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The Renaissance

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The Renaissance was an era of Exploration. ... 'Madonna and Child' Culture & People. A few other important people... Martin Luther (1483 1546) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Renaissance


1
The Renaissance
  • 1450-1600

2
Culture People
  • Renaissance New Birth/Re-Birth
  • 1450-1600
  • Began in Florance , Italy and quickly spread
    through the rest of Europe.

3
Culture People
  • The Renaissance was an era of Exploration.
  • The development of the compass made possible
    voyages to far, new lands.
  • The European explores were in search of a new
    trade route to China and the Indies.
  • This search led to a few of them accidentally
    running into North and South America.

4
Culture People
5
Culture People
  • During the Renaissance, Europe began to question
    the church.
  • Europe went from a very religious society to a
    more secular one.
  • Scientific inquiry and reason allowed people to
    solve their own problems rather than rely of God
    alone.
  • As people asked more question there was a rise in
    philosophical developments.

6
Culture People
  • One important philosopher of the period was
    Nicolas Copernicus.
  • His model of the universe was heliocentric rather
    than geocentric.
  • This didnt set well with the church.

7
Culture People
  • Copernican Model of the Universe

8
Culture People
  • The visual art of the Renaissance also
    experienced reform.
  • Medieval painting presented life through
    symbolism whereas the Renaissance preferred
    Realism.
  • Renaissance painters discovered landscape,
    created the illusion of distance, and focused on
    the physical loveliness of the world around them.

9
Culture People
  • Medieval Art compared to Renaissance Art

10
Culture People
  • Because the Renaissance began in Italy, many of
    the artistic contributions also originate there.
  • Donatello (1386 - 1466)
  • Boy

11
Culture People
  • Botticelli (1444 1510)
  • Rites of Spring

12
Culture People
  • Leonardo da Vinci (1452 1519)
  • Last Supper

13
Culture People
  • Michelangelo (1475 1564)
  • The Creation of Adam

14
Culture People
  • Raphael (1483 1520)
  • Madonna and Child

15
Culture People
  • A few other important people
  • Martin Luther (1483 1546)
  • A German Monk
  • The father of Protestantism
  • Author of the 95 Theses
  • First to translate the bible into
  • vernacular form

16
Culture People
  • William Shakespeare (1564 1616)
  • English Playwright and Poet
  • Widely regarded as the greatest writer in the
    English language.
  • Globe Theatre
  • Known for his famous tragedies
  • Romeo and Juliet
  • Hamlet
  • Macbeth

17
Culture People
  • Elizabeth Tudor (1533 1603)
  • (Elizabeth I Queen of England)
  • Daughter of Henry VIII
  • Protestant, Not Catholic
  • Never married
  • known as (Virgin Queen)
  • Under Elizabeth, England
  • came to be the most
  • powerful nation in the world.

18
Take a Break
19
Musicians and Musical Style
  • Musicians of the 15th and 16th centuries were
    supported by the chief institutions of their
    society.
  • The Church
  • The State
  • The Aristocracy
  • (Royalty and Upper Class)

20
Musicians and Musical Style
  • Musicians could find employment as
  • Choirmasters
  • Singers
  • Organists
  • Instrumentalists
  • Copyists
  • Composers
  • Teachers
  • Instrument builders
  • Music Printers and Publishers

21
Musicians and Musical Style
  • Music was considered both an art and a trade.
  • You would become a professional musician while
    studying and working as an apprentice.
  • There were very few professional musicians that
    were women, but there were some, and most were
    singers.

22
Musicians and Musical Style
  • The Renaissance also saw a rise in armature
    musicians.
  • This was brought about by a system for printing
    music in the early 16th century.
  • Printed music books became available and
    affordable.
  • This led to great music publishing houses in
    Venice, Paris, and Antwerp resulting in
    wide-spread music literacy.

23
Musicians and Musical Style
  • Early Music Printing

24
Musicians and Musical Style
  • The Psalterium is the first known printed book of
    music.
  • The book was printed by Johann Fust and Peter
    Schoffer, Gutenberg's associates.
  • Only the text and 3 black lines of the staff were
    printed. The fourth and fifth lines were drawn
    in by hand, as were the notes.
  • This was a book of church psalms.

