CHAPTER 39 Johann Sebastian Bach: Instrumental Music in Weimar and Cöthen.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 9 Baroque Instrumental Music
Advertisements

Sonata – Concerto – Concerto Grosso Chorale Prelude – Passacaglia - Chaconne.
S3 Listening Unit 2 Baroque Music.
Music History An Abbreviated History of Western Classical Music An Abbreviated History of Western Classical Music.
Johann Sebastian Bach ( ) The Life of J.S. Bach Born in Eisenach, Germany, which was also the birthplace of Martin Luther. Bach’s family supplied.
Timeline. Chapter 7 LATE BAROQUE MUSIC BACH AND HANDEL Craig Wright’s Listening to Music, 4/edition.
Class of 1685 The Instrumental Music of Bach and Handel.
You have probably heard of someone named Bach before. Most likely it was Johann Sebastian Bach. The Bach family was made up of more than 70 composers.
Classical Music Higher Music.
Johann Sebastian Bach ( ) Came from long line of GERMAN musicians Plus four of his sons became influential musicians themselves Grew up in church.
Johann Sebastian Bach J.S. Bach (1685 – 1750) Born in modern Germany Family had numerous musicians in it (over 80!!!) Mother & father died.
By: Heather Newell Born March 21 st, 1685, in Eisenach, Germany Orphan at 10 and taken in by his brother, Johann Christoph, until he was 15 Went to Lüneburg.
Music Fundamentals 9 th Grade Mr. Lias The Life and Music of Johann Sebastian Bach Music: Toccata and Fugue in d minor.
High School Music Theory The Fugue Straka. What is the Fugue? The fugue is a composition based on imitative counterpoints. It has a fixed number of voices.
Chapter 8 Prelude: The Late Baroque Period
Chapter 10: The Late Baroque: Bach. Johann Sebastian Bach ( ) Career: – Weimer ( ), organist – Cöthen ( ), court composer, conductor.
Johann Sebastian Bach Copyright © Frankel Consulting Services, Inc.
The Genius of Baroque Music
Baroque – derived from the Portuguese word barroco meaning “an irregular shaped pearl” Era of absolute monarchy Religious wars Protestants.
What Makes a Work of Art Great? [chorale=Lutheran Hymn]
The Pavan and Galliard Renaissance dances organised into pairs or groups Homophonic texture with sections repeated in a more ornamented form.
Baroque Instrumental Music
Markham Woods Middle Music History Part 2 The Baroque Period.
HOW MUSICAL LINES INTERACT Musical Texture, Form, and Style.
CLASS #3 THE BAROQUE, PART 2 CD #1, TRACKS 9 AND 10 Music Appreciation MUSI 115.
HOW MUSICAL LINES INTERACT Musical Texture, Form, and Style.
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685– 1750) Baroque Era Composer.
Music History and Composer Study
© 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved The World of Music 7 th edition Part 4 Listening to Western Classical Music Chapter 10: Music.
The World of Music 6 th edition Part 4 Listening to Western Classical Music Chapter 10: Music of the Baroque Period ( )
Baroque Music Handel, Pachelbel, Vivaldi, Bach. Key Musical Developments in the Baroque Era Instrumental music Instrumental music Concerto (a composition.
Baroque Music. Sonata A work for solo piano, or a solo instrument accompanied by harpsichord. Often the basso continuo would also be played by a cello/Viola.
Baroque Era Baroque Era Baroque is a term generally used by music historians to describe a broad range of musical styles in a large geographic.
Bach and jazz connection Students of the ATHENEE ROYAL VICTOR HORTA.
Baroque Instrumental Music Higher. Basso Continuo Most Distinguishing features Continually played throughout music Bass line – Cello, or bassoon Chord.
The Baroque Text book Musical tracks 9-13.
Baroque ( ) Rise of Instrumental Music Rise of Instrumental Music Tonality - harmony is regularized, sounds more modern Tonality - harmony is regularized,
The World of Music 7th edition
Bach By: Preston Wooten.  Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Eisensach, Germany on march,  He was the youngest son of Johann Ambrosius Bach and.
BAROQUE. Orchestral Instruments (Basso) Continuo A accompaniment style with an improvised, chordal part on harpsichord or organ, supported by a low-sounding.
Important form in the late Baroque period Concerto Grosso – a small group of soloists is set against a larger group of players Anywhere from 2-4 soloists.
 Most popular work  From The Four Seasons  Violin, string orchestra, and basso continuo  Descriptive effects  Based on four sonnets.
Get books again today…. CHAPTER 3: CONCERTO GROSSO AND RITORNELLO FORM Basic principles of Baroque music: Basic principles of Baroque music: Contrasts.
CLASSICAL.
Baroque Music The Concerto Comes from concertare (to contend with) –the opposition of two dissimilar bodies of sound Two types of Baroque Concerto.
Johann Sebastian Bach Life and Compositions. Johann Sebastian Bach.
CHAPTER 40 Johann Sebastian Bach: Vocal Music in Leipzig.
Begins on page 121 Chapter 14 Baroque Instrumental Music: Concerto and Fugue.
Music Through the Ages Thursday, January 7th. Objectives Policies and Procedures signatures due Tuesday Bach’s Early Years Happy Wednesday!
Medieval Music: Gregorian Chants Dufay: Mass for the inauguration of Florence cathedral (1436): 2 voices Polyphonic Music: Religious: Josquin the Prez.
HOW MUSICAL LINES INTERACT Musical Texture (Harmony), Form, and Style.
BAROQUE AND CLASSICAL CHAMBER MUSIC – AOS2. This lesson… All of you will be able to name some features of Baroque and Classical Chamber music. All of.
Johann Sebastian Bach German composer, organist, harpsichordist, violist, and violinist whose sacred and secular works for choir, orchestra,
The Baroque: The Age of Musical Extravagance and Control.
“Ornate style of Architecture” “Ornamentation” Baroque “Irregular shaped Jewellery” or.
Baroque Solo and Chamber Music
Johann Sebastian Bach
Classical Music Higher Music.
J.S. Bach Jeopardy Family Numbers Take a Chance His Life Geography
Baroque Unit
By Maria Yea, Maria Eppler, Jose Soriano Seminar
The World of Music 6th edition
Johann Sebastian Bach BORN ON March 21, 1685 – July 28, 1750 in Leipzip HIS EARLY YEARS.
Baroque Era
Johann Sebastian Bach Copyright © Frankel Consulting Services, Inc.
Gigue Describe what you see & hear.
Classical Music Higher Music.
Chapter 9 Baroque Instrumental Music
Johann Sebastian Bach Copyright © Frankel Consulting Services, Inc.
Brandenburg Concerto No.5, 3rd movement
Presentation transcript:

CHAPTER 39 Johann Sebastian Bach: Instrumental Music in Weimar and Cöthen

Johann Sebastian Bach Born in central Germany from a family with a long musical tradition, J.S. Bach first studied music, the humanities, and theology in private Lutheran church schools at Eisenach, Ohrdruf, and Lüneburg. After serving as organist in Arnstadt, he moved to more promising positions in Mühlhausen and then in Weimar.

In Bach's time, the organ occupied a central place in German society and particularly in the Lutheran religious service. Then and now, the Germans were known for their excellence in the manufacture of pipe organs. Rank: a group of similar-sounding organ pipes (violins, trumpets, oboes, etc.). Stop: a small wooden knob that activates each rank when pulled.

Bach in Weimar During his time in Weimar ( ), Bach wrote most of his great works for organ. Among them, the Orgelbüchlein (Little Organ Book) is a collection of forty-six choral preludes that Bach might have intended as –a repertory of pieces for the organist to play in church; –a demonstration on how to compose a choral prelude on a given tune; –a way to develop the organist's technique through extensive use of the pedal. Recall that a choral prelude is an ornamental setting of a pre-existing choral tune to be played on the organ before the singing of the choral by the congregation.

"In dulci jubilo" Known today as the Christmas carol "Good Christian men rejoice," this choral prelude from the Orgelbüchlein sets an old Gregorian chant. Here, the melody is in the soprano, while the other voices provide counterpoint. Moreover, Bach adds two canons, one between soprano and bass, and the other between alto and tenor.

Pedal point: a sustained or continually repeated pitch, usually placed in the bass and sounding while the harmonies change around it—so called because of its original association with the pedal of the organ. Bach often concludes his keyboard works with a pedal point.

Bach in Cöthen Bach was appointed Kappellmeister (chief court musician) at Cöthen in 1717, where he served until This position was very much a step up from that of organist in Weimar. Much of his chamber and orchestral music dates from this period. Two- and Three-Part Inventions: two sets of didactic pieces along the lines of simple fugues. Each collection contains fifteen works all in separate keys.

The Well-Tempered Clavier A collection keyboard pieces by Bach in two books each containing twenty-four pairs of preludes and fugues arranged by key in ascending order. As the title suggests, Bach's "clavier" should be tuned to play in all tonalities. Equal temperament: a division of the octave into twelve equal half-steps.

Subject: the energetic, memorable theme with which a fugue begins. Countersubject: a theme that serves as a counterpoint to the subject.

Exposition: the opening section of a fugue in which the subject is presented in imitation in each voice. Episode: the section(s) that follows the exposition and subsequent statements of the subject characterized by melodic sequence and modulation. Fugue: a contrapuntal piece for two, three, or four voices, which begins with the presentation of a subject in imitation in each voice (exposition), continues with modulating passages of free counterpoint (episodes) and further appearances of the subject, and ends with a strong affirmation of the tonic key.

Invertible counterpoint: a compositional technique in which two voices exchange motives.

Picardy third: the sudden shift to a major chord at the end of a composition in a minor key. Obbligato: a term indicating that a composer has written a specific part for an instrument and intends it to be played as written. Bach often wrote out obbligato accompaniment parts for the harpsichord instead of a single figured bass line.

Bach's Brandenburg Concertos are a set of six concertos for "several instruments" written for the most part in Cöthen. They are dedicated to the Margrave of Brandenburg, whom Bach met during a visit to Berlin where he was sent to pick up a large new harpsichord. It was this harpsichord that Bach himself likely played during the premier of Brandenburg Concerto No. 5.