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A short history of baroque music in Europe English

ITALY
Special o"er from 2 to 16 September
The papacy returned to Rome in 1377, and after the middle of the 15th 2020
century the city became a center of Renaissance culture. Massive papal
patronage of the arts began to enrich Rome. During the papacy (1447-
1455) of Nicholas V the defense walls were repaired, palaces built, and
churches restored. Major artists and architects now worked in Rome, and by
the end of the century it had supplanted Florence as the primary focal point
of the Renaissance. The sack of the city in 1527 by Habsburg mercenaries
was a temporary setback. During the 16th century Michelangelo, Donato
Bramante, Raphael, and other artists worked for the popes, and
construction of the new Saint Peter’s Basilica progressed. It was not until
the reign (1585-1590) of Pope Sixtus V, however, that the dense, confused
medieval urban pattern began to be modernized. Three major streets were
laid out to radiate from the Piazza del Popolo to the center of the city.
Sixtus also built squares and fountains, and he restored the Acqua Felice
aqueduct. In addition, old churches were refurbished, and Saint Peter’s
dome was completed.

It was hardly surprising that music too should flourish against this rich visual
background. Typical of baroque musicians active in Rome was the
composer and violinist Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713), whose style of
playing became the basis for the violin technique of the 18th and 19th
centuries, and whose chamber music compositions were far-reaching in
their influence. Born in Fusignano, he studied in nearby Bologna and after
1675 lived in Rome. There his patrons included Queen Christina of Sweden
and, after 1690, Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni, (1667-1740), librettist and
important music patron who as vice-chancellor of the church resided in the
Palazzo della Cancelleria where Poetico-Musicali Accademie were held and
operas and oratorios performed. The most widely published and reprinted
composer before the Austrian Joseph Haydn, Corelli was the first composer
to gain an international reputation solely on the basis of his instrumental
music. Many elements of his style became commonplace in the 18th
century, and his works are early examples of the newly evolved system of
major and minor tonality. As the preeminent violin virtuoso of the day, he
taught many leading violinist-composers of the 18th century, among them
the Italian Francesco Geminiani.

Many eminent composers of the baroque period, notably Handel for


example, sojourned in Rome, and Corelli’s influence was to spread itself
throughout Europe. Rome was of course also featured on the Grand Tour,
which the wealthy of Europe and especially England were enjoying in

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increasing numbers during the 1700s.

Rivalling Rome in its musical influence if not in its architectural and artistic
splendor, Naples owed its outstanding position in music to the inordinate
number of talented musicians to which the city gave birth – as well as to its
music conservatories which educated and served them so well. Indeed
Naples has aptly been called the conservatory of 18th century music and
did in fact boast four conservatories of the highest musical caliber.

Scarcely any great composer of the first half of the settecento was not
influenced by Neapolitan music. Indeed, most great musical figures of the
time visited Naples or stayed and worked there for some time. The brilliant
Nicola Porpora (b. Aug. 19, 1686, in Naples; d. there February 1767), for
instance, not only taught Joseph Haydn but knew intimately such world-
renowned figures as Bononcini, Farinelli, Handel, and Hasse. In 1733, he
went to London, joining first Hasse, then Bononcini, to compete with the
giant Handel. Some say that Porpora’s influence modernized Handel’s late
operatic style of composition or at least had had that tendency up until
Porpora’s departure from England for Italy in 1737.