25
Musicians and Musical Style
26
Musicians and Musical Style
27
Musicians and Musical Style
  • The vocal forms of the Renaissance were marked by
    smoothly gliding melodies conceived for the
    voice.
  • In fact, the 16th century has come to be regarded
    as the Golden Age of the
  • a cappella style
  • a cappella is a vocal work without instrumental
    accompaniment.

28
Musicians and Musical Style
  • Polyphony in a cappella music was based on a
    principle called Continuous Imitation.
  • With imitation, voices imitate one another so
    that the same theme that is heard in the soprano
    line, is also later heard in the alto line.

29
Musicians and Musical Style
  • Sicut Cervus
  • Composer Giovanni de Palestrina
  • (1525 1594)
  • Genre Motet
  • Period Renaissance

30
To Be Continued
31
Musicians and Musical Style
  • Though visual art of the Renaissance has its
    roots in Italy. Music of the era has its roots
    in Burgundy.
  • Burgundy is present-day Belgium
  • The composers from Burgundy made up the
    Burgundian, or Franco-Flemish School.

32
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • The most popular of these composers was Josquin
    des Prez.
  • (1450 1520)
  • Specialized in the
  • Motet.

33
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • In the Renaissance, the motet was used in the
    Mass and other religious services.
  • Motets in praise of the Virgin Mary were
    extremely popular.
  • Josquin mastered the technique of writing motets
    in the Renaissance.

34
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • Josquin eventually left Burgundy and went to
    Italy.
  • A number of composers of the era did this because
    Italy was the Hot Spot for employment if you
    were an artist.
  • Josquin would compose over 100 motets, 17 masses,
    and numerous secular pieces.

35
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • Ave Mariavirgo serena
  • (Hail Mary, gentle virgin)
  • Composer Josquin des Prez
  • Genre 4 part motet
  • Period Renaissance (1480)

36
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • With the rise of Renaissance polyphony, composers
    concentrated their musical settings on the
    Ordinary of the Mass.
  • 5 settings of the Ordinary
  • Kyrie
  • Gloria
  • Credo
  • Sanctus
  • Agnus Dei

37
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • Today these settings are sung in the vernacular.
  • Kyrie Lord have mercy
  • Gloria Glory be to God on High
  • Credo I believe in one God
  • Sanctus Holy, Holy, HolyHosanna
  • Agnus Dei Lamb of God who takes away the sin of
    the world, have mercy on us.

38
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • Early Renaissance settings of the mass was based
    on Gregorian Chant.
  • This became known as Cantus Firmus
  • Cantus Firmus is a fixed melody line, thus the
    cantus firmus served as the foundation of the
    work.

39
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • By the time of Josquins death, Europe was
    experiencing major reform.
  • After Martin Luthers protestant revolt, the
    Catholic Church responded with a reform of its
    own.
  • It focused on a return to true Christian Piety.
  • This reform extended from the 1530s to the end
    of the 16th Century up to the Council of Trent.

40
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • The Council of Trent was a big meeting/convention
    to regulate every aspect of religious discipline.
  • At the meeting, music was a hot topic.
  • The attending cardinals were concerned about
    corruption of traditional chant by singers, who
    added extravagant embellishments to the Gregorian
    melodies.

41
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • The council members objected to the use of
    certain instruments in religious services.
  • They objected the practice of incorporating
    popular songs in Masses.
  • They objected to the secular spirit that had
    invaded sacred music.
  • They objected the irrelevant attitude of church
    musicians.

42
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • There was one composer of the period who went
    along with the church and composed a Mass that
    exuded the councils demands.
  • Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina.
  • (1525-1594)
  • Worked as a choirmaster and organist in various
    churches including St. Peters in Rome.

43
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • Palestrina wrote over 100 Masses, of which the
    most famous is the Mass for Pope Marcellus,
    successor to Julius III.
  • This Mass was written to satisfy the strict new
    demands placed on polyphonic church music at the
    Council of Trent.

44
Renaissance Sacred Music
  • Gloria from the Pope Marcellus Mass
  • Composer Palestrina
  • Genre Mass
  • Period Renaissance (1567)

45
  • Secular Music of the Renaissance
  • 1450 - 1600

46
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Music in Court and City Life
  • Both professionals and amateurs took part in
    music making.
  • Professionals were paid to entertain nobles and
    VIP guests at court.

47
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Most prosperous homes had a lute or a keyboard
    instrument.
  • The study of music was considered to be part of a
    proper upbringing.
  • This was more so the case for girls than young
    boys.

