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Music History
Chapter 16
32
Music
Undergraduate 3
11/18/2010

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Term
Louis XIV
Definition
used the arts as propaganda
absolute monarch so music under his reign reflected his personality and policies
called himself the "Sun King" after Apollo
he constructed the immensely vast palace in Versailles which proclaimed his power and kept aristocracy under his control
Term
Three types of music at court
Definition
music of the royal chapel, music of the chamber, and music of the great stable
Term
music of the royal chapel
Definition
singers, organists, and other instruments who performed for religious services
Term
music of the chamber
Definition
string, harpsichord, and flute players who played for indoor entertainment
Term
music of the great stable
Definition
wind, brass, and timpani players who played for military and outdoor ceremonies
they sometimes they joined the other to add color
called Great Stable because they were on horseback while they played
Term
Vingt-quater Violons du Roi
Definition
24 Violins of the King
played in 5 part texture: 6 soprano violins (tuned like modern violin), 12 alto and tenor violins (tuned like modern viola), 6 bass violins (tune a whole tone lower than modern cello)
Term
Who is responsible for creating modern oboe?
Definition
wind players and instrument makers of French court
Term
Jean Baptiste Lully
Definition
Louis XIV's favorite musician for 30 years until he messed with page boy
After Cardinal Mazarin unsuccessfully tried to bring Italian opera to France, Lully blende ballet elements with opera to create comedies-ballets (with Moliere)
born in florence
enforced unified bowing
conducted with a long staff or cane: this modeled king's absolute power as conductor
Term
tragedie en musique
Definition
later called tragedie lyrique
new French form of opera
Lully and his librettist Jean-Philippe Quinalt reconciled the demands of drama, music, and ballet
Term
Quinalt
Definition
his 5-act dramas combined serious plots from ancient mythology or chivalric tales with frequent divertissements
Term
divertissements
Definition
"diversions"
long interludes of dancing and choral singing used by Quinalt in his 5-act dramas
an extended episode that appeared at the center or the conclusion of each act of a French opera
Term
ouverture
Definition
French word for "opening"
opened each opera of Lully
marked the entry of the king when he was present and welcomed him and audience to the performance
Term
French overture
Definition
2 sections each played twice
1st: homophonic and majestic
2nd: fast and begins with a fugal imitation
ex: Lully's Armide
Term
airs
Definition
leading genre of vocal chamber music in France
less elaborate, no virtuosic display, little text repetition
songs with a rhymed text and regular meter and phrasing, often in the meter and form of dance
scored for one to three voices with lute or continuo accompaniment
Term
style luthe
Definition
lute style in which you struck one note at a time and sketched in melody, bass and harmony
this was imitate by French harpsichord players
sometimes called modern term "style brise" (broken style)
Term
notes inegales
Definition
"unequal notes"
practice of alternating longer notes on the beat with shorter off-beats
created triplets and dotted figures
form of expression and elegance
Term
over-dotting
Definition
practice related to unequal notes
dotted not is held longer than its notated value, according to performers taste and the following note is shortened
Term
unmeasured prelude
Definition
in suites that began with a prelude in the style of a toccata or other or other abstract work
non-metric notation allowed rhythmic freedom, as if improvising
Term
allemande
Definition
French for "German"
highly stylized dance in binary form in moderately fast quadruple meter
popular during Renaissance and Baroque
often appeared as first dance in a suite
Term
courante
Definition
French for "running" or "flowing"
dance in binary form in compound meter at modeter tempo with an upbeat
standard movement in a suite
Term
sarabande
Definition
originally, a quick, lascivious style of dance from Central America accompanied by guitar and procession
evolved to slow, dignified dance in triple meter with emphasis on second beat
standard dance in suite in binary form
Term
gigue
Definition
French for "jig"
originated in British isles
stylized dance movement of standard Baroque suite
in binary form, compound meter 6/4 or 12/8
two sections usually both began with imitation
Term
zarzuela
Definition
Spanish genre of musical theater
light, mythological play in a pastoral setting that alternates between sung and spoken dialogue and various types of ensemble and solo song
devised by Hidalgo
Term
sacred villancico
Definition
work composed in imitative polyphony
most vibrant genre of Spanish sacred music
scored for one or more choirs, soloists with choir, or solo voice with continuo
in vernacular, not Latin
brought the concertato medium unto church
Term
agrements
Definition
Brief ornaments used in 17th century French opera to adorn cadences and other important notes
Term
grand motet
Definition
sacred concerto for solists, double chorus, and orchestra
Term
Denis Gaultier
Definition
leading lute composer of the French Baroque
Term
dramatic opera
Definition
spoken play with an overture and four or more masques or substantial musical epoisodes
Term
Purcell
Definition
wrote Dido and Aenaes
Term
The English Dancing Master
Definition
collection of and instructional treatise on traditional English country dances published by John Playford
Term
La purpura de la rosa
Definition
first opera performed in the Americas
Term
tiento
Definition
A Spanish improvisatory style for organ, often featuring imitation
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