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Encyclopedia > Chorale concerto

In music, a chorale concerto is a short sacred composition for one or more voices and instruments, principally from the very early German Baroque era. Most examples of the genre were composed between 1600 and 1650.


Description

This use of the word concerto differs considerably from the more modern, and considerably more common usage: in the early Baroque the word meant vocal music accompanied by instruments, specifically in concertato style. The concertato style was brought north across the Alps by composers such as Hans Leo Hassler and Heinrich Schütz, who studied in Venice with the originators of the style, the Venetian School composers including Giovanni Gabrieli. Hassler, Schütz and others then applied their newly learned techniques to the German chorale to create a form roughly equivalent in expression and purpose to the Roman Catholic motet of the preceding Renaissance era. The Protestant Reformation made necessary the development of new genres of music, most of which were related in form and function to equivalent genres in Roman Catholic parts of Europe, but which avoided the use of German).


There were two basic types of chorale concerto:

  1. A simple composition for voice and basso continuo, sometimes with an obbligato solo instrument;
  2. A more elaborate polychoral setting, directly related to the music of the Venetian School, and often modeled after the work of Giovanni Gabrieli.

The chorale cantata, culminating in the work of J.S. Bach, evolved out of the chorale concerto, and became a popular liturgical form in Germany for more than a hundred years.


Composers

Composers of chorale concertos included:

References

  • Articles "Chorale concerto", "Chorale settings", in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1561591742
  • Manfred Bukofzer, Music in the Baroque Era. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1947. ISBN 0393097455





  Results from FactBites:
 
HOASM: Spiritual Concerto and Church Cantata (1932 words)
Although the chorales were not strictly biblical in their texts they were regarded as the pillars of the liturgy and thus paralleled the liturgical function of the Gregorian chant in the Catholic church.
The organ chorale variation which Scheidt had already transferred to the chorale motet was also applied to the chorale concertato so that the composer had a great variety of styles at his disposal.
Tunder's chorale variations are remarkable for the extensive use they make of the concertato style and the inner expansion of the form.
concerto: Definition and Much More from Answers.com (2664 words)
He wrote one concerto each for flute, oboe, clarinet, and bassoon, four for horn, one for flute and harp, and a sinfonia concertante for violin and viola.
Brahms's first piano concerto in D minor (pub 1861) was the result of an immense amount of work on a mass of material originally intended for a symphony.
Britten’s concertos for piano (1938) and violin (1939) are mature works from his early period, while the so-called Cello Symphony (1963) emphasizes, as its title suggests, the equal importance of soloist and orchestra.
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