48
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Women as Professional Musicians
  • During the later 16th century a small number of
    women singers began to become semi-famous.
  • This was only Italy.
  • THEY WERE NOT COMPOSERS

49
Renaissance Secular Music
  • The two major secular vocal genres of the
    Renaissance
  • The Chanson
  • The Madrigal

50
Renaissance Secular Music
  • In the 15th century, the chanson was the favored
    genre at the courts in France and Burgundy.
  • Chansons in French literally means song.
  • They were often written for 3 or 4 voices.
  • Chansons were set to popular French poems (love
    poems)

51
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Mille regretz
  • (A thousand regrets)
  • Composer Josquin
  • Genre Chanson
  • Period Renaissance

52
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Mille regretz
  • (A thousand regrets)
  • 'A thousand regrets for deserting you
  • and leaving behind your loving face,
  • I feel so much sadness
  • and such painful distress,
  • that it seems to me
  • my days will soon dwindle away.'

53
Renaissance Secular Music
  • The chanson continued to be a favorite secular
    form throughout the 16th century.
  • Composers most known for working with the genre
    were
  • Machaut (1300-1377) wrote some of the first
    chansons
  • Josquin (1450 1521)
  • Roland de Lassus

54
Renaissance Secular Music
  • The Italian Madrigal
  • In the madrigal, Renaissance composers found one
    of their chief forms of secular music.
  • The 16th century madrigal was an aristocratic
    form of poetry and music that flourished in the
    Italian Courts.

55
Renaissance Secular Music
  • The text consisted of a short poem of lyric or
    reflective character often including very
    emotional words such as
  • Weeping
  • Sighing
  • Trembling
  • Dying
  • (In Italian of course)

56
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Love and unsatisfied desire were popular topics
    of the madrigal but by no means the only ones.
  • Composers were also given a chance to make fun of
    nobility with humorous and satirical madrigals,
    with political themes and scenes of Renaissance
    Culture.

57
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Instruments participated in the performance of
    madrigals, often duplicating or even substituting
    for the voices.
  • Sometimes only the top part was sung while the
    other parts were played on instruments.
  • Composers were taking their own liberties with
    the form and how these madrigals were performed.

58
Renaissance Secular Music
  • There are two types of madrigals
  • Italian Madrigal
  • English Madrigal

59
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Within the Italian madrigal there were three
    phases
  • The first phase (1525 1550) The composers
    chief concern was to give pleasure to the
    performers.
  • The middle phase (1550 1580) The madrigal
    became a highly respected art form in which words
    and music were clearly linked.
  • The final phase (1580 1620) The madrigal
    became the direct expression of the composers
    personality and feelings.

60
Renaissance Secular Music
  • The late Renaissance madrigal was mastered by
    Claudio Monteverdi.
  • (1567 1643)
  • Monteverdi published 9 books of madrigals that
    span from the Renaissance to the Baroque styles.
  • In his life he would write
  • over 200 madrigals.

61
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Monteverdi was a rock star in his day.
  • He would compose music for some of the most
    famous people of the time.
  • Royalty from all over wanted him to compose music
    for their courts.

62
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Baci soavi e cari
  • From the First Book of Madrigals
  • Composer Monteverdi
  • Genre Italian Madrigal
  • Period Renaissance (1587)

63
Renaissance Secular Music
  • In England, the madrigal was also a very popular
    secular genre.
  • The madrigal in England flourished during the
    Elizabethan Age.
  • Period during the reign of Elizabeth I (1588
    1603) and James I (1603 1625)

64
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Englands first collection of madrigals were
    Italian madrigals that were translated to
    English.
  • This book of madrigals was entitled Musica
    Trasalpina
  • After this book was published Englands composers
    began to write their own.

65
Renaissance Secular Music
  • There were some significant differences in the
    English madrigal
  • English composers preferred simple texts
  • English madrigals were for the most part, more up
    beat with quicker tempos.
  • Some English madrigals were humorous, risqué for
    the time, and satirical in nature.

66
Renaissance Secular Music
  • There were many composers during the Elizabethan
    age that were writing madrigals in England.
  • One of those was John Farmer.
  • (1591-1601)
  • He was an organist and choirmaster at Christ
    Church.
  • Farmer moved to London in 1599 and published his
    only collection of 4-part madrigals.

67
Renaissance Secular Music
  • Fair Phyllis
  • Composer John Farmer
  • Genre English Madrigal
  • Period Renaissance (1599)
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