Read The complete idiot's guide to classical music Online
Authors: Robert Sherman,Philip Seldon,Naixin He
Soon, every monarch worth his royal salt had a couple of court composers to produce music for weddings, funerals, private parties, and all manner of other functions. Some of them were pretty good musicians themselves—Frederick the Great played the flute and Louis IX danced in courtly ballets—and the great body of what we call classical music derived from these aristocratic arbiters of culture.
Bet You Didn’t Know
When he wasn’t beheading wives, Henry VIII kept a court band of 79 musicians on hand for his royal entertainment. Meanwhile, his daughter, Queen Elizabeth, started the whole idea of dinner music. They say she couldn’t enjoy her supper unless she was being serenaded by an orchestra of trumpets, fifes, and kettledrums.
Things have changed a lot since Handel wrote music for King George to go barging down the Thames. These days, classical music is for everybody. We can hear it on radio and television, go to concerts, or just create our own surround-sound environment at home. Most large cities have free summer concerts with orchestras playing under the stars—a far cry from those bygone days when a concertgoer needed the keys to the castle—and every form of music, from solo recitals to the grandest of operas, is as close as your friendly neighborhood record shop.
Classical music is the creation of a composer, who determines the organization of tones and sounds. You’ll not find improvisational riffs by the sax player as you will in a jazz band and the soprano singing
Lucia
better not interpolate scat-singing à la Ella Fitzgerald. Interpretations, of course, may vary greatly: Listen to the same symphony conducted by Herbert von Karajan and Leonard Bernstein and you may wonder whether they were working from the same manuscript. They were, of course: it’s just that the variables of speed, loudness, and instrumental emphasis keep classical music ever fresh and exhilarating.
Okay, it’s not all complex. There is nothing simpler than the unharmonized melody of a Gregorian chant. But when we move on to motets and madrigals, with their interweaving melodic lines, when we consider symphonies, concertos, and that mighty mishmosh known as opera, we realize how complicated a musical structure can get. This doesn’t make it less enjoyable, mind you, it’s just that it becomes a little harder to tell the players apart without a program.
Classical music can be instrumental, vocal, or a combination of the two. In this list, you can discover the wealth of musical arrangements available in each.
I know you never would have guessed this, but an instrumental piece is written for instruments only. It can be for a single guitar or a 110-piece orchestra, but you have to check your vocal cords at the door, since there’s nary a singer in sight.
Strings include violins, violas, cellos, double basses and, if you insist, the harp. The player either moves a bow across the strings, or plucks them with his fingers. Brasses are those loud, shiny things in the back: trumpets, horns, trombones, tubas. Woodwinds are so called because they were originally made of wood and you blew through them. Now, wind instruments have all sorts of metal parts and some, like the flute and piccolo, are made entirely of metal. The percussion section is the noisiest bunch of all, including anything that’s fit to be banged, bonged, or beaten. It’s sometimes called “the kitchen” because it has everything but the sink.
Music Word
A
concerto
is an extended work for one or more solo instruments and orchestra, usually in three movements. Sometimes composers use this title for solo or purely orchestral pieces, when the intended effect is to mimic the scope and focus of a genuine concerto.
Bet You Didn’t Know
It was German violinist, composer, and conductor Ludwig Spohr (1784–1859) who popularized the small baton we know today, since he liked to carry it around in his pocket. Before that, conductors used everything from a violin bow (Gluck) to a cane with ivory knobs on either end (Spontini).
Vocal music is any progression of musical sounds emanating from the human throat. In a way, it is the most elemental form of music making, since it proceeds from performer to listener without any intervening contraptions.
Bet You Didn’t Know
The French composer Jean-Baptiste Lully used to conduct his operas by banging out the rhythm on the floor with a large walking stick. One day he banged out the rhythm on his foot by mistake, and died of blood poisoning shortly afterward.
Listening to classical music takes us out of our workaday world, with all of its stresses and strains. New York City’s Lincoln Center once had a banner proclaiming “Savage Beasts Soothed Here,” and while it may seem contradictory to think of being soothed by the dissonant harmonies of Bartok or the boisterous cries of the Valkyries, it really isn’t. We instinctively turn to music when we feel troubled, angry, or upset, and this is not a recent phenomenon.
Bet You Didn’t Know
Early in the 16th century, Martin Luther told us that “Nothing on earth is so well-suited to make the sad merry, to give courage to the despairing, to make the proud humble, to lessen envy and hate, as music.”