The universally acknowledged master of Neapolitan Baroque music was


Alessandro Scarlatti (b. May 2, 1660, in Palermo; d. October 24, 1725, in
Naples). Almost overnight he revolutionized the provincial musical
atmosphere prevailing at Naples before he arrived in February of 1684 as
new maestro di cappella at the Viceregal Chapel. Direct inheritor of the
grand Italian traditions of opera, oratorio, cantata, and instrumental
composition received from Pietro Francesco Cavalli (1602-1676), Giacomo
Carissimi (1605-1674), Alessandro Stradella (1642-1682), and Giovanni
Legrenzi (1626-1690), Scarlatti was well equipped to revolutionize
Neapolitan musical life. The abrupt resignation of the old Neapolitan Guard
– Francesco Provenzale (ca. 1627-1704) and six of his colleagues, all
disappointed that Provenzale was passed over in favor of Scarlatti upon the
death of Pietro Andrea Ziani (ca. 1630-1684), cleared the way for Scarlatti’s
breath of fresh air. Scarlatti’s operas and cantatas, his serenatas and
oratorios, and especially his instrumental works soon brought new life to
Neapolitan music. He was to write over one hundred operas, six hundred
cantatas and a number of oratorios. He was also frequently commissioned
by members of the European nobility to compose sonatas for wind and
string instruments as well as cembalo pieces and concerti grossi.

Domenico Scarlatti (b. Oct. 26, 1685, in Naples; d. July 23, 1757, in Madrid)
was the sixth son of Alessandro Scarlatti. The father no doubt exposed
Domenico to the best possible training in Naples, taking him in about 1708
to Venice to study with Francesco Gasparini (1668-1727), himself a pupil of
Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713). From Venice the younger Scarlatti
journeyed to Rome with Handel, according to report where both performed
before Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni. About 1720 he moved to Lisbon, and some
ten years later to Madrid. He is perhaps best-known today for his keyboard
sonatas, in which he borrowed liberally from Hispanic folk tunes and
rhythms creating a unique blend which might be called “Iberian Baroque”.

Francesco Durante (b. March 31, 1684, in Fratta Maggiore; d. August 13,
1755, in Naples) was the busiest of Neapolitan teachers, holding posts at
both the Sant’ Onofrio and Santa Maria di Loreto conservatories, and
teaching, playing, and composing elsewhere as well. His career developed

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at the best possible time for taking maximum advantage of the new depths
and richness, the new musical fluency which Alessandro Scarlatti had
created for Naples. Durante so profited from these fortunate circumstances
that Rousseau was encouraged to name him “the greatest harmonist in
Italy, that is to say, of the world.”

But for consistently high inspiration few composers of the time, Neapolitan
or otherwise, can compare with Giovanni Batista Pergolesi (b. January 4,
1710, in Jesi; d. March 16, 1736, in Pozzuoli). His career also coincided with
the most fruitful period of Neapolitan musical history. It was Pergolesi’s
destiny to take advantage (within two and a half decades of a tragically
foreshortened life) of the grand opportunity for completely new musical
formulation which Scarlatti’s works provided. Almost single-handedly
Pergolesi forged a new dramatic style, utilizing for his purposes the lowly
opera bu"a, and bringing to the stage and concert hall all the subtleties of
psychological, idiomatic, and motivic development and all the dramatic
flexibility so vital to the art of musical characterization which Mozart was to
bring to perfection.

Venice, the great independent trading city-on-the-water in the north, was


also a place of great wealth, architectural masterpieces, and musical
influence, the most famous among its musical sons being Antonio Vivaldi.
Venice also featured on the European nobility’s “Grand Tour”. In retrospect
however we may perhaps sadly note that the economic power and wealth of
Venice was already in decline, and by the end of Vivaldi’s lifetime economic
recession had set in from which Venice was never to recover.

An underlying, all-pervading and inspirational influence on Italian baroque


music was provided by its violin-makers, mainly centered in Cremona – the
Amati family in the 16th and 17th centuries, the Guarneri and Stradivari
families in the 17th and 18th. It might be suggested that in a similar way the
great organ-builders of Germany, Arp Schnitger in the north and Gottfried
Silbermann in the south, inspired and challenged composers such as
Buxtehude and JS Bach to compose organ works which would exploit to
the full the varied and majestic tonalities of these notable instruments.

