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Classical music

Classical music generally refers to the art music of the Western world, considered to be distinct from Western folk music or popular music traditions. It is sometimes distinguished as Western classical music, as the term "classical music" also applies to non-Western art music. Classical music is often characterized by formality and complexity in its musical form and harmonic organization,[1] particularly with the use of polyphony.[2] Since at least the ninth century it has been primarily a written tradition,[2] spawning a sophisticated notational system, as well as accompanying literature in analytical, critical, historiographical, musicological and philosophical practices. A foundational component of Western Culture, classical music is frequently seen from the perspective of individual or groups of composers, whose compositions, personalities and beliefs have fundamentally shaped its history.

A youth orchestra performing.

Rooted in the patronage of churches and royal courts in Western Europe,[1] surviving early medieval music is chiefly religious, monophonic and vocal, with the music of ancient Greece and Rome influencing its thought and theory. The earliest extant music manuscripts date from the Carolingian Empire (800–888),[3] around the time which Western plainchant gradually unified into what is termed Gregorian chant.[4] Musical centers existed at the Abbey of Saint Gall, the Abbey of Saint Martial and Saint Emmeram's Abbey, while the 11th century saw the development of staff notation and increasing output from medieval music theorists. By the mid-12th century France became the major European musical center:[3] the religious Notre-Dame school first fully explored organized rhythms and polyphony, while secular music flourished with the troubadour and trouvère traditions led by poet-musician nobles.[5] This culminated in the court sponsored French ars nova and Italian Trecento, which evolved into ars subtilior, a stylistic movement of extreme rhythmic diversity.[5] Beginning in the early 15th century, Renaissance composers of the influential Franco-Flemish School built off the harmonic principles in the English contenance angloise, bringing choral music to new standards, particularly the mass and motet.[6] Northern Italy soon emerged as the central musical region, where the Roman School engaged in highly sophisticated methods of polyphony in genres such as the madrigal,[6] which inspired the brief English Madrigal School.

The Baroque period (1580–1750) saw the relative standardization of common-practice tonality,[7] as well as the increasing importance of musical instruments, which grew into ensembles of considerable size. Italy remained dominant, being the birthplace of opera, the soloist centered concerto genre, the organized sonata form as well as the large scale vocal-centered genres of oratorio and cantata. The fugue technique championed by Johann Sebastian Bach exemplified the Baroque tendency for complexity, and as a reaction the simpler and song-like galant music and empfindsamkeit styles were developed. In the shorter but pivotal Classical period (1730–1820) composers such as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Joseph Haydn, and Ludwig van Beethoven created widely admired representatives of absolute music,[8][9] including symphonies, string quartets and concertos. The subsequent Romantic music (1800–1910) focused instead on programmatic music, for which the art song, symphonic poem and various piano genres were important vessels. During this time virtuosity was celebrated, immensity was encouraged, while philosophy and nationalism were embedded—all aspects that converged in the operas of Richard Wagner. By the 20th century, stylistic unification gradually dissipated while the prominence of popular music greatly increased. Many composers actively avoided past techniques and genres in the lens of modernism, with some abandoning tonality in place of serialism, while others found new inspiration in folk melodies or impressionist sentiments. After World War II, for the first time audience members valued older music over contemporary works, a preference which has been catered to by the emergence and widespread availability of commercial recordings.[10] Trends of the mid-20th century to the present day include New Simplicity, New Complexity, Minimalism, Spectral music, and more recently Postmodern music and Postminimalism. Increasingly global, practitioners from the Americas, Africa and Asia have obtained crucial roles,[3] while symphony orchestras and opera houses now appear across the world.

Terminology and definition

Ideological origins

(from left to right) Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven from the 1904 Beethoven–Haydn–Mozart Memorial. All three are often considered part of the First Viennese School, and among the first composers to be referred to as "Classical"

Both the English term "classical" and the German equivalent klassik developed from the French classique, itself derived from the Latin word classicus, which originally referred to the highest class of Ancient Roman citizens.[11][n 1] In Roman usage, the term later became a means to distinguish revered literary figures;[11] the Roman author Aulus Gellius commended writers such as Demosthenes and Virgil as classicus.[13] By the Renaissance, the adjective had acquired a more general meaning: an entry in Randle Cotgrave's 1611 A Dictionarie of the French and English Tongues is among the earliest extant definitions, translating classique as "classical, formall [sic], orderlie, in due or fit ranke; also, approved, authenticall, chiefe, principall".[11][14] The musicologist Daniel Heartz summarizes this into two definitions: 1) a "formal discipline" and 2) a "model of excellence".[11] Like Gellius, later Renaissance scholars who wrote in Latin used classicus in reference to writers of classical antiquity;[12][n 2] however, this meaning only gradually developed, and was for a while subordinate to the broader classical ideals of formality and excellence.[15] Literature and visual arts—for which substantial Ancient Greek and Roman examples existed—did eventually adopt the term "classical" as relating to classical antiquity, but virtually no music of that time was available to Renaissance musicians, limiting the connection between classical music and the Greco-Roman world.[15][n 3]

It was in 18th-century England that the term 'classical' "first came to stand for a particular canon of works in performance."[15] London had developed a prominent public concert music scene, unprecedented and unmatched by other European cities.[11] The royal court had gradually lost its monopoly on music, in large part from instability that the Commonwealth of England's dissolution and the Glorious Revolution enacted on court musicians.[11][n 4] In 1672 the former court musician John Banister began giving popular public concerts at a London tavern;[n 5] his popularity rapidly inaugurated the prominence of public concerts in the London.[19] The conception of "classical"—or more often "ancient music"—emerged, which was still built on the principles of formality and excellence, and according to Heartz "civic ritual, religion and moral activism figured significantly in this novel construction of musical taste".[15] The performance of such music was specialized by the Academy of Ancient Music and later at the Concerts of Antient Music series, where the work of select 16th and 17th composers was featured,[20] especially George Frideric Handel.[15][n 6] In France, the reign of Louis XIV (r. 1638–1715) saw a cultural renaissance, by the end of which writers such as Molière, Jean de La Fontaine and Jean Racine were considered to have surpassed the achievements of classical antiquity.[21] They were thus characterized as "classical", as was the music of Jean-Baptiste Lully (and later Christoph Willibald Gluck), being designated as "l’opéra française classique".[21] In the rest of continental Europe, the abandonment of defining "classical" as analogous to the Greco-Roman World was slower, primarily because the formation of canonical repertoires was either minimal or exclusive to the upper classes.[15]

Many European commentators of the early 19th century found new unification in their definition of classical music: to juxtapose the older composers Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Joseph Haydn, and (excluding some of his later works) Ludwig van Beethoven as "classical" against the emerging style of Romantic music.[22][23][24] These three composers in particular were grouped into the First Viennese School, sometimes called the "Viennese classics",[n 7] a coupling that remains problematic by reason of none of the three being born in Vienna and the minimal time Haydn and Mozart spent in the city.[25] While this was an often expressed characterization, it was not a strict one. In 1879 the composer Charles Kensington Salaman defined the following composers as classical: Bach, Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Weber, Spohr and Mendelssohn.[26] More broadly, some writers used the term "classical" to generally praise well-regarded outputs from various composers, particularly those who produced many works in an established genre.[11][n 8]

Contemporary understanding

The contemporary understanding of the term "classical music" remains vague and multifaceted.[31][32] Other terms such as "art music", "canonic music", "cultivated music" and "serious music" are largely synonymous.[33] The term "classical music" is often indicated or implied to concern solely the Western world,[34] and conversely, in many academic histories the term "Western music" excludes non-classical Western music.[35][n 9] Another complication lies in that "classical music" is sometimes used to describe non-Western art music exhibiting similar long-lasting and complex characteristics; examples include Indian classical music (Carnatic and Hindustani music), Gamelan music, and various styles of the court of Imperial China (see yayue for instance).[1] Thus in the later 20th century terms such as "Western classical music" and "Western art music" came in use to address this.[34] The musicologist Ralph P. Locke notes that neither term is ideal, as they create an "intriguing complication" when considering "certain practitioners of Western-art music genres who come from non-Western cultures".[37][n 10]

Complexity in musical form and harmonic organization are typical traits of classical music.[1] The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) offers three definitions for the word "classical" in relation to music:[27]

  1. "of acknowledged excellence"
  2. "of, relating to, or characteristic of a formal musical tradition, as distinguished from popular or folk music"
  3. and more specifically, "of or relating to formal European music of the late 18th and early 19th centuries, characterized by harmony, balance, and adherence to established compositional forms".

The last definition concerns what is now termed the Classical period, a specific stylistic era of European music from the second half of the 18th century to the beginning of the 19th century.[38]

History

Roots

The Western classical tradition formally begins with music created by and for the early Christian Church.[39] It is probable that the early Church wished to disassociate itself from the predominant music of ancient Greece and Rome, as it was a reminder of the pagan religion it had persecuted and by which it had been persecuted.[39] As such, it remains unclear as to what extent the music of the Christian Church, and thus Western classical music as a whole, was influenced by preceding ancient music.[40] The general attitude towards music was adopted from the Ancient Greek and Roman music theorists and commentators.[41][n 11] Just as in Greco-Roman society, music was considered central to education; along with arithmetic, geometry and astronomy, music was included in the quadrivium, the four subjects of the upper division of a standard liberal arts education in the Middle Ages.[43] This high regard for music was first promoted by the scholars Cassiodorus, Isidore of Seville,[44] and particularly Boethius,[45] whose transmission and expansion on the perspectives of music from Pythagoras, Aristotle and Plato were crucial in the development of medieval musical thought.[46] However, scholars, medieval music theorists and composers regularly misinterpreted or misunderstood the writings of their Greek and Roman predecessors.[47] This was due to the complete absence of surviving Greco-Roman musical works available to medieval musicians,[47][n 12] to the extent that Isidore of Seville (c. 559 – 636) stated "unless sounds are remembered by man, they perish, for they cannot be written down", unaware of the systematic notational practices of Ancient Greece centuries before.[48][n 13] The musicologist Gustave Reese notes, however, that many Greco-Roman texts can still be credited as influential to Western classical music, since medieval musicians regularly read their works—regardless of whether they were doing so correctly.[47]

However, there are some indisputable musical continuations from the ancient world.[49] Basic aspects such as monophony, improvisation and the dominance of text in musical settings are prominent in both early medieval and music of nearly all ancient civilizations.[50] Greek influences in particular include the church modes (which were descendants of developments by Aristoxenus and Pythagoras),[51] basic acoustical theory from pythagorean tuning,[40] as well as the central function of tetrachords.[52] Ancient Greek instruments such as the aulos (a reed instrument) and the lyre (a stringed instrument similar to a small harp) eventually led to several modern-day instruments of a symphonic orchestra.[53] However, Donald Jay Grout notes that attempting to create a direct evolutionary connection from the ancient music to early medieval is baseless, as it was almost solely influenced by Greco-Roman music theory, not performance or practice.[54]

Early music

Medieval

 
Musician playing the vielle (fourteenth-century Medieval manuscript)

Medieval music includes Western European music from after the fall of the Western Roman Empire by 476 to about 1400. Monophonic chant, also called plainsong or Gregorian chant, was the dominant form until about 1100.[55] Christian monks developed the first forms of European musical notation in order to standardize liturgy throughout the Church.[56][57] Polyphonic (multi-voiced) music developed from monophonic chant throughout the late Middle Ages and into the Renaissance, including the more complex voicings of motets. During the earlier medieval period, the vocal music from the liturgical genre, predominantly Gregorian chant, was monophonic, using a single, unaccompanied vocal melody line.[58] Polyphonic vocal genres, which used multiple independent vocal melodies, began to develop during the high medieval era, becoming prevalent by the later 13th and early 14th century. Notable Medieval composers include Hildegard of Bingen, Léonin, Pérotin, Philippe de Vitry, Guillaume de Machaut, Francesco Landini, and Johannes Ciconia.

