fbpx
Wikipedia

Siciliana

The siciliana [sitʃiˈljaːna] or siciliano (also known as sicilienne [sisiljɛn] or ciciliano) is a musical style or genre often included as a movement within larger pieces of music starting in the Baroque period. It is in a slow 6
8
or 12
8
time with lilting rhythms, making it somewhat resemble a slow jig or tarantella, and is usually in a minor key. It was used for arias in Baroque operas, and often appears as a movement in instrumental works. Loosely associated with Sicily, the siciliana evokes a pastoral mood, and is often characterized by dotted rhythms that can distinguish it within the broader musical genre of the pastorale.[2]

Siciliana rhythms.[1]

History and notable examples edit

In a 2006 book, Raymond Monelle found musicologists' attempts to trace the style to any authentic tradition in Sicily inconclusive, though he did trace its origins back to Italian Renaissance madrigals from the 1500s, in triple time with dotted rhythms.[3] These madrigal rhythms may themselves derive from the dactylic hexameter of the epic poetry of ancient Greece and Rome.[4]

Baroque era edit

The siciliana was firmly established as a signifier of a pastoral context in the operas of Sicilian-born Alessandro Scarlatti, though only two of his slow arias in 12
8
are actually titled "aria siciliana" in the scores. Monelle notes that the texts of Scarlatti's siciliana arias are generally lamenting and melancholic.[3] Several written references to the genre are known from earlier in the 1600s;[5] and sicilianas are described in musical dictionaries since 1703.

Further examples of Baroque sicilianas are found in J. S. Bach's music: for instance, in his Sonata in G minor for solo violin, BWV 1001, in his Sonata in E-flat for flute and harpsichord, BWV 1031, and in his Concerto in E for harpsichord and strings, BWV 1053. Other well-known Baroque sicilianas are: the middle movement of Antonio Vivaldi's Concerto Grosso, Op. 3, No. 11, from L'estro armonico (which Bach then transcribed as his Concerto in D minor for organ, BWV 596), the first movement of Giuseppe Tartini's "Devil's Trill Sonata" for violin,[6] and the last movement of Arcangelo Corelli's Christmas Concerto, Op. 6, No. 8.

Classical era edit

Works in siciliana rhythm appear occasionally in the Classical period. Joseph Haydn, perhaps inspired by the bucolic associations of the genre, wrote a siciliana aria for soprano in his oratorio The Creation, "Nun beut die Flur das frische Grün" ("With verdure clad the fields appear"), to celebrate the creation of plants. For Mozart, the hesitating rhythm of the siciliana lent itself to the portrayal of grief,[7][8] and some of Mozart's most powerful musical utterances are tragic sicilianas: the aria for soprano "Ach, ich fühl's, es ist verschwunden" ("Ah, my heart, 'tis gone forever") from The Magic Flute, the F-sharp minor slow movement of the Piano Concerto, K. 488, the F minor Adagio from the Piano Sonata, K. 280, and the finale of the String Quartet in D minor, K. 421. In a more cheerful A major, he used a siciliana as the opening theme of his Piano Sonata, K. 331.

Other examples of Classical sicilianas are the third movement of Domenico Cimarosa's Oboe Concerto, the last movement of Carl Maria von Weber's Violin Sonata No. 5, and the second movement of Anton Reicha's Clarinet Quintet in F major, Op. 107.

The guitar virtuoso Mauro Giuliani (1781–1829) was very fond of the siciliana style and frequently composed in it. A notable example is the second movement of his Guitar Concerto No. 1 in A major, Op. 30. Another siciliana written for guitar (with vocal) is Franz Xaver Gruber's renowned Christmas carol, "Silent Night".[5][9]

Romantic era edit

At the beginning of the Romantic period, John Field inserted a refined siciliana ("Siciliano") in G minor in his Fourth Concerto for Piano and Orchestra (1814). Bernhard Crusell used a "siciliano" as a slow part in one of his clarinet duets (1821). Later in the Romantic era, Brahms wrote a siciliana as the 19th variation in his Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel for solo piano (1861). In another set of variations by Brahms, the orchestral Variations on a Theme by Haydn (1873), the seventh variation also takes the form of a siciliana.[10] The second of Moritz Moszkowski's Trois Morceaux poétiques, Op. 42 (1887), is a "Siciliano".

