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Tempesta - Clive McClelland

Tempesta

Stormy Music in the Eighteenth Century
Buch | Softcover
256 Seiten
2019
Lexington Books (Verlag)
978-1-4985-1994-6 (ISBN)
CHF 79,90 inkl. MwSt
Tempesta is the stormy musical language employed whenever a composer wishes to inspire terror in an audience. This study explores the large repertoire of such music to examine programmatic storm depictions and the idea of tempesta as a topic in instrumental music.
Tempesta is a term coined in this book applying to music that exhibits agitated or violent characteristics in order to evoke terror and chaos, involving ideas like rapid scale passages, driving rhythmic figurations, strong accents, full textures, and robust instrumentation including prominent brass and timpani. Music of this type was used for storm scenes, which in operas of the 17th and 18th centuries are almost invariably of supernatural origin, and other frightening experiences such as pursuit, madness, and rage.

This ‘stormy’ music formed the ingredients of a particular style in the later 18th century that scholars in recent decades have referred to as Sturm und Drang, implying a relationship to German literature which I believe is unhelpful and misleading. Haydn’s so-called Sturm und Drang symphonies exhibit characteristics that are no different to his depictions of storms in his operas and sacred music, and there is no evidence of Haydn suffering some kind of personal crisis, or even of him responding to the ‘spirit of the age’. He was simply exploring the expressive possibilities of the style for dramatic/rhetorical effect. Scholars have been dissatisfied with the term for some time, but no-one has previously suggested an alternative. The term tempesta therefore applies to all manifestations of this kind of music, a label that acknowledges the ‘stormy’ origins of the style, but which also recognizes that it functions as a counterpart to ombra.

Tempesta contributed enormously to the continued popularity of operas on supernatural subjects, and quickly migrated towards sacred music and even instrumental music, where it became part of the topical discourse. The music does not merely represent the supernatural, it instills an emotional response in the listener. Awe and terror had already been identified as sources of the sublime, notably by Edmund Burke (predating the German literary Sturm und Drang), and the latter half of the century saw the rise of Gothic literature. The supernatural remained popular in theaters and opera houses, and special music that could produce an emotional response of such magnitude was a powerful tool in the composer’s expressive armory.

Clive McClelland is associate professor of music at the University of Leeds, West Yorkshire

Chapter 1 Tempesta Music in Context
Chapter 2 Tonality (Opera)
Chapter 3 Harmony and Line (Opera)
Chapter 4 Tempo and Rhythm (Opera)
Chapter 5 Texture, Dynamics and Instrumentation (Opera)
Chapter 6 Case Studies in Opera
Chapter 7 Tempesta in Sacred Music
Chapter 8 Tempesta in Instrumental Music
Chapter 9 Towards Romanticism

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort Lanham, MD
Sprache englisch
Maße 153 x 16 mm
Gewicht 3915 g
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Musik
ISBN-10 1-4985-1994-6 / 1498519946
ISBN-13 978-1-4985-1994-6 / 9781498519946
Zustand Neuware
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