Renato Bellucci: guitar "Guitar Celebration, 1990"
|
Gavottes 1 & 2;
J.S.
Bach
page 1/2
Baroque
Instrumental Music is synonym with Suite and Concerto Grosso. The
organ is strongly associated with church music. There was, however, another
kind of instrumental music during the Baroque: secular music written not
for the organ but for orchestral instruments and for the harpsichord. This
non-organ music took three important forms suite, sonata, and concerto.
The word suite (sweet)
simply means a series or set of items that belong together—a suite of rooms
or a suite of furniture. In the Baroque period, a suite referred
to a collection of dances that were intended for performance as a group.
These dances were stylized; that is, they were "dressed up" to make them
interesting pieces for listening. Bach, being the master that he was, made
suite music "extremely interesting". Composers wrote their own music for
them, but meter, tempo, and other characteristics were like dance types.
To understand this concept better, imagine a contemporary composer doing
the same thing by taking a popular dance of a generation or more ago, say
the fox-trot or Charleston, and writing similar music with more interesting
melodies and harmonies while retaining the essential rhythm and style of
the original dance music.
This is what Bach and other Baroque
composers did. They took several contrasting dances that were no longer
in vogue and stylized them for listening, not dancing. Many
different dances were incorporated into suites. The four most common dances
were the allemande, courante, saraband,
and gigue. The allemande [ah-la-mahnd] (which means German,
in French) probably came
from Germany. It has a moderate
tempo and a rather continuous pattern of eighth or sixteenth notes. The
courante [koo-rahnt] was French in origin. It moves a little more rapidly
than the allemande. The saraband [sahra-bahnd] is a slow dance. It was
probably imported by the Spaniards from Mexico. The gigue [zheeg] originated
in Britain, where it was called jig. It is lively and is appropriately
placed as the final dance in a suite. It also tends to be more contrapuntal
in character than most dance types. With elements drawn from many countries,
the Baroque suite is an international music form.
Other dances found in suites are
the bourree, minuet, gavotte,
loure,
polonaise, and passepied. Often a composer wrote
a double—a variation of the dance preceding it. Many times
a suite is preceded by a prelude or overture. The prelude
is like an "appetizer" for the suite. It introduces the key and
many musical ideas which will be developed in the movements (dances) that
will follow.. It is customary for all the dances in a suite to be written
in the same key, with the double in the parallel major or minor key. The
composer achieves variety by arranging the movements so that the faster
dances contrast with slower ones. Most dances are in two-part form, with
each part repeated. Suites originally were composed for keyboard instruments,
but by the late Baroque they were also being written for orchestra. Composers
in Baroque times did not always specify which keyboard instrument they
wanted. In Bach's famous Well Tempered Clavier the word clavier does not
refer to a special kind of piano; rather it means simply keyboard. The
pieces in that collection might
have been played originally on the clavichord, harpsichord, or organ.
|