24.07.2007

TEST



Prof. Dr. Bülent Tarcan'ın roman tadındaki biyografisi Dünya Yayınevi tarafından piyasaya çıktı.Bülent Tarcan hem beyin cerrahisi kürsüsünün kurucusu olan bir tıp doktoru, hem de büyük senfonik yapıtlar üretmiş bir müzik adamı. Kendi anılarına dayanan yaşam öyküsünde Türk tıp tarihiyle çağdaş müziğimizin tarihi içiçe işleniyor. Kitaba ekli CD’de bestecinin bir zamanlar TRT haberlerine sinyal müziği olan 3.Süiti; kızı Hülya Tarcan solistliğinde Piyano Konçertosu ve kendisiyle Evin İlyasoğlu’nun yaptığı söyleşi yer alıyor.

TEST



Prof. Dr. Bülent Tarcan'ın roman tadındaki biyografisi Dünya Yayınevi tarafından piyasaya çıktı.Bülent Tarcan hem beyin cerrahisi kürsüsünün kurucusu olan bir tıp doktoru, hem de büyük senfonik yapıtlar üretmiş bir müzik adamı. Kendi anılarına dayanan yaşam öyküsünde Türk tıp tarihiyle çağdaş müziğimizin tarihi içiçe işleniyor. Kitaba ekli CD’de bestecinin bir zamanlar TRT haberlerine sinyal müziği olan 3.Süiti; kızı Hülya Tarcan solistliğinde Piyano Konçertosu ve kendisiyle Evin İlyasoğlu’nun yaptığı söyleşi yer alıyor.

TEST



Prof. Dr. Bülent Tarcan'ın roman tadındaki biyografisi Dünya Yayınevi tarafından piyasaya çıktı.Bülent Tarcan hem beyin cerrahisi kürsüsünün kurucusu olan bir tıp doktoru, hem de büyük senfonik yapıtlar üretmiş bir müzik adamı. Kendi anılarına dayanan yaşam öyküsünde Türk tıp tarihiyle çağdaş müziğimizin tarihi içiçe işleniyor. Kitaba ekli CD’de bestecinin bir zamanlar TRT haberlerine sinyal müziği olan 3.Süiti; kızı Hülya Tarcan solistliğinde Piyano Konçertosu ve kendisiyle Evin İlyasoğlu’nun yaptığı söyleşi yer alıyor.

TEST



Prof. Dr. Bülent Tarcan'ın roman tadındaki biyografisi Dünya Yayınevi tarafından piyasaya çıktı.Bülent Tarcan hem beyin cerrahisi kürsüsünün kurucusu olan bir tıp doktoru, hem de büyük senfonik yapıtlar üretmiş bir müzik adamı. Kendi anılarına dayanan yaşam öyküsünde Türk tıp tarihiyle çağdaş müziğimizin tarihi içiçe işleniyor. Kitaba ekli CD’de bestecinin bir zamanlar TRT haberlerine sinyal müziği olan 3.Süiti; kızı Hülya Tarcan solistliğinde Piyano Konçertosu ve kendisiyle Evin İlyasoğlu’nun yaptığı söyleşi yer alıyor.

TEST



Prof. Dr. Bülent Tarcan'ın roman tadındaki biyografisi Dünya Yayınevi tarafından piyasaya çıktı.Bülent Tarcan hem beyin cerrahisi kürsüsünün kurucusu olan bir tıp doktoru, hem de büyük senfonik yapıtlar üretmiş bir müzik adamı. Kendi anılarına dayanan yaşam öyküsünde Türk tıp tarihiyle çağdaş müziğimizin tarihi içiçe işleniyor. Kitaba ekli CD’de bestecinin bir zamanlar TRT haberlerine sinyal müziği olan 3.Süiti; kızı Hülya Tarcan solistliğinde Piyano Konçertosu ve kendisiyle Evin İlyasoğlu’nun yaptığı söyleşi yer alıyor.

Bir Hekimin Senfonik Öyküsü


Prof. Dr. Bülent Tarcan'ın roman tadındaki biyografisi Dünya Yayınevi tarafından piyasaya çıktı.Bülent Tarcan hem beyin cerrahisi kürsüsünün kurucusu olan bir tıp doktoru, hem de büyük senfonik yapıtlar üretmiş bir müzik adamı. Kendi anılarına dayanan yaşam öyküsünde Türk tıp tarihiyle çağdaş müziğimizin tarihi içiçe işleniyor. Kitaba ekli CD’de bestecinin bir zamanlar TRT haberlerine sinyal müziği olan 3.Süiti; kızı Hülya Tarcan solistliğinde Piyano Konçertosu ve kendisiyle Evin İlyasoğlu’nun yaptığı söyleşi yer alıyor.

19.07.2007

OPERA OF THE 18th CENTURY

OPERA OF THE 18TH CENTURY
Opera emerged as a new vocal form in the Baroque Age. The forerunners of opera are: Monody (solo song accompanied by one instrument like lute or guitar), musical dialogues, classical tragedies of the ancient ages, intermezzo (a comic play between the acts of tragic plays), pastoral poems (sung stories about shepherds and nature), and cantatas (a theatrical composition of sacred or secular subject to be performed without staging or costumes, within 15 to 20 minutes duration with soloists and a small group of instruments).
An opera is a dram, written by a text (libretto), set to music, with soloists, chorus, costumes, scenery, action and orchestra. Its dictionary meaning is "Opus"(work). Music in an opera is integral, not incidental, as in a musical or play with music. The early operas consisted of recitatives (musical declamation which reflect the movement and accent of speech, rather than that of a regular musical rhythm. Then aria gained importance. In contrast to the wandering recitative, aria had some consistent, regular and extended plan. It leaned towards song and dance rhythms. It had a continuous melodic material. The audience came to opera to hear the well-known performers singing the expressive arias. This was the origin of the star performer today.
The first opera was written in 1600. Peri and Caccini jointly set to music a pastoral mythological drama, Euridice. It was publicly performed in Florence, in honor of the marriage of Henry the Fourth of France and Marie de Medici. Its libretto was written by Rinuccini. This is the first complete opera of the earliest surviving. In the early Baroque (1600-1650) Monteverdi; in the mid Baroque (1650-1700) Lully (with his comedie ballet and tragedy lyrics); in the late Baroque (1700-1750) G. F. Handel were the masters of “opera”.
For the court, “opera” was a grandoise entertainment; for the church it was attractive to bring the people once more to its orbit. Church used the techniques of the opera in the oratorio and staged operas on sacred subjects.
In an oratorio, the action was narrated or suggested by a chorus and soloists, but not presented as in the opera. Early oratorios had sacred subject matter and used chorus for the dramatic purposes. The main difference between an opera and oratorio is that oratorio never meant to be staged. There is chorus, soloists and orchestra and a text in saecred subject.

