1 / 36

The Renaissance

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

ornice
Télécharger la présentation

The Renaissance

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. The Renaissance

  2. What was the Renaissance? • Period following the middle ages (1400-1600) • “Rebirth” of classical Greece and Rome • Began in Italy • Moved to northern Europe

  3. 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

  4. Objectives During the middle ages • Find God • Prove pre-conceived ideas During the Renaissance • Find man • Promote learning

  5. 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)

  6. 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

  7. 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

  8. 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

  9. 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

  10. 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

  11. Realism That painting is the most to be praised which agrees most exactly with the thing imitated. - Leonardo da Vinci

  12. Names! Artists known by name – 1st contemporary art historian (1550) • Individuality celebrated in this era

  13. 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

  14. Church is still the biggest power structure • Beginning of banking • Private fortunes & power • Starts in Italy – specifically Florence

  15. Josquin Ave Maria . . . MichelangeloDavid DonatelloDavid Michelangelo Raphael Leonardo REFORMATION Renaissance timeline 1400 1500 1600

  16. 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

  17. 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

  18. 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.)

  19. Basic structure • Words dominate • Tone painting

  20. 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)

  21. Josquin (to the tune of the Beatles’ “Michelle”) Josquin, the Man, Wrote smooth counterpoint as no one can, That guy Josquin.

  22. Josquin Desprez • 1st “Great Composer” glorified by contemporary and following generations • new approach to composition?

  23. a piece by Josquin

  24. Musical Notation • Invented to publish books of music • Invented instruments • Instrumental arrangements appeared

  25. 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

  26. The Counter-Reformation

  27. 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

  28. 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”

  29. 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

  30. 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.

  31. Secular Music • New instruments • Chansons favored in the court • Courtly Love • Madrigals • Poetry and Music

  32. 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)

  33. 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

  34. 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

  35. 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 

More Related