Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 The violin and bow – origins and development
- 2 The physics of the violin
- 3 The violinists of the Baroque and Classical periods
- 4 The nineteenth-century bravura tradition
- 5 The twentieth century
- 6 The fundamentals of violin playing and teaching
- 7 Technique and performing practice
- 8 Aspects of contemporary technique (with comments about Cage, Feldman, Scelsi and Babbitt)
- 9 The concerto
- 10 The sonata
- 11 Other solo repertory
- 12 The violin as ensemble instrument
- 13 The pedagogical literature
- 14 The violin – instrument of four continents
- 15 The violin in jazz
- Appendix Principal violin treatises
- Glossary of technical terms
- Notes
- Select bibliography
- Index
9 - The concerto
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- 1 The violin and bow – origins and development
- 2 The physics of the violin
- 3 The violinists of the Baroque and Classical periods
- 4 The nineteenth-century bravura tradition
- 5 The twentieth century
- 6 The fundamentals of violin playing and teaching
- 7 Technique and performing practice
- 8 Aspects of contemporary technique (with comments about Cage, Feldman, Scelsi and Babbitt)
- 9 The concerto
- 10 The sonata
- 11 Other solo repertory
- 12 The violin as ensemble instrument
- 13 The pedagogical literature
- 14 The violin – instrument of four continents
- 15 The violin in jazz
- Appendix Principal violin treatises
- Glossary of technical terms
- Notes
- Select bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Baroque
The term ‘concerto’, implying an aggregation of performing forces large or small, described many musical genres in the early seventeenth century. These ranged from vocal music accompanied by instrumentalists, to purely instrumental music in which the element of contrast was prominent. The development of the concertato style is witnessed both in the later madrigal books of Monteverdi and in the church music and madrigals of Venetian composers such as Andrea and Giovanni Gabrieli. The Gabrielis' Concerti per voci e stromenti musicali (1587), comprising sacred music and madrigals in six to sixteen parts, is the earliest known publication to use the term ‘concerto’ in its title. The instrumental concerto emerged as an independent form towards the end of the seventeenth century and soon evolved into a genre in which virtuosity was a significant ingredient.
Italy
The earliest type of purely instrumental concerto, the concerto grosso, contrasted a large (concerto grosso) and a small group (concertino) of performers. The first essays in this genre emerged with Stradella in Rome in the 1670s, but Corelli brought the form to its first peak with his collection of twelve concerti grossi for strings Op. 6 (1714). these are essentially elaborations of Corelli's trio sonata ideal, the ‘concertino’ section consisting of two violins and a cello. Eight of the set conform to the da chiesa (church) slow–fast–slow–fast pattern, excluding movements of a dance character but including fugal fast movements; the other four comprise largely sequences of dance-like movements in da camera (chamber) fashion.
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- The Cambridge Companion to the Violin , pp. 148 - 167Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992
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