Many medieval musical instruments still exist, but in different forms. Medieval instruments included the flute, the recorder and plucked string instruments like the lute. As well, early versions of the organ and fiddle (or vielle) existed. Medieval instruments in Europe had most commonly been used singly, often self accompanied with a drone note, or occasionally in parts. From at least as early as the 13th century through the 15th century there was a division of instruments into haut (loud, shrill, outdoor instruments) and bas (quieter, more intimate instruments).[59] A number of instrument have roots in Eastern predecessors that were adopted from the medieval Islamic world.[60] For example, the Arabic rebab is the ancestor of all European bowed string instruments, including the lira, rebec and violin.[61][62]

Renaissance

The Renaissance era was from 1400 to 1600. It was characterized by greater use of instrumentation, multiple interweaving melodic lines, and the use of the first bass instruments. Social dancing became more widespread, so musical forms appropriate to accompanying dance began to standardize. It is in this time that the notation of music on a staff and other elements of musical notation began to take shape.[63] This invention made possible the separation of the composition of a piece of music from its transmission; without written music, transmission was oral, and subject to change every time it was transmitted. With a musical score, a work of music could be performed without the composer's presence.[64] The invention of the movable-type printing press in the 15th century had far-reaching consequences on the preservation and transmission of music.[65]

 
An illuminated opening from the Chigi codex featuring the Kyrie of Ockeghem's Missa Ecce ancilla Domini

Many instruments originated during the Renaissance; others were variations of, or improvements upon, instruments that had existed previously. Some have survived to the present day; others have disappeared, only to be re-created in order to perform music on period instruments. As in the modern day, instruments may be classified as brass, strings, percussion, and woodwind. Brass instruments in the Renaissance were traditionally played by professionals who were members of Guilds and they included the slide trumpet, the wooden cornet, the valveless trumpet and the sackbut. Stringed instruments included the viol, the rebec, the harp-like lyre, the hurdy-gurdy, the lute, the guitar, the cittern, the bandora, and the orpharion. Keyboard instruments with strings included the harpsichord and the clavichord. Percussion instruments include the triangle, the Jew's harp, the tambourine, the bells, the rumble-pot, and various kinds of drums. Woodwind instruments included the double-reed shawm (an early member of the oboe family), the reed pipe, the bagpipe, the transverse flute, the recorder, the dulcian, and the crumhorn. Simple pipe organs existed, but were largely confined to churches, although there were portable varieties.[66] Printing enabled the standardization of descriptions and specifications of instruments, as well as instruction in their use.[67]

Vocal music in the Renaissance is noted for the flourishing of an increasingly elaborate polyphonic style. The principal liturgical forms which endured throughout the entire Renaissance period were masses and motets, with some other developments towards the end, especially as composers of sacred music began to adopt secular forms (such as the madrigal) for their own designs. Towards the end of the period, the early dramatic precursors of opera such as monody, the madrigal comedy, and the intermedio are seen. Around 1597, Italian composer Jacopo Peri wrote Dafne, the first work to be called an opera today. He also composed Euridice, the first opera to have survived to the present day.

Notable Renaissance composers include Josquin des Prez, Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, John Dunstaple, Johannes Ockeghem, Orlande de Lassus, Guillaume Du Fay, Gilles Binchois, Thomas Tallis, William Byrd, Giovanni Gabrieli, Carlo Gesualdo, John Dowland, Jacob Obrecht, Adrian Willaert, Jacques Arcadelt, and Cipriano de Rore.

Common-practice period

The common practice period is typically defined as the era between the formation and the dissolution of common-practice tonality.[citation needed] The term usually spans roughly two-and-a-half centuries, encompassing the Baroque, Classical, and Romantic periods.

Baroque

 
Baroque instruments including hurdy-gurdy, harpsichord, bass viol, lute, violin, and baroque guitar

Baroque music is characterized by the use of complex tonal counterpoint and the use of a basso continuo, a continuous bass line. Music became more complex in comparison with the simple songs of all previous periods.[68] The beginnings of the sonata form took shape in the canzona, as did a more formalized notion of theme and variations. The tonalities of major and minor as means for managing dissonance and chromaticism in music took full shape.[69]

During the Baroque era, keyboard music played on the harpsichord and pipe organ became increasingly popular, and the violin family of stringed instruments took the form generally seen today. Opera as a staged musical drama began to differentiate itself from earlier musical and dramatic forms, and vocal forms like the cantata and oratorio became more common.[70] Vocalists for the first time began adding extra notes to the music.[68]

The theories surrounding equal temperament began to be put in wider practice, especially as it enabled a wider range of chromatic possibilities in hard-to-tune keyboard instruments. Although J.S. Bach did not use equal temperament, as a modern piano is generally tuned, changes in the temperaments from the meantone system, common at the time, to various temperaments that made modulation between all keys musically acceptable, made possible his Well-Tempered Clavier.[71]

Baroque instruments included some instruments from the earlier periods (e.g., the hurdy-gurdy and recorder) and a number of new instruments (e.g., the oboe, bassoon, cello, contrabass and fortepiano). Some instruments from previous eras fell into disuse, such as the shawm, cittern, rackett, and the wooden cornet. The key Baroque instruments for strings included the violin, viol, viola, viola d'amore, cello, contrabass, lute, theorbo (which often played the basso continuo parts), mandolin, Baroque guitar, harp and hurdy-gurdy. Woodwinds included the Baroque flute, Baroque oboe, recorder and the bassoon. Brass instruments included the cornett, natural horn, natural trumpet, serpent and the trombone. Keyboard instruments included the clavichord, the tangent piano, the harpsichord, the pipe organ, and, later in the period, the fortepiano (an early version of the piano). Percussion instruments included the timpani, snare drum, tambourine and the castanets.

One major difference between Baroque music and the classical era that followed it is that the types of instruments used in Baroque ensembles were much less standardized. A Baroque ensemble could include one of several different types of keyboard instruments (e.g., pipe organ or harpsichord),[72] additional stringed chordal instruments (e.g., a lute), bowed strings, woodwinds, and brass instruments, and an unspecified number of bass instruments performing the basso continuo,(e.g., a cello, contrabass, viola, bassoon, serpent, etc.).

Vocal developments in the Baroque era included the development of opera types such as opera seria and opéra comique, and related forms such as oratorios and cantatas.[73][74]

Important composers of this era include Johann Sebastian Bach, Antonio Vivaldi, George Frideric Handel, Johann Pachelbel, Henry Purcell, Claudio Monteverdi, Barbara Strozzi, Domenico Scarlatti, Georg Philipp Telemann, Arcangelo Corelli, Alessandro Scarlatti, Jean-Philippe Rameau, Jean-Baptiste Lully, and Heinrich Schütz.

Classical

 
Joseph Haydn (1732–1809) portrayed by Thomas Hardy (1791)

Though the term "classical music" includes all Western art music from the Medieval era to the 2000s, the Classical Era was the period of Western art music from the 1750s to the early 1820s—the era of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Joseph Haydn, and Ludwig van Beethoven.

The Classical era established many of the norms of composition, presentation, and style, and was also when the piano became the predominant keyboard instrument. The basic forces required for an orchestra became somewhat standardized (although they would grow as the potential of a wider array of instruments was developed in the following centuries). Chamber music grew to include ensembles with as many as 8 to 10 performers for serenades. Opera continued to develop, with regional styles in Italy, France, and German-speaking lands. The opera buffa, a form of comic opera, rose in popularity. The symphony came into its own as a musical form, and the concerto was developed as a vehicle for displays of virtuoso playing skill. Orchestras no longer required a harpsichord (which had been part of the traditional continuo in the Baroque style), and were often led by the lead violinist (now called the concertmaster).[75]

Classical era musicians continued to use many of instruments from the Baroque era, such as the cello, contrabass, recorder, trombone, timpani, fortepiano (the precursor to the modern piano) and organ. While some Baroque instruments fell into disuse (e.g., the theorbo and rackett), many Baroque instruments were changed into the versions that are still in use today, such as the Baroque violin (which became the violin), the Baroque oboe (which became the oboe) and the Baroque trumpet, which transitioned to the regular valved trumpet. During the Classical era, the stringed instruments used in orchestra and chamber music such as string quartets were standardized as the four instruments which form the string section of the orchestra: the violin, viola, cello, and double bass. Baroque-era stringed instruments such as fretted, bowed viols were phased out. Woodwinds included the basset clarinet, basset horn, clarinette d'amour, the Classical clarinet, the chalumeau, the flute, oboe and bassoon. Keyboard instruments included the clavichord and the fortepiano. While the harpsichord was still used in basso continuo accompaniment in the 1750s and 1760s, it fell out of use at the end of the century. Brass instruments included the buccin, the ophicleide (a replacement for the bass serpent, which was the precursor of the tuba) and the natural horn.

Wind instruments became more refined in the Classical era. While double-reed instruments like the oboe and bassoon became somewhat standardized in the Baroque, the clarinet family of single reeds was not widely used until Mozart expanded its role in orchestral, chamber, and concerto settings.[76]

Major composers of this period include Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven, Joseph Haydn, Christoph Willibald Gluck, Johann Christian Bach, Luigi Boccherini, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Muzio Clementi, Antonio Salieri, and Johann Nepomuk Hummel.

Romantic

 
Josef Danhauser's 1840 painting of Franz Liszt at the piano surrounded by (from left to right) Alexandre Dumas, Hector Berlioz, George Sand, Niccolò Paganini, Gioachino Rossini, Marie d'Agoult with a bust of Ludwig van Beethoven on the piano.

