Title: The Romantic Era
1The Romantic Era
2Romance/Romantic
- term derived from medieval French
- imaginative tale written in a romance language as
opposed to Latin. Ordinary people achieving the
extraordinary - Term Romantic first appears in English literature
during the 17th Century
3Individualism
- The individual imagination paired with defiance
to authority reached its peak during the 19th C - Artists served themselves rather than pleasing
aristocratic patrons - When accepting patronage, it was to the artists
own terms
4A thing for the past
- Sir Walter Scott almost a dozen popular novels
set in medieval times - Eugène Delacroix gallant knights followed
chivalric code in service of idealized women - Hector Berlioz Greek and Roman mythology in his
opera The Trojans http//thespace.org/items/e000
0exc - Richard Wagner Norse mythology The Ring Cycle
http//ringcycle.metoperafamily.org/
5(No Transcript)
6Grotesque Themes
- Hunchback of Notre Dame Hugo 1831
- Ring of Nebulung ugly dwarfs
- Faust Goethe
7Natures Force and Power
- Darwins theory of natural selection 1859 On the
Origin of Species - Caspar David Friedrich 1774-1840
- William Turner 1775-1851
8The Industrial Revolution
- Smokestack industries spewed ash over cities and
countryside - People abandoned farms for greater security in
the cities instead they found congestion,
poverty and crime - Cheap labor including child labor in factories
9Warfare
- Napoleon assembled hordes of soldiers motivated
by patriotism rather than money - Development of the Gatling gun
- Little concern for civilian casualties
10Colonialism to Imperialism
- World powers Britain, France and Germany governed
the lesser races of the world, traveling to
Africa, India and the Middle East - Institutuionalized slavery
11Politics
- American Civil War
- French Revolution
- Risogimento the resurgence, unification of
Italy - A newly united Germany under leadership of Otto
von Bismarck
12Education
- Extended to the middle class
- Spread of egalitarianism race, gender battles
13The work week
- At start of Romantic Era 70 hours per week
- At end of Romantic Era 50 hours per week
- Provided more leisure time
- Permanent orchestras and symphonies put in place
as well as the nine month concert season
14Hector Berlioz
- 1803-1869 small town near Grenoble
- Wavy red hair, penetrating eyes and unbound
energy - Shared Fathers love for literature
- Father insisted Hector study medicine
- Lasted 2yrs
15Hector Berlioz
- In Paris, no family support for music
- Prix de Rome (3rd try)
- 1827 first saw H.S.
- Music seen as incorrect to the public
- Music critic
- Idèe Fixe (fixed idea)
- Programmatic Music
- Marriage was over within six years
16Symphony Fantastique1830
- Part I Reveries, passions
- Part II a ball (1520)
- Part III Country side (2150)
- Part IV March to Scaffold (3750)
- Part V A Witches Sabbath (4445)
17Hector Berlioz
- Symphonie Fantastique
- Romeo and Juliet
- The Trojans
- Treatise on Instrumentation and Modern
Orchestration - Tuba Mirum
- Te Deum
18Nicolo Paganini
- Born into a poor family 1782-1840
- Father made him practice morning to night even
denying food - By 13 leading violinist would not take him as a
student
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vwXoAYWpzT3E
19Nicolo Paganini
- By 18 supported himself by giving performances
- Warsaw and Paris 1829 1831 Liszt and Chopin
20The Piano
- In 1830 lt 10,000 produced annually
- By 1900 gt 500,000
- Viennese piano of Beethoven competed with the
French pianos of Pleyel and Erard
21Franz Liszt 1811-1886
- Hungarian family that worked with Esterhazy
estate - Thought descended from nobility no proof
- Father taught cello when he was 7
- Hungarian nobles provided scholarship for him to
study music in Vienna when 10
22Liszt 1811-1886
- Studied with Czerny (pupil of Beethoven)
- As a teenager, travelled in France, England and
Switzerland to play concerts - Day before premiere of Symphony Fantastique, met
Berlioz
23Liszt 1811-1886
- Three months later met Paganini
- From 16-19 dedicated 10-12 hours daily to achieve
his own transcendental technique - Le concert, cest moi
- 1848 permanent conductor of Weimar court orchestra
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vhQULyGMhhWs
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vGX0KiSwm3yc
24Liszt 1811-1886
- 1860 moved from Weimar to Rome because of an
affair with a Catholic princess - Taught master classes for 25 years to his death
- 1865 took minor Catholic orders, though he never
became a priest
25Frederic Chopin
- 1810-1849
- Reserved and withdrawn
- Born in Warsaw mom Polish, dad French
- 1829 heard Paganini
- Lived in Paris for the latter part of his life
- Gave lessons to aristocratic children
26Frederic Chopin
- Asked students to leave fees on the mantlepiece
- 1836 Met George Sand, aka Aurore Dudevant