Hélène's aria, "Merci, jeunes amies" ("Thank you, beloved friends") from Verdi's opera Les vêpres siciliennes is another example of a siciliana, suited to its setting, and is referred to as such in the score, even though it is popularly called a bolero. The opening aria of Mascagni's masterpiece Cavalleria rusticana is the Siciliana "O Lola".

Ernest Chausson composed a sicilienne as the second movement of his Concerto for Piano, Violin, and String Quartet, Op. 21 (1892). The orchestral suite from Pelléas et Mélisande by Gabriel Fauré includes his well-known Sicilienne, which he had composed for an incomplete project in 1893.

20th–21st centuries edit

Examples of sicilianas in 20th-century music include Igor Stravinsky's Serenata from his ballet Pulcinella, Ottorino Respighi's Siciliana from "Ancient Airs and Dances", Suite No. 3, and Malcolm Arnold's Siciliano from the Little Suite No. 1 for Brass. Sergei Rachmaninoff utilized siciliana style and rhythms in three of his Op. 32 Preludes for piano: the B-flat minor (No. 2), the B minor (No. 10), and the B major (No. 11). Maurice Duruflé's Suite for Organ (Op. 5) contains a Sicilienne notable for its Impressionist harmonies,[11] and another prominent example is the middle movement of Paul Hindemith's Organ Sonata No. 2.[12]

Hungarian composer György Kurtág references the style in a surprising way in his 1987 magnum opus, Kafka-Fragmente Op. 24, for soprano and violin in the movement "Der wahre Weg" ("The true path"). Nino Rota's "Godfather Waltz" is a classic siciliana at the start of his Grammy-winning score for the 1972 film.[13] "Hedwig's Theme", composed by John Williams for the Harry Potter films, is also in the siciliana genre, with a particular similarity to Fauré's Sicilienne.[14][15] Other notable examples of siciliana style include the "Intrada" and "Rhapsody" from Gerald Finzi's 1939 cantata Dies Natalis.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Roger Scruton (1997). The Aesthetics of Music, p.25, ex.2.6. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0198166389.
  2. ^ Andrew Haringer (2014). Pastoral, p.204 ff. The Oxford Handbook of Topic Theory, ed. Danuta Mirka. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199841578.
  3. ^ a b Raymond Monelle (2006). The Musical Topic: Hunt, Military and Pastoral, p.215 ff. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0253347664.
  4. ^ Geoffrey Chew and Owen Jander (2001). . Grove Music Online. ISBN 978-1561592630.
  5. ^ a b Meredith Ellis Little (2001). . Grove Music Online. ISBN 978-1561592630.
  6. ^ Michelle Edelman (2001). .
  7. ^ Daniela Carvalho Broderick (2009). The use of the siciliana as grief topic in Mozart's keyboard works (DMA thesis). University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
  8. ^ Mítia D'Acol (2022). Constructing Pamina's "Ach ich fühl's" as a Siciliana Lament. Mozart Society of America and Society for Eighteenth-Century Music, Joint Conference (PDF). Salzburg.
  9. ^ Gerlinde Haid (1994). Siciliano als Typus weihnachtlicher Volksmusik. 175 Jahre "Stille Nacht! Heilige Nacht!" (in German), p.135–146. Salzburg.
  10. ^ Julian Littlewood (2004). The Variations of Johannes Brahms. Plumbago Books. pp. 92–93, 111. ISBN 978-0954012342.
  11. ^ Ronald Ebrecht, ed. (2002). Maurice Duruflé: The Last Impressionist. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-4351-X.
  12. ^ Blair Sanderson (2005). Review: Hindemith/Schoenberg/Pepping Organ Works. AllMusic.
  13. ^ Franco Sciannameo (2010). Nino Rota's The Godfather Trilogy: A Film Score Guide. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-1461664246.
  14. ^ Hugo Luis (2016). "Influences et origines de la musique de John Williams". En Quête d'Histoire (in French).
  15. ^ Christophe Loup. "La sicilienne en musique". Apprendre Le Solfege (in French).