The music of the Romantic era, from roughly the first decade of the 19th century to the early 20th century, was characterized by increased attention to an extended melodic line, as well as expressive and emotional elements, paralleling romanticism in other art forms. Musical forms began to break from the Classical era forms (even as those were being codified), with free-form pieces like nocturnes, fantasias, and preludes being written where accepted ideas about the exposition and development of themes were ignored or minimized.[77] The music became more chromatic, dissonant, and tonally colorful, with tensions (with respect to accepted norms of the older forms) about key signatures increasing.[78] The art song (or Lied) came to maturity in this era, as did the epic scales of grand opera, ultimately transcended by Richard Wagner's Ring cycle.[79]

In the 19th century, musical institutions emerged from the control of wealthy patrons, as composers and musicians could construct lives independent of the nobility. Increasing interest in music by the growing middle classes throughout western Europe spurred the creation of organizations for the teaching, performance, and preservation of music. The piano, which achieved its modern construction in this era (in part due to industrial advances in metallurgy) became widely popular with the middle class, whose demands for the instrument spurred many piano builders. Many symphony orchestras date their founding to this era.[78] Some musicians and composers were the stars of the day; some, like Franz Liszt and Niccolò Paganini, fulfilled both roles.[80]

European cultural ideas and institutions began to follow colonial expansion into other parts of the world. There was also a rise, especially toward the end of the era, of nationalism in music (echoing, in some cases, political sentiments of the time), as composers such as Edvard Grieg, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, and Antonín Dvořák echoed traditional music of their homelands in their compositions.[81]

In the Romantic era, the modern piano, with a more powerful, sustained tone and a wider range took over from the more delicate-sounding fortepiano. In the orchestra, the existing Classical instruments and sections were retained (string section, woodwinds, brass, and percussion), but these sections were typically expanded to make a fuller, bigger sound. For example, while a Baroque orchestra may have had two double bass players, a Romantic orchestra could have as many as ten. "As music grew more expressive, the standard orchestral palette just wasn't rich enough for many Romantic composers."[82]

The families of instruments used, especially in orchestras, grew larger; a process that climaxed in the early 20th century with very large orchestras used by late romantic and modernist composers. A wider array of percussion instruments began to appear. Brass instruments took on larger roles, as the introduction of rotary valves made it possible for them to play a wider range of notes. The size of the orchestra (typically around 40 in the Classical era) grew to be over 100.[78] Gustav Mahler's 1906 Symphony No. 8, for example, has been performed with over 150 instrumentalists and choirs of over 400.[83] New woodwind instruments were added, such as the contrabassoon, bass clarinet and piccolo and new percussion instruments were added, including xylophones, snare drums, celestas (a bell-like keyboard instrument), bells, and triangles,[82] large orchestral harps, and even wind machines for sound effects. Saxophones appear in some scores from the late 19th century onwards, usually featured as a solo instrument rather than as in integral part of the orchestra.

The Wagner tuba, a modified member of the horn family, appears in Richard Wagner's cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen. It also has a prominent role in Anton Bruckner's Symphony No. 7 in E Major and is also used in several late romantic and modernist works by Richard Strauss, Béla Bartók, and others[84] Cornets appear regularly in 19th century scores, alongside trumpets which were regarded as less agile, at least until the end of the century.

Prominent composers of this era include Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Frédéric Chopin, Hector Berlioz, Franz Schubert, Robert Schumann, Felix Mendelssohn, Franz Liszt, Giuseppe Verdi, Richard Wagner, Johannes Brahms, Alexander Scriabin, Nikolai Medtner, Edvard Grieg, and Johann Strauss II. Gustav Mahler and Richard Strauss are commonly regarded as transitional composers whose music combines both late romantic and early modernist elements.

20th and 21st centuries

Modernist

 
Igor Stravinsky, by Pablo Picasso, collaborators on Pulcinella (1920)

Encompassing a wide variety of post-Romantic styles, modernist classical music includes late romantic, impressionist, expressionist, and neoclassical styles of composition. Modernism marked an era when many composers rejected certain values of the common practice period, such as traditional tonality, melody, instrumentation, and structure. Some music historians regard musical modernism as an era extending from about 1890 to 1930.[85][86] Others consider that modernism ended with one or the other of the two world wars.[87] Still other authorities claim that modernism is not associated with any historical era, but rather is "an attitude of the composer; a living construct that can evolve with the times".[88] Despite its decline in the last third of the 20th century, there remained at the end of the century an active core of composers who continued to advance the ideas and forms of modernism, such as Pierre Boulez, Pauline Oliveros, Toru Takemitsu, George Benjamin, Jacob Druckman, Brian Ferneyhough, George Perle, Wolfgang Rihm, Richard Wernick, Richard Wilson, and Ralph Shapey.[89]

Two musical movements that were dominant during this time were the impressionist beginning around 1890 and the expressionist that started around 1908. It was a period of diverse reactions in challenging and reinterpreting older categories of music, innovations that lead to new ways of organizing and approaching harmonic, melodic, sonic, and rhythmic aspects of music, and changes in aesthetic worldviews in close relation to the larger identifiable period of modernism in the arts of the time. The operative word most associated with it is "innovation".[90] Its leading feature is a "linguistic plurality", which is to say that no single music genre ever assumed a dominant position.[91]

The orchestra continued to grow in size during the early years modernist era, peaking in the first two decades of the 20th century. Saxophones that appeared only rarely during the 19th century became more commonly used as supplementary instruments, but never became core members of the orchestra. While appearing only as featured solo instruments in some works, for example Maurice Ravel's orchestration of Modest Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition and Sergei Rachmaninoff's Symphonic Dances, the saxophone is included in other works such as Sergei Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet Suites 1 and 2 and many other works as a member of the orchestral ensemble. In some compositions such as Ravel's Boléro, two or more saxophones of different sizes are used to create an entire section like the other sections of the orchestra. The euphonium is featured in a few late Romantic and 20th century works, usually playing parts marked "tenor tuba", including Gustav Holst's The Planets, and Richard Strauss's Ein Heldenleben.

Prominent composers of the early 20th century include Igor Stravinsky, Claude Debussy, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Sergei Prokofiev, Arnold Schoenberg, Nikos Skalkottas, Heitor Villa-Lobos, Anton Webern, Alban Berg, Cécile Chaminade, Paul Hindemith, Aram Khachaturian, George Gershwin, Amy Beach, Béla Bartók, and Dmitri Shostakovich, along with the aforementioned Mahler and Strauss as transitional figures who carried over from the 19th century.

Post-modern/contemporary

Postmodern music is a period of music that began as early as 1930 according to some authorities.[85][86] It shares characteristics with postmodernist art – that is, art that comes after and reacts against modernism.

Some other authorities have more or less equated postmodern music with the "contemporary music" composed well after 1930, from the late 20th century through to the early 21st century.[92][93] Some of the diverse movements of the postmodern/contemporary era include the neoromantic, neomedieval, minimalist, and post minimalist.

Contemporary classical music at the beginning of the 21st century was often considered to include all post-1945 musical forms.[94] A generation later, this term now properly refers to the music of today written by composers who are still alive; music that came into prominence in the mid-1970s. It includes different variations of modernist, postmodern, neoromantic, and pluralist music.[89]

Performance

 
A string quartet performing for the Mozart Year 2006 in Vienna

Performers who have studied classical music extensively are said to be "classically trained". This training may come from private lessons from instrument or voice teachers or from completion of a formal program offered by a Conservatory, college or university, such as a Bachelor of Music or Master of Music degree (which includes individual lessons from professors). In classical music, "...extensive formal music education and training, often to postgraduate [Master's degree] level" is required.[95]

Performance of classical music repertoire requires a proficiency in sight-reading and ensemble playing, harmonic principles, strong ear training (to correct and adjust pitches by ear), knowledge of performance practice (e.g., Baroque ornamentation), and a familiarity with the style/musical idiom expected for a given composer or musical work (e.g., a Brahms symphony or a Mozart concerto).[citation needed]

The key characteristic of European classical music that distinguishes it from popular music, folk music, and some other classical music traditions such as Indian classical music, is that the repertoire tends to be written down in musical notation, creating a musical part or score.[96] This score typically determines details of rhythm, pitch, and, where two or more musicians (whether singers or instrumentalists) are involved, how the various parts are coordinated. The written quality of the music has enabled a high level of complexity within them: fugues, for instance, achieve a remarkable marriage of boldly distinctive melodic lines weaving in counterpoint yet creating a coherent harmonic logic. The use of written notation also preserves a record of the works and enables Classical musicians to perform music from many centuries ago.

Although Classical music in the 2000s has lost most of its tradition for musical improvisation, from the Baroque era to the Romantic era, there are examples of performers who could improvise in the style of their era. In the Baroque era, organ performers would improvise preludes, keyboard performers playing harpsichord would improvise chords from the figured bass symbols beneath the bass notes of the basso continuo part and both vocal and instrumental performers would improvise musical ornaments.[97] Johann Sebastian Bach was particularly noted for his complex improvisations.[98] During the Classical era, the composer-performer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was noted for his ability to improvise melodies in different styles.[99] During the Classical era, some virtuoso soloists would improvise the cadenza sections of a concerto. During the Romantic era, Ludwig van Beethoven would improvise at the piano.[100]

Women in classical music

Almost all of the composers who are described in music textbooks on classical music and whose works are widely performed as part of the standard concert repertoire are male composers, even though there has been a large number of women composers throughout the history of classical music. Musicologist Marcia Citron has asked "[w]hy is music composed by women so marginal to the standard 'classical' repertoire?"[101] Citron "examines the practices and attitudes that have led to the exclusion of women composers from the received 'canon' of performed musical works". She argues that in the 1800s, women composers typically wrote art songs for performance in small recitals rather than symphonies intended for performance with an orchestra in a large hall, with the latter works being seen as the most important genre for composers; since women composers did not write many symphonies, they were deemed not to be notable as composers.[101] In the "...Concise Oxford History of Music, Clara S[c]humann is one of the only [sic] female composers mentioned."[102] Abbey Philips states that "[d]uring the 20th century the women who were composing/playing gained far less attention than their male counterparts."[102]

Historically, major professional orchestras have been mostly or entirely composed of musicians who are men. Some of the earliest cases of women being hired in professional orchestras was in the position of harpist. The Vienna Philharmonic, for example, did not accept women to permanent membership until 1997, far later than the other orchestras ranked among the world's top five by Gramophone in 2008.[103][n 14] The last major orchestra to appoint a woman to a permanent position was the Berlin Philharmonic.[107] As late as February 1996, the Vienna Philharmonic's principal flute, Dieter Flury, told Westdeutscher Rundfunk that accepting women would be "gambling with the emotional unity (emotionelle Geschlossenheit) that this organism currently has".[108] In April 1996, the orchestra's press secretary wrote that "compensating for the expected leaves of absence" of maternity leave would be a problem.[109]

In 2013, an article in Mother Jones stated that while "[m]any prestigious orchestras have significant female membership—women outnumber men in the New York Philharmonic's violin section—and several renowned ensembles, including the National Symphony Orchestra, the Detroit Symphony, and the Minnesota Orchestra, are led by women violinists," the double bass, brass, and percussion sections of major orchestras "...are still predominantly male".[110] A 2014 BBC article stated that the "...introduction of 'blind' auditions, where a prospective instrumentalist performs behind a screen so that the judging panel can exercise no gender or racial prejudice, has seen the gender balance of traditionally male-dominated symphony orchestras gradually shift."[111]

Relationship to other music traditions

Popular music

Classical music has often incorporated elements or material from popular music of the composer's time. Examples include occasional music such as Brahms' use of student drinking songs in his Academic Festival Overture, genres exemplified by Kurt Weill's The Threepenny Opera, and the influence of jazz on early and mid-20th-century composers including Maurice Ravel, exemplified by the movement entitled "Blues" in his sonata for violin and piano.[112] Some postmodern, minimalist and postminimalist classical composers acknowledge a debt to popular music.[113][failed verification]

