89966 - History of Music of the Seventeenth-Eighteenth Century

Academic Year 2019/2020

Learning outcomes

By the end of this course students will know: – the major musicians of the 17th and 18th centuries and their works, including the listening of their works; – genres, styles and musical techniques of the 17th and 18th centuries music history; – how to relate musical knowledge to philosophical, theological and literary culture in the historical-social background.

Course contents

Knowledge and comprehension of the History of music implies three different levels:

(1) Listening;

(2) Reading a score;

(3) Situating the musical art work into its aesthetic and historical context.

This course provides a didactic articulation conforming to the student’s different levels of competence. For simplification purposes, students can be divided as follows:

(A) students specialising in Music;

(B) students of other specialisations.

A students are expected to govern levels 1, 2, and 3; B students are expected to govern levels 1 and 3. B students who wish to specialise in Music shall accordingly govern level 2 as well: this implies an additional examination to verify the ability of reading a score.

Special attention will be paid to music listening. Today, more than ever, in a noisy society invaded by often cheap, trivial music, there is a need to learn techniques for listening consciously. It is necessary to learn how to distinguish the different types of music, understand their aesthetic value and be aware of the compositional processes behind them. A guide to listening, deemed as a guide to the pleasure of music (and of the silence which music presupposes), has a high educational value: conscious listening activates the processes of perception, enhancing attention and heightening sensitivity; at the same time, it leads students to “listen to” silence as a privileged moment for reflection and for getting in touch with their inner sphere. In this perspective, History of music is at the base of Citizen education and an indispensable source of culture for Humanities students.

Additional didactic activities will enrich the course such as concerts, conferences, seminars. Students may choose among them those most fitting to their interests and their cultural preparation. Introductory courses on an elementary level will be planned for students without any notion of music.

This course's lectures will treat, in summary, the following topics: in the first part, the seventeenth-century madrigal; Monteverdi and the seconda pratica; Monteverdi, the Seventh (Concerto) and the Eighth Book of madrigals (Madrigali guerrieri e amorosi); the music for solo voice: Sigismondo d’India and the Nuove musiche by Caccini; the opera before 1637 (Florence, Mantua, Rome) and Monteverdi, La favola d’Orfeo; the opera after 1637: the last Monteverdi and Cavalli; the opera in German countries and theatrical music in England and Spain; the tragédie lyrique: Jean-Baptiste Lully; Catholic devotional music and the historiae by Giacomo Carissimi; the music of the Lutheran Church (Heinrich Schütz) and sacred music as music of State (France and England); the instrumental music in the seventeenth century: Girolamo Frescobaldi; Arcangelo Corelli; in the second part, Zeno, Metastasio and Italian opera in seventeenth century, also in France and in other european countries; the instrumental music in the first half of the eighteenth century; sacred and devotional music in the eighteenth century; Georg Friedrich Händel; Johann Sebastian Bach: the instrumental music and the last “speculative” works; Johann Sebastian Bach: cantatas, oratorios, passions and other sacred music; the galant style and the empfindsamer style, and italian harpsichordists; the opera seria and the opera buffa in the second half of the eighteenth century, and Christoph Willibald Gluck; the Sturm und Drang and Franz Joseph Haydn; Wolfgang Amadé Mozart: the instrumental music; Wolfgang Amadé Mozart: the musical theatre and the sacred music.

INSTITUTIONAL COURSE

(a) Music of the 17th and 18th centuries (A, B students)

(b) Listening guide: a selection of works from 17th and 18th centuries (A, B students)

(c) Analysis of a selection of works – on the basis of the scores (A students)

Readings/Bibliography

- E. Surian, Manuale di Storia della musica, vol. I: Dalle origini alla musica vocale del Cinquecento, chap. 12-16 (6th rev. ed., Milan, Rugginenti, 2012), and vol. II: Dalla musica strumentale del Cinquecento al periodo classico (5th rev. ed., Milan, Rugginenti, 2010) [A students];

