Mu 102: Principles of Music

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Attendance/Reading Quiz! Mu 102: Principles of Music Borough of Manhattan Community College Instructor: Dr. Alice Jones Fall 2018 Sections 0701 (MW 7:30-8:45a) and 2001 (TTh 8:30-9:45p)

Reading quiz Leopold Mozart wrote a pedagogical treatise on playing the piano. a) True b) False

Reading quiz Mozart s older sister was an even more famous musician than he was. a) True b) False

Reading quiz All opera is serious. a) True b) False

Reading quiz Which of the following activities did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart do in his professional career? Circle all that apply. a) Compose music, including operas, string quartets, sonatas, concertos, and symphonies b) Perform on the piano c) Teach piano lessons d) Publish a treatise on violin playing

Reading quiz What was the most interesting or surprising thing you learned from the reading(s) this week?

Recap Final project: Arts administration Day 2: November 27 Day 3: December 18 Presentations and discussion: December 20 Topics covered so far in class: Music and dance Music and religion Music as Art provoking thought, experimentation, escape from the real world, intellectual or aesthetic contemplation Remainder of term: Music as entertainment Opera, concerto

Opera Margrave s Opera Theater, Bayreuth 1879 Secular Originated during the 17 th century as a way to add magnificence to royal and noble events Adding music to plays (example: masques in England) Singing is dramatic and takes great skill The first opera theater open to paying customers appeared in Venice, Italy, in 1637 Social event: eating, talking, drinking, visiting Singing and orchestral accompaniment together imitate spoken language, sensations, and emotions A staged genre: acting, costumes, props, set design Librettist writes the words of the opera Composer writes the music

Henry Purcell (1659-1695), Dido and Aeneas (1689) Based on Virgil s The Aeneid (29-19 BC) Giovanni Barbieri (1591-1666), The Death of Dido

Opera: dramatic stories and human emotions Operas take small moments and blow them up to large proportions It takes longer to sing words than speak them, so the music physically takes a long time to be heard Repeating melodies and adding dancing can make a scene even longer, which means that the emotional mood persists

Singing styles and purposes Aria Emotional outpouring Repetitive text and melody Singer s vocal technique and ability are put on display Many harmony changes (demonstrating the nuances of the singer s emotion) Full orchestra accompaniment Recitative Depicts characters thoughts, plans, and dialogue Advances the plot Little to no text repetition Unpredictable and forgettable melody Few harmony changes Minimal instrumental accompaniment

Henry Purcell (1659-95), Dido and Aeneas Dido s Lament (1689) A B When I am laid, am laid in Earth May my wrongs create no trouble, no trouble in thy breast Remember me Remember me But ah, forget my fate! Royal Opera House, May 15, 2009 Christopher Hogwood, (conductor), Sarah Connolly (Dido)

Teatro Regio in Turin, Italy (1740)

Distaste for opera Would you know what an opera is? I ll tell you, that it is an odd medley of poetry and music, wherein the poet and musician, equally confined one by the other, take a world of pains to compose a wretched performance. Charles St. Évremond (1613-1703) Opera is an exotick and irrational entertainment. Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)

Character and meaning 1) Describe how their voices sound different. 2) What kind of situation do you imagine each character would be expressing these words? Where are they? What have they experienced that s led them to this moment? What do they care about? Who are they talking to? What kind of person are they? Etc. 3) How does the sound of the singer s voice add to the drama of the character they re playing? Age The first version is sung by a young man in his 20s. The second version is sung by an old man at the end of his life in his 70s. Gender The first version is sung by a group of women. The second version is sung by a man.

Reminders Optional online discussion, articles roundtable rewrites due by December 11 Calendar change! November 27: The concerto + project Day 2 no reading November 29: Opera (day 2) reading Yudkin 115-126 Concert Response Essay due December 11 Have a safe, stress-free, enjoyable holiday!

End quiz 1. What s the difference between aria and recitative? 2. Which do you think is more important: the text (words) or the person who is singing them? Why do you think so?