Numerous examples show influence in the opposite direction, 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.[114] In heavy metal, a number of lead guitarists (playing electric guitar), including Ritchie Blackmore and Randy Rhoads,[115] modeled their playing styles on Baroque or Classical-era instrumental music.[116]

Folk music

Composers of classical music have often made use of folk music (music created by musicians who are commonly not classically trained, often from a purely oral tradition). Some composers, like Dvořák and Smetana,[117] have used folk themes to impart a nationalist flavor to their work, while others like Bartók have used specific themes lifted whole from their folk-music origins.[118] Khachaturian widely incorporated into his work the folk music of his native Armenia, but also other ethnic groups of the Middle East and Eastern Europe.[119][120]

Commercialization

 
With the advent of radio broadcasting and record shop, live classical music performances have been compiled into compilation CDs. (WQXR for Tower Records, 1986)

Certain staples of classical music are often used commercially (either in advertising or in movie soundtracks). In television commercials, several passages have become clichéd, particularly the opening of Richard Strauss' Also sprach Zarathustra (made famous in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey) and the opening section "O Fortuna" of Carl Orff's Carmina Burana; other examples include the "Dies irae" from the Verdi Requiem, Edvard Grieg's "In the Hall of the Mountain King" from Peer Gynt, the opening bars of Beethoven's Symphony No. 5, Wagner's "Ride of the Valkyries" from Die Walküre, Rimsky-Korsakov's "Flight of the Bumblebee", and excerpts of Aaron Copland's Rodeo.[citation needed] Several works from the Golden Age of Animation matched the action to classical music. Notable examples are Walt Disney's Fantasia, Tom and Jerry's Johann Mouse, and Warner Bros.' Rabbit of Seville and What's Opera, Doc?

Similarly, movies and television often use standard, clichéd excerpts of classical music to convey refinement or opulence: some of the most-often heard pieces in this category include Bach's Cello Suite No. 1, Mozart's Eine kleine Nachtmusik, Vivaldi's Four Seasons, Mussorgsky's Night on Bald Mountain (as orchestrated by Rimsky-Korsakov), and Rossini's "William Tell Overture". Shawn Vancour argues that the commercialization of classical music in the early 20th century may have harmed the music industry through inadequate representation.[121][incomprehensible]

Education

During the 1990s, several research papers and popular books wrote on what came to be called the "Mozart effect": an observed temporary, small elevation of scores on spatial reasoning tests as a result of listening to Mozart's music. The approach has been popularized in a book by Don Campbell, and is based on an experiment published in Nature suggesting that listening to Mozart temporarily boosted students' IQ by 8 to 9 points.[122] This popularized version of the theory was expressed succinctly by the New York Times music columnist Alex Ross: "researchers... have determined that listening to Mozart actually makes you smarter."[123] 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 per year to provide every child born in Georgia with a tape or CD of classical music. One of the co-authors of the original studies of the Mozart effect 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."[124]

References

Notes

  1. ^ The Ancient Roman citizenship classes in question were derived from the guidelines set forth by the legendary king Servius Tullius in the Servian constitution.[12]
  2. ^ In 1690, many decades after Cotgrave's 1611 definition, Antoine Furetière's posthumous Dictionnaire universel echoed Aulus Gellius in praising Cicero, Julius Caesar, Sallust, Virgil, and Horace and referring to them as classique.[13]
  3. ^ This is why the Neoclassicism movement of the mid 18th-century was widespread in fields such as architecture and painting but not music.[16]
  4. ^ Before the beginning of the 18th-century, there was a brief flowering of court music following the Stuart Restoration.[11] Composers such as Matthew Locke and later Henry Purcell found considerable success,[17] particularly with the popular court masques.[18]
  5. ^ John Banister's concerts quickly gained popularity, allowing him to later move his venue to Lincoln's Inn Fields, and then Essex Street; at its peak, his ensemble consisted of nearly 50 musicians.[19]
  6. ^ For further information on the development of a classical music canon in 18th-century England, see Weber, William (Autumn 1994). "The Intellectual Origins of Musical Canon in Eighteenth-Century England". Journal of the American Musicological Society. 47 (3): 488–520. doi:10.2307/3128800. JSTOR 3128800.
  7. ^ Some critics, from the 19th to 21st centuries, defined the First Viennese School in different ways. Commentators such as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and later Ludwig Finscher excluded Beethoven from the school entirely, while the musicologist Friedrich Blume included all three in addition to Franz Schubert.[22] Charles Rosen included Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven, but only their instrumental music.[22]
  8. ^ The earliest use of the term "classical music" in English literature given by the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) is in the 1829 diary of English musician Vincent Novello, who said "This is the place I should come to every Sunday when I wished to hear classical music correctly and judiciously performed".[27] However, this is predated by at least 9 years from the title of the English writer John Feltham Danneley's 1820 Introduction to the Elementary Principles of Thorough Bass and Classical Music.[28][29] A search in Google Books gives at least three uses of the term "classical music" in the first half of the 18th-century.[30]
  9. ^ In addition to the title of Taruskin 2005, see also, the titles of Grout 1973, Hanning 2002 and Stolba 1998, all of which include the term "Western music" but essentially exclude non-classical music in the Western world. Grout 1973 was first published in 1960, and it was not until the fifth edition prepared by Claude V. Palisca in 1996 that any information on jazz and popular music was included.[36]
  10. ^ The musicologist Ralph P. Locke cites composer Tan Dun as an example, and notes the title of a 2004 publication, Locating East Asia in Western Art Music.[37] See also the title of Barone, Joshua (23 July 2021). "Asian Composers Reflect on Careers in Western Classical Music". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 28 December 2021. Burkholder, Grout & Palisca 2014, p. 1009 note that "We may well wonder whether the term "Western [classical] music" is still appropriate when Western culture has spread around the world, and some of the most practices performers and interesting new composers come from China, Japan and Korea. Given its global reach, it may be time to rename this tradition, but as eclectic and diverse as it has become, its roots are still in Western culture reaching back through Europe to ancient Greece".
  11. ^ From all available evidence, it appears that no, or few, significant musical developments can be credited to Ancient Rome, who largely adopted the practices of their Ancient Greek predecessors.[42]
  12. ^ Musicologist Donald Jay Grout notes that even by the 20th century there were only fragments and a few more sizable examples of such Greco-Roman music that survive.[39]
  13. ^ The entirety of early medieval Europe may not have been without a notional system for music, see Gampel 2012, who argues against the traditional conclusion of Isidore of Seville's remark.
  14. ^ In 1997, the Vienna Philharmonic was "facing protests during a [US] tour" by the National Organization for Women and the International Alliance for Women in Music. Finally, "after being held up to increasing ridicule even in socially conservative Austria, members of the orchestra gathered [on 28 February 1997] in an extraordinary meeting on the eve of their departure and agreed to admit a woman, Anna Lelkes, as harpist."[104] As of 2013, the orchestra has six female members; one of them, violinist Albena Danailova became one of the orchestra's concertmasters in 2008, the first woman to hold that position.[105] In 2012, women still made up just 6% of the orchestra's membership. VPO president Clemens Hellsberg said the VPO now uses completely screened blind auditions.[106]

