalieri • Some music inserted by Caccini

  7. The music of Euridice • Structure — five acts, modeled on Greek drama • Vocal style — stile rappresentativo, recitative • free rhythm, like speech, to suit affect and meaning • pitch controlled by affect more than by meaning — rhetoric rather than word painting • monodic texture — basso continuo accompaniment, scoring not specified • harmony — dynamic created stress by chord changes

  8. Claudio Monteverdi, Orfeo (1607) • Libretto by Alessandro Striggio (1573?–1630) • Five acts • 1 — rejoicing over wedding • 2 — news of Euridice’s death • 3 — Orfeo goes to Hades • 4 — release and second loss of Euridice • 5 —Apollo takes him to Olympus (in early version Orfeo chased away by Bacchantes) • Instrumental pieces • early and unusual example of specific orchestration • function for articulation of drama, unifying ritornelli • Choral madrigals, dance pieces • Solo singing • stile rappresentativo for dramatic passages • separate songs for expressive monologue

  9. Vocal chamber music • Madrigals • vocal and unaccompanied, as in sixteenth-century style • Monodies and ensemble vocal pieces with basso continuo • trend to chamber duet • title might be madrigal, but more precise for soloistic pieces would be aria or cantata • Works with additional concertato instrumental parts accompanying • introductory sinfonias or recurring ritornellos • quasi-dramatic depictions

  10. The importance of stylus cubicularis • Development of musical forms — problem of writing extended vocal works without dramatic plot to give coherence • Ariachanged from strophic or strophic-bass form to closed-form piece in which music dominated text • Cantatabegan to mean a piece that employed a variety of styles and eventually a work planned as a series of movements

  11. Styles of sacred music in the early seventeenth century • Stylus gravis, or stile antico — older Zarlino/Palestrina style • Polychoral vocal scoring • multiple choral forces — may also include organ • prima pratica harmony • Concerted style • choirs, organ, instruments • prima pratica harmony • Motets and concertos in seconda pratica — for solo portions of liturgy • solo voices and b.c. • motet — without obbligato instruments (cf. monodic madrigal, duet) • concerto — with obbligato instruments

  12. Oratorio • Derived from narrative texts treated as motets or sacred concertos • Name taken from oratorio or prayer hall, space separate from sanctuary, where such works were performed • Intended for devotional observances of Christian confraternities, but not liturgical • Features narrator, called testo or historicus (in Passion oratorios “evangelist”)

  13. Dramatic and musical gestures of oratorio • Concert work (not worship music) for chorus, solo singers, and orchestra • Not staged or costumed • Based on biblical story • Uses musical techniques of opera — recitative, affective/rhetorical solos, chorus, instrumental accompaniment • Likely to feature chorus • no logistical problem in costuming, staging • musical word painting replaces visual scenery

  14. Instrumental genres in the early seventeenth century

  15. Building on Renaissance genres • Increased importance in musical life • Doctrine of affects provided justification for expression — musical style as rhetorical even without text • Structural advances — concertato scoring, tonality, form • Conception based on instruments • farther from vocal models • idiomatic writing • Dynamics — terraced

  16. Improvisatory types • Toccata, prelude • Often paired or interwoven with section or passages in fuga

  17. Imitative types • Ricercar, fantasia • Featured polyphonic imitation, concentrating on one subject — unity of affect • Free form, tendency to continuity rather than frequent sectional divisions

  18. Sonata • Successor of canzona by separation of sections into movements • Key unity maintains central affect, but sections contrast in material, tempo • Almost always with basso continuo — trio texture (two parts and b.c.) becomes most important

  19. Variation types • Partita (series of partes) • Cantus firmus variation — especially of chorale • Ornamentation of melody line • Variations over repeating bass • similar to vocal strophic variations • standard types — chaconne, passacaglia, ruggiero, romanesca, etc.

  20. Dance types • Stylized dance types for independent pieces • Binary form • Suite • relation to variation set — partita • key unity stabilizes affect while dance rhythms give affective variety • standard order — allemande, courante, sarabande, gigue

  21. Questions for discussion • What historical factors let to the distinction between church, chamber, and theatrical styles in seventeenth-century music? How have more recent periods maintained or forsaken the separation of styles by social function? • In what sense is early opera dramatic? In what senses is it not dramatic? • How did the appearance and development of the oratorio resemble or differ from that of the liturgical drama? • What factors contributed to the increasing important and sophistication of instrumental music in the seventeenth century?

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