- Transition from Renaissance to Baroque in instrumental music
In the years centering around
1600 in , several distinct shifts emerged in ways of thinking about the purposes, writing and performance of music. Partly these changes were "revolutionary", deliberately instigated by a group of intellectuals inFlorence known as the Camerata, and partly they were "evolutionary", in that precursors of the new Baroque style can be found far back in the Renaissance, and the changes merely built on extant forms and practices. The transitions emanated from the cultural centers of northern Italy, then spread to Rome, France and Germany, and lastly reached England.cite book|last=Schulenberg|first=David|title=Music of the Baroque|publisher=Oxford University Press|date=2001|location=New York] In terms ofinstrumental music , shifts in four discreet areas can be observed: idiomatic writing, texture, instrument use and orchestration.Instrumentation
One key distinction between Renaissance and Baroque instrumental music is in
instrumentation ; that is, the ways in which instruments are used or not used in a particular work. Closely tied to this concept is the idea of idiomatic writing, for if composers are unaware of or indifferent to the idiomatic capabilities of different instruments, then they will have little reason to specify which instruments they desire.Specified instrumentation
According to David Schulenberg, Renaissance composers did not as a general rule specify which instruments were to play which part; in any given piece, "each part [was] playable on any instrument whose range encompassed that of the part." Nor were they necessarily concerned with individual instrumental sonorities or even aware of idiomatic instrumental capabilities. The concept of writing a quartet specifically for
sackbut s or a sextet forrackett s, for instance, was apparently a foreign one to Renaissance composers. Thus, one might deduce that little instrumental music "per se" was written in the Renaissance, with the chief repertoire of instruments consisting of borrowed vocal music.Howard Brown, while acknowledging the importance of vocal transcriptions in Renaissance instrumental repertoire, has identified six categories of specifically instrumental music in the sixteenth century:
#
vocal music played on instruments
# settings of preexisting melodies, such asplainchant or popular songs
# variation sets
#ricercar s, fantasias, andcanzona s
# preludes, preambles, andtoccata s
# music for solo voice andlute cite book|last=Brown|first=Howard|coauthors=Louis K. Stein|title=Music of the Renaissance|publisher=Prentice Hall|date=1999|location=Upper Saddle River, NJ]While the first three could easily be performed vocally, the last three are clearly instrumental in nature, suggesting that even in the sixteenth century composers were writing with specifically instrumental capabilities in mind, as opposed to vocal. In contention of composers' supposed indifference to instrumental timbres, Brown has also pointed out that as early as
1533 ,Pierre Attaignant was already marking some vocal arrangements as more suitable for certain groups of like instruments than for others. Furthermore, CountGiovanni de' Bardi , host of a gathering of prominent 1580s scholars and artists known as theFlorentine Camerata , was demonstrably aware of the timbral effects of different instruments and regarded different instruments as being suited to expressing particular moods.cite book|last=Strunk|first=Oliver|title=Source Readings in Music History|publisher=Norton|date=2001|location=New York]Idiomatic writing
In the absence of idiomatic writing in the sixteenth century, characteristic instrumental effects may have been improvised in performance. On the other hand, idiomatic writing may have stemmed from virtuosic improvised ornamentation on a vocal line – to the point that such playing became more idiomatic of the instrument than of the voice.
In the early Baroque, these melodic embellishments that had been improvised in the Renaissance began to be incorporated into compositions as standardized melodic gestures. With the Baroque's emphasis on a soloist as virtuoso, the range of pitches and characteristic techniques formerly found only in virtuosic improvisation, as well as the first dynamic markings, were now written as the expected standard. On the other hand, some of the instrumental genres listed above, such as the prelude, toccata, and intonation, were improvisation-based to begin with. Even in the early sixteenth century, these genres were truly, idiomatically instrumental; they could not be adapted for voices because they were not composed in a consistent polyphonic style.
Thus, idiomatic instrumental effects were present in Renaissance performance, if not in writing. By the early Baroque, however, they had clearly found their way into writing when composers began specifying desired instrumentation, notably
Claudio Monteverdi in hisopera scores.Texture
Another crucial distinction between Renaissance and Baroque writing is its texture: the shift from contrapuntal
polyphony , in which all voices are theoretically equal, tomonody and treble-bass polarity, along with the development of basso continuo. In this new style of writing, solo melody and bass line accompaniment were now the important lines, with the inner voices filling in harmonies.The application of this principle to instrumental writing was partly an extension of the forces of change in "vocal writing" stemming from the Florentine Camerata and their head Count Giovanni de' Bardi, who deliberately sought to change the way music was written, and adopted an overarching goal of a music renascence. In a c.
