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Chapter 10 Baroque Vocal Music

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Title: LISTEN! Author: Mark Harbold Last modified by: Mark Harbold Created Date: 9/30/1996 6:28:10 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Company – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 10 Baroque Vocal Music


1
Chapter 10Baroque Vocal Music
  • Opera

2
Key Terms
  • Affects
  • Coloratura
  • Opera seria
  • Libretto
  • Librettist
  • Recitative
  • Secco recitative
  • Accompanied recitative
  • Castrato
  • Aria
  • Da capo (ABA) form

3
Baroque Vocal Music
  • Largest part of a Baroque composers output was
    vocal music
  • For solo voices, chorus, or both
  • In demand for church, court, theater
  • Close connection between words music
  • Affect especially important in vocal music
  • Vocabulary of the emotions
  • Victory expressed with trumpets, drums, lively
    march rhythms, major key
  • Sorrow expressed with soft dynamics, slow
    rhythms, dissonances, minor key

4
Opera
  • Reflected Baroque fascination with theater
  • Flourished throughout Europe after 1600
  • The most spectacular, adventurous, glamorous,
    influential Baroque genre
  • Combined music, vocal virtuosity, poetry, drama,
    dance, scenic splendor, more
  • Elaborate stage machinery for rapid scene
    changes, deities in clouds or flying chariots,
    fire-breathing dragons, etc.
  • Intense expression of emotion foremost!

5
Opera Emotional Expression
  • Opera allowed solo singers to express feelings in
    the most direct, powerful way
  • Opera plots put characters in situations where
    intense emotion was natural
  • Emotions intensified by music
  • Also intensified by vocal virtuosity
  • Coloratura singingfast brilliant runs, scales,
    high notes, vocal cadenzas, etc.
  • Great singers moved audiences by singing more
    beautifully, delicately, emotionally

6
Italian Opera Seria (1)
  • Principal type of Italian Baroque opera was opera
    seria (serious opera)
  • Plots often used tragic heroes, stories from
    ancient history mythology
  • Designed to stir powerful emotions
  • Passion, rage, grief, triumph, etc.
  • Many opportunities for singers to express these
    emotions one at a time
  • Needed more plot twists than a soap opera to make
    so many emotions believable

7
Italian Opera Seria (2)
  • Almost entirely solo singing
  • Featured sopranos mezzo-sopranos (including
    castrati)
  • Tenors basses played subordinate roles
  • Very few duets or choruses
  • Libretto the text of an opera
  • Italian for little book
  • Author of the text was the librettist
  • Librettist shaped the drama
  • Libretto alternated between prose texts (for
    recitative) poetic texts (for arias)

8
Recitative
  • Musical declamation of words in a heightened,
    theatrical manner
  • Always with instrumental accompaniment
  • Uses free rhythm of emotional speech
  • Mirrors natural ups and downs of speech
  • As in angry outbursts, asides, questioning
  • Words not repeated, as in speech
  • Used in scenes that call for
  • Action or dialogue
  • Special emphasis on the words

9
Recitative Types
  • Secco Recitative
  • Italian secco dry
  • Simple continuo accompaniment only
  • Offers maximum flexibility for singer
  • Accompanied Recitative
  • Accompanied by orchestra continuo
  • Provides greater weight emphasis
  • Reserved for the most excited, emotion-filled
    moments

10
Aria
  • A set piece for solo singer orchestra
  • Much more musical elaboration coherence than
    recitative
  • Vocal part more melodic
  • Clear beat, rhythm, meter
  • Orchestral accompaniment
  • Singer-actor mulls over emotions at length
  • Plot action stops during aria
  • Frequent repetition of words phrases

11
Da Capo Form
  • Standard Italian Baroque opera aria form
  • Ternary form A B A
  • Based on poem in two stanzas
  • A section sets 1st stanza to music
  • Contrasting B section sets 2nd stanza
  • Written instruction at end of B says
  • Da capo (from the head)
  • Tells performers to go back to the beginning
  • Performers repeat entire A section

12
Ornamentation Da Capo Form
  • Customary for solo singer to add ornamentation
    during repeat of A
  • Improvised runs, cadenzas, etc.
  • The slower the tempo, the more elaborate the
    ornaments
  • Permitted singer to show off vocal skill,
    virtuosity, expressiveness
  • Greatly appreciated by Baroque audiences

13
Recitative vs. Aria
  • Free, speechlike rhythms
  • Pitches follow speech patterns
  • Continuo accompaniment
  • Prose text (words stated once)
  • Advances the action (movement)
  • Dialoguefreely interactive
  • Clear beat, consistent meter
  • Pitches form melodic patterns phrases
  • Orchestral accompaniment
  • Poetic text (phrases often repeated)
  • Freezes the action (reflection)
  • Soliloquyexpresses one emotion

14
Castrato
  • Castrati were biggest stars in Italian opera
  • Boys with beautiful voices who were castrated and
    never went through puberty
  • Their voices remained in soprano/alto range
  • Years of intensive vocal training made them
    virtuoso singers
  • Castrato voice highly prizedmore powerful
    brilliant than a womans voice
  • Castrati sang most important male roles
  • Heroes, romantic leads, supporting roles

15
George Frideric Handel(1685-1759)
  • Born in Halle, near Leipzig
  • Played in Hamburg opera orchestra
  • Successful journey to Italy
  • Wrote operas for Venice, Florence, Rome
  • Court musician to Elector of Hanover, who soon
    became Englands King George I
  • Handel pursued a career in London
  • Opera impresariocomposer, producer, etc.
  • Turned to oratorio as opera audiences dwindled

16
Handel, Julius Caesar
  • One of nearly 40 Italian operas for London
  • Story from Roman history
  • Takes up events surrounding Egyptian Queen
    Cleopatras seduction of Roman emperor Julius
    Caesar
  • Cleopatras brother Ptolemy has murdered Pompey
    (Caesars foe) put Cornelia (Pompeys widow) in
    his own harem
  • Sextus (Cornelias son) seeks revenge on Ptolemy
    ( eventually kills him)

17
Handel, La giustizia (1)
  • Sextus promises revenge on Ptolemy
  • Typical da capo ariastrict A B A form
  • Aria begins with string orchestra ritornello
  • Sets the mood, or affect, right away
  • Sextus starts with the same music a bit later

18
Handel, La giustizia (2)
  • The affect expressed here is anger
  • Vigorous, strenuous music
  • Minor key
  • Loud explosions coloratura on key words
  • vendetta (vengeance)
  • traditor (traitor)
  • punire (punish)
  • Dramatic pause near end of A

19
Handel, La giustizia (3)
  • B section provides subtle contrast
  • Visits new keys
  • More subdued mood
  • Orchestra drops outonly continuo used
  • Return of A uses many ornaments
  • Flourishes added to high notes on punire long
    note on traditor
  • Dramatic pause near end filled with virtuoso
    cadenza
  • Ornamented final cadence sweeps us away

20
Aria La giustizia
  • La giustizia ha già sull arco
  • Pronto strale alla vendetta
  • Per punire un traditor.
  • Quanto è tarda la saetta
  • Tanto più crudele aspetta
  • La sua pena un empio cor.
  • Justice now has in its bow
  • The arrow primed for vengeance
  • To castigate a traitor!
  • The later the arrow is shot
  • The crueler is the pain suffered
  • By a dastardly heart!
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