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Sources

Books

Journal and encyclopedia articles

Further reading

External links

classical, music, this, article, about, western, music, from, middle, ages, present, other, uses, disambiguation, generally, refers, music, western, world, considered, distinct, from, western, folk, music, popular, music, traditions, sometimes, distinguished, . This article is about Western art music from the Middle Ages to the present For other uses see Classical music disambiguation Classical music generally refers to the art music of the Western world considered to be distinct from Western folk music or popular music traditions It is sometimes distinguished as Western classical music as the term classical music also applies to non Western art music Classical music is often characterized by formality and complexity in its musical form and harmonic organization 1 particularly with the use of polyphony 2 Since at least the ninth century it has been primarily a written tradition 2 spawning a sophisticated notational system as well as accompanying literature in analytical critical historiographical musicological and philosophical practices A foundational component of Western Culture classical music is frequently seen from the perspective of individual or groups of composers whose compositions personalities and beliefs have fundamentally shaped its history A youth orchestra performing Rooted in the patronage of churches and royal courts in Western Europe 1 surviving early medieval music is chiefly religious monophonic and vocal with the music of ancient Greece and Rome influencing its thought and theory The earliest extant music manuscripts date from the Carolingian Empire 800 888 3 around the time which Western plainchant gradually unified into what is termed Gregorian chant 4 Musical centers existed at the Abbey of Saint Gall the Abbey of Saint Martial and Saint Emmeram s Abbey while the 11th century saw the development of staff notation and increasing output from medieval music theorists By the mid 12th century France became the major European musical center 3 the religious Notre Dame school first fully explored organized rhythms and polyphony while secular music flourished with the troubadour and trouvere traditions led by poet musician nobles 5 This culminated in the court sponsored French ars nova and Italian Trecento which evolved into ars subtilior a stylistic movement of extreme rhythmic diversity 5 Beginning in the early 15th century Renaissance composers of the influential Franco Flemish School built off the harmonic principles in the English contenance angloise bringing choral music to new standards particularly the mass and motet 6 Northern Italy soon emerged as the central musical region where the Roman School engaged in highly sophisticated methods of polyphony in genres such as the madrigal 6 which inspired the brief English Madrigal School The Baroque period 1580 1750 saw the relative standardization of common practice tonality 7 as well as the increasing importance of musical instruments which grew into ensembles of considerable size Italy remained dominant being the birthplace of opera the soloist centered concerto genre the organized sonata form as well as the large scale vocal centered genres of oratorio and cantata The fugue technique championed by Johann Sebastian Bach exemplified the Baroque tendency for complexity and as a reaction the simpler and song like galant music and empfindsamkeit styles were developed In the shorter but pivotal Classical period 1730 1820 composers such as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Joseph Haydn and Ludwig van Beethoven created widely admired representatives of absolute music 8 9 including symphonies string quartets and concertos The subsequent Romantic music 1800 1910 focused instead on programmatic music for which the art song symphonic poem and various piano genres were important vessels During this time virtuosity was celebrated immensity was encouraged while philosophy and nationalism were embedded all aspects that converged in the operas of Richard Wagner By the 20th century stylistic unification gradually dissipated while the prominence of popular music greatly increased Many composers actively avoided past techniques and genres in the lens of modernism with some abandoning tonality in place of serialism while others found new inspiration in folk melodies or impressionist sentiments After World War II for the first time audience members valued older music over contemporary works a preference which has been catered to by the emergence and widespread availability of commercial recordings 10 Trends of the mid 20th century to the present day include New Simplicity New Complexity Minimalism Spectral music and more recently Postmodern music and Postminimalism Increasingly global practitioners from the Americas Africa and Asia have obtained crucial roles 3 while symphony orchestras and opera houses now appear across the world Contents 1 Terminology and definition 1 1 Ideological origins 1 2 Contemporary understanding 2 History 2 1 Roots 2 2 Early music 2 2 1 Medieval 2 2 2 Renaissance 2 3 Common practice period 2 3 1 Baroque 2 3 2 Classical 2 3 3 Romantic 2 4 20th and 21st centuries 2 4 1 Modernist 2 4 2 Post modern contemporary 3 Performance 4 Women in classical music 5 Relationship to other music traditions 5 1 Popular music 5 2 Folk music 6 Commercialization 7 Education 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksTerminology and definition EditIdeological origins Edit from left to right Haydn Mozart and Beethoven from the 1904 Beethoven Haydn Mozart Memorial All three are often considered part of the First Viennese School and among the first composers to be referred to as Classical Both the English term classical and the German equivalent klassik developed from the French classique itself derived from the Latin word classicus which originally referred to the highest class of Ancient Roman citizens 11 n 1 In Roman usage the term later became a means to distinguish revered literary figures 11 the Roman author Aulus Gellius commended writers such as Demosthenes and Virgil as classicus 13 By the Renaissance the adjective had acquired a more general meaning an entry in Randle Cotgrave s 1611 A Dictionarie of the French and English Tongues is among the earliest extant definitions translating classique as classical formall sic orderlie in due or fit ranke also approved authenticall chiefe principall 11 14 The musicologist Daniel Heartz summarizes this into two definitions 1 a formal discipline and 2 a model of excellence 11 Like Gellius later Renaissance scholars who wrote in Latin used classicus in reference to writers of classical antiquity 12 n 2 however this meaning only gradually developed and was for a while subordinate to the broader classical ideals of formality and excellence 15 Literature and visual arts for which substantial Ancient Greek and Roman examples existed did eventually adopt the term classical as relating to classical antiquity but virtually no music of that time was available to Renaissance musicians limiting the connection between classical music and the Greco Roman world 15 n 3 It was in 18th century England that the term classical first came to stand for a particular canon of works in performance 15 London had developed a prominent public concert music scene unprecedented and unmatched by other European cities 11 The royal court had gradually lost its monopoly on music in large part from instability that the Commonwealth of England s dissolution and the Glorious Revolution enacted on court musicians 11 n 4 In 1672 the former court musician John Banister began giving popular public concerts at a London tavern n 5 his popularity rapidly inaugurated the prominence of public concerts in the London 19 The conception of classical or more often ancient music emerged which was still built on the principles of formality and excellence and according to Heartz civic ritual religion and moral activism figured significantly in this novel construction of musical taste 15 The performance of such music was specialized by the Academy of Ancient Music and later at the Concerts of Antient Music series where the work of select 16th and 17th composers was featured 20 especially George Frideric Handel 15 n 6 In France the reign of Louis XIV r 1638 1715 saw a cultural renaissance by the end of which writers such as Moliere Jean de La Fontaine and Jean Racine were considered to have surpassed the achievements of classical antiquity 21 They were thus characterized as classical as was the music of Jean Baptiste Lully and later Christoph Willibald Gluck being designated as l opera francaise classique 21 In the rest of continental Europe the abandonment of defining classical as analogous to the Greco Roman World was slower primarily because the formation of canonical repertoires was either minimal or exclusive to the upper classes 15 Many European commentators of the early 19th century found new unification in their definition of classical music to juxtapose the older composers Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Joseph Haydn and excluding some of his later works Ludwig van Beethoven as classical against the emerging style of Romantic music 22 23 24 These three composers in particular were grouped into the First Viennese School sometimes called the Viennese classics n 7 a coupling that remains problematic by reason of none of the three being born in Vienna and the minimal time Haydn and Mozart spent in the city 25 While this was an often expressed characterization it was not a strict one In 1879 the composer Charles Kensington Salaman defined the following composers as classical Bach Handel Haydn Mozart Beethoven Weber Spohr and Mendelssohn 26 More broadly some writers used the term classical to generally praise well regarded outputs from various composers particularly those who produced many works in an established genre 11 n 8 Contemporary understanding Edit The contemporary understanding of the term classical music remains vague and multifaceted 31 32 Other terms such as art music canonic music cultivated music and serious music are largely synonymous 33 The term classical music is often indicated or implied to concern solely the Western world 34 and conversely in many academic histories the term Western music excludes non classical Western music 35 n 9 Another complication lies in that classical music is sometimes used to describe non Western art music exhibiting similar long lasting and complex characteristics examples include Indian classical music Carnatic and Hindustani music Gamelan music and various styles of the court of Imperial China see yayue for instance 1 Thus in the later 20th century terms such as Western classical music and Western art music came in use to address this 34 The musicologist Ralph P Locke notes that neither term is ideal as they create an intriguing complication when considering certain practitioners of Western art music genres who come from non Western cultures 37 n 10 Complexity in musical form and harmonic organization are typical traits of classical music 1 The Oxford English Dictionary OED offers three definitions for the word classical in relation to music 27 of acknowledged excellence of relating to or characteristic of a formal musical tradition as distinguished from popular or folk music and more specifically of or relating to formal European music of the late 18th and early 19th centuries characterized by harmony balance and adherence to established compositional forms The last definition concerns what is now termed the Classical period a specific stylistic era of European music from the second half of the 18th century to the beginning of the 19th century 38 History EditFurther information History of music List of classical music composers by era and Dates of classical music eras Roots Edit Further information Ancient music Music of ancient Greece and Music of ancient Rome The Western classical tradition formally begins with music created by and for the early Christian Church 39 It is probable that the early Church wished to disassociate itself from the predominant music of ancient Greece and Rome as it was a reminder of the pagan religion it had persecuted and by which it had been persecuted 39 As such it remains unclear as to what extent the music of the Christian Church and thus Western classical music as a whole was influenced by preceding ancient music 40 The general attitude towards music was adopted from the Ancient Greek and Roman music theorists and commentators 41 n 11 Just as in Greco Roman society music was considered central to education along with arithmetic geometry and astronomy music was included in the quadrivium the four subjects of the upper division of a standard liberal arts education in the Middle Ages 43 This high regard for music was first promoted by the scholars Cassiodorus Isidore of Seville 44 and particularly Boethius 45 whose transmission and expansion on the perspectives of music from Pythagoras Aristotle and Plato were crucial in the development of medieval musical thought 46 However scholars medieval music theorists and composers regularly misinterpreted or misunderstood the writings of their Greek and Roman predecessors 47 This was due to the complete absence of surviving Greco Roman musical works available to medieval musicians 47 n 12 to the extent that Isidore of Seville c 559 636 stated unless sounds are remembered by man they perish for they cannot be written down unaware of the systematic notational practices of Ancient Greece centuries before 48 n 13 The musicologist Gustave Reese notes however that many Greco Roman texts can still be credited as influential to Western classical music since medieval musicians regularly read their works regardless of whether they were doing so correctly 47 However there are some indisputable musical continuations from the ancient world 49 Basic aspects such as monophony improvisation and the dominance of text in musical settings are prominent in both early medieval and music of nearly all ancient civilizations 50 Greek influences in particular include the church modes which were descendants of developments by Aristoxenus and Pythagoras 51 basic acoustical theory from pythagorean tuning 40 as well as the central function of tetrachords 52 Ancient Greek instruments such as the aulos a reed instrument and the lyre a stringed instrument similar to a small harp eventually led to several modern day instruments of a symphonic orchestra 53 However Donald Jay Grout notes that attempting to create a direct evolutionary connection from the ancient music to early medieval is baseless as it was almost solely influenced by Greco Roman music theory not performance or practice 54 Early music Edit Main article Early music Medieval Edit Main article Medieval music See also List of medieval composers List of medieval music theorists and List of medieval musical instruments Musician playing the vielle fourteenth century Medieval manuscript Medieval music includes Western European music from after the fall of the Western Roman Empire by 476 to about 1400 Monophonic chant also called plainsong or Gregorian chant was the dominant form until about 1100 55 Christian monks