Wednesday, January 8, 2020
The Word Symph Nia - 1251 Words
The word symphÃ
nia was used by the Greeks in reference to notes sounding together in harmony and by extension meant an ââ¬Å"ensembleâ⬠or ââ¬Å"bandâ⬠rather than a musical form. The word implies a pleasant concord of different notes and has been used in fields other than music to denote a pleasing combination of various elements. In the New Testament Gospel According to Luke (King James Version), symphÃ
nia is translated as ââ¬Å"musick,â⬠as distinct from choroi, ââ¬Å"dancing.â⬠In the Middle Ages the name was given to several musical instruments, among them a double-headed drum, bowed stringed instruments, a large hurdy-gurdy, and bagpipes. Mention is made in 1582 of eine Symphonie, evidently a stringed keyboard instrument. From the mid-16th century,â⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦His countryman Samuel Scheidtââ¬â¢s 70 Symphonien auf Konzerten-Manier (1644) likewise combine instrumental and vocal ensembles to enrich the texture and heighten the drama of his music. Symphonies for instruments alone during the early Baroque era (c. 1600ââ¬â30) occur as independent pieces and as introductions or interludes in theatrical productions. The Italian Biagio Mariniââ¬â¢s sinfonia La Orlandia (1617) is a duet for violin or cornetto (a wind instrument with finger holes and cup-shaped mouthpiece) and continuo in five brief contiguous sections, distinguished by contrasting metres and new melodic material in each section. (The continuo is a harmonic accompaniment improvised over the written bass line, usually played on a keyboard instrument and a bass viol or other bass melody instrument.) Early operas often include instrumental symphonies. Jacopo Periââ¬â¢s Euridice (first performed 1600) includes a sinfonia for three flutes; Claudio Monteverdiââ¬â¢s lavish musical drama Orfeo (1607) is punctuated with five richly scored sinfonias, while a sinfonia da guerra (ââ¬Å"sinfonia of warâ⬠) accompanies a staged battle in his Il ritorno dââ¬â¢U lisse in patria (The Return of Ulysses to his Country; 1641). Each act of Stefano Landiââ¬â¢s opera Il Santââ¬â¢Alessio (1632) opens with a sectional sinfonia. Many other opera and oratorio composers used short descriptive or introductory sinfonias, often of sectional form with contrasting metres and tempos. It remained for a Neapolitan,
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