Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur
View Post
What Is Early Music?
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Roehre View PostAs the pre-Bach music started to get the deserved attention more widely, i.e. from the mid 1960s onwards, "Early Music" was understood to be music before JSBach, therefore ending at around 1700.
It is no coincidence IMO that the HIP-"movement" developed alongside this re-discovery of an earlier past, together b.t.w. with a tendency in contemporary music to make more use of smaller ensembles than symphony orcehstras but larger than the up to ten musicians for chamber music.
It has got to be recalled, that until the mid 1950s even Vivaldi was a rather obscure and unknown composer (that ended with the Four Seasons recording of I Musici iirc, 1955?)
Monteverdi, let alone the Burgundian (Flemish/Dutch/Franco-schools [roughly: Dufay-Sweelinck]), or earlier music like de Machaut, let alone from the Toubadours/Trovères/Minnesänger, was written about, but hardly if at all performed. Stravinsky's interest in Gesualdo is a spin-off of this re-discovery of pre-1700 music e.g.
Pre-1700s is therefore roughly Early Music as we then did understand it, and IMO a definition which still makes sense for the majority of the "classical" listeners whose main interests lay roughly between say JSBach and Bartok.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by doversoul View PostIf I read this as ‘you are not an early music composer unless you depend totally on HIPP ensembles to get heard’, a lot of Renaissance polyphony composers will be disqualified, as they are often performed by the BBC Singers.I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
Comment
-
Comment