Music Appreciation 2-Project Presentation
Music Appreciation 2-Project Presentation
Music Appreciation 2-Project Presentation
Soloists(Concerto)
By Xan Chong Zhu Xu,Ngiam Li Qing, Iskandar Arfan Bin Ahmad
Kamsul
CHAPTERS
DEFINITION OF CONCERTO -HISTORY OF CONCERTO
BIBILOGRAPHY
-MODERN(ALBAN BERG AND
GYORGY LIGETI)
Concerto
• Large-scale composition
for an orchestra with a
soloist or a group of
soloists.
• The solo performers will
alternate between playing
with or alongside the larger
ensemble.
• It comes from Latin text
“concertare” which means
or competition or battle.
History of Concerto-Baroque
• First indicated concertos in the title of a music print
was the publishing of the Concerti by Andrea and
Giovanni Gabrieli in 1587.
• At first, concerto only involved voices and
instruments in which the instruments had
independent parts.
• The concerto began to take its modern shape,
beginning with the concerto grosso (a group of
soloist-concertino, large ensemble- ripieno) form
developed by Arcangelo Corelli.
• Further on, the birth of solo concerto established the
main format of concerto for the later periods of
music.
History of Concerto-Classical
• During the classical period, most concertos have been written for piano, to
replace the harpsichord. Some composers also composed for cello and
violin.
• It started the tradition of composing for single soloist instead of group
soloist.
• A traditional practice of concerto also established this period.
-3 movements(First and the last in a quicker tempo, while 2nd movement stays slow and lyrical.)
-Sonata Form at the First Movement(Exposition-Development-Recapitulation)
-Cadenza(Virtuosic passages at the end of the First and Last Movement)
Development of Concerto in Romantic Era
• The concerto in romantic era becomes a representative genre that the
soloist display their virtuosity. Concertos became complex and
ambitious therefore the timespan of concerto increased which could
last half an hour or longer.
• The term concertino start to be smaller pieces that are shorter than a
full concerto, albeit it has never formalized. Which many Concertinos
are still longer than Baroque concertos.
• The number of cello concertos drastically increase in the romantic era,
close to violin and piano.
Development of Concerto in Modern Era
• 20th century, composers started experimenting new musical ideas that were hardly
practice and new musical ideas were used.
- Bartók(Nationalism,Hungarian folk tunes and scales),
-Schoenberg, Berg(development of atonality and the invention of the twelve-tone
technique of composition)
-Debussy(Use of whole tone scales)
-Alberto Ginastera (the use of polyrhythms and complex time signatures)
• These idea expand virtuosic elements of concerto including new and extended
instrumental techniques and focus on previously neglected aspects of sound such
as pitch, timbre and dynamics.
• Some modern concertos changed the group and solo relationship between soloist
and orchestra.
Development of Concerto in Modern Era
• Up to 1950, the concerto of the modern era kept pace with the language and idiom
of modern music. (Deep Purple-Concerto for the band and orchestra,Igor
Stravinsky-Ebony Concerto)
• Neo-Baroque and Neoclassical trends in modern music had also affected the
forms of modern concerto to retake the forms of the Baroque and classical.(Alfred
Schnittke-Concerto Grosso No 1)
• A growth of the concertante repertoire of instruments, some of which had seldom
or never been used in this capacity.(Concerto for wordless coloratura soprano by
Reinhold Glière,Theremin Concerto by Kalevi Aho, Strathclyde Concertos by
Maxwell Davies,Viola Concerto by Gyorgy Ligeti)
The culture and history of Romantic
concerto
• During the romantic period, most of the concertos are composed in the German
empire which the number reign over other empires at the period.
• Romantic concerto are usually composed by virtuosos at that period to display their
virtuosity(Niccolo Paganini,Franz Lizst,Charles-Valentin Alkan)
• Many composers accepted the movement forms and cycle that by then had been used
by composers in the past, especially “sonata form” in the first movement. However,
some composers also advance with the experimentation of concerto.