By the middle of the 18th century, many composers felt a need to reform opera and bring it into line with changing attitudes toward music and drama. Christoph Willibald Gluck (1714-1767) achieved an international style that remained influential throughout the classical period. Gluck was born in Bohemia, studied in Italy, visited London and toured in Germany as a conductor of an opera troup, became court composer to Vienna, triumphed in Paris under the patronage of Marie Antoinette. His operas are under the influence of the reform in opera so they carry more radical ideas of the time. Gluck achieved his mature style with the operas of Orfeo and Alceste, assimilating Italian melodic grace, German seriousness and magnificance of French tragedy lyric.
The goals of operatic reform were to restore the poetry to its central place, to remove excessive vocal acrobatics, and to emphasize the drama. These goals required, in Gluck's words, a "beautiful simplicity" in the music, which became characteristic of classical opera. His influence on the form and spirit of opera was transmitted to the 19th century through Cherubini and Berlioz.
Opera Seria (Serious Opera)
The new Italian opera, eventually dominated the stages of Europe in the 18th century. Opera seria was the product of the same forces, that were reshaping all other forms of music in the age of the Enlightenment: It aimed to be clear, simple, rational, faithful to nature, of universal appeal and capable of giving immediate pleasure to its audience.
The musical interest of the Italian opera in the Baroque Age was centered in the arias. (Aria is a solo vocal piece in A-B-A form.) Operatic arias became more elaborated in the Classical Age. The orchestra had not much to do but accompany the aria singers. (Except for the overture which is an instrumental opening of the opera). Recitatives (musical dialogues) were accompanied by a harpsichord. Among the singers there were famed Italian castrati-plural of castrato (male soprano and alto). One of the most original composers of the new style was Pergolesi. Althought he is best known for his comic intermedi (plural of intermezzo), he also composed opera seria.
Comic Opera
The 18th century comic opera consisted of the works that were lighter in style than the serious opera. They presented familiar scenes and characters rather than heroic or mythological material; also required modest performing resources (like a modest setting). First it was a revolt against the tragic Italian opera. Librettos were in national tongue and the music suggested national tunes. Comic opera took different forms in different countries and continued in the 19th century with the same manner.
In Italy the important type was intermezzo. It began as presenting comic-short musicals between the acts of a serious operas. An early master of this style was Pergolesi, and his work La serva Padrona (The maid as mistress) is still popular. In Vienna, the opera buffa came a long way in the course of the century. Later, in Vienna, Mozart made good use of its mingled heritage of serious, comic and sentimental drama and widely acceptable musical style.
In France, the national form of light opera known as opera comique. Popular tunes and simple melodies were used for the entertainment. The opera comique flourished through the Revolution and the Napoleonic era and took on even greater musical significance in the Romantic period. In England, ballad opera of which Thomas Arne was the principal composer rose to popularity after the extraordinary success of the Beggar's Opera in London (1728). Ballad opera consisted of popular tunes, ballads with a few numbers parodied from familiar operatic arias. In Germany, there were singspiels, as they called opera in the 1700. These were theatrical plays (spoken dialogues) with music. In 1800, the 18th century singspiels found their ways into German song collections, thus in the course of time have become practically folk songs. The history of singspiel merged with that of early 19th century German Romantic opera.
It remained for Mozart, however, to bring classical opera, in most of its forms, to perfection. His melodical gift--a keen dramatic sense, skillfully wrought ensembles, and perfect, formal construction--contributed to the creation of music that has never been surpassed.

Mozart Operas
Mozart’s chief passion lay in his operas. He wrote a school opera in Latin when he was eleven, and a full scale comic opera at 12. The operas, however which always stood firmly in the public taste are three: The Magic Flute, Don Giovanni and The Marriage of Figaro. The Magic Flute is regarded as the first and one of the greatest of modern German operas for its rich music and profound, symbolic meaning.
Comic opera had a device of putting all the characters on the stage together by singing against each other. Mozart used this device to have a dramatic complexity in his Figaro. Mozart has two type of operas: Italian and German. Not only in language but also in style they belong to different countries.
German Operas: The Magic Flute and Abduction from the Seraglio (Saraydan Kız Kaçırma). He wrote the Abduction in the style of singspiel (singing play) which means it is originally a school play, using spoken dialogues in the native language.
Don Giovanni: (1787) Don Juan is a drama written for Prague by Mozart. Tragedy of Everyman. (Inspired by the moral plays of the middle ages). It is a sub type of comic opera with the presence of some serious character. When the great seducer is eventually dragged down to hell by the statue of the man he killed, the remainders of the characters come on to the stage, and warn the audience to learn from this and to behave themselves. This they do in a solemn tone but the music is so cheerful as an opera comic kind.
The Magic Flute: (1791) It looks like an English pantomime. (a singspiel with spoken dialogues) It is highly moral with personifications of good and evil on the stage, it takes the form of a popular entertainment with songs; it suggests the working of the supernatural forces in the middle of a tale about ordinary human beings. The action takes place in ancient Egypt, near a temple of Isis and Osiris. a spectacular fairy tale for the public rather than the aristocracy of Vienna. Thus it is written in German rather than Italian, used spoken dialogues instead of recitatives and made a comedy burlesque rather than wit. One of the opera’s most enchanting qualities is its use of popular songs, fancy coloratura (acrobatic soprano), slow marches and a glockenspiel (a percussive instrument like xylophone with bells)
Mozart wrote 24 operas.
Serious operas:
Idomeneo; La Clemenza di Tito
Comic Operas:
Cosi Fan Tutte (All women are like this); The Marriage of Figaro; Don Govanni.
Singspiel (a German style with spoken dialogues)
Abduction from Seragglio; The Magic Flute.


TURKISH INSPIRED WORKS OF MOZART
Mozart was inspired by the percussive effects of the Janissary band. He used the percussiveness thru the rhythms and instruments.

Zaide (an unfinished opera)
Abduction from the Seraglio (opera-singspiel style-spoken dialogues)
Violin concerto no.5 (in the last movement cellos have percussive effect)
Piano Sonata K.331 (The last “all turca” section- right hand bells, left drums)