developed the first forms of European musical notation in order to standardize liturgy throughout the Church 56 57 Polyphonic multi voiced music developed from monophonic chant throughout the late Middle Ages and into the Renaissance including the more complex voicings of motets During the earlier medieval period the vocal music from the liturgical genre predominantly Gregorian chant was monophonic using a single unaccompanied vocal melody line 58 Polyphonic vocal genres which used multiple independent vocal melodies began to develop during the high medieval era becoming prevalent by the later 13th and early 14th century Notable Medieval composers include Hildegard of Bingen Leonin Perotin Philippe de Vitry Guillaume de Machaut Francesco Landini and Johannes Ciconia Many medieval musical instruments still exist but in different forms Medieval instruments included the flute the recorder and plucked string instruments like the lute As well early versions of the organ and fiddle or vielle existed Medieval instruments in Europe had most commonly been used singly often self accompanied with a drone note or occasionally in parts From at least as early as the 13th century through the 15th century there was a division of instruments into haut loud shrill outdoor instruments and bas quieter more intimate instruments 59 A number of instrument have roots in Eastern predecessors that were adopted from the medieval Islamic world 60 For example the Arabic rebab is the ancestor of all European bowed string instruments including the lira rebec and violin 61 62 Renaissance Edit Main article Renaissance music See also List of Renaissance composers The Renaissance era was from 1400 to 1600 It was characterized by greater use of instrumentation multiple interweaving melodic lines and the use of the first bass instruments Social dancing became more widespread so musical forms appropriate to accompanying dance began to standardize It is in this time that the notation of music on a staff and other elements of musical notation began to take shape 63 This invention made possible the separation of the composition of a piece of music from its transmission without written music transmission was oral and subject to change every time it was transmitted With a musical score a work of music could be performed without the composer s presence 64 The invention of the movable type printing press in the 15th century had far reaching consequences on the preservation and transmission of music 65 An illuminated opening from the Chigi codex featuring the Kyrie of Ockeghem s Missa Ecce ancilla Domini Many instruments originated during the Renaissance others were variations of or improvements upon instruments that had existed previously Some have survived to the present day others have disappeared only to be re created in order to perform music on period instruments As in the modern day instruments may be classified as brass strings percussion and woodwind Brass instruments in the Renaissance were traditionally played by professionals who were members of Guilds and they included the slide trumpet the wooden cornet the valveless trumpet and the sackbut Stringed instruments included the viol the rebec the harp like lyre the hurdy gurdy the lute the guitar the cittern the bandora and the orpharion Keyboard instruments with strings included the harpsichord and the clavichord Percussion instruments include the triangle the Jew s harp the tambourine the bells the rumble pot and various kinds of drums Woodwind instruments included the double reed shawm an early member of the oboe family the reed pipe the bagpipe the transverse flute the recorder the dulcian and the crumhorn Simple pipe organs existed but were largely confined to churches although there were portable varieties 66 Printing enabled the standardization of descriptions and specifications of instruments as well as instruction in their use 67 Vocal music in the Renaissance is noted for the flourishing of an increasingly elaborate polyphonic style The principal liturgical forms which endured throughout the entire Renaissance period were masses and motets with some other developments towards the end especially as composers of sacred music began to adopt secular forms such as the madrigal for their own designs Towards the end of the period the early dramatic precursors of opera such as monody the madrigal comedy and the intermedio are seen Around 1597 Italian composer Jacopo Peri wrote Dafne the first work to be called an opera today He also composed Euridice the first opera to have survived to the present day Notable Renaissance composers include Josquin des Prez Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina John Dunstaple Johannes Ockeghem Orlande de Lassus Guillaume Du Fay Gilles Binchois Thomas Tallis William Byrd Giovanni Gabrieli Carlo Gesualdo John Dowland Jacob Obrecht Adrian Willaert Jacques Arcadelt and Cipriano de Rore Common practice period Edit The common practice period is typically defined as the era between the formation and the dissolution of common practice tonality citation needed The term usually spans roughly two and a half centuries encompassing the Baroque Classical and Romantic periods Baroque Edit Main article Baroque music See also List of Baroque composers Baroque instruments including hurdy gurdy harpsichord bass viol lute violin and baroque guitar Baroque music is characterized by the use of complex tonal counterpoint and the use of a basso continuo a continuous bass line Music became more complex in comparison with the simple songs of all previous periods 68 The beginnings of the sonata form took shape in the canzona as did a more formalized notion of theme and variations The tonalities of major and minor as means for managing dissonance and chromaticism in music took full shape 69 During the Baroque era keyboard music played on the harpsichord and pipe organ became increasingly popular and the violin family of stringed instruments took the form generally seen today Opera as a staged musical drama began to differentiate itself from earlier musical and dramatic forms and vocal forms like the cantata and oratorio became more common 70 Vocalists for the first time began adding extra notes to the music 68 The theories surrounding equal temperament began to be put in wider practice especially as it enabled a wider range of chromatic possibilities in hard to tune keyboard instruments Although J S Bach did not use equal temperament as a modern piano is generally tuned changes in the temperaments from the meantone system common at the time to various temperaments that made modulation between all keys musically acceptable made possible his Well Tempered Clavier 71 Baroque instruments included some instruments from the earlier periods e g the hurdy gurdy and recorder and a number of new instruments e g the oboe bassoon cello contrabass and fortepiano Some instruments from previous eras fell into disuse such as the shawm cittern rackett and the wooden cornet The key Baroque instruments for strings included the violin viol viola viola d amore cello contrabass lute theorbo which often played the basso continuo parts mandolin Baroque guitar harp and hurdy gurdy Woodwinds included the Baroque flute Baroque oboe recorder and the bassoon Brass instruments included the cornett natural horn natural trumpet serpent and the trombone Keyboard instruments included the clavichord the tangent piano the harpsichord the pipe organ and later in the period the fortepiano an early version of the piano Percussion instruments included the timpani snare drum tambourine and the castanets One major difference between Baroque music and the classical era that followed it is that the types of instruments used in Baroque ensembles were much less standardized A Baroque ensemble could include one of several different types of keyboard instruments e g pipe organ or harpsichord 72 additional stringed chordal instruments e g a lute bowed strings woodwinds and brass instruments and an unspecified number of bass instruments performing the basso continuo e g a cello contrabass viola bassoon serpent etc Vocal developments in the Baroque era included the development of opera types such as opera seria and opera comique and related forms such as oratorios and cantatas 73 74 Important composers of this era include Johann Sebastian Bach Antonio Vivaldi George Frideric Handel Johann Pachelbel Henry Purcell Claudio Monteverdi Barbara Strozzi Domenico Scarlatti Georg Philipp Telemann Arcangelo Corelli Alessandro Scarlatti Jean Philippe Rameau Jean Baptiste Lully and Heinrich Schutz Classical Edit Main article Classical period music See also List of Classical era composers This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Joseph Haydn 1732 1809 portrayed by Thomas Hardy 1791 Though the term classical music includes all Western art music from the Medieval era to the 2000s the Classical Era was the period of Western art music from the 1750s to the early 1820s the era of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Joseph Haydn and Ludwig van Beethoven The Classical era established many of the norms of composition presentation and style and was also when the piano became the predominant keyboard instrument The basic forces required for an orchestra became somewhat standardized although they would grow as the potential of a wider array of instruments was developed in the following centuries Chamber music grew to include ensembles with as many as 8 to 10 performers for serenades Opera continued to develop with regional styles in Italy France and German speaking lands The opera buffa a form of comic opera rose in popularity The symphony came into its own as a musical form and the concerto was developed as a vehicle for displays of virtuoso playing skill Orchestras no longer required a harpsichord which had been part of the traditional continuo in the Baroque style and were often led by the lead violinist now called the concertmaster 75 Classical era musicians continued to use many of instruments from the Baroque era such as the cello contrabass recorder trombone timpani fortepiano the precursor to the modern piano and organ While some Baroque instruments fell into disuse e g the theorbo and rackett many Baroque instruments were changed into the versions that are still in use today such as the Baroque violin which became the violin the Baroque oboe which became the oboe and the Baroque trumpet which transitioned to the regular valved trumpet During the Classical era the stringed instruments used in orchestra and chamber music such as string quartets were standardized as the four instruments which form the string section of the orchestra the violin viola cello and double bass Baroque era stringed instruments such as fretted bowed viols were phased out Woodwinds included the basset clarinet basset horn clarinette d amour the Classical clarinet the chalumeau the flute oboe and bassoon Keyboard instruments included the clavichord and the fortepiano While the harpsichord was still used in basso continuo accompaniment in the 1750s and 1760s it fell out of use at the end of the century Brass instruments included the buccin the ophicleide a replacement for the bass serpent which was the precursor of the tuba and the natural horn Wind instruments became more refined in the Classical era While double reed instruments like the oboe and bassoon became somewhat standardized in the Baroque the clarinet family of single reeds was not widely used until Mozart expanded its role in orchestral chamber and concerto settings 76 Major composers of this period include Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Ludwig van Beethoven Joseph Haydn Christoph Willibald Gluck Johann Christian Bach Luigi Boccherini Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach Muzio Clementi Antonio Salieri and Johann Nepomuk Hummel Romantic Edit Main article Romantic music See also List of Romantic era composers Josef Danhauser s 1840 painting of Franz Liszt at the piano surrounded by from left to right Alexandre Dumas Hector Berlioz George Sand Niccolo Paganini Gioachino Rossini Marie d Agoult with a bust of Ludwig van Beethoven on the piano The music of the Romantic era from roughly the first decade of the 19th century to the early 20th century was characterized by increased attention to an extended melodic line as well as expressive and emotional elements paralleling romanticism in other art forms Musical forms began to break from the Classical era forms even as those were being codified with free form pieces like nocturnes fantasias and preludes being written where accepted ideas about the exposition and development of themes were ignored or minimized 77 The music became more chromatic dissonant and tonally colorful with tensions with respect to accepted norms of the older forms about key signatures increasing 78 The art song or Lied came to maturity in this era as did the epic scales of grand opera ultimately transcended by Richard Wagner s Ring cycle 79 In the 19th century musical institutions emerged from the control of wealthy patrons as composers and musicians could construct lives independent of the nobility Increasing interest in music by the growing middle classes throughout western Europe spurred the creation of organizations for the teaching performance and preservation of music The piano which achieved its modern construction in this era in part due to industrial advances in metallurgy became widely popular with the middle class whose demands for the instrument spurred many piano builders Many symphony orchestras date their founding to this era 78 Some musicians and composers were the stars of the day some like Franz Liszt and Niccolo Paganini fulfilled both roles 80 European cultural ideas and institutions began to follow colonial expansion into other parts of the world There was also a rise especially toward the end of the era of nationalism in music echoing in some cases political sentiments of the time as composers such as Edvard Grieg Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov and Antonin Dvorak echoed traditional music of their homelands in their compositions 81 In the Romantic era the modern piano with a more powerful sustained tone and a wider range took over from the more delicate sounding fortepiano In the orchestra the existing Classical instruments and sections were retained string section woodwinds brass and percussion but these sections were typically expanded to make a fuller bigger sound For example while a Baroque orchestra may have had two double bass players a Romantic orchestra could have as many as ten As music grew more expressive the standard orchestral palette just wasn t rich enough for many Romantic composers 82 The families of instruments used especially in orchestras grew larger a process that climaxed in the early 20th century with very large orchestras used by late romantic and modernist composers A wider array of percussion instruments began to appear Brass instruments took on larger roles as the introduction of rotary valves made it possible for them to play a wider range of notes The size of the orchestra typically around 40 in the Classical era grew to be over 100 78 Gustav Mahler s 1906 Symphony No 8 for example has been performed with over 150 instrumentalists and