-Jan Ladislav Dussek(first composer that omit improvised cadenzas and compose in a
way that isolates soloist and orchestra)
-Carl Maria Von Weber(Insert programmatic and literature ideas into concerto )
Frédéric Chopin
• Born (year, place): 1st March 1810,
Zelazowa Wola, Poland
• Died (year, place): 17th October 1849,
Paris France
• family: Nicholas Chopin(father), Justyna
Krzyzanowska(mother), Emilia
Chopin(younger sister), Ludwika
Jedrzejewicz(older sister), Izabela
Barcinski(younger sister)
• Health and physiognomy: Diagnose and
treated with tuberculosis
• Personality: complicated, cold, vain,
calculating, snobbish, snide, anti-Semitic
and impossibly hypersensitive
Frédéric Chopin
• Significant places: Congress Poland
• Significant people: Bach, W.A. Mozart, A. Scriabin and S.
Rachmaninoff
• Employers or patrons: Jane Stirling
• Means of earning a living: piano teacher, composer and
concert pianist
• Financial situation: Wealthy
Characteristics of Chopin’s Music
• Style of composition: Impromptu,Take ideas from Bach,Mozart and
John Field
• General characteristics:
• -Endowed popular dance forms with a greater range of melody and
expression
• Exploited the poetic potential of the concept of the concert etude
Piano Concerto No 1(1830)
• The Piano Concerto No. 1 in E minor, Op. 11, is
a piano concerto written by Frédéric Chopin in
when he was twenty years old. It was first
performed on 11 October of that year, at the
Teatr Narodowy in Warsaw, Poland, with the
composer as soloist, during one of his "farewell"
concerts before leaving Poland.It also features
Krakowiak rhythms in chopin’s composition.
• The concerto follows the traditional form of
three movements:
I..Allegro non troppo e molto maestoso – Allegro
con spirito (B♭ minor – B♭ major)
• II.Andantino semplice – Prestissimo – Tempo I
(D♭ major)
• III.Allegro con fuoco – Molto meno mosso –
Allegro vivo (B♭ minor – B♭ major)
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R3azyotbXgg
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
• Born: Born: May 7, 1840, Votkinsk, Russia.
ALBAN BERG
Career: Composer for the upper members of the Vienna
society,Lecturer or figure of the Second Viennese School.
Characteristics of Berg’s Music
• Style of composition: Expressionism
[Late-Romantic Lyricism combined with twelve tone-technique]
(Wozzeck,Lulu)
General characteristics:
Semanticized his music by means of tone anagrams and cryptograms. He
took great pleasure in musically symbolizing names by means of tonal
letters.
Violin Concerto-To A Memory of An
Angel(1935)
• Final complete work of Alban Berg which is dedicated to the late-
Manon Gropius,.
• The concerto contains two movements(I. Andante-Allegretto and
II. Allegro-Adagio),it appears uncommon instrument as
doublings(the cor anglais,piccolo and alto saxophone).The first
movement interpret life and the second movement interprets the
death and transfiguration.
• The work contains late-romantic elements with the use of twelve-
tone technique which he uses a tone row that only contains thirds.
• In the final Adagio section of the 2nd movement, Berg quotes J.S.
Bach’s cantata “O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort,” BWV 60. He also
quotes a Carinthian folk song “Ein Vogel auf’m
Zwetschgenbaum, which both quotes are tonal.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0GzNmf_AUw
WALTER GROPIUS,ALMA MAHLER AND
YOUNG MANON GROPIUS
György Ligeti
Born: 28 May 1923 in Transylvania, Romania
Died:12 June 2006 in Vienna, Austria
Family:Leopold Auer(Violinist,great-granduncle),
Alexander Ligeti(Bank clerk, father),Iloma
Sogomy(ophthalmologist, mother) Ágnes
Heller(Philosopher,second cousin),Lukas
Ligeti(percussionist and composer, son),Vera
Spitz(scholar of psychoanalysis, wife),