OPERA OF THE 19th CENTURY

OPERA OF THE 19TH CENTURY
In the beginning of the 19th century the opera centers moved from Italy to France. Those composers who imigrated from Germany and Italy to Paris, carried their own cultural and technical background with them. They were also inspired by the general atmosphere of French nation. Napoleon wanted formal, highly melodious, very pompous music for his France. The military pomp and ceremony with heroic music appealed to the men; its human drama of forbidden passion, voiced in noble classical style with fervent singing and rich orchestral accompaniment, attracted the audience. So this was the birth of French Grand Opera.
GRAND OPERA- Crowded scenes, rich decoration, showy dances, crowded chorus, historical background, strong melodramatic climaxes and a splendid music (with rich orchestration) are the main characteristics of this style. Another important characteristic of the Grand Opera is that all dialogues are sung. There are no spoken dialogues on the stage. The Grand Opera was developing in France since the time of Lully.
Meyerbeer was the leader of this genre in Paris and quickliy became the dictator in Paris opera. In Italy Rossini was the leader of this genre. Later on Verdi (e.g.Aida) and Wagner operas can be classified as grand opera.
Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791-1864), German composer, whose flair for the drama influenced the work of the German composer Richard Wagner. He was born in Berlin, went to Venice in 1815, where he adopted the melodic style of the Italian composer Gioacchino Rossini. He wrote six Italian-style operas, then moved to Paris, and studied French opera, which differed from the Italian in its emphasis on extravagant settings and ballets (which were inserted as interludes between acts) and in the predominance of choral and instrumental music over solo arias. It also treated more serious subjects, usually historical ones. In his final phase, Meyerbeer composed six French operas that established the grand-opera style and gained him fame throughout Europe. His most important work was in rehearsal at the time of his death, L'Africaine –The African (1865).
COMIC OPERA: Side by side with the Grand Opera, there occured another genre in Paris which was called the “opera comique”. The main technical difference between these two genres are the way of handling the recitatives (musical declamations). In the Comic Opera there are spoken dialogues on the stage, where in the Grand Opera every word is sung. It is shorter than the Grand Opera, and the subjet matter is lighter, even comical. The melodical and rhythmical elements flow naturally in music, harmonic structure is not complicated. The orchestra is less crowded, the decoration and the dances are not exaggerated. Instead of lofty places the familiar scenes were preferred. Like the public square in a village took the place of an esteemed mythological palace setting.
Originally, Bizet’s Carmen was classified as a comic opera because of the spoken dialogues in it. Eventhough the subject matter is tragic, and realistic, from technical point of view, originally it was classified as a “comic opera”. After Bizet died, all of the spoken dialogues in Carmen were composed by some other composers. Now we don’t find any non-sung passages in new versions of this tragic-realistic opera.
The light operas of Jacques Offenbach are good example to the comic opera genre. They deal with the laxities of Parisians: “Orpheus in the Underworld” is light-hearted with its lively melodies like the legendary “can-can” dance in it.
Operetta is the Vienna product of comic opera. Johann Strauss composed Der Fledermaus (The Bat-Yarasa) in Vienna. Gilbert and Sullivan composed Mikado in England. And it opened the gates for Broadway musicals of USA in the beginning of the 20th century.
LYRIC OPERA-The romantic branch of the comic opera gave way to this genre. It is in between the Grand Opera and Comic Opera. It has attractive melodies with romantic, dramatic and fantastic subjet matter. In France, this genre was recognized only with dance and ballet scenes in it. Charle Gounod’s Faust is the best example for this sort.
ITALIAN ROMANTIC OPERA-The story of Italian music in the 19th century is essenitally the story of opera. The orchestra gains an important role with the Italian composers. They composed both for serious kind and for comic kind. Four important signitures dominate the operatic scene during the Romanticism of the 19th century: Rossini, Donizetti, Bellini and Verdi.
Gioacchino Rossini (1792-1868), Italian composer, the most successful operatic composer of his time. He was outstanding in his comic operas and was one of the great 19th-century exponents of the bel canto style (singing beatifully thru stressing vocal agility and precision), which emphasizes beauty of melodic line, rather than drama or emotional depth.
Born 1792, at Pesaro and trained at the Conservatory of Bologna, Rossini composed 37 operas. His most successful opera is The Barber of Seville, produced in Rome in 1816. No comic opera has ever been as much loved and performed. The brillant “patter song” sylabbles are articulated at a crazy speeed reflecting the comic effect. Beautiful melodies and symphonic writing are his characteristics. Of his other operas, those most frequently and successfully revived today are The Italian Girl in Algiers, (1813), Il Turco in Italia (The Turk in Italy, 1814), and Cinderella (1817). After 1831, Rossini composed no further operas and during the rest of his life produced only two important works, the Stabat Mater of 1842 and The Petite Messe Solenelle (1864). Despite his long retirement, he remained one of the great personalities of the musical world. He died in France, on November 13, 1868.
Rossini's operas were the last and best in the Italian comic opera style. Typically light and lively, their music is notable for its high degree of comic characterization. Rossini used the bel canto style to fashion bright melodies, which the singers could deliver with brilliant effects and stirring expression.
Gaetano Donizetti (1797-1848), Italian operatic composer, born in Bergamo, and educated in music at the Naples Conservatory. He composed 65 operas and operettas. He did not become widely known until his 33rd opera, which was Anna Bolena, was produced in 1830. Donizetti's musical style, considerably influenced by that of Rossini, is characterized by brilliant and graceful melodies, designed chiefly for virtuoso singers. He is a full blodded romantic, using sentimental effects with big and complex dramatic scenes. His grand opera Lucia di Lammermoor (1835), is his most popular work. The mad scene, the hysterical arias of Lucia is very typical in romantic operas. Some of his light operas are The Elixir of Love (1832), and Don Pasquale (1843).
Vincenzo Bellini (1801-1835), Italian composer, born in Sicily, and trained at the Conservatory of Music, Naples. His opera Il Pirata (The Pirates) was composed for La Scala Opera House in 1827. In 1831 the premieres of two of Bellini's most famous operas, The Sleepwalker and his masterpiece, Norma, brought him international fame. In the aria of Casta Diva (Norma), the melody is in a tension, tries to breath but always climbs to a climax. The hysterical crises in this work are very typical of romantic opera. In 1835 he composed his final work, The Puritans. Bellini was a meticulous craftsman. He composed for singers who were masters of bel canto. He was highly sensitive to the relation between text and music, and his operas gain their greatest dramatic impact through his melodies, which are often admired for a characteristic concentrated beauty. He used to create melodies and store them, and after finding the proper setting he used them accordingly.
Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901), Italian operatic composer, whose works stand among the greatest in the history of opera. Born as the son of illiterate peasants on October 10, 1813, in Roncole in the French-governed state of Parma, he first studied music in the neighbouring town of Busseto. Then, upon being rejected in 1832, because of his age, by the Milan Conservatory, he became a pupil of Vincenzo Lavigna. He returned to Busseto in 1833 as conductor of the Philharmonic Society.
At the age of 25 Verdi again went to Milan. His first opera, Oberto, was produced at La Scala Opera House with some success in 1839. His next work, the comic opera Un giorno di regno (King for a Day, 1840), was a failure. In the mean time Verdi was lamenting also the recent deaths of his wife and two children, then he decided to give up composing. After more than a year, however, the director of La Scala succeeded in inducing him to write Nabucco (1842). The opera created a sensation; its subject matter dealt with the Babylonian captivity of the Jews, and the Italian public regarded it as a symbol of the struggle against Austrian rule in northern Italy. After this success he composed a couple of operas which have survived in the permanent operatic repertory.
Verdi's three following works, Rigoletto (1851), Il Trovatore (1853), and La Traviata (1853), brought him international fame and remain among the most popular of all operas. Operas written in the middle of Verdi's career, including Un ballo in maschera (A Masked Ball, 1859), La forza del destino (The Force of Destiny, 1862), and Don Carlo (1867), exhibit a greater mastery of musical characterization and a greater emphasis on the role of the orchestra than his earlier works. Aïda (1871), also of this period and probably Verdi's most popular opera, was commissioned by the Hidiv of Egypt to celebrate the opening of the Suez Canal; it was first performed in Cairo. Three years later, Verdi composed his most important non-operatic work, the Requiem Mass in memory of the Italian novelist Alessandro Manzoni.
Verdi had been considered as a national hero because general public considered his operas with the historical subject matter, symbolizing the situation of Italians at the end of the 19th century. In all of his operas there is a powerful chorus which is the sound of general public. With his patriotic appeal he became a member of the parliment for long years, and “Viva Verdi” was an equal saying as “Viva Victoria Emmanuela Re d’Italiy”. Victoria Emmanuela, the king of Italy who saved his nation from the siege of Austurians.
In his seventies, Verdi produced perhaps the finest of his operas, Otello (1887), composed to a libretto skilfully adapted by the Italian composer and librettist Arrigo Boito from Shakespeare's tragedy Othello. This was followed by Verdi's last opera, Falstaff (1893), also adapted by Boito from Shakespeare, and generally considered one of the greatest of all comic operas. Verdi died on January 27, 1901, in Milan.
In general, Verdi's works are most noted for their emotional intensity, tuneful melodies, and dramatic characterizations. He transformed the Italian opera, with its traditional set pieces, old-fashioned librettos, and emphasis on vocal display, into a unified musical and dramatic entity. His operas are among those most frequently produced in the world today.

