IB Music/Music History/Romantic Period

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Characteristics

Individuality of style

  1. Self-expression important
  2. People can distinguish composers easily

Expressive aims and subjects

  1. Love glorified
  2. Fascination with fantastic and diabolical
  3. Nature important influence

Nationalism and exoticism

Nationalism:

  1. music created with specific national identity
  2. Used folk songs, dances, legends, history of homeland
  3. fired up by French Revolution and Napoleonic wars
  4. led to unification --> this caused composers to write in styles, language and history of their homeland

Exoticism:

  1. use of colorful materials from foreign countries
  2. Remote, picturesque, mysterious

Program music

  1. Instrumental music associated with story, poem, idea
  2. Accompanied with an explanation in a program
  3. “Union of the arts”

Expressive tone color

  1. Timbre really important
  2. Orchestra could have 100 musicians
  3. Brass, woodwind, percussion had more active role
  4. Mahler used 25 brass instruments in 2nd symphony
  5. Contrabassoon, bass clarinet, English horn, piccolo added to woodwind section
  6. New sounds drawn from old instruments
    • Low-range flutes
    • Pizzicato
  7. Piano made better, so better tone; damper pedal added

Colorful harmony

  1. New chords
  2. Chromatic harmony
  3. Dissonance more acceptable
  4. Wide variety of keys, rapid modulation
  5. Tonic less clear

Expanded range of dynamics, pitch, and tempo

  1. ffff, pppp used
  2. Frequent crescendos and decrescendos
  3. Range of pitch expanded with piccolo, contrabassoon
  4. Accelerando, ritardando, rubato

Form: miniature and monumental

  1. Short piano pieces for the home by Schubert and Chopin
  2. Several-hour Berlioz and Wagner pieces
  3. Symphonies, sonatas, string quartets, concertos, operas, choral works still produced
  4. individual movements longer than in classical
  5. Themes quoted in different movements to unify
  6. “Thematic transformation”
  7. Transitional passages between movements

The art song

Franz Schubert

Robert Schumann

Clara Wieck Schumann

Frederic Chopin

Franz Liszt

Felix Mendelssohn

Hector Berlioz

Peter Illyich Tchaikovsky

Bedrich Smetana

He was a bohemian nationalist composer.

Giacomo Puccini

an Italian composer whose operas, including La bohème, Tosca, and Madama Butterfly, are among the most frequently performed in the standard repertoire. (successor to Verdi)

Richard Wagner

a German composer, conductor, music theorist, and essayist, primarily known for his operas (or "music dramas" as he later came to call them). Unlike most other great opera composers, Wagner always wrote the scenario and libretto for his works himself. Wagner's compositions, particularly those of his later period, are notable for their contrapuntal texture, rich chromaticism, harmonies and orchestration, and elaborate use of leitmotifs: musical themes associated with specific characters, locales, or plot elements. Wagner pioneered advances in musical language including extreme chromaticism and atonality which greatly influenced the development of European classical music.

Gustav Mahler

(1860-1911) Gustav Mahler was a Bohemian-Austrian composer and conductor. Mahler was best known during his own lifetime as one of the leading orchestral and operatic conductors of the day. He has since come to be acknowledged as among the most important post-romantic composers. The spirit of the Lied (German for song) constantly rests in his work. Keenly aware of the colourations of the orchestra, the composer filled his symphonies with flowing melodies and expressive harmonies, achieving bright tonal qualities using the clarity of his melodic lines. Among his other innovations are expressive use of combinations of instruments in both large and small scale, increased use of percussion, as well as combining voice and chorus to symphony form, and extreme voice leading in his counterpoint. His orchestral style was based on counterpoint; two melodies would each start off the other seemingly simultaneously, choosing clarity over a mass orgy of sound. This is shown most clearly by his approach to the issue of so-called 'progressive tonality'. Progressive tonality is the name given to the compositional practice whereby a piece of music does not finish in the key in which it began, but instead 'progresses' to an ending in a different key.

Contextual

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