choirs of over 400 83 New woodwind instruments were added such as the contrabassoon bass clarinet and piccolo and new percussion instruments were added including xylophones snare drums celestas a bell like keyboard instrument bells and triangles 82 large orchestral harps and even wind machines for sound effects Saxophones appear in some scores from the late 19th century onwards usually featured as a solo instrument rather than as in integral part of the orchestra The Wagner tuba a modified member of the horn family appears in Richard Wagner s cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen It also has a prominent role in Anton Bruckner s Symphony No 7 in E Major and is also used in several late romantic and modernist works by Richard Strauss Bela Bartok and others 84 Cornets appear regularly in 19th century scores alongside trumpets which were regarded as less agile at least until the end of the century Prominent composers of this era include Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Frederic Chopin Hector Berlioz Franz Schubert Robert Schumann Felix Mendelssohn Franz Liszt Giuseppe Verdi Richard Wagner Johannes Brahms Alexander Scriabin Nikolai Medtner Edvard Grieg and Johann Strauss II Gustav Mahler and Richard Strauss are commonly regarded as transitional composers whose music combines both late romantic and early modernist elements 20th and 21st centuries Edit Main articles 20th century classical music and 21st century classical music Modernist Edit Main article Modernism music Igor Stravinsky by Pablo Picasso collaborators on Pulcinella 1920 Encompassing a wide variety of post Romantic styles modernist classical music includes late romantic impressionist expressionist and neoclassical styles of composition Modernism marked an era when many composers rejected certain values of the common practice period such as traditional tonality melody instrumentation and structure Some music historians regard musical modernism as an era extending from about 1890 to 1930 85 86 Others consider that modernism ended with one or the other of the two world wars 87 Still other authorities claim that modernism is not associated with any historical era but rather is an attitude of the composer a living construct that can evolve with the times 88 Despite its decline in the last third of the 20th century there remained at the end of the century an active core of composers who continued to advance the ideas and forms of modernism such as Pierre Boulez Pauline Oliveros Toru Takemitsu George Benjamin Jacob Druckman Brian Ferneyhough George Perle Wolfgang Rihm Richard Wernick Richard Wilson and Ralph Shapey 89 Two musical movements that were dominant during this time were the impressionist beginning around 1890 and the expressionist that started around 1908 It was a period of diverse reactions in challenging and reinterpreting older categories of music innovations that lead to new ways of organizing and approaching harmonic melodic sonic and rhythmic aspects of music and changes in aesthetic worldviews in close relation to the larger identifiable period of modernism in the arts of the time The operative word most associated with it is innovation 90 Its leading feature is a linguistic plurality which is to say that no single music genre ever assumed a dominant position 91 The orchestra continued to grow in size during the early years modernist era peaking in the first two decades of the 20th century Saxophones that appeared only rarely during the 19th century became more commonly used as supplementary instruments but never became core members of the orchestra While appearing only as featured solo instruments in some works for example Maurice Ravel s orchestration of Modest Mussorgsky s Pictures at an Exhibition and Sergei Rachmaninoff s Symphonic Dances the saxophone is included in other works such as Sergei Prokofiev s Romeo and Juliet Suites 1 and 2 and many other works as a member of the orchestral ensemble In some compositions such as Ravel s Bolero two or more saxophones of different sizes are used to create an entire section like the other sections of the orchestra The euphonium is featured in a few late Romantic and 20th century works usually playing parts marked tenor tuba including Gustav Holst s The Planets and Richard Strauss s Ein Heldenleben Prominent composers of the early 20th century include Igor Stravinsky Claude Debussy Sergei Rachmaninoff Sergei Prokofiev Arnold Schoenberg Nikos Skalkottas Heitor Villa Lobos Anton Webern Alban Berg Cecile Chaminade Paul Hindemith Aram Khachaturian George Gershwin Amy Beach Bela Bartok and Dmitri Shostakovich along with the aforementioned Mahler and Strauss as transitional figures who carried over from the 19th century Post modern contemporary Edit Main articles Postmodern music and Contemporary classical music See also High modernism List of 20th century classical composers and List of 21st century classical composers Postmodern music is a period of music that began as early as 1930 according to some authorities 85 86 It shares characteristics with postmodernist art that is art that comes after and reacts against modernism Some other authorities have more or less equated postmodern music with the contemporary music composed well after 1930 from the late 20th century through to the early 21st century 92 93 Some of the diverse movements of the postmodern contemporary era include the neoromantic neomedieval minimalist and post minimalist Contemporary classical music at the beginning of the 21st century was often considered to include all post 1945 musical forms 94 A generation later this term now properly refers to the music of today written by composers who are still alive music that came into prominence in the mid 1970s It includes different variations of modernist postmodern neoromantic and pluralist music 89 Performance Edit A string quartet performing for the Mozart Year 2006 in Vienna Performers who have studied classical music extensively are said to be classically trained This training may come from private lessons from instrument or voice teachers or from completion of a formal program offered by a Conservatory college or university such as a Bachelor of Music or Master of Music degree which includes individual lessons from professors In classical music extensive formal music education and training often to postgraduate Master s degree level is required 95 Performance of classical music repertoire requires a proficiency in sight reading and ensemble playing harmonic principles strong ear training to correct and adjust pitches by ear knowledge of performance practice e g Baroque ornamentation and a familiarity with the style musical idiom expected for a given composer or musical work e g a Brahms symphony or a Mozart concerto citation needed The key characteristic of European classical music that distinguishes it from popular music folk music and some other classical music traditions such as Indian classical music is that the repertoire tends to be written down in musical notation creating a musical part or score 96 This score typically determines details of rhythm pitch and where two or more musicians whether singers or instrumentalists are involved how the various parts are coordinated The written quality of the music has enabled a high level of complexity within them fugues for instance achieve a remarkable marriage of boldly distinctive melodic lines weaving in counterpoint yet creating a coherent harmonic logic The use of written notation also preserves a record of the works and enables Classical musicians to perform music from many centuries ago Although Classical music in the 2000s has lost most of its tradition for musical improvisation from the Baroque era to the Romantic era there are examples of performers who could improvise in the style of their era In the Baroque era organ performers would improvise preludes keyboard performers playing harpsichord would improvise chords from the figured bass symbols beneath the bass notes of the basso continuo part and both vocal and instrumental performers would improvise musical ornaments 97 Johann Sebastian Bach was particularly noted for his complex improvisations 98 During the Classical era the composer performer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was noted for his ability to improvise melodies in different styles 99 During the Classical era some virtuoso soloists would improvise the cadenza sections of a concerto During the Romantic era Ludwig van Beethoven would improvise at the piano 100 Women in classical music EditMain article Women in classical music Further information Women in music Martha Argerich at the Kirchner Cultural Centre Buenos Aires Almost all of the composers who are described in music textbooks on classical music and whose works are widely performed as part of the standard concert repertoire are male composers even though there has been a large number of women composers throughout the history of classical music Musicologist Marcia Citron has asked w hy is music composed by women so marginal to the standard classical repertoire 101 Citron examines the practices and attitudes that have led to the exclusion of women composers from the received canon of performed musical works She argues that in the 1800s women composers typically wrote art songs for performance in small recitals rather than symphonies intended for performance with an orchestra in a large hall with the latter works being seen as the most important genre for composers since women composers did not write many symphonies they were deemed not to be notable as composers 101 In the Concise Oxford History of Music Clara S c humann is one of the only sic female composers mentioned 102 Abbey Philips states that d uring the 20th century the women who were composing playing gained far less attention than their male counterparts 102 Historically major professional orchestras have been mostly or entirely composed of musicians who are men Some of the earliest cases of women being hired in professional orchestras was in the position of harpist The Vienna Philharmonic for example did not accept women to permanent membership until 1997 far later than the other orchestras ranked among the world s top five by Gramophone in 2008 103 n 14 The last major orchestra to appoint a woman to a permanent position was the Berlin Philharmonic 107 As late as February 1996 the Vienna Philharmonic s principal flute Dieter Flury told Westdeutscher Rundfunk that accepting women would be gambling with the emotional unity emotionelle Geschlossenheit that this organism currently has 108 In April 1996 the orchestra s press secretary wrote that compensating for the expected leaves of absence of maternity leave would be a problem 109 In 2013 an article in Mother Jones stated that while m any prestigious orchestras have significant female membership women outnumber men in the New York Philharmonic s violin section and several renowned ensembles including the National Symphony Orchestra the Detroit Symphony and the Minnesota Orchestra are led by women violinists the double bass brass and percussion sections of major orchestras are still predominantly male 110 A 2014 BBC article stated that the introduction of blind auditions where a prospective instrumentalist performs behind a screen so that the judging panel can exercise no gender or racial prejudice has seen the gender balance of traditionally male dominated symphony orchestras gradually shift 111 Relationship to other music traditions EditPopular music Edit Classical music has often incorporated elements or material from popular music of the composer s time Examples include occasional music such as Brahms use of student drinking songs in his Academic Festival Overture genres exemplified by Kurt Weill s The Threepenny Opera and the influence of jazz on early and mid 20th century composers including Maurice Ravel exemplified by the movement entitled Blues in his sonata for violin and piano 112 Some postmodern minimalist and postminimalist classical composers acknowledge a debt to popular music 113 failed verification Numerous examples show influence in the opposite direction 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 114 In heavy metal a number of lead guitarists playing electric guitar including Ritchie Blackmore and Randy Rhoads 115 modeled their playing styles on Baroque or Classical era instrumental music 116 Folk music Edit Composers of classical music have often made use of folk music music created by musicians who are commonly not classically trained often from a purely oral tradition Some composers like Dvorak and Smetana 117 have used folk themes to impart a nationalist flavor to their work while others like Bartok have used specific themes lifted whole from their folk music origins 118 Khachaturian widely incorporated into his work the folk music of his native Armenia but also other ethnic groups of the Middle East and Eastern Europe 119 120 Commercialization Edit With the advent of radio broadcasting and record shop live classical music performances have been compiled into compilation CDs WQXR for Tower Records 1986 Certain staples of classical music are often used commercially either in advertising or in movie soundtracks In television commercials several passages have become cliched particularly the opening of Richard Strauss Also sprach Zarathustra made famous in the film 2001 A Space Odyssey and the opening section O Fortuna of Carl Orff s Carmina Burana other examples include the Dies irae from the Verdi Requiem Edvard Grieg s In the Hall of the Mountain King from Peer Gynt the opening bars of Beethoven s Symphony No 5 Wagner s Ride of the Valkyries from Die Walkure Rimsky Korsakov s Flight of the Bumblebee and excerpts of Aaron Copland s Rodeo citation needed Several works from the Golden Age of Animation matched the action to classical music Notable examples are Walt Disney s Fantasia Tom and Jerry s Johann Mouse and Warner Bros Rabbit of Seville and What s Opera Doc Similarly movies and television often use standard cliched excerpts of classical music to convey refinement or opulence some of the most often heard pieces in this category include Bach s Cello Suite No 1 Mozart s Eine kleine Nachtmusik Vivaldi s Four Seasons Mussorgsky s Night on Bald Mountain as orchestrated by Rimsky Korsakov and Rossini s William Tell Overture Shawn Vancour argues that the commercialization of classical music in the early 20th century may have harmed the music industry through inadequate representation 121 incomprehensible Education EditFurther information Music education During the 1990s several research papers and popular books wrote on what came to be called the Mozart effect an observed temporary small elevation of scores on spatial reasoning tests as a result of listening to Mozart s music The approach has been popularized in a book by Don Campbell and is based on an experiment published in Nature suggesting that listening to Mozart temporarily boosted students IQ by 8 to 9 points 122 This popularized version of the theory was expressed succinctly by the New York Times music columnist Alex Ross researchers have determined that listening to Mozart actually makes you smarter 123 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 per year to provide every child born