Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Music
- The 20th Century
- The Rites of Spring
- It was written for the ballet Russes (a Russian group performing in Paris)
- it was choreographed by the ballet superstar Vaslaw nijinsky
- It was written by Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971)
- Constant unevenness in rhythm and changing time signiture
- The first performance was in Paris
- Made up of stamping and jumping with knees pulled in and elbows sticking out
- One of the most famous openings in music
- Played higher than ever before on the bassoon
- Based on a Lithuanian Folk Song
- opening section is called the Auguries of Spring
- It end with 'the Sacrificial Dance'
- 'the chosen one' dances herself to death
- as a sacrifice to the God of Spring
- Dissonance
- Lack of harmony among musical notes
- Modernism
- Bela Bartok
- Serialism
- Arnold Schoenberg
- He had begun composing in an atonal style,
dissonance music without any sense of home key
- Webern's Variations of Piano
- composed in 1936
- Large range of dynamics
- Classical
- Beethoven
- suffered from hearing loss (under 30)
- 1770-1827
- born in Bonn (Germany)
- irritable and short tempered
- never married
- Joseph Haydn
- wrote string-quartets
- type of chamber music
- 2 violins, viola, cello
- wrote symphonies
- Mozart
- Born in Austria 1770
- Mozert horn Concerto No.4 in E flat major, K.49
- It is in three movements
- Rondo form
- 6/8 time
- happy, springy
- Rondo form
- Rondo Form
- A structure based around a returning tune called the rondo
theme. It is seperated by other contrasting sections of
music which always leads back to the same tune
- ABACABA
- Horn
- Early horns had a
restricted number
of pitches
- the use of crooks - a section of tubing of different length
that, when inserted, altered the length of the instrument,
therefor the pitch - was an early solution to the problem
- In the mid 18th century, people began to
insert their right hands into the bell to
change the length of the instrument;
adjusting the tuning
- Around 1815, valves were
introduced - became chromatic
- Concerto
- piece for orchestra with a solo instrument
- Romantic
- Piano
- invented in the early 1700s by an Italian Cristoforti
- It was later built using an iron frame
- The range of notes was gradually increased to 6
octaves by 1819, giving it more expressive scope
- Idee fixe
- Woodwind new instruments
- piccolo (small, high flute with a piercing sound)
- bass clarinet (a low sounding clarinet)
- Contra bassoon (a very low sounding double or bass bassoon)
- Cor anglais (a bigger deeper sounding oboe)
- The harp became a regular
member of the orchestra
- hector Berlioz's Symphonie Fantastique
- Is a musical phrase or theme that occurs at intervalsthroughout the piece
- 2nd movement: ball. Waltz 3/4
- 4th movement:
March to the
Scaffold. The
idee fixe
reappears to be
cut off by the
fall of the axe
- Fredryk Chopin - born near Warsaw
- He wrote:
Nocturnes
- Rubato
- 'holding back and pushing on'
- stolen/borrowing
- an expressive variation of tempo; a
relaxation of strict time
- Time is taken from less
important notes to spend
on more important ones.
- Virtuoso
- having an amazing technical ability
- Virtuosic Pianist
- Nicolo Pagini
- Virtuosic Violinist
- Techniques such as:
- Franz Liszt
- 1811 Hungary
- Invented the modern piano recital
- Opera
- Secular - non-religious
- Love
- Dramatic work set to music
- Consists of: recitatives, arias, choruses
- Music Drama
- Richard Wagner wanted to create a form calles Gesamtkunstwerk
- Bringing together the best aspects of music, poetry, art and acting
- His compositions have
leitmotifs - short musical
themes associalted with a
character, place, idea or plot
element
- Tristian Chord
- F,D sharp,B, Gsharp
- not like normal chords
- famous chord