FROM ITALY TO GERMANY

Johann Georg Pisendel (born 1687, died at Dresden in 1755) was not only
one of the foremost German violinists of the 18th century, but also a
musical personality of international renown. At the age of ten he went to
Ansbach, where Giuseppi Torelli became his teacher. When he was 25 he
entered the Dresden Court Orchestra, and in 1728 he was appointed as its
leader, occupying that post with great distinction until his death. It was
largely to his work that the Dresden Court Orchestra owed its fame
throughout Europe. Johann Friedrich Reichardt wrote in 1774: “Good
though the Berlin orchestra has always been, those people qualified to
judge and who were acquainted with both always preferred the Dresden
orchestra under the leadership of the renowned Concertmeister Pisendel.”
With the permission of the Court, Pisendel traveled to France in 1714 and
to Italy in 1716/17. He studied under Vivaldi in Venice, also coming into
contact with other prominent Italian masters of the day, and after his return
to Dresden he introduced the latest Italian violin compositions.

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We know that Pisendel played a concerto by Torelli for the Leipzig


Collegium Musicum, while Dresden was, at that time, the center of the
German cult of Vivaldi, under whose influence J.S. Bach composed his
organ concertos. The political and cultural links between Saxony and Italy
were made even stronger by the coronation of Marie Amalia of Saxony as
Queen of Naples. The royal residences in Munich, Stuttgart and Hanover
also allowed themselves the luxury of Italian musical establishments, and
many of the smaller princely courts where the music was directed by
Germans ordered the latest scores from Italy.

Pisendel’s significance and stature as an original composer were long


underestimated. While he was not a prolific writer, those compositions of
his which survive are of a high quality, and demonstrate an individual
creative purpose. A sonata for violin solo is a highly exacting work both
from the musical and violinistic viewpoint, and tends to confirm the theory
that Pisendel’s playing and style may have led to the composition of Bach’s
solo sonatas. Indeed it has been suggested that Bach’s Six Sonatas/Partitas
for solo violin were composed precisely as a challenge to Pisendel during a
visit with Bach at the Kôthen Court where Bach was then in service.

Likewise, the Capellmeister of Gotha, Gottfried Heinrich Stôlzel (1690-


1749), went to Italy in 1713 in order to come into personal contact with the
foremost musicians of the age, and to miss no opportunity “where anything
was to be heard”. He met Alessandro Scarlatti in Rome, and in Venice
Vivaldi, Marcello, and his fellow-countryman Johann David Heinichen. His
journey took him by way of Florence, Pisa and Leghorn, and the return
journey through Bologna, Venice and Trieste to Innsbruck, then via Linz and
Budweis to Prague.

Stôlzel’s ‘Concerto a quattro chori’ for example, was a splendid highlight in


the court music making of the time. The very scoring of this work, with its
two groups of trumpets, a group of woodwind and subdivided strings,
creates the air of festive splendor characteristic of the later Baroque period,
with its sheer joy in making music. J.S. Bach knew and probably valued this
splendid-sounding work by his colleague at Gotha; he used the fugal theme
from the Finale of this Concerto in his G minor Bourrée from the
“Clavierbûchlein” for Wilhelm Friedemann Bach – in which a “Partia di
Signore Stelzeln”, in several movements, has a place of honor.

GERMANY

Though highly influenced by developments in Italy, Germany was in fact


grafting these forms and styles onto its own indigenous traditions.

The Reformation, led by Martin Luther and formally begun in 1517, brought
religion to the masses, both through Luther’s translations of biblical texts
into German, and through the extensive use of the chorale as an essential
textual/musical accompaniment to the church service. From the traditional
chorale melodies much of German baroque music was to grow and develop.
Cantatas and Passions were frequently chorale-based, and if not, were
simply extensions of the chorale tradition. Organists too would elaborate on
the chorale for the week, either by adding interpolations between verses, or
by composing whole sets of variations based on a specific chorale melody.

To this tradition must be added the instinctive German love of order,

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manifested still today in so many aspects of German life. Thus German


composers were attracted to the fugue, the canon and passacaglia for their
basis of fundamental form, pattern and unity.

