Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

European Classical Music

Encyclopedia : E : EU : EUR : European Classical Music


This article is about the genre of classical music or art music in the Western musical tradition. For articles on classical music of non-Western cultures, see Classical music. For the period of music in the late 18th century, see Classical music era.
History of European art music
Medieval (476 – 1400)
Renaissance (1400 – 1600)
Baroque (1600 – 1760)
Classical (1730 – 1820)
Romantic (1815 – 1910)
20th century (1900 – 2000)
Contemporary classical music
Classical music is a broad, somewhat imprecise term, referring to music produced in, or rooted in the traditions of, European art, ecclesiastical and concert music, encompassing a broad period from roughly 1000 to the present day. The central norms of this tradition, according to one school of thought, developed between 1550 and 1820, focusing on what is known as the common practice period.

The term classical music did not appear until the early 19th century, in an attempt to "canonize" the period from Bach to Beethoven as an era in music parallel to the golden age of sculpture, architecture and art of classical antiquity (from which no music has directly survived). The earliest reference to "classical music" recorded by the Oxford English Dictionary is from about 1836. Since that time the term has come in common parlance to mean the opposite of popular music.

Timeline

According to one school of thought, musical works are best understood in the context of their place in musical history; for adherents to this approach, this is essential to full enjoyment of these works. There is a widely accepted system of dividing the history of classical music composition into stylistic periods. According to this system, the major time divisions are:

The dates are generalizations, since the periods overlapped. Some authorities subdivide the periods further by date or style. However, it should be noted that these categories are to an extent arbitrary; the use of counterpoint and fugue, which is considered characteristic of the Baroque era, was continued by Mozart, who is generally classified as typical of the Classical period, by Beethoven who is often described as straddling the Classical and Romantic periods, and Brahms, who is often classified as Romantic.

This chart shows a selection of the most famous classical composers. For a more complete overview see Graphical timeline for classical composers Preset = TimeHorizontal_AutoPlaceBars_UnitYear ImageSize = width:760

Colors =

id:lightGray     value:gray(0.7)
id:gray          value:gray(0.4)
id:darkGray      value:gray(0.2)
  1. id:mid value:rgb(0.6,0.6,0) legend:Medieval
id:ren      value:rgb(0.6,1,1)     legend:Renaissance
id:bar      value:rgb(0.6,1,0.6)   legend:Baroque
id:cla      value:rgb(1,1,0.6)     legend:Classic
id:rom      value:rgb(1,0.75,0.75) legend:Romantic

BackgroundColors = canvas:lightGray

Period = from:1425 till:1960 ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:25 start:1425 gridcolor:gray Legend = orientation:vertical left:49 top:100

LineData =

at:1500 color:darkGray layer:back
at:1600 color:darkGray layer:back
at:1700 color:darkGray layer:back
at:1800 color:darkGray layer:back
at:1900 color:darkGray layer:back
BarData=
barset:Composers
PlotData=

  1. set defaults
width:15 fontsize:M textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift:(4,-6)