BIZET'S CARMEN OPERA

Background to Bizet’s Carmen:
In 19th century Paris, Oriental subjects with opportunities for exotic-sounding music, were very much favored. George Bizet (1838-1875) also used oriental subjects because like his contemporary painters he was also impressed by the North Africa, Moors etc. Two of his operas before Carmen: The Pearl Fishers (1863)-Far East- and Djamileh (1872)-Egypt-. Orient means a far off setting giving dramatic opportunity for an exceptional, exotic touch in the music. Far East, India, Africa,Spain with their folkloric characters became very interesting. Offered a rich imagination for the artists. For Carmen, Bizet found another orient at the very door of France: Spain.
Carmen, as the character of “seductive Spanish gipsy”-Escamillo, a Spanish hero, a Toreador.
Carmen was composed in 1875, displeased most of the critics and called as a failure. It is said that it caused the early death of its composer.
Tschaikovsky, visiting Paris at this time, prophesied that within ten years it would be the most popular opera in the world. Maybe he overestimated. But Carmen became a real favorite of all the opera houses since then.
Carmen opera is classified as a “comique opera” in spite of its tragic and realistic subjet. This is a technical classification. The use of spoken dialogue, in place of recitative, is a typical feature of the comic opera genre. After Bizet’s death Carmen was performed and published in all-sung version, with recitatives replaced the spoken-dialogues.

It is in a way a Grand Opera with its crowded scenery, dances and chorus.
Chorus of soldiers, street boys, townspeople, cigarette girls, gypsies, smugglers.
Also it was influenced by Wagner’s operas in the usage of leitmotive. (When Escamillo is introduced, the bullfight music repeats and suddenly Carmen’s motif comes.)
Indeed, Carmen is a direct outpoor of human feelings. Everything is open. Nothing is hidden and is not presented through the embellishments.
It was a shock for the regular opera audience: Girls were smoking on the stage! It was a disgusting death for a heroine. It was so sudden for Don Jose to kill her immediately. It was too blody to drow a parrallel with the bull fight and the crime of human being outside the arena.
With all these features, Carmen opened the gates to the Realistic opera genr, which is called as verismo:

VOICES
Singer is given one instrument at birth. And each person has his own voice range which characterizes his own color. In opera, singers are classified by range: There are six classification: Soprano, highest female voice; Mezzo-soprano, middle; contralto, the lowest female voice. Tenor is the highest male voice, bariton, the middle and bass is the lowest male voice.
In many operas the leading female role is soprano. But Carmen and Dalia are exceptinos, they are is mezzo-sopranos, which means it is the middle female voice.
Carmen:Mezzo=middle soprano
Micaela: A lyric soprano. A voice with a light, innocent quality.The role is graceful, charming and sentimental.
Don Jose-is a tenor. Which is symbolises a pure and youthful male voice.
Escamillo-Bariton (sometimes bass) A darker voice, an elder, more powerful figure.

ORCHESTRA
The opera orchestra, like many others, divides into four groups: String, brass, woodwinds and percussion. An 18th century opera may require 25-30 players where a Wagner opera may require 153 performers in the orchestra.

Bizet’s scoring is unusual for its simplicity and clarity for his time. It doesn’t have exotic instruments except the castanets and the tambourine, both of which Carmen introduces on the stage. For Carmen, the violins play in their lower range. For Micaela they play sweetly in their higher range. For Escamillo he used the trumpets, horns and trombones to reflect his courage. For Don Jose, the most complicated character, and the only one who developed thor the whole opera, he used the whole orchestra with some emphasis on the woodwinds.
The introduction to the chorus of the boys is a solo for two piccola flutes. (The smallest flute plays the highest notes).
The English horn introduces Act 2, and is the solo insturement throughout Don Jose’s flower song. Trumpet is used many times. Like The change of guard and the boys chorus. French Horn, colors the aria of Micaella, and their duets.

Act 4: After Escamillo leads in Carmen, he tells that within the hour she will be proud of him. It is his proudest and tenderest moment,his offering of his courage to her. The cellos have the melody and the double-bass group. The violas weave around them.
Except for the final chords, the opera ends with human voice: Don Jose’s broken voice.More realistiic, more touching.
DANCES
French people did not accept operea before adding dances in it.
In Carmen, Habanera-originally an African dance which went to Cuba-Habana-Havana-came to be a popular Spanish dance.Sings and dances in Act 1. Seguidilla- an old Spanish dance in the first act Carmen seduces Don Jose. Use of the castanets is very attractive.

The Romantic Composers

Franz Schubert (1797-1828), Austrian composer, whose songs are among the masterpieces of that genre and whose instrumental works reflect a Classical heritage as well as looking forward to 19th-century Romanticism.
Schubert was born on January 31, 1797, in Vienna. The son of a pious schoolmaster, he became a choirboy and began studies at the school for court singers. He played violin in the school orchestra. His earliest works are some songs. When his voice broke in 1813, Schubert began teaching in his father's school. The following year, he wrote his first opera which had never been popular at all. In the same years he also wrote his first Mass, in F major; and 17 songs. In 1815 Schubert completed his second and third symphonies and wrote two masses, in G and B-flat major, other sacred works, some chamber music, and 146 songs, including “Erlkönig” (Erl King), based on a mythological figure of death. That year, he also worked on five operas, that he could never complete. In 1816 he wrote his Symphony in C Minor, known as the Tragic Symphony (No. 4), the Symphony in B-flat Major (No. 5), additional sacred music, an opera, and more than 100 songs. About this time Schubert gave up teaching, devoting himself exclusively to composition. Not a success with the general public during his lifetime, Schubert was recognized as a composer of genius by a small circle of friends, among them the poets, playwrights and the singers.
He also composed sacred music such as the Twenty-third Psalm and the unfinished oratorio Lazarus. A group of his songs was published in 1821. In 1822 he wrote the Symphony in B Minor (No. 8), known as the Unfinished Symphony, and the Mass in A-flat. His song cycle Die Schöne Müllerin (The Miller's Beautiful Daughter) was composed in 1823. For the next two years Schubert wrote constantly, producing the Symphony in C Major (No. 9), known as The Great in 1825, and the song cycle Die Winterreise (Winter's Journey) in 1827. Some of his last works were published after his death under the title “Swan Song”. Schubert died on November 19, 1828, of typhoid fever.
Schubert's early instrumental works, which follow the patterns used by Mozart and Haydn, are marked as Romantic by a new sonority and a harmonic and melodic richness. In his early piano sonatas, Schubert worked to free himself from the influence of Beethoven.
Schubert's instrumental works show development over a long period of time, but some of his greatest songs were composed before he was 20 years old. In Schubert's songs the literary and musical elements are perfectly balanced, matched on the same intellectual and emotional level. Although Schubert composed impressive songs throughout his career, he did not follow set patterns but accomplished bold and free forms when the text demanded it. His reputation as the father of German Lieder (“art songs”) rests on a body of more than 600 songs.
Lied is a song based on a poem sung by a vocal soloist and accompanied by piano. The piano part reflects the mood of the poem in a dramatic way.

Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847), German composer, one of the leading figures of early 19th-century European Romanticism. Born Jakob Ludwig Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy on February 3, 1809, in Hamburg, he was the grandson of the noted Jewish philosopher Moses Mendelssohn. (The name Bartholdy was added to his surname when the family inherited property from a relative of that name, but he was always known by his original name.) As a child he converted with his family to Protestant Christianity. Mendelssohn first appeared in public as a pianist at the age of 9 and performed his first original compositions when 11 years old. His masterly overture to A Midsummer Night's Dream was composed at the age of 17; the famous “Wedding March” and the rest of his incidental music to the play were written 17 years later.
A revival of public interest in the works of Johann Sebastian Bach was directly attributable to Mendelssohn, who in 1829 found the musical material of St Matthew Passion in a butcher’s shop and conducted the first performance of it within three months.
Mendelssohn appeared as a pianist and conductor throughout Europe, making frequent trips to England, where he was a favourite of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. He was musical director for the city of Düsseldorf (1833-1835), conductor of the Gewandhaus Orchestra in Leipzig (from 1835), and musical director to King Frederick William IV of Prussia (from 1841). In 1842 he helped to organize the Leipzig Conservatory. He suffered a physical collapse at the death of his favourite sister, Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel (one of the female composers in the history of music known to us) and died a few months later in Leipzig on November 4, 1847.
In spite of an enormously active schedule as pianist, conductor, and teacher, Mendelssohn was a fertile composer. With his symphonies we enter into the geograpihcal realm. Of his five symphonies, the best known are the Italian Symphony (1833) and the Scotch Symphony (1843). His organ and choral music is among the best of the 19th century and includes, for choir and orchestra, his oratorios, cantatas are important works. His organ works constituted the most important addition to the organ repertoire since the works of J. S. Bach. Also important are the Variations sérieuses (1841) for piano; his concert overtures, including The Fingal’s Cave Overture (1832); his concertos for violin (1844) and for piano (1837); and the eight volumes of Songs Without Words for piano.
His Romanticism shows most clearly in his use of orchestral colour and in his fondness for programme music depicting places, events, or personalities. Structurally, Mendelssohn's music attaches to classical forms. It is lyrical and graceful, and in a harmonic idiom that places him among the more conservative composers of his time
Niccolo Paganini (1782-1840), Italian violonist and composer. The son of a dockyard worker. He is regarded as the greatest of all violin virtuosos. Composed very difficult pieces according to his own talent. His Mephistophelean appearance led to stories that his virtuosity stemmed from demon-like powers. His legendary pact with the Devil ensured that he could not be buried in consecrated ground, and his body continued to be moved aronud until 1926. He composed 24 Caprices for unaccompanied violine, 3 violin concertos, chamber works and works for guitar.
Robert Schumann (1810-1856), German composer, a principal figure of the early Romantic movement in 19th-century music. Schumann was born on June 8, 1810, in Zwickau, Saxony, and educated at the universities of Leipzig and Heidelberg. The son of a bookseller, he early became absorbed in literature, particularly that of the German Romantic writers. In 1830 he abandoned the study of law in order to devote himself to music. He studied piano with the German teacher Friedrich Wieck, but a permanent injury to one of his fingers forced him to abandon the career of pianist. He then turned to composition and the writing of musical essays. In 1834, in an attempt to fight what he saw as the artistic philistinism (uncultured, anti-intellectual) of the time, he founded the music journal Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, which he edited until 1844. Schumann married the pianist Clara Josephine Wieck, the daughter of his former teacher, in 1840. As Clara Schumann, one of the emminent pianists of history of music, she became a major exponent of his piano works. In 1843 Schumann was appointed to the faculty of the newly founded Leipzig Conservatory, but finding himself temperamentally unsuited to teaching, he soon resigned. In 1850 he was appointed town music director of Düsseldorf; advancing mental illness, which had threatened him since adolescence, forced him to resign in 1854. That same year Schumann attempted suicide by throwing himself into the Rhen river and was confined to an asylum near Bonn, where he died on July 29, 1856.
One of the most typical of Romantic composers, Schumann characterized himself in two imaginary figures, the forceful Florestan and the poetic Eusebius, whose names he signed to his critical articles and whose musical portraits he drew in his piano suite Carnaval (1834-1835). During 1840, following his marriage after years of opposition from Clara's father, he achieved what is generally considered his greatest work when he suddenly turned to writing songs. In that year he composed 138 songs.
Schumann's piano works are largely musical expressions of literary themes and moods. With the exception of the Fantasy in C Major (1836) and Études Symphoniques (1854), his finest piano compositions consist of cycles of short pieces in which a single lyrical idea is brought to completion within a small framework. In addition to Carnaval, these include Butterflies, (1831), Scenes from Childhood, (1838), Kreisleriana (1838), and Album for the Young, (1848). Although Schumann rarely achieved in his larger works the unity of form found in his songs and piano pieces, they do contain much that is beautiful and dramatic. This is particularly true of the First Symphony (1841), Piano Quintet (1842), Piano Concerto (1845), Second Symphony (1846), and Piano Trio (1847). The Fourth Symphony has an innovative form in which the four movements are linked and play continuously. He also wrote an unsuccessful opera, Genoveva (1848).
Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849), Polish composer and pianist of the Romantic school, regarded by some as one of the greatest composers of piano music.
Born March 4, 1810, near Warsaw, of a French father and a Polish mother, Chopin began to study the piano at the age of four and when eight years old played at a private concert in Warsaw. Later he studied harmony and counterpoint at the Warsaw Conservatory. He was precocious also as a composer; his first published composition is dated 1817. He gave his first concerts as a piano virtuoso in 1829 in Vienna, where he lived for the next two years. After 1831 he lived in Paris, where he became noted as a pianist, teacher, and composer. He formed an intimate relationship in 1837 with the French writer George Sand. In 1838 Chopin began to suffer from tuberculosis and she nursed him in Majorca in the Balearic Islands and in France until continued differences between the two resulted in separation in 1847. Thereafter his musical activity was limited to giving several concerts. He died in Paris on October 17, 1849, of tuberculosis.
Nearly all of Chopin's compositions are for piano. Although an expatriate, he was deeply loyal to his war-torn homeland; his mazurkas reflect the rhythms and melodic traits of Polish folk music, and his polonaises are marked by a heroic spirit. The influence of Italian opera composer Vincenzo Bellini can also be heard in his melodies. (Bellini was an inventor of beautiful melodies). His ballades, scherzos, and études (studies, each testing a particular aspect of piano technique) exemplify his large-scale works for solo piano. His music, romantic and lyrical in nature, is characterized by wonderful melody of great originality, refined—often adventurous—harmony, subtle rhythm, and poetic beauty. Chopin's many published compositions include 55 mazurkas, 27 études, 24 preludes, 19 nocturnes, 13 polonaises, and 3 piano sonatas. Among his other works are Concertos in E minor and in F minor, a cello sonata, and 17 songs.
Hector Berlioz (1803-1869), French composer, and conductor, who was a principal force in the development of 19th-century musical Romanticism. Berlioz was born in La Côte-Saint-André on December 11, 1803, and was originally educated in medicine in Paris. Abandoning medicine, he studied music from 1823 to 1825 at the Paris Conservatoire. In 1830 he won the Prix de Rome which was (and still is) the most important price for the composers where they spend one year in Rome as a reward. He toured the Continent and Great Britain several times as a conductor and also wrote musical criticism.