One of several early baroque composers who contributed significantly to


the marriage of chorale and counterpoint was DIETRICH BUXTEHUDE. Of
Danish origin and born at Oldesloe, Holstein (then a Danish possession), in
1637, he died at Lûbeck in 1707 aged sixty-nine or seventy. In addition to
his compositional contributions, his artistry on the organ was legendary. His
performance of sacred music, instrumental and vocal, made Lûbeck a place
of pilgrimage for musicians anxious to advance in their art, and the young
Sebastian Bach himself traveled two hundred miles to hear them and to sit
at the feet of the Master. In Bach’s Cantatas and Passions, and in his
numerous chorale preludes and variations, the development of the chorale
reached a peak which has never subsequently been exceeded.

The chorale has continued, and continues to occupy a place of fundamental


in German life, both Protestant and Catholic. The chorales have been
continually heard in the homes as much as in the churches. It was
customary for centuries for church choirs to perambulate the streets during
the week, singing them before the houses. Even in the 1880s Steinert, the
Boston piano dealer, re-visiting his native Bavarian town after an absence of
forty years, found the night-watchman in the streets still marking the hours
by singing his hymn verses to their old chorale tune, as he does in another
Bavarian town in Wagner’s Mastersingers. The chorale, indeed, has
permeated German religious, communal, and domestic life. A private
traveler in Germany today may be surprised to learn how many of those he
or she meets are regular and enthusiastic participants in church choirs, once
again attesting to their deep love of choral music.

ENGLAND

The 1600s proved to be a century of political upheaval and change in


England – change from autocratic to parliamentary monarchy. As the
century opened Britain was ruled by a highly autocratic monarch who would
have nothing to do with the young and aspiring parliament. The showdown
came with the trial by parliament and subsequent execution of King Charles
I in 1649. This was followed by an attempt at a republic under Cromwell –
which proved to be chaotic and disastrous. The restored monarchs –
Charles II and James II – were still somewhat reluctant to accept the
supremacy of parliament, until parliament itself called upon James’s
daughter Mary and her Dutch husband William of Orange to rescue the
country from its political instability. This they did in 1689, reigning jointly
thereafter as William III and Mary. This brief history will explain why, after
the cultural vacuum and chaos of the revolution, the republic and its
ensuing years, music would once again flourish as the century drew to a
close.

Henry Purcell was born in 1659, and though he was to live a very short life
(he died in 1695) he was able to enjoy and make full use of the renewed
flowering of music.

He devoted much his talent to writing operas, or rather musical dramas, and
incidental stage music; but he would also write chamber music in the form
of harpsichord suites and trio sonatas, and became involved with the

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growing London public concert scene. For a young London Musical Society
he produced Odes to celebrate Saint Cecilia’s day (the Patron Saint of
Music) – which any music-lover so desirous may celebrate on November
22nd.

As the son of a musician at court, a chorister at the Chapel Royal, and the
holder of continuing royal appointments until his death, Purcell worked
exclusively in Westminster for three di"erent Kings over twenty-five years,
and facts about Purcell’s activities at court are fairly well documented.
Among other works written for the Court, he produced Odes for royal
birthdays, among which is the lively and tuneful “Come ye Sons of Art”.

Queen Mary’s death was a devastating blow which deeply a"ected the
country. Mary had been a much-loved monarch and the public demanded a
funeral which reflected its devotion. No expense was spared. Sir
Christopher Wren had ensured that the route to Westminster was lined with
black railings. Three hundred somber women led the entourage dressed in
black capes with boys carrying their trains. Purcell was also called upon to
provide an ode for the death of his (and the country’s) beloved Queen Mary.
How perfectly the occasion leant itself to Purcell’s evocative and bitter-
sweet music. In November of that same year Westminster Abbey would also
be the setting for Purcell’s own funeral, at which the combined choirs of the
Abbey and the Chapel Royal would commemorate the premature passing of
‘the English Orpheus’.

