The English word baroque is derived from the Italian barocco, meaning,
bizarre, though probably exuberant would be a better translation more accurately
reflecting the sense. The usage of this term originated in the 1860s to
describe the highly decorated style of 17th and 18th century religious
and public buildings in Germany and Austria, as typified by the very baroque
angelic organist adorning the Gottfried Silbermann organ completed in 1714
for the Cathedral in Freiberg, Saxony. Later, during the early-to-mid 1900s,
the term baroque was applied by association to music of the 17th and early
18th century, and today the term baroque has come to refer to a very clearly
definable type or genre of music which originated, broadly speaking, around
1600 and came to fruition between 1700 and 1750.
Great componists of this period are for example: Johann Sebastian Bach
(GER), Franz Joseph Haydn (A), Georg Friedrich Händel (GER), Antonio
Vivaldi (I).
Antonio Vivaldi
(born Venice, 4 March 1678; died Vienna, 28 July 1741).
He was the son of a professional violinist who played at St. Mark's
and may have been involved in operatic management. Vivaldi was trained
for the priesthood and ordained in 1703 but soon after his ordination ceased
to say Mass. He claimed this was because of his unsure health (he is known
to have suffered from chest complaints, possibly asthma or angina). In
1703 he was appointed maestro di violino at the Ospedale della Pietà,
one of the Venetian girls' orphanages; he remained there until 1709, and
held the post again, 1711-16; he then became maestro de' concerti. Later,
when he was away from Venice, he retained his connection with the Pietà
(at one period he sent two concertos by post each month). He became maestro
di cappella, 1735-8; even after then he supplied concertos and directed
performances on special occasions.
Vivaldi's reputation had begun to grow with his first publications:
trio sonatas (probably 1703-5), violin sonatas (1709) and especially his
12 concertos L'estro armonico op.3 (1711). These, containing some of his
finest concertos, were issued in Amsterdam and widely circulated in northern
Europe; this prompted visiting musicians to seek him out in Venice and
in some cases commission works from him (notably for the Dresden court).
Bach transcribed five op.3 concertos for keyboard, and many German composers
imitated his style. He published two further sets of sonatas and seven
more of concertos, including La stravaganza op.4 (circa 1712), Il cimento
dell'armonia e dell'inventione (circa 1725, including 'The Four Seasons')
and La cetra (1727). It is in the concerto that Vivaldi's chief importance
lies. He was the first composer to use ritornello form regularly in fast
movements, and his use of it became a model; the same is true of his three-movement
plan (fast-slow-fast). His methods of securing greater thematic unity were
widely copied, especially the integration of solo and ritornello material;
his vigorous rhythmic pattems, his violinistic figuration and his use of
sequence were also much imitated. Of his circa 550 concertos, circa 350
are for solo instrument (more than 230 for violin); there are circa 40
double concertos, more than 30 for multiple soloists and nearly 60 for
orchestra without solo, while more than 20 are chamber concertos for a
small group of solo instruments without orchestra (the 'tutti' element
is provided by the instmments all playing together). Vivaldi was an enterprising
orchestrator, writing several concertos for unusual combinations like viola
d'amore and lute, or for ensembles including chalumeaux, clarinets, horns
and other rarities. There are also many solo concertos for bassoon, cello,
oboe and flute. Some of his concertos are programmatic, for example 'La
tempesta di mare' (the title of three concertos). Into this category also
fall 'The Four Seasons', with their representation of seasonal activities
and conditions accommodated within a standard ritornello form - these are
described in the appended sonnets, which he may have written himself.
Vivaldi was also much engaged in vocal music. He wrote a quantity of
sacred works, chiefly for the Pietà girls, using a vigorous style
in which the influence of the concerto is often marked. He was also involved
in opera and spent much time travelling to promote his works. His earliest
known opera was given in Vicenza in 1713; later he worked at theatres in
Venice, Mantua (1718-20), Rome (probably 1723-5), possibly Vienna and Prague
(around 1730), Ferrara (1737), Amsterdam (1738) and possibly Vienna during
his last visit. He was by most accounts a difficult man; in 1738 he was
forbidden entry to Ferrara ostensibly because of his refusal to say Mass
and his relationship with the singer Anna Giraud, a pupil of his with whom
he travelled. More than 20 of his operas survive; those that have been
revived include music of vitality and imagination as well as more routine
items. But Vivaldi's importance lies above all in his concertos, for their
boldness and originality and for their central place in the history of
concerto form.
Antun Opic/Sabine Rothmayer/Olga Lang/Diana Savcic
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