Música en el Renacimiento VIII: Música instrumental. Formas instrumentales y sistemas de escritura

Música en el Renacimiento VIII: Música instrumental. Formas instrumentales y sistemas de escritura

Overview of Instrumental Music in the Renaissance

Introduction to Musical Forms

  • The discussion begins with an overview of instrumental music during the Renaissance, emphasizing the ambiguity of terms used at that time and the lack of a clear taxonomy for musical forms.
  • It is noted that many formal designations were interchangeable, leading to variations in naming pieces across different sources. For example, a piece might be referred to as "Richard Car," "fantasía," or "cansona" depending on the source.

Categories of Instrumental Forms

  • The speaker outlines six major categories of instrumental forms from this period:
  • Transcriptions based on vocal models and canzonas.
  • Compositions based on Gregorian melodies for liturgical use.
  • Variations or differences (recher carar).
  • Tientos, preludes, tocatas, and dance music.

Transcriptions Based on Vocal Models

Characteristics of Transcriptions

  • Transcribing existing vocal pieces was common; these arrangements typically preserved the polyphonic texture while adding ornamentation and virtuosic passages appealing to contemporary tastes. An example given is Luis de Narváez's "Canción del Emperador."
  • Over time, transcriptions increasingly deviated from their original models due to added embellishments and virtuosity, sometimes rendering them unrecognizable compared to their originals.

Understanding Cansona

  • The term "cansona" originally referred to arrangements of polyphonic songs but evolved over time to include original compositions using stereotyped resources through arrangements and reworkings. John Caldwell's insights highlight its complexity in definition.
  • By the late 15th century, three types of pieces emerged under the term cansona: simple transcriptions without much development, heavily glossed versions, and completely original works imitating that style. Notable composers included Andrea Gabrieli and Claudio Merulo.

Compositions Based on Gregorian Melodies

Liturgical Context

  • Compositions based on Gregorian melodies were primarily performed on organs during liturgy; they often involved paraphrasing techniques linked to specific celebrations within church services. Examples include Antonio de Cabezón’s treatments of hymns like “Pange Lingua.”

Variations as a Key Technique

Importance in Improvisation

  • Variations became essential for improvisation among skilled instrumentalists during this era; they also served as fundamental compositional tools for dance music creation. In Spain during the 15th century, variations developed into a distinct compositional form known as “diferencias.”

Evolution of Richard Car and Tiento

Definitions and Developments

  • Initially referring to free-form instrumental pieces serving as preludes, terms like “Richard Car” began encompassing more structured compositions with imitative characteristics by mid-century due to influences from composers like Francesco Canova da Milano. This led towards monothematic constructions eventually evolving into fugues.

Dance Music in Renaissance Culture

Social Significance

  • Dance transformed into a respected art form taught by experts during this period; it played crucial roles in courtly celebrations where both nobility and middle-class individuals participated actively under trained masters' guidance. Dances varied widely but included collective dances alongside choreographed balletos featuring intricate formations and movements reflecting social communication norms at events.

Conclusion

The notes encapsulate key discussions around various aspects of Renaissance instrumental music including transcription practices, composition styles based on liturgical traditions, improvisational techniques through variations, definitions surrounding Richard Car forms leading towards fugue developments along with significant cultural implications tied closely with dance practices within society at that time.

Notation Systems in String Instruments

Overview of String Instrument Notation

  • The representation of string instruments involves a linear depiction of each string, indicated by letters or numbers corresponding to the fret to be pressed, with '0' denoting an open string.

Keyboard Notation Techniques

  • Keyboard notation differs as it uses lines to represent notes played on white keys of the diatonic series, with additional markings for octave changes and accidentals like sharps and flats.

Evolution of Notation Systems

  • The numeric cyclic system is highlighted as the most efficient and intuitive notation method, still used today for teaching instruments like guitar. Historical comparisons show consistency in rhythmic notation across centuries.

Variations in Tablature

  • Two variants exist in tablature: Italian tablatures indicate a figure above each number, while Spanish publications use an abbreviated system applying one figure to all subsequent notes until a change is specified.

Integration of Vocal Parts

  • In vihuela books, vocal parts are often notated alongside instrumental sections using various systems; mensural notation synchronizes with figures or appears separately before them.

The Role of Instrumental Music in the Renaissance

Importance of Instrumental Music

  • The Renaissance saw significant growth in instrumental music; however, there was still no clear differentiation between timbres for instruments and voices. Improvisation was crucial during performances.

Key Instruments Highlighted

  • Important wind instruments included cornetto, shawm, sackbut, dulzaina, recorder, and trumpet; string instruments featured vihuela, lute, viola da gamba, and harpsichord. The organ held particular significance.

Musical Forms and Their Characteristics

  • Major forms included transcriptions from vocal models (canzonas), Gregorian melodies for liturgical use (iones), variations on bass lines (romanesca), free forms introducing imitation (preludes/toccatas), and dance music which had social relevance.

Tablature System Explained

  • Much instrumental music was written using tablature that indicates finger positions rather than specific note pitches. This system applies differently across keyboard versus fretted string instruments.

Conclusion on Renaissance Music Studies

Transitioning Period

  • This concludes both the class session and the study period focused on the Renaissance era. A new historical period termed "Baroque" will commence shortly.
Video description

Unidad didáctica 14 La música instrumental en el Renacimiento (Parte II) Francisco Parralejo Masa Historia de la Música Conservatorio Profesional de Música 'Joaquín Villatoro' Jerez de la Frontera (España) Vídeo completo con audiciones: https://youtu.be/uBfRIr5r2zo Vídeo completo sin audiciones: Lista de reproducción con las audiciones: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmIvXzulbRKt9V67PS8pNMHWj6AaQpHe- La música instrumental en el Renacimiento en un minuto (más o menos) https://youtu.be/CzQqJ1nCF9w CONTENIDOS DEL VÍDEO 00:00 Presentación 00:26 Aclaraciones previas sobre las formas instrumentales en el Renacimiento 01:51 Transcripciones basadas en modelos vocales & Canzonas 02:56 Ejemplo 1. Luis de Narváez: La canción del emperador 09:07 Ejemplo 2. Claudio Merulo: Susanne un jour 14:39 Composiciones basadas en el canto gregoriano 15:58 Ejemplo 3. Pange lingua more hispano 17:02 Ejemplo 4. Antonio de Cabezón: Pange lingua 20:15 Series, variaciones y diferencias 22:37 Ejemplo 5. Luis de Narváez: Diferencias sobre Guárdame las vacas 26:12 Ejemplo 6. Antonio de Cabezón: Diferencias (II) sobre Guárdame las vacas 30:39 Ricercares y tientos 32:18 Ejemplo 7. Francesco Canova da Milano: Ricercar Ness 16 34:08 Ejemplo 8. Andrea Gabrieli: Ricercar del primo tuono 40:09 Preludios, intonazione, tocatas y fantasías 41:09 Ejemplo 9. Andrea Gabrieli: Toccata del decimo tuono 44:38 Ejemplo 10. Alonso de Mudarra: Fantasía que contrahaze la arpa en la manera de Ludovico 46:35 Música de danza 53:56 Ejemplo 11. Alonso de la Torre: Danza alta 56:41 Los sistemas de escritura instrumental: las tablaturas 61:56 Resumen de la clase Enlaces: Diferencias sobre Guárdame las vacas de Alonso de Mudarra: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h1p6c8mFdL4 La Spagna en Danza (Fundación Juan March) https://canal.march.es/es/coleccion/spagna-danza-578