Berlioz's position in 19th-century music is that of an influential figure, directly influencing symphonic form and the use of the orchestra as well as musical aesthetics; to many he exemplifies the Romantic image of the composer as artist. He laboured ceaselessly to promote the new music of his time. Forced to train orchestras to meet the demands of this music, he educated a generation of musicians and became the first virtuoso conductor. His Symphonie fantastique (1831) created an aesthetic revolution by its integral use of a literary programme (inspired by his fascination for the Irish actress Harriet Smithson), and established programme music as a dominant Romantic orchestral genre. In this work and in Harold in Italy (1834), for viola and orchestra, his use and transformation of a recurrent theme (the ideé fixe, or fixed idea) foreshadowed the genre termed symphonic poem by the Hungarian composer Franz Liszt; the genre was developed by many notable composers such as Richard Strauss and Richard Wagner, who developed the idea known as Leitmotiv in German, to an enormous extent in his music dramas, in which each character and concept in the drama was given its own Leitmotiv, a musical label.
Among his most important works is the monumental opera The Trojans (1859), in which his Romanticism is infused with Classical control. Other works include the symphony with chorus Roméo et Juliette (1838), the cantata The Damnation of Faust (1846), the requiem mass Grande messe des morts (1837), the oratorio, The Childhood of Christ, (1854), and the “The Roman Carnival Overture (1844). Berlioz died in Paris on March 8, 1869.
Franz Liszt (1811-1886), Hungarian-born pianist and composer, originator of the solo piano recital and, through his network of pupils, the most influential pianist of the 19th century. Also he is the creator of the genre called, Symphonic Poem.
Liszt was born on October 22, 1811, near Sopron in Hungary. He studied the piano first with his father, then with the Austrian pianist Carl Czerny in Vienna, where he also studied theory with the Italian composer Antonio Salieri. In 1823 he moved with his parents to Paris, where he soon established himself as a pianist. Residing in Paris for 12 years, Liszt knew many of the city's intellectuals, including composers such as Berlioz and Chopin and, among many literary acquaintances, the novelist and poet Victor Hugo, the poet Alphonse de Lamartine, and the German poet Heinrich Heine. His connections with the Italian violin virtuoso Nicolò Paganini particularly inspired him to establish the same, “transcendental” level of technique for the piano that Paganini had for the violin. In 1833 Liszt met the French countess Marie d'Agoult, known as a writer under the pen name Daniel Stern. They formed a liaison that endured until 1844, and they had three children, one of whom, Cosima, became the wife of the German conductor Hans von Bülow and later of the German composer Richard Wagner.
From 1839 to 1847 Liszt toured Europe from Lisbon to Moscow and from Dublin to Istanbul, rising to a degree of fame first-time for a performing artist. In 1847, however, he abandoned his career as a virtuoso, rarely playing in public again. The same year he met the Russian princess Carolyne Sayn-Wittgenstein, who remained his closest, most influential companion for the rest of his life. From 1848 to 1861 he was musical director at the grand ducal court at Weimar, giving performances of works by Berlioz, Wagner, and others, as well as his own.
Departing from Weimar in 1861, Liszt for nearly ten years resided chiefly in Rome, where he studied theology and became a lay cleric (almost a priest). After 1871, dividing his time between Rome, Weimar, and Budapest, he continued to conduct, teach, compose, and to promote the music of Wagner. He died in Bayreuth, Germany, on July 31, 1886, during the Wagner Festival there.
Liszt was one of the most remarkable personalities of his time. Aside from his achievements as pianist and conductor, Liszt taught more than 400 pupils, turned out some 350 compositions, and wrote or collaborated on 8 volumes of prose, not counting his correspondence. He also made more than 200 piano arrangements and transcriptions of works by other composers, whose music he wished to advance.
Liszt was one of the 19th century's harmonic innovators, especially in his use of complex, chromatic (half-tone) chords. His compositions for the piano inaugurated a revolutionary, difficult playing technique that gave to the piano an extraordinary variety of textures and sonorities. Among his well-known works for the piano are the 12 Transcendental Etudes (1851), the 20 Hungarian Rhapsodies (1846-1885), Six Paganini Etudes (1851), Concerto No. 1, in E-Flat (1849), Concerto No. 2, in A-Major (1848), and the character pieces making up the three-volume Years of Pilgrimage (1855, 1858, 1877). Some of these last, representing nature scenes, anticipate the impressionism of the French composer Claude Debussy. The orchestral works include, besides the Faust and Dante symphonies (both 1857), 13 examples of the symphonic poem, a genre of programme music that Berlioz invented and Liszt named; Les préludes (1854), the best known, is based on a poem by Lamartine. Although the ultimate value of Liszt's large output remains uncertain, its originality is unquestioned; in harmony and form, his later compositions foreshadow music of such 20th-century composers as the Austrian Arnold Schoenberg (in the atonality of his works), and the early nationalistic works of the Hungarian Béla Bartók.
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897), German composer, one of the major composers of the 19th century, whose works combine the best of the Classical and Romantic schools. Brahms was born in Hamburg on May 7, 1833. After studying the violin and cello with his father, a double-bass player in the city theatre, Brahms mastered the piano and began to compose under the guidance of the German music teacher Marxsen. In 1853 Brahms went on a concert tour as accompanist to the Hungarian violinist Eduard Reményi. In the course of the tour he met the Hungarian violinist Joseph Joachim, who introduced him in turn to the German composer Robert Schumann. Schumann was so impressed by Brahms's unpublished compositions that he wrote a wildly enthusiastic magazine article about him. Brahms cherished a deep affection for both Schumann and his wife Clara, a famous pianist. The friendship and encouragement he received from them gave motivation to his work. Many biographers contend that Brahms was deeply in love with Clara, but he did not propose to her after Schumann's death in 1856, and he never married.
In 1857 Brahms secured appointment as conductor at the court theatre in Detmold, where he remained until 1859; for several years thereafter he travelled in Germany and Switzerland. His first major work to be publicly presented was the Piano Concerto No.1 in D Minor, which he performed in Leipzig in 1859. The composition was not well received, however, because it lacked the showiness and the virtuoso passages then in vogue. The composer went to Vienna in 1863 and became director of the Choral Academy but left the post a year later.
In 1868 Brahms won fame throughout Europe following the performance of his A German Requiem, so called because the text is taken from Luther's German translation of the Bible rather than the Latin texts normally used. The piece, cast in seven divisions, focuses on the sorrow of those who mourn, rather than speculating on the fate of the dead. Brahms settled in Vienna in 1871 and devoted himself for composing.
Until 1873 Brahms had written chiefly for the piano, the instrument he knew best, and for chorus and orchestra (and he continued to write piano music until the end of his life). In that year, however, he produced the Variations on a Theme by Haydn, scored for full orchestra. His masterpieces include the Four Symphonies (1876,1877, 1883, 1885); the Academic Festival Overture (1880),Tragic Overture (1881). All these works display a tightly knit structure, stemming from the Viennese Classical tradition. Unlike his contemporaries, Brahms shunned exploitation of new harmonic effects and new tone colours for their own sake. He concerned himself rather with creating music of inherent unity, utilizing new or unusual effects only to enhance internal structural nuances. Thus, his best works contain no extraneous passages; each theme, each figure, each modulation is implicit in all that has preceded it. The Classicism of Brahms was a unique phenomenon in its day, entirely at odds with the trends in contemporary music as represented especially by the German composer Richard Wagner.
Brahms wrote in every medium except opera. The Violin Concerto in D Major (1878), a classic in the violin repertoire; 3 string quartets; 5 trios; a clarinet quintet; numerous other chamber works for various combinations of instruments; and more than 150 songs. Brahms died on April 13, 1897, in Vienna.

