- Form (what are we going to make?)
- Vocal Forms
- Operas
- Big story, big voices, big orchestra, big sets, big costumes, dramatic acting
- Wagner coined the idea of a complete musical work or a Musical Drama
- Leitmotif - a short musical theme used to introduce a character. A good example of a leitmotif is Darth Vader's Theme from Star Wars.
- Instrumental Forms
- Piano Forms
- Concerto
- Piano soloist plus orchestra
- Etudes
- Short pieces by Chopin and Liszt meant to show off their skills
- Revolutionary Etude by Chopin
- Rhapsodies
- A form of piano music in which the composer can do literally whatever he or she wants, made popular by Liszt.
- Hungarian Rhapsody no. 2 by Franz Liszt
- Nocturne
- A musical composition that is inspired by or attempts to evoke the night. Chopin’s nocturnes are the most famous.
- Chopin Nocturne op. 9 no. 1
- Orchestral Forms
- Symphonies
- Beethoven elevated the Symphony to the supreme form for a composer.
- After his death no one could come up with anything as revolutionary or powerfully emotional as Beethoven’s symphonies and most did not even attempt to write symphonies.
- Berlioz was the only acception and managed to created beautiful, richly original symphonies like his Symphonie Fantastique.
- “March to the Scaffold” from Symphonie Fantastique
- Tone Poems
- Liszt reacted to the fear surrounding the attempt to create a symphony that would surpass Beethoven by creating a new genre of orchestral music, the Tone Poem
- A tone poem is a piece of orchestral music, usually in a single movement that illustrates or evokes the content of a poem, short story, novel, painting, landscape, or other non-musical source.
- it seeks, like opera, a union of music and drama.
- Tonality (flavors)
- Music at this time is becoming increasingly atonal, or chromatic.
- What is tonality?
- Tonality is a heirarchy of notes, intervals, and chords that sound more or less stable, or pleasant to the ears.
- Do is the most stable note
- Consonance: chords or intervals that sound stable or pleasant to the ears
- Dissonance: chords or intervals that sound unstable or unpleasant to the ears
- Diatonic:
- Notes contained within the do-based scales (do is pronounced doe)
- Chromatic:
- Notes that fall outside the do-based scales
- Comes from the greek word chroma for color
- Instruments (ingredients)
- Piano
- The most important composition tool.
- The most popular and lucrative solo instrument of the time period.
- Berlioz some how got by without knowing how to play.
- Voice
- Roles for operatic voices are becoming increasingly dissonant and difficult
- The number of people who have the natural talent and the skill to fulfill the requirements of the roles decrease quite sharply during this time
Wednesday, February 4, 2015
Composing a song is like cooking a recipe. Today we are going to get an idea of the musical flavors that the New German School was interested in.
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