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The Renaissance 4/4 1475-1600 Based on the writings of Anna Butterworth: ‘Stylistic Harmony’ (OUP 1992) NB To understand the slides herein, you must play though all the sound examples to hear the principles in action. The sound of the music will make sense of the rules. Other Features of the Style 1 1. Chromatic Writing Expression through chromaticism (using semitones as dissonance) came into its own in the Renaissance (1475-1600). Because dissonance sounds ‘painful’, it became associated with emotions of ‘grief’ and ‘despair’ + with the depiction of the ‘weird’ and ‘fantastical’. This is especially true when a chromatic descending line is used. 1. Chromatic Writing cont. At the end of the 1500s, experiments were made with re-tuning keyboard instruments from just intonation (which tuned a key perfectly) to equal temperament (which ‘tweaked’ certain pitches so that it became possible to modulate to any key without it sounding as if the new key was out of tune). 2 1. Chromatic Writing cont. Nicola Vincentino (1511-ca1575) (possibly a pupil of Adrian Willaert [1490-1562]), invented the arcicembalo, a two-manual keyboard tuned so that one could play in most keys without sounding out of tune. For more details see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enharmonic_ke yboard and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicola_Vicentino 1. Chromatic Writing cont. Plan & modern realization Nicola Vicentino’s arcicembalo 3 1. Chromatic Writing cont. Nicola Vicentino (1511-ca1575) 1. Chromatic Writing cont. Adrien Willaert (1490-1562). Flemish composer, possibly Vicentino’s teacher. Founder of the Venetian School. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetian_School 4 1. Chromatic Writing cont. The composer Carlo Gesualdo (1566-1613) from Venosa is said to have been influences by Nicola Willaert’s archicembalo. Gesualdo was one of the most ‘chromatic’ of madrigal composers. Extract from madrigal by Gesualdo, showing extreme chromaticism (play pp22-23) 5 There are examples of similar degrees of chromaticism in the music of Thomas Weelkes (1576-1623) (play p23) 2. The Harmonic ‘Instinct’ cont. Did pre-Renaissance composers have a sense of ‘tonality’? - Of course they did. There is evidence of a key or tonal centre in the music of Pérotin (d. 1225) and Machaut (d. 1377). While polyphony (the principal musical texture of the Renaissance) is pre-occupied with the fitting together of horizontal lines, homophonic harmony (chord progressions where each part has more or less the same rhythm) is in evidence e.g. in Palestrina’s Stabat Mater and Tallis’s Spem in Alium... 6 2. The Harmonic ‘Instinct’ cont. E.g. in Thomas Tallis’s Spem in Alium, along with the words Respice humilitatem nostram (be mindful of our loneliness), the music forms a progression with more of a harmonic than a polyphonic sense, as C major drops to A major (play p23): 2. The Harmonic ‘Instinct’ Feel the harmonic progressions in this homophonic texture from Palestrina’s Stabat Mater (play p24): 7 2. The Harmonic ‘Instinct’ cont. The theory of chords (harmony) is complicated enough when concerned with major and minor keys. When dealing with modal harmony, things get even more complex. Two features of modal harmony are worth bearing in mind when dealing with the musical styles of the Renaissance... (a) Chord on the Flattened Leading-Note This chord was prevalent in modal harmony of the Renaissance (play p24): 8 (b) Typical harmonic progressions: • • • • ii-I V-IV iii-I I-iii E.g. (play p24): 3. Note Doubling When writing 3-part polyphony, composers of the Renaissance avoided doubling the following notes: • leading notes • dominant 7ths • dissonances • chromatically-altered notes. This is because: 1. by their dissonance these notes were already ‘prominent’ and so did not need ‘doubling’ - which unbalances the harmony. 2. ‘notes of motion’ need to be resolved. If they’re doubled, that would result in parallel octaves! 9 3. Note Doubling cont. When not functioning as a leading note, the major 3rd was frequently doubled, but usually quitted (left) via contrary motion. Such doubling usually occurred in chord VI in a minor key when the progression moves V-VI. Write this progression out in E minor for example. FIN 10