- Storia della musica, Turin, EDT, 1991, vol. 5: L. Bianconi, Il Seicento, chap. I (il madrigale e Monteverdi); chap. III, § 16 (le musiche devozionali cattoliche); chap. IV, § 19-26 (l’opera in musica nel Seicento); vol. 7: G. Pestelli, L’età di Mozart e Beethoven, chap. II, § 16-17 (l’opera in musica nella seconda metà del Settecento e Gluck); and chap. III, § 22-24 (Sturm und Drang e Haydn) and 26 (Mozart) [A students];

- M. Carrozzo - C. Cimagalli, Storia della musica occidentale, Rome, Armando, 2014, vol. II: Dal barocco al classicismo viennese, chap. 16-30 (without approfondimenti) [B students];

- Handout prepared by Gabriella Sartini, and related Appendix, a.y. 2019/20, available at Harpo’s (via Barberia, 9) [A and B students, which are expected to have different competences: cf. below]. For the audio examples, students should visit the Musica e Spettacolo Library (Dipartimento delle Arti, via Barberia 4).

 

More spcifically:

 

A students (specialising in Music)

For the final examination, A students are expected to know the general outline of music in the 17th and 18th centuries. Recommended reading: the handbook by E. Surian, Manuale di storia della musica, vol. I: Dalle origini alla musica vocale del Cinquecento (6th rev. ed., Milan, Rugginenti, 2012), chap. 12-16, and vol. II: Dalla musica musica strumentale del Cinquecento al periodo classico (5th rev. ed., Milan, Rugginenti, 2010). In addition, on following topics: Storia della musica, Turin, EDT, 1991, vol. 5: L. Bianconi, Il Seicento, chap. I (il madrigale e Monteverdi); chap. III, § 16 (le musiche devozionali cattoliche); chap. IV, § 19-26 (l’opera in musica nel Seicento); vol. 7: G. Pestelli, L’età di Mozart e Beethoven, chap. II, § 16-17 (l’opera in musica nella seconda metà del Settecento e Gluck); and chap. III, § 22-24 (Sturm und Drang e Haydn) and 26 (Mozart).

Knowledge of Chapter I of Surian, Manuale di storia della musica cit., vol. I, pp. 7-21, is required.

A students are expected to know in detail the Handout and related Appendix, a.y. 2019/20, avalaible at Harpo’s (via Barberia, 9). In addition, notions of the basic elements of Italian versification are required (cf. teaching materials).

A students are expected:

- to demonstrare their knowledge of the topics treated in the texts of Surian and Storia della musica EDT;

- to demonstrate their knowledge of the materials included in the Handout and related Appendix, a.y. 2019/20, available at Harpo’s (via Barberia, 9). Students may get some help by reading Consigli per l'ascolto e per l'esame della partitura, available at Harpo’s and on teaching materials. A students are required to have detailed knowledge of the authors and compositions, which they are expected to analyse from a stylistic-formal point of view, even on the basis of listening;

- to demonstrate their knowledge of the rudiments of the Italian versification (cf. teaching materials);

- to report on a musicological event (lecture, meeting, conference, etc.) they have recently attended to (candidates shall bring along the relevant program);

- to report on at least five concerts or performances of Western art music they have recently attended to (candidates shall bring along the relevant concert programs).

 

B students (other specialisations)

For the final examination, B students are expected to know the general outline of music history in the 17th and 18th centuries. Recommended reading: the handbook by M. Carrozzo - C. Cimagalli, Storia della musica occidentale, Rome, Armando, 2014, vol. II: Dal barocco al classicismo viennese, cap. 16-30 (without approfondimenti).

B students are expected to have studied in detail the Handout and related Appendix, a.y. 2019/20, avalaible at Harpo’s (via Barberia, 9). A knowledge of the basic elements of Italian versification is required (cf. teaching materials).

B students are expected:

- to demonstrate their knowledge of the topics treated in the handbook by Carrozzo-Cimagalli;

- to demonstrate their knowledge of the materials included in the Handout and related Appendix, a.y. 2019/20, available at Harpo’s (via Barberia, 9). Students may get some help by reading Consigli per l'ascolto e per l'esame della partitura, available at Harpo’s and also on the web site of the Dipartimento delle Arti (cf. teaching materials). B students are required to give a general-historical outline of authors and compositions; the exam, therefore, will essentially focus on listening;

- to demonstrate knowledge of the rudiments of the Italian versification (cf. teaching materials);

- to report on a musicological event (lecture, meeting, conference, etc.) they have recently attended to (candidates shall bring along the relevant program);

- to report on at least three concerts or performances of Western art music they have recently attended to (candidates shall bring along the relevant concert programs).