siciliana, siciliana, sitʃiˈljaːna, siciliano, also, known, sicilienne, sisiljɛn, ciciliano, musical, style, genre, often, included, movement, within, larger, pieces, music, starting, baroque, period, slow, time, with, lilting, rhythms, making, somewhat, resem. The siciliana sitʃiˈljaːna or siciliano also known as sicilienne sisiljɛn or ciciliano is a musical style or genre often included as a movement within larger pieces of music starting in the Baroque period It is in a slow 68 or 128 time with lilting rhythms making it somewhat resemble a slow jig or tarantella and is usually in a minor key It was used for arias in Baroque operas and often appears as a movement in instrumental works Loosely associated with Sicily the siciliana evokes a pastoral mood and is often characterized by dotted rhythms that can distinguish it within the broader musical genre of the pastorale 2 Siciliana rhythms 1 Contents 1 History and notable examples 1 1 Baroque era 1 2 Classical era 1 3 Romantic era 1 4 20th 21st centuries 2 NotesHistory and notable examples editIn a 2006 book Raymond Monelle found musicologists attempts to trace the style to any authentic tradition in Sicily inconclusive though he did trace its origins back to Italian Renaissance madrigals from the 1500s in triple time with dotted rhythms 3 These madrigal rhythms may themselves derive from the dactylic hexameter of the epic poetry of ancient Greece and Rome 4 Baroque era edit nbsp Bach Sonata in E flat for flute and harpsichord II Siciliano source source Performed by Alex Murray traverso and Martha Goldstein harpsichord Problems playing this file See media help The siciliana was firmly established as a signifier of a pastoral context in the operas of Sicilian born Alessandro Scarlatti though only two of his slow arias in 128 are actually titled aria siciliana in the scores Monelle notes that the texts of Scarlatti s siciliana arias are generally lamenting and melancholic 3 Several written references to the genre are known from earlier in the 1600s 5 and sicilianas are described in musical dictionaries since 1703 Further examples of Baroque sicilianas are found in J S Bach s music for instance in his Sonata in G minor for solo violin BWV 1001 in his Sonata in E flat for flute and harpsichord BWV 1031 and in his Concerto in E for harpsichord and strings BWV 1053 Other well known Baroque sicilianas are the middle movement of Antonio Vivaldi s Concerto Grosso Op 3 No 11 from L estro armonico which Bach then transcribed as his Concerto in D minor for organ BWV 596 the first movement of Giuseppe Tartini s Devil s Trill Sonata for violin 6 and the last movement of Arcangelo Corelli s Christmas Concerto Op 6 No 8 Classical era edit nbsp Mozart Ach ich fuhl s es ist verschwunden from The Magic Flute source source Performed by Aulikki Rautawaara soprano and Orchester des Deutschen Opernhauses Hans Schmidt Isserstedt conductor nbsp Mozart Piano Sonata No 11 in A major I Andante grazioso source source performed by Bernd Krueger Problems playing this file See media help Works in siciliana rhythm appear occasionally in the Classical period Joseph Haydn perhaps inspired by the bucolic associations of the genre wrote a siciliana aria for soprano in his oratorio The Creation Nun beut die Flur das frische Grun With verdure clad the fields appear to celebrate the creation of plants For Mozart the hesitating rhythm of the siciliana lent itself to the portrayal of grief 7 8 and some of Mozart s most powerful musical utterances are tragic sicilianas the aria for soprano Ach ich fuhl s es ist verschwunden Ah my heart tis gone forever from The Magic Flute the F sharp minor slow movement of the Piano Concerto K 488 the F minor Adagio from the Piano Sonata K 280 and the finale of the String Quartet in D minor K 421 In a more cheerful A major he used a siciliana as the opening theme of his Piano Sonata K 331 Other examples of Classical sicilianas are the third movement of Domenico Cimarosa s Oboe Concerto the last movement of Carl Maria von Weber s Violin Sonata No 5 and the second movement of Anton Reicha s Clarinet Quintet in F major Op 107 The guitar virtuoso Mauro Giuliani 1781 1829 was very fond of the siciliana style and frequently composed in it A notable example is the second movement of his Guitar Concerto No 1 in A major Op 30 Another siciliana written for guitar with vocal is Franz Xaver Gruber s renowned Christmas carol Silent Night 5 9 Romantic era edit nbsp Brahms Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel Variation XIX source source