barset:Composers
from:1430 till:1495 color:Ren text:J Ockeghem
from:1440 till:1521 color:Ren text:J Des Prez
from:1525 till:1594 color:Ren text:GP da Palestrina
from:1543 till:1623 color:Ren text:W Byrd
from:1562 till:1621 color:Bar text:JP Sweelinck
from:1563 till:1621 color:Bar text:K Harant
from:1567 till:1643 color:Bar text:C Monteverdi
from:1583 till:1643 color:Bar text:G Frescobaldi
from:1585 till:1672 color:Bar text:H Schütz
from:1632 till:1687 color:Bar text:JB Lully
from:1637 till:1707 color:Bar text:D Buxtehude
from:1653 till:1713 color:Bar text:A Corelli
from:1659 till:1695 color:Bar text:H Purcell
from:1660 till:1725 color:Bar text:A Scarlatti
from:1674 till:1754 color:Bar text:T Albinoni
from:1678 till:1741 color:Bar text:A Vivaldi
from:1681 till:1767 color:Bar text:GP Telemann
from:1683 till:1764 color:Bar text:JP Rameau
from:1685 till:1750 color:Bar text:JS Bach
from:1685 till:1757 color:Bar text:D Scarlatti
from:1685 till:1759 color:Bar text:GF Händel
from:1710 till:1736 color:Bar text:GB Pergolesi
from:1714 till:1798 color:Cla text:CW Gluck
from:1732 till:1809 color:Cla text:J Haydn
from:1750 till:1825 color:Cla text:A Salieri
from:1751 till:1825 color:Cla text:D Bortniansky
from:1756 till:1791 color:Cla text:WA Mozart
from:1770 till:1827 color:cla text:L v Beethoven
from:1782 till:1840 color:Rom text:N Paganini
barset:break
from:1786 till:1826 color:Rom text:CM von Weber
from:1791 till:1857 color:Rom text:C Czerny
from:1792 till:1868 color:Rom text:G Rossini
from:1797 till:1828 color:Rom text:F Schubert
from:1797 till:1848 color:Rom text:G Donizetti
from:1803 till:1869 color:Rom text:H Berlioz
from:1809 till:1847 color:Rom text:F Mendelssohn
from:1810 till:1849 color:Rom text:F Chopin
from:1810 till:1856 color:Rom text:R Schumann
from:1811 till:1886 color:Rom text:F Liszt
from:1813 till:1883 color:Rom text:R Wagner
from:1813 till:1901 color:Rom text:G Verdi
from:1819 till:1880 color:Rom text:J Offenbach
from:1824 till:1884 color:Rom text:B Smetana
from:1824 till:1896 color:Rom text:A Bruckner
from:1833 till:1897 color:Rom text:J Brahms
from:1835 till:1921 color:Rom text:C Saint-Saëns
from:1838 till:1875 color:Rom text:G Bizet
from:1838 till:1920 color:Rom text:M Bruch
from:1839 till:1881 color:Rom text:M Mussorgsky
from:1840 till:1893 color:Rom text:PI Tchaikovsky
from:1841 till:1904 color:Rom text:A Dvorák
from:1843 till:1907 color:Rom text:E Grieg
from:1844 till:1908 color:Rom text:N Rimsky-Korsakov
from:1858 till:1924 color:Rom text:G Puccini
from:1872 till:1915 color:Rom text:A Scriabin
from:1873 till:1943 color:Rom text:S Rachmaninoff
from:1881 till:1945 color:Rom text:B Bartók
from:1891 till:1953 color:Rom text:S Prokofiev

Classical music as \"music of the classical era\"

In music history, a different meaning of the term classical music is occasionally used: it designates music from a period in musical history covering approximately Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach to Beethoven—roughly, 1730–1820. When used in this sense, the term is usually capitalized to avoid confusion.

The nature of classical music

Classical music is primarily a written musical tradition, preserved in music notation, as opposed to being transmitted orally, by rote, or in recordings. While there are differences between particular performances of a classical work, a piece of classical music is generally held to transcend any interpretation of it. The use of musical notation is an effective method for transmitting classical music, since the written music contains the technical instructions for performing the work. The written score, however, does not usually contain explicit instructions as to how to interpret the piece in terms of production and/or performance, apart from directions for dynamics and tempo; this is left to the discretion of the performers, who are guided by their personal experience and musical education, their knowledge of the work's idiom, and the accumulated body of historic performance practices.

Classical music is meant to be experienced for its own sake, unlike music that serves as an adjunct to other forms of entertainment (although orchestral film music is occasionally treated as classical music). Classical music concerts often take place in a relatively solemn atmosphere, and the audience is usually expected to stay quiet and still to avoid distracting the concentration of other audience members. The performers often dress formally, a practice which is taken as a gesture of respect for the music and the audience, and performers do not normally engage in direct involvement or casual banter with the audience. Private readings of chamber music may take place at more informal domestic occasions.