in Georgia with a tape or CD of classical music One of the co authors of the original studies of the Mozart effect 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 124 References EditNotes Edit The Ancient Roman citizenship classes in question were derived from the guidelines set forth by the legendary king Servius Tullius in the Servian constitution 12 In 1690 many decades after Cotgrave s 1611 definition Antoine Furetiere s posthumous Dictionnaire universel echoed Aulus Gellius in praising Cicero Julius Caesar Sallust Virgil and Horace and referring to them as classique 13 This is why the Neoclassicism movement of the mid 18th century was widespread in fields such as architecture and painting but not music 16 Before the beginning of the 18th century there was a brief flowering of court music following the Stuart Restoration 11 Composers such as Matthew Locke and later Henry Purcell found considerable success 17 particularly with the popular court masques 18 John Banister s concerts quickly gained popularity allowing him to later move his venue to Lincoln s Inn Fields and then Essex Street at its peak his ensemble consisted of nearly 50 musicians 19 For further information on the development of a classical music canon in 18th century England see Weber William Autumn 1994 The Intellectual Origins of Musical Canon in Eighteenth Century England Journal of the American Musicological Society 47 3 488 520 doi 10 2307 3128800 JSTOR 3128800 Some critics from the 19th to 21st centuries defined the First Viennese School in different ways Commentators such as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and later Ludwig Finscher excluded Beethoven from the school entirely while the musicologist Friedrich Blume included all three in addition to Franz Schubert 22 Charles Rosen included Haydn Mozart and Beethoven but only their instrumental music 22 The earliest use of the term classical music in English literature given by the Oxford English Dictionary OED is in the 1829 diary of English musician Vincent Novello who said This is the place I should come to every Sunday when I wished to hear classical music correctly and judiciously performed 27 However this is predated by at least 9 years from the title of the English writer John Feltham Danneley s 1820 Introduction to the Elementary Principles of Thorough Bass and Classical Music 28 29 A search in Google Books gives at least three uses of the term classical music in the first half of the 18th century 30 In addition to the title of Taruskin 2005 see also the titles of Grout 1973 Hanning 2002 and Stolba 1998 all of which include the term Western music but essentially exclude non classical music in the Western world Grout 1973 was first published in 1960 and it was not until the fifth edition prepared by Claude V Palisca in 1996 that any information on jazz and popular music was included 36 The musicologist Ralph P Locke cites composer Tan Dun as an example and notes the title of a 2004 publication Locating East Asia in Western Art Music 37 See also the title of Barone Joshua 23 July 2021 Asian Composers Reflect on Careers in Western Classical Music The New York Times Archived from the original on 28 December 2021 Burkholder Grout amp Palisca 2014 p 1009 note that We may well wonder whether the term Western classical music is still appropriate when Western culture has spread around the world and some of the most practices performers and interesting new composers come from China Japan and Korea Given its global reach it may be time to rename this tradition but as eclectic and diverse as it has become its roots are still in Western culture reaching back through Europe to ancient Greece From all available evidence it appears that no or few significant musical developments can be credited to Ancient Rome who largely adopted the practices of their Ancient Greek predecessors 42 Musicologist Donald Jay Grout notes that even by the 20th century there were only fragments and a few more sizable examples of such Greco Roman music that survive 39 The entirety of early medieval Europe may not have been without a notional system for music see Gampel 2012 who argues against the traditional conclusion of Isidore of Seville s remark In 1997 the Vienna Philharmonic was facing protests during a US tour by the National Organization for Women and the International Alliance for Women in Music Finally after being held up to increasing ridicule even in socially conservative Austria members of the orchestra gathered on 28 February 1997 in an extraordinary meeting on the eve of their departure and agreed to admit a woman Anna Lelkes as harpist 104 As of 2013 the orchestra has six female members one of them violinist Albena Danailova became one of the orchestra s concertmasters in 2008 the first woman to hold that position 105 In 2012 women still made up just 6 of the orchestra s membership VPO president Clemens Hellsberg said the VPO now uses completely screened blind auditions 106 Citations Edit a b c d Owens 2008 para 1 a b Schulenberg 2000 p 99 a b c Schulenberg 2000 p 100 Schulenberg 2000 pp 100 101 a b Schulenberg 2000 pp 102 104 a b Schulenberg 2000 pp 104 105 Schulenberg 2000 p 110 Schulenberg 2000 p 113 Owens 2008 para 2 Owens 2008 para 7 a b c d e f g h Heartz 2001 para 1 a b Howatson M C 2011 classic The Oxford Companion to Classical Literature Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 954854 5 Archived from the original on 7 December 2021 Retrieved 10 December 2021 a b Mignot Claude in French 2017 Classic In Cassin Barbara ed Dictionary of Untranslatables A Philosophical Lexicon Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 19 068116 6 Archived from the original on 7 December 2021 Retrieved 10 December 2021 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Culture Why aren t there more women conductors BBC Archived from the original on 23 November 2015 Retrieved 27 November 2015 Kelly Barbara L 2001 Ravel Maurice 3 1918 37 In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 See for example Sion Pwyll Ap 2001 Nyman Michael In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 Notable examples are the Hooked on Classics series of recordings made by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in the early 1980s and the classical crossover violinists Vanessa Mae and Catya Mare Carew Francis Wayne 1 January 2018 The Guitar Voice of Randy Rhoads Master of Arts Wayne State University pp 1 2 Archived from the original on 29 March 2019 Retrieved 2 October 2019 Walser Robert October 1992 Eruptions heavy metal appropriations of classical virtuosity Popular Music 11 3 263 308 doi 10 1017 s0261143000005158 ISSN 0261 1430 S2CID 162682249 Yeomans David 2006 Piano Music of the Czech Romantics A Performer s Guide Indiana University Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 253 21845 2 Stevens Haley Gillies Malcolm 1993 The Life and Music of Bela Bartok Oxford Clarendon Press p 129 ISBN 978 0 19 816349 7 Bakst James 1977 Khachaturyan A History of Russian Soviet Music Reprint ed Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press p 336 ISBN 0837194229 Rosenberg Kenyon C 1987 Khachaturian Aram A Basic Classical and Operatic Recordings Collection for Libraries Metuchen New Jersey Scarecrow Press p 112 ISBN 9780810820418 Vancour Shawn March 2009 Popularizing the Classics Radio s Role in the Music Appreciation Movement 1922 34 Media Culture and Society 31 2 19 doi 10 1177 0163443708100319 S2CID 144331723 Steele Kenneth M Bella Simone Dalla Peretz Isabelle Dunlop Tracey Dawe Lloyd A Humphrey G Keith Shannon Roberta A Kirby Johnny L Olmstead C G 1999 Prelude or requiem for the Mozart effect PDF Nature 400 6747 827 828 Bibcode 1999Natur 400 827S doi 10 1038 23611 PMID 10476959 S2CID 4352029 Archived PDF from the original on 30 October 2021 Retrieved 17 February 2022 Ross Alex Classical View Listening To Prozac Er Mozart Archived 17 February 2022 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times 28 August 1994 Retrieved on 16 May 2008 Goode Erica Mozart for Baby Some Say Maybe Not Archived 17 February 2022 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times 3 August 1999 Retrieved on 16 May 2008 Sources Edit Books Albright Daniel 2004 Modernism and Music An Anthology of Sources Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 01267 0 Beard David Gloag Kenneth 2005 Musicology The Key Concepts London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 31692 7 Burkholder J Peter Grout Donald Jay Palisca Claude V 2014 A History of Western Music 9th ed New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 91829 8 Du Noyer Paul ed 2003 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Music From Rock Pop Jazz Blue and Hip Hop to Classical Folk World and More London Flame Tree ISBN 978 1 904041 70 2 Fassler Margot 2014 Frisch Walter ed Music in the Medieval West Western Music in Context A Norton History 1st ed New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 92915 7 Grout Donald Jay 1973 A History of Western Music New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 09416 9 Hanning Barbara Russano 2002 1998 Concise History of Western Music 2nd ed New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 97775 7 Hoppin Richard 1978 Medieval Music The Norton Introduction to Music History 1st ed New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 09090 1 Karolyi Otto 1994 Modern British Music The Second British Musical Renaissance From Elgar to P Maxwell Davies Madison Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 0 8386 3532 6 McHard James L 2008 The Future of Modern Music A Philosophical Exploration of Modernist Music in the 20th Century and Beyond 3rd ed Livonia Iconic Press ISBN 978 0 9778195 1 5 Metzer David Joel 2009 Musical Modernism at the Turn of the Twenty first Century Music in the Twentieth Century 26 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 51779 9 Meyer Leonard B 1994 Music the Arts and Ideas Patterns and Predictions in Twentieth Century Culture 2nd ed Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 52143 5 Pauly Reinhard G 1988 Music in the Classic Period 1st ed Englewood Cliffs Prentice Hall Reese Gustave 1940 Music in the Middle Ages With an Introduction on the Music of Ancient Times Lanham Maryland W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 09750 4 Stolba K Marie 1998 The Development of Western Music A History 3rd ed New York McGraw Hill Companies ISBN 0 697 29379 3 Sullivan Henry W 1995 The Beatles with Lacan Rock n Roll as Requiem for the Modern Age Sociocriticism Literature Society and History Series 4 New York P Lang ISBN 0 8204 2183 9 Swafford Jan 1992 The Vintage Guide to Classical Music New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 679 72805 4 Taruskin Richard 2005 Oxford History of Western Music New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 516979 9 Weber William 1999 The History of Musical Canon PDF In Cook Nicholas Everist Mark eds Rethinking Music Oxford Oxford University Press pp 336 355 ISBN 978 0 19 879003 7 Yudkin Jeremy 1989 Music in Medieval Europe 1st ed Upper Saddle River Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 608192 0 Journal and encyclopedia articles Botstein Leon 2001 Modernism Grove Music Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 40625 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 subscription or UK public library membership required Bowles Edmund A 1954 Haut and Bas The Grouping of Musical Instruments in the Middle Ages Musica Disciplina 8 115 140 JSTOR 20531877 Gampel Alan 2012 Papyrological Evidence of Musical Notation From the 6th to the 8th Centuries Musica Disciplina 57 5 50 JSTOR 24427165 Heartz Daniel 2001 Classical Grove Music Online Revised by Bruce Alan Brown Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 05889 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 subscription or UK public library membership required Locke Ralph P 2012 On Exoticism Western Art Music and the Words We Use Archiv fur Musikwissenschaft 69 H 4 318 328 doi 10 25162 afmw 2012 0028 JSTOR 23375158 S2CID 252447994 McVeigh Simon 2001 London i Grove Music Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 16904 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 subscription or UK public library membership required Morgan Robert P 1984 Secret Languages The Roots of Musical Modernism Critical Inquiry 10 3 442 461 doi 10 1086 448257 JSTOR 1343302 S2CID 161937907 Schulenberg David 2000 History of European Art Music In Rice Timothy Porter James Goertzen Chris eds The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music Europe Abingdon on Thames Routledge pp 99 119 ISBN 0 8240 6034 2 Owens Tom C 2008 Classical Music In Stearns Peter N ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern World Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 517632 2 Further reading EditBeckerman Michael Boghossian Paul eds 2021 Classical Music Contemporary Perspectives and Challenges Cambridge Open Book Publishers ISBN 978 1 80064 116 7 Bryant Wanda 2000 Ancient Greek Music In Rice Timothy Porter James Goertzen Chris eds The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music Europe Abingdon on Thames Routledge pp 77 79 ISBN 0 8240 6034 2 Hanning Barbara Russano 2002 1998 Concise History of Western Music 2nd ed New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 97775 7 Johnson Julian 2002 Who Needs Classical Music Cultural Choice and Musical Value Oxford Oxford University Press Kramer Lawrence 2007 Why Classical Music Still Matters Simpson Book in the Humanities Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 25082 6 Nettl Bruno 2000 The Role of History in Contemporary European Art Music Culture In Rice Timothy Porter James Goertzen Chris eds The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music Europe Abingdon on Thames Routledge pp 89 98 ISBN 0 8240 6034 2 Nettl Bruno 2014 2001 Music Grove Music Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 40476 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 subscription or UK public library membership required Randel Don Michael ed 2003 The Harvard Dictionary of Music 4th ed Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674011632 Scholes Percy 1988 The New Oxford Companion to Music Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 311316 3 Seebass Tilman 2000 Notation and Transmission in European Music History In Rice Timothy Porter James Goertzen Chris eds The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music Europe Abingdon on Thames Routledge pp 80 88 ISBN 0 8240 6034 2 Stolba K Marie 1998 The Development of Western Music A History 3rd ed New York McGraw Hill Companies ISBN 0 697 29379 3 External links EditGrove Music Online online version of The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians MGG Online online version of Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart Historical classical recordings from the British Library Sound Archive Portals Classical music Opera Music History The artsClassical music at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Travel guides from Wikivoyage Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Classical music amp oldid 1139255886, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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