Performed by Martha Goldstein piano At the beginning of the Romantic period John Field inserted a refined siciliana Siciliano in G minor in his Fourth Concerto for Piano and Orchestra 1814 Bernhard Crusell used a siciliano as a slow part in one of his clarinet duets 1821 Later in the Romantic era Brahms wrote a siciliana as the 19th variation in his Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel for solo piano 1861 In another set of variations by Brahms the orchestral Variations on a Theme by Haydn 1873 the seventh variation also takes the form of a siciliana 10 The second of Moritz Moszkowski s Trois Morceaux poetiques Op 42 1887 is a Siciliano Helene s aria Merci jeunes amies Thank you beloved friends from Verdi s opera Les vepres siciliennes is another example of a siciliana suited to its setting and is referred to as such in the score even though it is popularly called a bolero The opening aria of Mascagni s masterpiece Cavalleria rusticana is the Siciliana O Lola Ernest Chausson composed a sicilienne as the second movement of his Concerto for Piano Violin and String Quartet Op 21 1892 The orchestral suite from Pelleas et Melisande by Gabriel Faure includes his well known Sicilienne which he had composed for an incomplete project in 1893 20th 21st centuries edit nbsp Rachmaninoff Prelude in B Minor Op 32 No 10 source source Performed by Wikipedia user La Pianista piano Examples of sicilianas in 20th century music include Igor Stravinsky s Serenata from his ballet Pulcinella Ottorino Respighi s Siciliana from Ancient Airs and Dances Suite No 3 and Malcolm Arnold s Siciliano from the Little Suite No 1 for Brass Sergei Rachmaninoff utilized siciliana style and rhythms in three of his Op 32 Preludes for piano the B flat minor No 2 the B minor No 10 and the B major No 11 Maurice Durufle s Suite for Organ Op 5 contains a Sicilienne notable for its Impressionist harmonies 11 and another prominent example is the middle movement of Paul Hindemith s Organ Sonata No 2 12 Hungarian composer Gyorgy Kurtag references the style in a surprising way in his 1987 magnum opus Kafka Fragmente Op 24 for soprano and violin in the movement Der wahre Weg The true path Nino Rota s Godfather Waltz is a classic siciliana at the start of his Grammy winning score for the 1972 film 13 Hedwig s Theme composed by John Williams for the Harry Potter films is also in the siciliana genre with a particular similarity to Faure s Sicilienne 14 15 Other notable examples of siciliana style include the Intrada and Rhapsody from Gerald Finzi s 1939 cantata Dies Natalis Notes edit Roger Scruton 1997 The Aesthetics of Music p 25 ex 2 6 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0198166389 Andrew Haringer 2014 Pastoral p 204 ff The Oxford Handbook of Topic Theory ed Danuta Mirka Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199841578 a b Raymond Monelle 2006 The Musical Topic Hunt Military and Pastoral p 215 ff Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253347664 Geoffrey Chew and Owen Jander 2001 Pastoral Grove Music Online ISBN 978 1561592630 a b Meredith Ellis Little 2001 Siciliana Grove Music Online ISBN 978 1561592630 Michelle Edelman 2001 Contrasts and Comparisons from Baroque to Modern Tartini s Devil s Trill Sonata Daniela Carvalho Broderick 2009 The use of the siciliana as grief topic in Mozart s keyboard works DMA thesis University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Mitia D Acol 2022 Constructing Pamina s Ach ich fuhl s as a Siciliana Lament Mozart Society of America and Society for Eighteenth Century Music Joint Conference PDF Salzburg Gerlinde Haid 1994 Siciliano als Typus weihnachtlicher Volksmusik 175 Jahre Stille Nacht Heilige Nacht in German p 135 146 Salzburg Julian Littlewood 2004 The Variations of Johannes Brahms Plumbago Books pp 92 93 111 ISBN 978 0954012342 Ronald Ebrecht ed 2002 Maurice Durufle The Last Impressionist Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 4351 X Blair Sanderson 2005 Review Hindemith Schoenberg Pepping Organ Works AllMusic Franco Sciannameo 2010 Nino Rota s The Godfather Trilogy A Film Score Guide Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 1461664246 Hugo Luis 2016 Influences et origines de la musique de John Williams En Quete d Histoire in French Christophe Loup La sicilienne en musique Apprendre Le Solfege in French nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Siciliana music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siciliana amp oldid 1213162173, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.