1580 letter toGiulio Caccini , a composer and member of the Camerata, Bardi decried counterpoint's obscuring of the text in vocal settings and advocates a return to the music of the ancient Greeks, which he believed consisted of a single singing line and simple accompaniment, allowing direct, intelligible expression of the text. He instructed Caccini to "make it your chief aim to arrange the verse well and to declaim the words as intelligibly as you can." While Bardi's letter dealt with vocal music, the principle of a single, clear melody dominating a simple accompaniment easily carries over to the instrumental realm. This is seen in the proliferation of hitherto unknown solo instrumental sonatas beginning shortly after Caccini's "Le Nuove Musiche" in 1601.The rise of instrumental monody did not have its roots exclusively in vocal music. In part, it was based on the extant sixteenth-century practice of performing polyphonic madrigals with one voice singing the treble line, while the others were played by instruments or by a single keyboard instrument. Thus, while all voices were still theoretically equal in these polyphonic compositions, in practice the listener would have heard one voice as being a
melody and the others asaccompaniment . Furthermore, the new musical genres that appeared in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, especially the instrumental sonata, revealed a transition in ways of thinking about composition and performance, from a collaboration of equals to a soloist backed up by a relatively unimportant accompaniment. In addition, even in the mid sixteenth century, most works for voice and lute were conceived specifically as such. In the realm of English ayres, for instance, this meant that composers such asJohn Dowland and Adrian LeRoy were already thinking of a dichotomous melody and bass, filled in not with counterpoint but with chords "planned for harmonic effect."Instrument use and aesthetics
A third major difference between Renaissance and Baroque music lies in which instruments were favored and used in performance. This is directly related to a larger shift in musical aesthetics, again stemming chiefly from the Florentine Camerata. In his "Dialogo della musica antica e della moderna",
Vincenzo Galilei , like Bardi, lauds the music of the Greeks, convinced that their music had "virtuous and wonderful effects" on listeners, while saying that modern composers did not know how to "express the conceptions of the mind [or] how to impress them with the greatest possible effectiveness on the minds of the listeners." The idea that music could and ought to move or impress listeners and provoke certain archetypal emotional states evidenced a change in thinking about music. This went hand-in-hand with the transition from polyphony to monody discussed above, for a solo instrument or pair of instruments would ideally be not only be the sole melodic vehicle but also be capable of "impressing [the listeners] with the greatest possible effectiveness."
thumb|right|The_shawm family was one of several consorts to gradually fall out of use after 1600.] This necessarily led to a change in the types of instruments that were preferred by composers, for many instruments of the Renaissance were greatly limited in pitch range, being designed only to play a discreet role in a consort, as well as in dynamic scope. Entire families of instruments, such asrackett s andshawm s, were unsuited to carrying a solo melodic line with brilliance and expressivity because they were incapable of dynamic variation, and fell into disuse or at best provided color in string-dominated ensembles. The low instruments of the woodwind consorts were all but abandoned. Even in the string family, members of the viol family – except for the bass viol, which provided the necessary "basso continuo " – were gradually replaced by the new and highly virtuosicviolin . The lute and "viola da gamba" continued being written for in an accompanimental role but could not compete with the violin in volume. The shawm was replaced by theoboe , which had a more refined sound and was capable of dynamic nuance. Thecornett , which in the Renaissance tended to function as the soprano member of the sackbut family, survived in the early seventeenth century as a solo instrument, even having a large repertoire rivaling that of the violin, but eventually disappeared as well. However, Renaissance instruments did not vanish from use quickly; contemporary references indicate such instruments survived in chamber or military contexts well throughout the seventeenth century and even into the eighteenth. [cite book|last=Owens|first=Samantha|title="Upgrading from Consorts to Orchestra at the Württemberg Court" in From Renaissance to Baroque|publisher=Ashgate|date=2005|location=Aldershot, England|pages=234-245]As a general rule, however, one can see in the Baroque an overwhelming preference for those instruments that were capable of carrying a melodic line alone: those that were louder and higher, that could achieve a variety of dynamics, and that lent themselves to virtuosic display and emotional expression, none of which the Renaissance instruments were designed to do. Lower-pitched instruments, those that could not vary dynamics, or those that were cumbersome, were deprecated. Thus, the supremacy of melody in the Baroque mind had wide-reaching consequences in the instrumental choices made by composers and makers.
Orchestration
A change between Renaissance and Baroque styles can also be discerned in the realm of
orchestration , or instrumental groupings. As has been discussed above, instruments in the sixteenth century were grouped together in like-instrument families called consorts. With the exception of keyboards and lutes, all instruments were conceived and built this way, fromracket s to recorders tosackbut s tocrumhorn s to ", divided choirs.cite web|url=http://www.grovemusic.com|title=Grove Music Online - Cori spezzati|accessdate=2007-07-09]Such music allowed for highly dramatic effects, with sudden shifts in volume, articulation, timbre and texture, for not all of the choirs were the same size, and could be made up of radically different combinations of voices and instruments. With the addition of the "basso continuo" in the early seventeenth century, the
concertato style ("stile concertato") had essentially been developed, featuring a larger overarching ensemble out of which smaller groups were selected at will to play successive musical phrases in different styles, or to perform simultaneously in different manners. Thus one phrase might be soloistic, the next set in imitative polyphony, the next homophonic, the next an instrumental tutti, and so on. Alternatively, a chorus could declaim a text homophonically while violins played in an entirely different style at the same time – in a different register, in a different location in the church, all performed over a "basso continuo". [cite book|last=Mangsen|first=Sandra|title="Forms and genres," in Companion to Baroque Music|publisher=Dent and Sons|date=1990|location=London|pages=391] The "stile concertato" spread throughout Europe and was particularly dominant in Italy and Germany, later forming the basis of the Baroque concerto, theconcerto grosso , and the Germancantata .cite web|url=http://www.grovemusic.com|title=Grove Music Online - Cantata - The 17th-century Protestant cantata: Origins|accessdate=2007-07-09]See also
*
Renaissance music
*Baroque music
*Monody
*Florentine Camerata
*Concertato References
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