ROMANTICISM (1827-1900)

There were always romantic elements in music and still are. The 19th century Romantic movement began in English and German literature about the years of 1770 (Sturm und Drang-Storm and Stress movement which was also reflected in some of the symphonies of Haydn), and found its musical voice during the early part of the 19th century. Then romanticism remained as a dominating force in music for a hundred years.
In very broad terms, romanticism is an attitude of mind that rejects the logical intellect and instead trusts in the instinct and emontion. This age is a reaction against the previous Classsicism which was the Age of Reason. Romantic art is emotional, exaggerated, fantastic, unbalanced, full of excitements, does not feed itself upon the conscious mind. The artist discovers his isolation and enjoys his solitude in his dreams.
The adjective “romantic” comes from romance, which had an original literary meaning of a Medieval tale or poem treating heroic personages or events and written in Latin language which was roman: Arthurian Romances of King Arthur.
Therefore, when the word ROMANTIC came into use in the middle of the 18th century, it carried the cannotation of something far off, legendary, fictional, fantastic, marvelous, fanciful and imaginary. The ideal world of the Romantics was contrasted with the actual world of the peresent. It was addition of strangeness to beauty. The artists began to praise the Gothic art for its irregularity rather than the symmetry of the Classics. There was a change from the symmetrical and simple art of the Classical Age towards the irregular and complex exposition of the Gothic Age.
Industrilizaton, scientific discoveries, and the crowded cities pushed the artists away from the society. The rising men were bankers, politicians, military generals, who did not have time for art in any form. There occured a gap between the artist and the audience. Then the artist had turned into himself, exploring his own emotions and discovering the depths of his personality. Art regarded as a mirror of the artist’s soul. Art existed for its own sake, instead of existing for the sake of society.
For the inspiration, artists looked at the vanished ages, distant lands; irrational, unusual and fantastic stories and exotic subjects. Witches, fairies, ghosts, supernatural forces and far off ages, like the Middle Age, became interesting.
Nationalism, as a typical characteristics of the late romanticism, blossemed as an effective force in music after the mid of the century.
The 19th century music is remarkable for its consistent exploration of new sounds. In expressing the inner emotions, the composers began to use dissonant (disharmonic-restless, opposite of consonant) sounds as well as very deep melodical lines. Classical theory of consonance no longer supported practice. By the end of the century the theories of coherence in a composition, (which was the ideal of classicism) had collapsed. And this collapse became a gate to the modern music of the 20th century.
Romanticism was seen as a revolt against the limitations of classicism.
Programme music, huge orchestrations, the piano, lied, grand operas with spectacular scenes as well as light operettas, Verdi’s heroic operas, Wagner’s musical dramas-monumental-, are some of the characteristics of this age.

COMPARING THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE CLASSICAL AND THE ROMANTIC AGES
CLASSICAL ROMANTIC
Cultural uniformity (International) National-local
Artist :An ordinary member of society In isolation, rejoicing solititude
Daily, natural Remote, strange
Order, control. Freedom, passion.
Perfection within limits Endless pursuit of unattainable
Being rather than Becoming
Achieving “ “ Striving
Rational expression “ “ Emotional and inspired
Taste of ordinary man “ “ Idealized mankind (audience)
Consious mind “ “ Unconsciousness
Balance, moderation “ “ Exaggeration, fantasy,excitement
Proportion “ “ non-proportionate
Form must control content “ “ Content decides form.

The following poem of Wordsworth is a good example for a romantic artist rejoicing his solitude:

