J S Bach: 3rd Movement from Brandenburg Concerto no. 5 in D major Flashcards

1
Q

Brandenburg: Rhythm, metre, tempo

A
  • 2/4 single duple time (feels like compound due to triplets) - Triplets
  • Demisemiquaver triplets
  • Sixteenth note runs
  • Pauses
  • Rhythmic fragments
  • Ritardano (played, not scored)
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2
Q

Brandenburg: Tonality

A

Closely related keys (due to ‘rules’ of Baroque)

A:

  • D major

B:

  • b (relative) minor
  • f# minor
  • A major
  • e minor​

A1:

  • D major
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3
Q

Brandenburg: Timbre (Instrumentation/Orchestration)

A
  • Concerto Grosso (Concertino and ripieno)
  • Concertino: Solo violin, solo flute, solo harphsichord
  • Ripieno: Violin, viola, cello, double bass, Harpsichord
  • (Harpsichord serves double role as solo and basso continuo)
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4
Q

Brandenburg: Melody

A
  • Short monophonic melody in subject
  • Conjunct, Fugato style
  • Scalic runs
  • Triadic melodic flourishes
  • Melodic and decorated sequences
  • Call and response
  • Minor and major transformations of first subject
  • Stretto
  • Fragmentation of subject
  • Ornamentations
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5
Q

Brandenburg: Harmony

A
  • Functional harmony and diatonic chords
  • Perfect cadences
  • In thirds and tenths
  • Harmony in traids
  • Chromatic bass
  • Doubling
  • Tonic pedal and dominant pedal (B section)
  • Suspensions
  • Circle of fifths
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6
Q

Brandenburg: Structure

A
  • A A1 B A (Ternary)
  • Riternello form in B section (little returns of the theme)
  • B section - motivic development of main theme
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7
Q

Brandenburg: Articulation

A
  • Terraced dynamics by varying texture of ripieno
  • Trills on harpsichord
  • Ties on triplets
  • Appoggiaturas
  • Legato section in the B section
  • Acciacaturas
  • Upper mordents
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8
Q

Brandenburg: Texture

A
  • Monophonic for first four bars (Alliteration skills right there)
  • Contrapuntal
  • Fugal/fugatto elements but NOT a fugue
  • Doubling solo instruments with accomp.
  • Tutti
  • Mainly polyphonic
  • Stretto (Subject in canon)
  • Imitation
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9
Q

Brandenburg: Genre/period features

A

BAROQUE ERA:

  • Composed 1721
  • Concerto Grosso
  • 3rd movement is the fastest
  • In the style of a gigue
  • Performed in courts
  • Baroque pitch (Semi-tone lower)
  • Terraced dynamcis
  • Functional harmony
  • Heavy (over-the-top ornamentation)
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10
Q

Brandenburg: Main theme

A

.

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11
Q

Why is the harpsichord part in Brandenburg so unusual?

A

While a harpsichord was a common feature of baroque music, it was uncommon for it to feature as a solo part. It was usually the basso continuo. (In this, the RH part plays solo and LH plays continuo)

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12
Q

What is a figured bass?

A

The little numbers on the harpsichord part. The harmonies would not be scored in and so the player would have to ‘realise’ them themselves

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13
Q

Why could the harpsichord player in Bach be considered virtuosic?

A

They have a lots of scalic passages and semi-quavers aswell as lots of ornamentation

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14
Q

Why are the dynamics in Brandenburg terraced?

A

They are terraced dynamics. This means it can be loud or quiet with no gradual changes. This is because of the fact that harpsichords weren’t able to express dynamics only loud/quiet
Dynamics were also varied by adding/removing instruments

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15
Q

What is an extended cadenza?

A

An unaccompanied solo part (In Brandenburg, the harpsichord has this in the B section)

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16
Q

Why does the harpsichord left hand play a ‘b’ in the B section?

A

To help identify the new key (with a tonic pedal) after the modulations in B section

17
Q

What is a gigue?

A

It is a dance-style rythm typical of the baroque era. It is in compound triple time (6/8) and while the Brandeburg is in 2/4, it is tripletted and so can be written as 6/8

18
Q

What is functional harmony?

A

Typical of the Baroque era and visible in Music for a while and Brandenburg, functional harmony is when the chords are used with purpose (following the rules of baroque)

i,e The I chord has tonic function (rest) the IV chord has subdominant function (instability) and the V chord has dominant function (leading back to the I chord). Typically Functional harmony would go: tonic, subdominant, dominant, repeat

19
Q

What two chord positions are used in Brandenburg?

A

Root position and first inversion