N.B. (i): Students who need to make up for exams and who choose 17th-18th century music, are required to follow this program.

N.B. (ii): DAMS students of other specialisations who wish to specialise in Music must integrate their final exam with an additional interview based on the scores included in the Handout and related Appendix, a.y. 2019/20, available at Harpo’s (via Barberia, 9).

N.B. (iii): Students from other corsi di laurea or other Universities, whose previous exams in History of music have been validated, must nevertheless take an additional interview on a program specifically negotiated with the teacher.

Assessment methods

The final examination consists of a written test (cf. teaching materials) to be discussed then with the teachers; candidates may choose to complement the result of their written test with an interview. In any case, the written test, the discussion and the optional additional interview will take place within the same day.

The written test will consist in:

- a question, the answer to which shall contain the correct chronological order of three music compositions: 3 points;

- an open-answer question, requiring a short definition of a notion, genre, style, form (including metrical forms), or the description of a concert or musicological event: max 3 points;

- an open-answer question on the 17th century: max 8 points;

- an open-answer question on the 18th century: max 8 points;

- an open-answer question on the listening of an anthology piece (Handout and Appendix): max 8 points.

The time available to complete the test is 100 minutes. Candidates are required to have their institutional username (ex.: xxx@studio.unibo.it) and password to access the on-line exam platform.

N.B. (i): as to the listening test, A students (specialising in Music) are expected to have detailed knowledge of the author and composition, which they will analyse from a formal-stylistic point of view; B students (other specialisations) are expected to make a general-historical outline of the author and composition.

N.B. (ii): all students (A and B) who need to make up for exams will take the final examination in accordance with these provisions.

It will be assessed as excellent the performance of those students achieving an organic vision of the course contents, the use of a proper specific language, a structural and historical-contextual understanding of the pieces studied, the originality of the reflection as well as the familiarity with the tools of analysis of the History of Music from the Seven-Eighteenth Century. It will be assessed as discrete the performance of those students showing mostly mechanical or mnemonic knowledge of the subject, not articulated synthesis and analysis capabilities, a correct but not always appropriate language, as well as a scholastic study of History of Music from the Seven-Eighteenth Century. It will be assessed as barely sufficient the performance of those students showing learning gaps, inappropriate language, lack of knowledge of the instruments of History of Music from the Seven-Eighteenth Century. It will be assessed as insufficient the performance of those students showing learning gaps, inappropriate language, no orientation within the recommended bibliography and inability to analyse the History of Music from the Seven-Eighteenth Centuries.

Teaching tools

Supplementary didactic activities

In a.y. 2019/20 the following didactic activities are planned (some promoted by the Department’s Center “La Soffitta”, and by the musicological society, “Il Saggiatore musicale”):

· Concerts in the DAMSLab/Auditorium, piazzetta P. P. Pasolini 5/b;

· Conferences;

· Seminars (please refer to ‘attività F’).

A detailed calendar of these activities will be communicated during the course; more details are available at the information point of the Dipartimento delle Arti (via Barberia 4) and on the relevant web sites.

 

Thesis

For Students of the old system (4- or 3-years) as well as of the new system (3 years-) DAMS:

Students who intend to write the thesis in History of music are required to agree with the supervisor an appropriate subject. They will prepare a short outline of the project (with bibliographic references) and submit it to the supervisor. Once the project has been approved, the supervisor will designate a second advisor (obligatory for the 4-year DAMS) and the student will start working on the thesis and will report periodically on the study progresses. If the supervisor is not reported about the research within a six-months period, she will be free to assign the same subject to a different candidate. The 3-years thesis is different from the old only for a smaller size (40-50 type-written pages of 30 lines per 60 characters a line).

The pre-requisite for being assigned a thesis is an in-depth knowledge of the lecture notes about the criteria for writing a musicological text prepared by the teacher and provided on student request.

Office hours

See the website of Elisabetta Pasquini

See the website of Nicola Badolato