Its written transmission, along with the veneration bestowed on certain classical works, has led to the expectation that performers will play a work in a way that realizes in detail the original intentions of the composer. Indeed, deviations from the composer's instructions are sometimes condemned as outright ethical lapses. During the 19th century the details that composers put in their scores generally increased. Yet the opposite trend—admiration of performers for new "interpretations" of the composer's work—can be seen, and it is not unknown for a composer to praise a performer for achieving a better realization of the composer's original intent than the composer was able to imagine. Thus, classical music performers often achieve very high reputations for their musicianship, even if they do not compose themselves.

Classical composers often aspire to imbue their music with a very complex relationship between its affective (emotional) content, and the intellectual means by which it is achieved. Many of the most esteemed works of classical music make use of musical development, the process by which a musical germ, idea or motif is repeated in different contexts, or in altered form, so that the mind of the listener consciously or unconsciously compares the different versions. The classical genres of sonata form and fugue employ rigorous forms of musical development. (See also History of sonata form)

Another consequence of the primacy of the composer's written score is that improvisation plays a relatively minor role in classical music, in sharp contrast to traditions like jazz, where improvisation is central. Improvisation in classical music performance was far more common during the Baroque era than in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and recently the performance of such music by modern classical musicians has been enriched by a revival of the old improvisational practices. During the Classical period, Mozart and Beethoven sometimes improvised the cadenzas to their piano concertos (and thereby encouraged others to do so), but they also provided written cadenzas for use by other soloists.

Art music, concert music, and orchestral music are terms sometimes used as synonyms of classical music.

Complexity

Classical works often display great musical complexity through the composer's use of development, modulation (changing of keys), variation rather than exact repetition, musical phrases that are not of even length, counterpoint, polyphony and sophisticated harmony.

Also, many long classical works (from 30 minutes to three hours) are built up from a hierarchy of smaller units: namely phrases, periods, sections, and movements. Schenkerian analysis is a branch of music theory which attempts to distinguish these structural levels.

Emotional content

As with many forms of fine art, classical music often aspires to communicate a transcendent quality of emotion, which expresses something universal about the human condition. While emotional expression is not a property exclusive to classical music, this deeper exploration of emotion arguably allows the best classical music to reach what has been called the "sublime" in art. Many examples often cited in support of this, for instance Beethoven's setting of Friedrich Schiller's poem, Ode to Joy in his 9th symphony, which is often performed at occasions of national liberation or celebration, as in Leonard Bernstein's famously performing the work to mark the collapse of the Berlin Wall, and the Japanese practice of performing it to observe the New Year.

However, some composers, such as Iannis Xenakis, argue that the emotional effect of music on the listeners is arbitrary and therefore the objective complexity or informational content of the piece is paramount.

Instruments

Classical and popular music are often distinguished by their choice of instruments. The instruments used in common practice classical music were mostly invented before the mid-19th century (often, much earlier), and codified in the 18th and 19th centuries. They consist of the instruments found in an orchestra, together with a few other solo instruments (such as the piano, harpsichord, and organ). Electric instruments such as the electric guitar and electric violin play a prominent role in popular music, but of course play no role in classical music before the twentieth century, and only appear occasionally in the classical music of the 20th and 21st centuries. Both classical and popular musicians have experimented in recent decades with electronic instruments such as the synthesizer, electric and digital techniques such as the use of sampled or computer-generated sounds, and the sounds of instruments from other cultures such as the gamelan.

None of the bass instruments existed until the Renaissance. In Medieval Music, instruments are divided in two categories: loud instruments for use outdoors or in church, and quieter instruments for indoor use.

Many instruments which are associated today with popular music used to have important roles in early classical music, such as bagpipes, vihuelas, hurdy-gurdies and some woodwind instruments. On the other hand, the acoustic guitar, for example, which used to be associated mainly with popular music, has gained prominence in classical music through the 19th and 20th centuries.

