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Claudio Monteverdi Words by Giovanni Battista Guirani Ohime, se tanto amate. Monteverdi 1567 - 1643 • A very important composer of the late Renaissance, early Baroque. • Developed a new style of Homophonic music, making the harmony, rather than the polyphonic texture, the means for expression. • This was called Monody. • He belonged to a new movement who made demands on all forces in the music to express the text as naturally as possible. “Oratio Harmoniae Domina absolutissima.” • He was one of the earliest composers of opera. • A prolific composer of madrigals, of which he wrote 9 books. Madrigals • Vocal music developed in Italy in the Renaissance. • Secular work. • Usually for two to six parts for mixed voices. • Generally unaccompanied. Voices • The music is written for five solo voices. • The top line has the words canto (melody) and quinto (fifth part), refer to the first soprano and second soprano. • The vocal technique required to perform this work suggests it is one for trained singers. • It would possibly be performed to an audience of wealthy and trained connoisseurs in the sophisticated courts of Italian nobility. Ohime, se tanto amate Structure • The madrigal is through-composed. ie. Each phrase has new music, Structure is determined by the words. • Coherency is achieved by the recurring falling third motif Giovanni Battista Guirani - Text • This madrigal is typical of late serious Italian types, in which composers sought to express every nuance of the text. • This is known as the ‘representational style’. • For example the word ‘ohime’ can mean ‘alas’ as in Shakespeare or the sigh of a lover. Tonality • The tonality is G minor but the music refuses to settle in a fixed key. This reflects the turbulent emotions of the text. • Example of modulation bars 1-6 where it is in C minor, the subdominant minor. • Another example of this reluctance to settle can be seen in bars 7-13. G minor Implied Modulation F major, leading note major to D C major, dominant major Word Setting • Word setting is syllabic. • Monteverdi constructs his music to mirror the speech rhythms of the Italian language • Repeated falling thirds repeated over and over again in sequence to represent the thousand sweet ‘Ah’s” of love. Melody • The melody is mainly conjunct. • Monteverdi uses free crossing of parts so as not to hinder the highly melodic nature of the parts. • The melody includes intervals that were almost never heard in previous styles. • Bar 12 - a tritone in the cantus part • Bar 16 - falling minor 7th in the bass line Other examples are: 1. Octave fall in the tenor at bar 20. 2. Downwards minor 7th in the tenor bar 25. 3. Downwards minor 7th in the bass bar 35. 4. These intervals are generally avoided in choral writing as they are difficult to sing. 5. Monteverdi uses them with great affect to represent the implied pain and passion of the text. Dissonance • Monteverdi also uses dissonance to reflect the mock agony of the poem. • For example; bars 2 and 4 the unprepared 9th between bass and quinto. • Bar 16-17 Example of False Relation • In Bar 38 and 39 the false relationship between the B natural in the Tierce de Picardie and B flat in bar 39. • This is cliché of many 16th century styles. • The most incredible example of false relation in this piece is in bars 49-51. Texture Harmonic devices • Appoggiaturas, echappee, passing notes, auxiliary notes and anticipation. • The final cadence is preceded by a dominant pedal. • The last two chords form an unusual variant on a perfect cadence - chord IIIb of G minor (with a B rather than a B ) is used instead of chord V. The final chord is another Tierce de Picardie. • The result allows both soprano and tenor a final weary falling 3rd on Ohime. Tierce de Picardie Dominant pedal Cadence IIIb - I Tonality Vocabulary • • • • • • • • • • • Monody Word painting Modulation Sequence Tritone Syllabic Imitative Homophonic Dominant pedal Through composed Chromatic Stylistic features of ‘Ohime, se Tanto Amate’ 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. The use or the old terms canto and quinto is a feature of vocal music from this time. Syllabic setting to ensure clarity of text and stress natural speech patterns. Word painting used throughout. Musical motifs. Homophonic texture with counterpoint Dominant pedal in the bass prior to a cadence. Part movement is highly conjunct with some consonant skips. Whilst the piece is minor only one flat is employed as a key signature, the other being used as an accidental. This is a common occurrence in music of this period as the transition between modal traditions and the more modern diatonic, functional harmony took place. Unpredictable use of tonality and modulation a feature of late Renaissance and early Baroque. Tierce de Picardie as a harmonic device. Prepared and unprepared dissonance. Suspensions are common. False relations MADRIGAL SONG VOICES 5 PARTS INTERWEAVING THROUGHCOMPOSED STRUCTURE PHRASES FALLING THIRD MUSICAL IDEAS HOMOPHONIC CHORDAL POLYPHONIC TEXTURE MONOPHONIC TIERCE DE PICARDIE MAJOR MINOR CHORD FALSE RELATION FALSE RELATION CHROMATIC ADJACENT FLAT, NATURAL, SHARP SYLLABIC MELISMATIC ONE WORD SYLLABLES MODULATION KEY CHANGE MAJOR MINOR SEQUENCE PITCH SAME IDEA REPEAT