Baroque Music Essay

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    Antonio Vivaldi born on March 4th 1678, which was the Baroque music style. In 1678 not only was it the baroque period it was also the years just after the Renaissance. 1670s was part of the Age of Abolitionism. The Age of Absolutism was the age when European monarchs struggled to centralize their power. And in Britain the English Civil war and the glorious revolution happened a few years prior to Vivaldi's life. In Russia, Peter the Great and Catherine the great were reforming Europe and trying to

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    Baroque music started around the 1600s and reflected the theatrical art and music which was popular at the time. During the Baroque era, music was shaped by the magnificent paintings, sculptures, and Catholic Church. Four hundred years later, music still shares some similarities like instrumentation, harmony, and dynamics, while being incorporated into modern day music. Deep Purple was a rock band formed in 1968 who experimented with, and incorporated the Baroque style into their music. However,

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    Baroque music is the western music art style that was composed in the era of Renaissance, that is, between 1600 and 1750. Music at any given period reflects tendencies, impulses and influences that are found in art of other kinds of the same period. Therefore the name baroque also applied to the architecture, literature and art in the same period. Baroque has in the past and to some degree in the present had the implications of abnormality, grotesqueness and absurdity. But in its applications to

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    1. Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 in G, BWV 1049, III By Johann Sebastian Bach https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6JQm5aSjX6g This music by Bach portrays all the characteristic of early Baroque Music which includes melody, texture, and timber. It is one of the Bach’s sets that forms a master anthology that demonstrates all possible possibilities inherent in a specific musical form. It is scored for violin, continuo, two flutes, and strings. The flutes was called “fiauti d’echo“, which represented the softer

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    the baroque era, and it wasn't until the late seventeenth century that the concerto took on its modern meaning; a piece of music that combined a solo instrument with orchestra or a group of soloists. It is usually composed in three parts, each movement distinguished by tempo changes. In the late sixteen hundreds composers gave rise to a this new form of orchestral music, which later became the most recognized and distinguished of all the other baroque genres. Such is a feature in the baroque era

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    J.S. Bach Flute Sonata in B minor (BWV 1030): the development of the Baroque Flute, the flautists and the music Johann Sebastian Bach (J.S. Bach) is no doubt one of the greatest composers of all times. He composed many works for flute including works for solo flute, flute with harpsichord and/or continuo and, two flutes and harpsichord. However, there has been a controversy, over the flute works, whether they were composed solely by the composer, assisted by someone or under the guidance of J.S

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    Early Baroque Music

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    Early Baroque Music The Baroque Period (1600-1750) was mainly a period of newly discovered ideas. From major new innovations in science, to vivid changes in geography, people were exploring more of the world around them. The music of the baroque period was just as extreme as the new changes. Newly recognized composers such as Bach, Handel, Vivaldi, and Monteverdi were writing entirely new musical ideas and giving a chance for new voices to be heard that were normally not thought of sounds. Their

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    Thus, creation begins somewhere and is referred to as artistic genesis, which is embodied within Baroque music and not Romantic music. In discussing the play of improvisation, Benton states that Baroque music celebrates a community affair or rather how people work together as opposed to just the individual. The composer creates the idea of how apiece is supposed to go, yet the performers extemporize

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    CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION Music of any period reflects, in its own way, some of the same influences, tendencies, and generative impulses that are found in the other arts of that time (Donna, 2005). Thus the word "baroque," usually used despairingly by eighteenth-century art critics to describe the art and architecture of the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, came to be applied also to the music of the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. After some years after the death of Johann

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    Baroque Era

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    Research Paper Done by: Alain Camous Professor Payne March 7, 2012 ENC 1102 Outline Baroque era was where the most important turn in music took place with its unique arts and its controversial styles to music in its time. I. Definition of Baroque Era A. Can mean different things 1. Bizarre 2. Flamboyant 3. Elaborately Ornamented. 4. Historians meaning a. Used to indicate the particular style in all different forms of art. B. Known as “the age of

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