Finally, while equal temperament became gradually accepted as the dominant musical tuning during the 19th century, different historical temperaments are often used for music from earlier periods. For instance, music of the English Renaissance is often performed in mean tone temperament.

Durability

One criterion that might be said to distinguish works of the classical musical canon is its cultural durability. However, this is not a distinguishing mark of all classical music: works by J. S. Bach (1685–1750) continue to be widely performed and highly regarded, while music by many of Bach's contemporaries, while undoubtedly "classical", is deemed mediocre, and is rarely performed. It could be argued that this is a self-fufilling prophecy, exacerbated by the fact that classical music is studied and preserved at much higher levels than other music.

The [Neutral point of view>neutrality] of this article or section may be compromised by "[Avoid weasel wordsweasel words]."
Please see the relevant discussion on the [talk page].

Influences between classical and popular music

Classical music has always been influenced by, or taken material from, popular music. Examples include occasional music such as Brahms' use of student drinking songs in his Academic Festival Overture, genres exemplfied by Kurt Weill's The Threepenny Opera, and the influence of jazz on early- and mid-twentieth century composers including Maurice Ravel. Certain postmodern and postminimalist classical composers acknowledge a debt to popular music.

There are also many examples of influence flowing the other way, including popular songs based on classical music, the use to which Pachelbel's Canon has been put since the 1970s, and the musical crossover phenomenon, where classical musicians have achieved success in the popular music arena (one notable example is the "Hooked on Classics" series of recordings made by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in the early 1980s). In fact, it could be argued that the entire genre of film music could be considered part of this influence as well, since it brings orchestral music to vast audiences of moviegoers who might otherwise never choose to listen to such music (albeit for the most part unconsciously).

Classical music and folk music

Composers of classical music have often made use of folk music (music created by untutored musicians, often from a purely oral tradition). Some have done so with an explicit nationalist ideology, others have simply mined folk music for thematic material. See: European Classical Composers Noted for Use of Folk Music

Commercial uses of classical music

Certain staples of classical music are often used commercially (that is, either in advertising or in the soundtracks of movies made for entertainment). In television commercials, several loud, bombastically rhythmic orchestral passages have become cliches, particularly the opening "O Fortuna" of Carl Orff's Carmina Burana; other examples in the same vein are the Dies Irae from the Verdi Requiem, and excerpts of Aaron Copland's "Rodeo".

Similarly, movies often revert to standard, cliched snatches of classical music to represent refinement or opulence: probably the most-often heard piece in this category is Mozart's Eine kleine Nachtmusik.

Classical music in education

Throughout history, parents have often made sure that their children receive classical music training from a young age. Early experience with music provides the basis for more serious study later. For those who desire to become performers, any musical instrument is practically impossible to learn to play at a professional level if it, or at least a similar instrument, is not learned in childhood. Some parents pursue music lessons for their children for social reasons or in an effort to instill a useful sense of self-discipline. Some consider that a degree of knowledge of important works of classical music is part of a good general education.

The 1990s marked the emergence in the United States of research papers and popular books on the so-called Mozart effect: a temporary, small elevation of scores on certain tests as a result of listening to Mozart. The popularized version of the controversial theory was expressed succinctly by a New York Times music columnist: "researchers have determined that listening to Mozart actually makes you smarter." Promoters marketed CDs claimed to induce the effect. Florida passed a law requiring toddlers in state-run schools to listen to classical music every day, and in 1998 the governor of Georgia budgeted $105,000 a year to provide every child born in Georgia with a tape or CD of classical music. One of the original researchers commented "I don't think it can hurt. I'm all for exposing children to wonderful cultural experiences. But I do think the money could be better spent on music education programs."

See also:

Related genres

Classical music (of the European tradition) in different countries

Composers of classical music

Terms of classical music

For terms relating specifically to the performance of classical music, see the Musical terminology.

Literature

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: