CLASS: Nov 7, 2018 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the defining characteristics of Musical Tales (Favola en Musica)?

  • Plots
  • Performance Contexts
  • Characters
  • Musical Style
A

What are the defining characteristics of Musical Tales (Favola en Musica)?

  • Plots
    • Greek and Roman Mythology
  • Performance Contexts
    • Court and Occasional (Weddings)
  • Characters
    • (Like Hansel and Gretel, Snow White)
  • Musical Style
    • Recitative (Speech like singing)
    • Aria (Character expresses emotion)
    • Noumenal music (Music that’s only heard by the audience)
    • Phenomenal Music (Characters hear it as music, Orfeo’s strophic aria)
      • Orfeo is a mashup of styles VS Monteverdi’s Coronation of Pompeo (the entire whole of itself, more seamless)
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2
Q

What genre is this?

  • Character expresses feeling
    • Orfeo’s Strophic, nothing happens except he is expressing his happiness
    • Plot stops, character emotes
  • Mix of syllabic and melismatic text setting
  • Accompaniment = basso continuo + orchestra
    • Beefed up accompaniment
  • Steady rhythms
    • Can tap your hand and can sense the meter
  • Strophic Form, Later: Da Capo Form
A

What genre is this?

ARIA

  • Character expresses feeling
    • Orfeo’s Strophic, nothing happens except he is expressing his happiness
    • Plot stops, character emotes
  • Mix of syllabic and melismatic text setting
  • Accompaniment = basso continuo + orchestra
    • Beefed up accompaniment
  • Steady rhythms
    • Can tap your hand and can sense the meter
  • Strophic Form, Later: Da Capo Form
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3
Q

What genre is this?

  • Dialogue, narration, moving the story along
    • Something actually happens
  • Syllabic text setting
    • Usually a lot of texts
  • Only Basso continuo accompaniment (no orchestra)
    • Strings drop out
  • Rubato: Flexible tempo following speech-like declamation
    • The continuo group and singer work closely together to follow each other
A

What genre is this?

RECITATIVE

  • Dialogue, narration, moving the story along
    • Something actually happens
  • Syllabic text setting
    • Usually a lot of texts
  • Only Basso continuo accompaniment (no orchestra)
    • Strings drop out
  • Rubato: Flexible tempo following speech-like declamation
    • The continuo group and singer work closely together to follow each other
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4
Q

Where did the first opera house open?

A

1637 in Venice

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5
Q

Who are Impresarios?

A

Musical businessmen

  • Think of them as music producers
    • Get funding
    • Get Libretto in order
    • Get composer to write music
    • Arrange/manage singers, instrumentalists, lighting, costumes
    • Not a steady job
      • Take on business ventures and overrun their budget, popular then fade away
      • If you can’t pay your singers, they don’t want to work for you
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6
Q

Who were the Opera Houses for?

A

Works created for public consumption

  • First commercial music venue
  • First time in music history when anyone who could afford it could go
  • You had to think about what would sell tickets, from a business perspective
    • What do I need to write to draw them in, have them come back, and tell their friends
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7
Q

The time just before lint, January / February

A

Carnival

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8
Q

What is significant about lint and Opera Houses?

A

Once Lint began, the opera houses would shut down until it was over.

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9
Q
  • Monteverdi, L’incoronazione di Poppea* (1643)
  • Talk about this piece
A

Monteverdi, L’incoronazione di Poppea (1643)

  • Carnival Show
    • No shows performed during lint
  • More agency given to “lower” characters (lady in waiting, page)
    • Points forward
  • Story: Historical Fantasy
    • Not an absolute true story
  • Love Triangle:
    • Emperor Nero, Wife Octavia, Mistress Poppea (Ottone)
    • Questionable morals
    • The seductress that wins
  • More earthly/sensual in focus
  • Conceived as a single genre
    • Compare to mash-up genre like Orfeo
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10
Q

31:07

p475

A
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