- Suffered from tuberculosis travelling to
England 1848 may have quickened his death
27Frederic Chopin
- Wrote nearly 250 works
- Most works are 2-6 minutes
- Mastered the mazurka, polonaise, nocturne, and
etude
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v6PGpn6Iw50g
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v4LkXsnEEQmE
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v4LkXsnEEQmE
28Felix Mendelssohn
- 1809-1847
- Songs Without Words
- Overture
- Sister Fanny
- Known for melodies
- Father was a banker
- Mother
29Felix Mendelssohn
- Used classical forms
- Embodied the feelings of Romanticism
- Visited Goethe, stayed two weeks
- Overture a stand alone work
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vm0gHTNJVFtA
30Robert Schumann
- 1810-1856
- Loved literature
- 16 attended University
- Did not attend class read, sketched novels and
improvised piano - 18 took lessons from Friedrich Wieck met 9 year
old Clara
31Robert Schumann
- 1830 heard Paganini
- Signs of manic-depressive disorder
- Fingers injured
- Turned to composition and journalism
- First to praise Berlioz, Chopin and Brahms
32Robert Schumann
- 1839 Engagement
- Legal battles
- 1840 Married Clara
- 150 songs
- cycle of great production followed by periods of
depression and inactivity - Suicide attempt
- Assylum
33Brahms
- 1833-1897
- Born the middle child mom43 dad25
- Sent Schumann his works of youth returned
unopened - Conservative
- Absolute music of classical era
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vBAuqxEMRapg
34Johann Strauss, Jr.
- 1825-1899
- Father discouraged musical career
- 1842 undertook his own musical education
- 1860 world famous
- International Peace Jubilee in America 10,000
instrumentalist 20,000 singers, 100 sub-conductors
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vqqm9jaM5UPA
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vlkzWF1UE1CI
35Opera in Italy
- Early 18th C opera moved from theathers of the
aristocracy to public theaters - Opera houses in Paris, London, Berlin, and Vienna
- Most popular form of entertainment
- Audience members not formally educated in music
- Libretto
36Gioacchino Rossini
- 1792-1868
- At 18 wrote his first opera
- 1810-1829 36 Spain, France and Italy
- The Barber of Seville
37Giuseppe Verdi
- 1813-1901
- Perfect blend of music and drama
- First music lessons 3
- At 18 Milan conservatory refused admission
- 1840 first production at La Scala - failure
38Verdi
- Within 2 months of first major flop, lost his
wife, son and daughter - 1842 Nabucco
- In following years, 20 more operas followed,
including Rigolletto, Il Tovatore, La Traviata
39Verdi
- Verdis operas had subtle political undertones
- For unification of Italy, he played an important
role - After 1860 completed only 5 operas
- Melodies that beg to be whistled or hummed
- Melodies straightforward and subtle
- Orchestration bold
40Verdi
41Giacomo Puccini
- 1858-1924
- Originated from family of church musicians
- Sometimes worked in Tuscan folk songs or snatches
from Verdi opera - Milan conservatory at 22
- The Almighty touched me with his little finger
and said Write for the theater, mind you, only
for the theater!
42Puccini
- Madama Butterfly, Tosca, La boheme
- Verismo realism favored lower class characters
caught up in lust, greed hatred, betrayal, or
revenge.
43Richard Wagner
- 1813-1883
- Youngest of nine
- Father died when Wagner was 6 mo.
- Wanted an opera in Paris
- Journals, piano arrangements
Tristan and Isolde http//www.youtube.com/watch?v
NlpLlQbNFow
44Wagner
- Affairs, debtors prison, insensitive, exiled
- Die Hochzeit (the wedding)
- The Flying Dutchman
- Tannhauser
- Lohengrin
- The Ring
45Wagner
- Unending melody
- Leitmotif
- Zukunftsmusik (music of the future)
- Gesamtkunstwerk (complete artwork)
- Lohengrin sought a woman who would believe in
him, who would believe in him, who would not ask
who he was or from where he came, but would love
him just as he was Doubt and jealousy prove to
him that he is not understood but only adored,
and tear from him the confession of his divinity,
whith which he returns, destroyed, into
isolation.
46Camille Saint - Säens
- 1835-1921
- Organist began playing at 3 by 10 he was
playing Beethoven concertos in public - Traveled extensively (Australia, Antarctica)
- Wife was half his age. Two sons death
47Saint - Säens
- Blamed his wife for their death leaves her and
travels the world extensively - After 1880 France recognized him as outdated.
This contributed to his travels - Helped found the French National Music Society
- Algeria
- Samson and Delilah, Danse Macabre, Carnival of
the Animals
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vtG8QCjaw4yk
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v5LOFhsksAYw
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vYMeGxIgVdHU