Berlioz - Symphony Fantastique
Copland - Appalachian Spring
Copland - The Cat and the Mouse
Glenn Gould – JS Bach – Goldberg Variation
Vivaldi’s Four Seasons
Call of the Mockingbird – Mark O’Connor
Bartok – folk songs from the fields
Listening to Music
·
How?
Requires preparation and discipline
·
What
to listen for and what to expect
·
How
do melodies unfold?
·
How
do phrases work together?
·
How
does a composer get from 1 section to the next?
·
Learn
to recognize
o
The
instruments
o
The
melody from the harmony
o
The
texture(s)
o
The
rhythm and the meter
o
The
sense of formal design
·
How
much do you need to know to appreciate music?
·
Why
do you want to listen to a piece of music?
·
The
composer, the listener, the performer
Britten’s Young People’s Guide to the Orchestra –
Variation and Fugue on a Theme of Purcell
The title and alternate tells us what
the music is and what it is about
Was designed in 1946 for an
educational film entitled Instruments
for the orchestra
Based on a theme by Henry Purcell
that is a dance tune from his incidental music to Abdelazar or The Moor’s
Revenge written in 1695
6-fold statement of the theme that
shows off the different orchestral departments
13 variations that are each devoted
to a different instrument or group of instruments and a fugue in which the
instruments make their entries in the same order as the variations.
What was Britten’s intent?
Britten is a true democrat in his approach to orchestration. Why?
Schoenberg’s Pierrot Lunaire – Moonstruck Pierrot – Opus 21 – 1922
Pantonal
A set of 21 melodramas present in
Sprechstimme – the vocalist-reciter against instrumental accompaniment that
varies from piece to piece
5 instruments needs 3 double
Piano
Cello
Flute
switching to piccolo
Clarinet
to bass clarinet
Violin
to viola
Poems are arranged in 3 groups of 7.
Each poem has 13 lines arranged in Renaissance roundeau form but the musical
settings do not follow roundeau form
The Sprechstimme is the use of normal
notation that indicates precise pitch and duration of each note but with an X
through each notes’ stem to indicate a special kind of delivery is required. He
supplied written instructions for singing Sprechstimme in which he indicated
that the rhythm must be absolutely strict but that the notated pitch is merely
touched on at the outset of the note’s value. He cautions the reciter-singer to
never really sing the pitches and never to “singsong” them.
For each of the 21 pieces, a short
motive generates the music for the entire piece.
#8 – (Nacht) Night. This is a
passacaglia, tenerative motive contains 10 notes. Though a 3-note ostinato
figure is ever-presnet, its note values are modified much of the time. The song
is dark in color, well suited to the gloomy text.
#18 – Der Mondfleck The Moonspot is
the most contrapuntally complex piece of the entire cycle. A double canon—one
between the strings, the orther between the winds—turns retrograde at the
middle of the 10th measure. Simultaneously with the canon, the
pianist plays a 3-voice fugue whose subject is an augmented version of the
canonic melody between the winds.
After Hitler was elected chancellor
of
Mussorgsky – Pictures At an Exhibition.
Written after the death of a friend,
Victor Hartmann in 1874. Hartmann was an architect and painter who designed
some fine building for
See program notes and score.
Some questions Roger Sessions raises about music
·
Is
music to be judged on its own merits?
·
Is
it a salable commodity? Does it matter?
·
What
is the basic intent and responsibility of the music?
·
Is
the composer, the listener a two way affair and why? Does that matter?
·
How
do we gain an awareness of music?
·
Was
music always intended for an audience?
Some convictions Sessions states about music
·
The
value of art should not be about the degree of communicability it has to its
listener or viewer.
·
Music
is to be enjoyed and experienced.
·
A
willing ear must be free of prejudice.
·
The
ear is slow, the mind is slower and the heart is slower still.
·
Music
described in metaphysical terms is a temporal art, not spatial and not static.