During the last decades of the 1600s England had learned much about
Italian and French musical styles from Purcell and would enter the new
century warmly receptive to continental fashions.

English musical life during the first half of the 1700s was dominated by the
giant figure of Handel, who had settled in London in 1712; here once again,
royalty had played its influential part.

Following his early studies in Germany, Handel went to Italy where he spent
more than three years, in Florence, Rome, Naples and Venice. In Rome he
studied with Corelli, and may also have met Vivaldi in Venice on his return.

Handel left Italy early in 1710 and went to Hanover, where he was
appointed Capellmeister to the Elector, George Louis. The Royal Houses of
Britain and Europe had always been closely inter-related, and the Act of
Settlement of 1701 which secured the Protestant succession to the Crown,
made George’s mother heiress-presumptive to the throne of Great Britain.
In 1705 George had already been naturalized by Act of Parliament, and in
August 1714 the death of Queen Anne made him King. Handel, who had
already visited London and apparently found it to his liking, was to follow
the Elector in adopting British nationality, and indeed part of Handel’s
success in London was due to the royal patronage of the Elector of
Hanover, now King George I.

Handel’s influence both upon the cultural milieu of his day and upon his
younger English contemporaries can hardly be overstated. It was the
beginning of the age of the “Grand Tour”, when educated and wealthy
citizens embarked on the “Grand Tour” to Italy, France, Germany and The
Netherlands. As often as not they returned home full of enthusiasm for the
academies, theatres, opera houses and concert life which they had

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encountered in Europe. England, in short, became a welcoming host to


foreign virtuosos, impresarios, singers and composers. As the Hamburg
theorist, critic and composer Johann Mattheson noted in 1713 (Das Neu-
Erô"nete Orchester): “He who in the present time wants to make a profit
out of music betakes himself to England.”

In England, as to begin with in Germany, the chief model for instrumental


music was Corelli, whose compositions first became known in London
towards the end of the seventeenth century. In 1715 John Walsh senior –
he and his son were soon to become Handel’s publishers – issued Corelli’s
12 Concerti Grossi Op. 6, from which time they were performed, adapted,
and from all accounts, universally loved. The English music historian Sir
John Hawkins mentions an occasion in 1724 when an enthusiastic group of
amateurs, having just acquired Corelli’s Op. 6 from a bookseller, “played the
whole 12 concertos through, without rising from their seats” (History of the
Science and Practice of Music, 1776). Concertos by Corelli’s contemporary,
Torelli, and the up-to-date fashionable Venetian concertos by Vivaldi were
also published and became popular in England.

Among the very first composers to have concertos printed in England was
Francesco Geminiani. Geminiani was born in Lucca and studied the violin
under Corelli in Rome. It is also possible that he studied composition with
Alessandro Scarlatti in Naples. In 1707 Geminiani returned to his native
town of Lucca, where he played in the town orchestra for three years before
taking up a position in Naples in 1711 as leader of the opera orchestra. In
1714 he came to England where his playing quickly gained him the support
of leading figures at court and among the aristocracy. Geminiani left
London for Dublin in 1733 where he built up a fine reputation as a teacher,
performer, concert promoter and theorist. In that year he opened a Concert
Room in Dublin, apparently using the upstairs premises for music and the
rooms below for trading in pictures.

FRANCE

The contribution of France to baroque music, particularly in its earlier


period, 1650-1700, was comparatively small. This was due entirely to the
influence of one Giovanni Battista Lulli (1632-1687), an Italian of noble
birth who, as a young man, journeyed to France, taking up service in 1653
at the Court of Louis XIV. Here he used his influence with the king,
combined with an aggressive sense of business, to create for himself a
virtual monopoly over French music which was to last beyond his death and
well into the early 1700s, it being only with Rameau and Couperin that
France began to find itself musically once again. The stranglehold of Lully
(to use his later French spelling) on French music at the time could hardly be
over-emphasized. A series of highly restrictive royal patents gave him a
total monopoly on the use of music on the French stage. Aggressive and
shrewd in business, Lully bought up the leading theater venues, and to
strengthen his position he even persuaded the king to issue an ordnance
limiting the number of singers and instrumentalists that could perform with
other Parisian theater troupes.

