Transcript
Page 1: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

• MUSICAL STYLE • the way in which a composer or performer treats the

following elements

• Melody• Harmony• Rhythm • Tone Color• Dynamics • Texture • Form

Page 2: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

• MUSICAL STYLE • often times outside factors play into the style of a piece or

artist• TIME PERIOD / LOCATION / WHAT IT WAS MEANT FOR

• king, under class, ect..• concert hall or dinning room,

• dance, religious rite, drama, ect…

Page 3: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

• MUSICAL STYLE

• Music is not created in vacuum• much borrowing and contrast occurs.

• to better understand music & style we turn to

• Music History

Page 4: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

• Overview of Time periods • Time periods are tied to World History events• Ancient Greece, Rome, Egypt, Israel had

music but nothing survives,• JAZZ/R&B/ROCK HISTORY is mostly 20th /21st

Century• ....a very small part of world music history

Page 5: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

•QUIZ 1 REVIEW

Page 6: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

MUSIC HISTORY TIME PERIODS

• MIDDLE AGES• RENAISSANCE• BAROQUE • CLASSICAL• ROMANTIC

• 20th CENTURY to 1945• 1945 to PRESENT

Page 7: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

MUSIC HISTORY TIME PERIODS

• MIDDLE AGES (450 – 1450)• RENAISSANCE (1450 – 1600)• BAROQUE (1600 – 1750)• CLASSICAL ( 1750 – 1820)• ROMANTIC (1820 – 1900)• 20th CENTURY to 1945• 1945 to PRESENT

Page 8: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

MUSIC HISTORY TIME PERIODS

• MIDDLE AGES (450 fall of Rome – 1450 printing press invented)

• RENAISSANCE (1450 – 1600 Birth of Opera)• BAROQUE (1600 – 1750 death of BACH)

• CLASSICAL ( 1750 – 1820 death of Beethoven)• ROMANTIC (1820 – 1900 start of 20th cen.

Industrial rev)• 20th CENTURY to 1945 (end of WWII)

• 1945 to PRESENT

Page 9: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

• THE MIDDLE AGES • 2 types of music • Church & Secular

• little of manuscript survives & has no tempos dynamics or instrument names• singers & instruments in paintings and

literary descriptions but not certain exactly how

Page 10: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

• Gregorian Chant• for 1000 years official Roman Catholic Church

music• Monophonic in LATIN sung to enhance parts

of religious services• NAMED after POPE Gregory I (the great) who

reorganized liturgy 590-604

Page 11: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

RENAISSANCE (1450-1600) (age of Humanisim)-printing press

-“Universal Man” every educated person was expected to be musicians along with other

education-Age of Shakespeare and rebirth of the arts

-Church continues to be major patron of music but secular attention to courts begins to rise-Musicians enjoy higher status and pay; no

longer content to be unknown

Page 12: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

BAROQUE (1600-1750)(The Birth of Opera)

-Two Giants of the era Handel & Bach

-Most other composers forgotten until rediscovered in the 20th century

Page 13: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

• THE CLASSICAL PERIOD (1750-1820)• CP BACH & JC BACH • Pioneers of pre-classical period (1730-1770)• shift to simplicity, clarity, and balance in

musically style• most equate Classical Music title to anything

non-pop / rock / jazz because of three greats are the most known & regarded

• Three greats of this period are • MOZART, HAYDN, and BEETHOVEN

Page 14: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

• THE ROMANTIC PERIOD (1820-1900)

• Similarities to Classical but…• Uses greater range of….

• Tone color• Dynamics• Pitch

• The harmonies are broader • The use of unstable chords

Page 15: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

• The Early 20th Century (Age of Musical Diversity)

• OLD FORMS EXPAND• Avant Garde / Atonal (12 Tone Music)

• NEW FORMS ARISE• Blues• Jazz• Rhythm & Blues• Rock & Roll

Page 16: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

JAZZ HISTORY TIMELINE• The Blues & Ragtime (early 1900’s)• New Orleans Jazz / Chicago Jazz (1910’s-1920’s)• Swing / Big Band (1930’s-1940’s)• Be-Bop (1940’s-1950’s)• Cool Jazz (1940’s-1950’s)• Hard Bop (1950’s-1960’s)• Funky Gospel (1950’s-1970’s)• Avant Garde (1950’s-1970’s)• Fusion (1970’s)• ** WATCH JAZZ HISTORY DVD 1 (0:00-31:30)

Page 17: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

The Blues• Early blues–Pre-Civil War–Result of slaves singing very sad songs–No chords –No set form– Sung in unison– Songs were performed privately of for

groups of slaves only

Page 18: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

The Blues• Early blues–After Civil war –Music could be performed more openly– Lyric became AAB (2 part form)– Standardized chords–4 measure groups - 3 lines (12 BARS)–2 measures lyric, 2 measure fill– Still topics were -usually unhappy

situations

Page 19: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

Ragtime

• Originated in Sedalia, MO• St. Louis became the Ragtime center

around 1901• General Public first exposed to Ragtime at a

series of World’s Fairs held in Omaha, Chicago, Buffalo, and the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis

Page 20: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

New OrleansPossibly the Birth place of Jazz but…• We must keep in mind that slaves were first

brought to the America’s in 1619 to Virginia were African & European musical traditions most likely first mixed

• Also the first recorded instrumental Jazz was produced in New York around 1917.

• Pinning down Jazz music’s exact time & place of birth is somewhat of an Historical mystery

• New Orleans is certainly a good place to look at

Page 21: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

New OrleansDIXELAND JAZZ FLOURISHES BECAUSE…• Early New Orleans melting pot of cultures• City has rare racial mixing• Congo Square• Creoles• 1st Opera company and Symphonies in USA• Marching bands, Parades, & Mardi Gras• Storyville

Page 22: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

Chicago Style JAZZ (the roaring 1920s)

• Chicago was prosperous• Many job opportunities• Close to Detroit, model T’s and model A

Fords• Prohibition (1920-1933)• Gangsters ruled Chicago• Like the Storyville, Chicago provided

musicians with many night clubs to play• Recording studios mostly in Chicago and

New York

Page 23: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

SWINGTHE SWING ERA…

• Most noteworthy Jazz of all era’s has an element of rhythm or feel that is referred to as swing

• The Swing Era general refers to….• The period after Boogie-Woogie in the

development of Jazz in the 1930’s & early 1940’s.

• The music of large dance bands that played written arrangements with the occasional improvised solo

Page 24: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

ROCK & ROLL HISTORY TIMELINE• Boogie Woogie / R&B (late 1940’s/early 1950’s)• Elvis / Teen Market (mid 1950’s)• Surf Music / Folk Rock (late 1950’s)• Motown / Atlantic Records (1950’s / early 1960’s)• The British Invasion (mid 1960’s)• Soul music / Acid Rock & Woodstock (late 1960’s)• Heavy Metal / Punk Rock (1970’s)• Disco / Smooth Pop-Rock (1970’s)• MTV & Hip Hop (1980’s)• Generation X & Boy Bands (1990’s)• The New Millennium (2000’s)

Page 25: MUSICAL STYLE the way in which a composer or performer treats the following elements Melody Harmony Rhythm Tone Color Dynamics Texture Form

• HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT

• Tracing your favorite bands “Musical History” by tracing their influences

• Trace backwards from present day to as far as you can go most likely into Jazz or Blues

influence


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