The major influence which France did exert over the baroque age was one
of courtly opulence. In 1669 Louis XIV (1638-1715) decided to convert an
old hunting lodge at Versailles into a palace of unprecedented
magnificence. It was completed in 1682, and the court moved in 1683.

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There was not a kingly or princely court in Europe which could match
Versailles for the opulence of its gilded interiors, its mirrors and chandeliers,
with an appropriately matching flamboyance of courtly ceremony, and there
was not a kingly or princely court in Europe which did not, either openly or
secretly aspire to match this model.

Lully (now naturalized French as Jean-Baptiste Lully with a ‘y’) reflected this
ideal in the magnificence of his operas and operatic settings, staged with
the aid of all kinds of machines by which suns and angels could fly about
and ships could ride the wild stormy seas. His operatic texts praised the
king and reflected the latest royal thinking at every turn, which of course
served to strengthen his position. At the same time however, it must be
stressed that his performances were not to be missed. His operas and
sacred works displayed a richness and majesty (the French-style Ouverture
being one of his contributions) which would attract the interest admiration
of audiences, and visiting musicians from Italy and Germany.

Though much or Europe’s royalty was to make the pilgrimage to Versailles,


none was to know that Louis and his country were overburdened by the
debts which the costly Versailles imposed on them. In addition France
during the latter years of the 1600s was to su"er two famines and a series
of disastrous military defeats. The splendor of Versailles gradually faded
along with the king’s vigor, and his death in 1715 signaled both an end for
Versailles (though it would later revive), and a rebirth of (non-Lullian) music
in Paris with a boom in sheet-music printing and music lessons for the
bourgeoisie, Musical freedom and vitality were reborn in Paris, and would
continue to flourish even after Louis XV moved his court back to Versailles.

SPAIN

The Moorish presence (roughly 800-1500) gave Spanish music much of its
distinctive flavor, bequeathing a legacy of complex Arabic rhythms,
microtonic scales, and an ongoing love of the plucked instrument, the
vihuela and the guitar. Itinerant gypsies would later add regional variety in
rhythm and melody. It was this rich and varied folk mixture which Domenico
Scarlatti would later explore and exploit with such flare and enthusiasm.

When Emperor Charles V united the Netherlands, Burgundy, Naples and


Spain under one crown, Spain would open to the whole European musical
world. In Charles’ reign and that of his son Philip II, together covering the
period 1516-1598, Spanish music reached a highpoint. During this period
organ building also flourished; organ-builders became enterprising and
inventive as Spain’s prosperity flowed into the churches. Philip II himself
presented the organ in Granada Cathedral – it is still in regular use. The
blind organist-composer Antonio de Cabezón (1510-66) was one of the
world’s earliest composers for keyboard, his works exhibiting a fairly
advanced style.

Significant musical developments during the baroque period however, took


place in other areas of Europe. Looking at the names of spanish composers
of 1650-1750, we find not one of any special note. However, in the 21st
century, we need to occasionally remind ourselves that from 1650 – 1750
the political map of the world was very di"erent. Most of southern Italy
(centered on Naples and including Sicily and Sardinia) were “spanish”
colonies of the spanish part of the House of Habsburg (the leading power in

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Europe). Spain was the leading european power in the mediterranean and
culturaly included much more than the iberian penisular.

The major figure of the spanish baroque was Domenico Scarlatti who was
born, and received his musical training, not in Spain but in Italy. In Scarlatti’s
500 or so Sonatas we find all the richness and excitement, the melodic and
rhythmic variety of traditional Spain..

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