THE WORLD IS TOO MUCH WITH US
The world is too much with us; late and soon,Getting and spending we lay waste our powersLittle we see in Nature, that is ours;We have given our hearts away, a sordid boon!The sea that bears her bosom to the moon;The winds that will be howling at all hours,And are upgathered now like sleeping flowers;For this for everything we are out of tune;It moves us not.-Great God! I'd rather beA Pagan suckled in a creed outworn;So might I, standing on this pleasant lea,Have glimpses that would make me less forlorn;Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea;Or hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn.
William Wordsworth-1806
ROMANTIC LITERATURE: Goethe; Wordsworth, Victor Hugo, Balzac,Therau., Pushkin. Nietzche (in search of the ideal mankind)
ROMANTIC PAINTING: Millet, Delacroix, T.Rousseau, Goya.
Natural scenery became very influential-the country side became very attractive for escaping from the industrilized city life. All the poems, novels and paintings described nature with an admiration. Thus music in the Romantic Age, more than before, sought to paint picture or tell a story and carried a programme in this sense.
THE CROWD AND THE INDIVIDUAL
The individual patronage of the 18th century began to dissapear.There was a growth of concert societies and musical festivals and this was a transition from a small, homogenous and cultural audience to the huge and unprepared middle class public. Composer used to know his small audience previously. But now he had to reach a vast new audience. This situation had driven the composer into his isolation. Now he was not composing for a patron, to entertain a small group in the society, but for an imaginative audience, hoping to be appreciated one day.
PROFESSIONAL MUSICIANS
In contrast to the amateur musicians of the Classical Age (that each member of aristocracy was playing an instrument, like lute or harpsichord), the professional standards of performers improved. That opened the gates to the virtuosity (excellence) in performing.
PUBLIC CONCERTS
Opposed to music given in aristocratic houses under the patronage of nobility, public concerts were invented. John Banister, a London violonist arranged the first concert series in a City Tavern. In Paris the famous “Concert Spirituel” series had been inagurated in 1725. The concerts of the Leipzig Gewandhaus came later in the century, in 1781. These were the concerts similar of today: Paying money and buying tickets. The concert halls were also built in this century. They came on the scene by the decline of the private patronage as well as the immense growth of large scale symphonic music. Performers were too crowded for a small room, they needed large stages. Then big concert halls with acoustically (perfect audible conditions) well decorated interiors were constructed.
Since the symphonic music gained importance at the beginning of the Romantic Age, the composers required a crowded performer group for their works and the chamber music that used to be performed with a few performers in small rooms became less important during this period. We may say that chamber music dominates the Classical Age, and symphonic music dominates the Romantic Age.
Another novelty that rose with the symphonic music was the presence of a conductor. In the early days of symphonic music, relatively small forces of musicians were used in performance. The members of the orchestra would be coordinated by a keyboard (e.g.harpsichord or lute) player. He set the tempo, helped those who had gone astrays to find the places again, provided a harmonic support of the ensemble and stressed the rhythmic pulse. Orchestration, in the age of Mozart and Haydn was a relatively straight forward matter. With the increasing orchestral recources, there was no way that the entire orchestra could follow a tempo given by someone seated among them, directing from a keyboard. There became a conductor, giving the beat with a baton or roll of music papers. After the fashion of some dance-band maestros, some conductors faced the audience while conducting the orchestra. By the middle of the 19th century, with the immense orchestral forces around him, the conductor needed a very sophisticated ear to judge the balance of the players. Towards the end of the 19th century, by the increase of the members in the orchestra, the conductor had to keep control over a hundred players. (Since the age of recording, the job of a conductor has become more complex-to learn the ever increasing repertoire, because public is less tolerant for the mistakes..)
SYMPHONIC MUSIC IN THE ROMANTIC AGE
Symphony means “sounding together”. So the orchestral music is called symphonic music. It can be considered in four catagories in the Romantic Age:
1)Symphony-A German preoccupation. German and Austrian composers like Schubert, Schumann, Mendelssohn, Brahms, Mahler and Bruckner contributed to this genre. The main characteristic of a 19th century symphonic writing was the thematic unity, wherein all the musical ideas in a symphony were derived from one or two main thematic germs (as in Beethoven’s 5th symphony). Cyclic unity was an off spring of this idea, which experimented in binding together the various movements (sections), either by referring back to the important themes or by continual reference to one basic motto theme.
2)Programme Symphony- Following the precedent of Beethoven’s Pastoral symphony, musical description became an important element in symphonic writing. The weight of symphony no longer depends on pure musical logic, but on expressing the drama of the composer’s inner life. Most composers were using picturesque descriptive elements, emotional excurtions and theatrical effects. The characteristic 19th century symphony is a sympony with programme. Sometimes the story is explained in so many words by the composers, sometimes it was merely implied (felt by the listener to be there). In any way, there was a problem of symphonic form. This was a problem of musical unity. It was impossible to trust in the story and let the music look after itself! So the programme-music composers evolved systems for ensuring musical coherence. Hector Berlioz evolved “Idee Fixe” (fixed idea method), where the obsessional idea used during each movement, as in his Fantastique Symphony. This system gave way to the cyclical symphonic forms of later 19th century (Cesar Franck). Franz Liszt used a system that he called “Metamorphosis of themes”. There are some MOTTO movements that are recurring and providing a unity for the piece. This is also parallel to the “leitmotive” usage of Wagner in opera.
The programme music gave way to symphonic poem, which is a large free form in one movement, intended to outline a definite story or paint a picture. Franz Liszt is the father of symphonic poems. Later on Richard Staruss became a master of it.
3) Concert Overture- Mendelssohn’s Fingal’s Cave is a descriptive tone-poem reflecting the romantic affects of sea scape and storm. A concert overture is identical in structure with the operatic overtue (a movement in the sonata form of ABA). It is short and descriptive. It is performed as the introductory piece within the symphonic concert programmes. Opera overture is played before the rise of the curtain of the opera performance.
4) Solo Concerto- With the rise of virtuoso performer and the increase in public concerts, the solo concerto became popular. It kept many of its classical features, but there were certain important structural modifications that emphasized the dramatic effects. Romantic concerto was different in style and manner. Mozart treated the soloist and orchestra as partners of equal standing. There was a polite interchange, a mutual understanding between the soloist and the tutti (ensemble). Romantic composer thought in terms of virtuosity and technical brillance. The polite conversation turned into a pitched battle- sometimes a fight to death between solo and orchestra. Most 19th century concertos are for piano and violin. These two instruments suited to display the emotional intensity.
SCIENCE AND THE INDIVIDUAL
Expansion in excat knowledge and scientific methods, as a reaction, music was searching something beyond the boarders of rational and going into the unconsciousness and supernatural. (e.g.Berlioz- Fantastique Symph.)
MATERIALISM AND IDEALISM
The essential spirit of romantıc age, was both idealistic and secular. None of the famous composers wrote liturgical (sacred, pertaining to liturgy, like Bible) pieces.
Instrumental music was thought to be more romantic than the vocal compositions. Because the words of vocal music may divert the pure feelings. But with an instrumental music, the listener may dream his fanciful images as much as he wants.
There is no typical romantic symphony or composer, as no novel, poem or artist. Complex personages were the characters of the operas. Intensitiy of feeling displayed. Melancholy led to pathological states of nihilism, plus insanity, plus suicide (e.g.Young Werther). Mad scenes, hysterical reactions in opera became fashionable: Flying Dutchman, Lucia, Butterfly.
THE POLITICAL BACKGROUND
USA-Andrew Jackson, the 7th president of the States. RUSSIA-1.Tsar Nicolai . AUSTRIA-Prince Metternich. FRANCE-Louis Philippe (last king of the country). ENGLAND- Queen Victoria
Romantic musician tends to support political stability. He hated wars and political unstability. He hated social disorder.
INDUSTRIALIZATION was a principal historical trend of the time. Watts discovered the steam machine in 1769. That opened the gates to the trains and railroads and communication facilities. In the cities with the mechanical development and establishment of factories, offered a cacophonic (ill-sounding) life for the artist.
Art was used as an escape from such a mechanical society. Each artist of the epoch praised an unspoiled, pre-industrial nature.
MUSIC-technical changes: If remotness and boundlesness were romantic qualities, then music is the most romantic of all arts. Its material is almost completely detached from the concrete world of objects, and this makes music able to reflect the flood of impressions, thoughts and feelings.
Romantic music has very long melodic sentences; where classical music was phrase dominated. Melodic line floats. Music seems to be reaching, striving, yet it never reaches to a final goal. Cadence is a final pause of harmonic progression. The end of a sentence. In romantic music, there is a feeeling as if the cadances are never to come, the piece is never to end. Cadences are in a tension. A second meaning of the “cadence” is that the soloist in a concerto shows his/her virtuosic abilities by the hard passages, almost in an imrovisatory mood and without the orchestral accompaniment.
Tempo and nuance (dynamics-sound level) markings increased. For the classical composers musical terminology were simpler, but for the romantics terminology became complicated. Such as, a simple “allegro” gained modifying adjactives as “molto allegro ma non troppo”. Not a simple “forte” (f) but using extremes of dynamic indications: ffff, or not a simple piano (p) but pppp, could be used.
Harmonic dissonances (disagreeable sonority) were also used instead of consonant (agreeable) sound of classicism. Harmonically the music is dense. The orchestra was enlarged, creating a rich sonority ( mass tone of voice.)
Tonality (definition of a given key) is widened: Unprepared shifts from one key to another was tolerated. This was to give a more dramatic expression. Minor tones, instead of Major tones, became popular for their mystical colors. Almost all of the Requiems (prayer for dead) were written in minor tones.

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)

At the turn of the 18th century to the 19th, Ludwig van Beethoven came on the scene as an explosion. His works were built on the achievements of the Classical Period. He inherited a style and certain musical forms from Haydn and Mozart. Beethoven’s music embodied a new dynamism and power that symbolized the changing role of the composer in the society. Well, the composer was no longer the servant of the society who used to be required submissively to meet its needs. The composer became a hero in the 19th century society. Beethoven transformed the Classical heritage into the source of Romantic Period. Beethoven himself was neither a Classical composer, nor a Romantic one. He is Beethoven and his figure towers like a huge statue in the history of music. We name the years between 1790-1830 as the AGE OF BEETHOVEN.
When we take a look at the historical events of his time, we find that in 1789 there was the French Revolution. Napoleon Bonaparte had begun his rise to the dictatorship. In 1792, George Washington was the president of the United States. Joseph Haydn was at the height of his fame, and Mozart’s body was lying in an unmarked grave in a Viennese cemetery. The Battle of Waterloo in 1815 was very impressive in the social change of European life. And Beethoven, unlike Mozart, was very much impressed by the historical events of his time, which is a sign for romanticism.
Beethoven was born in Bonn. His grandfather was Flemish and emigrated to Bonn and was a court singer. His father was a court musician as well and had every intention of turning his son into a child prodigy, a second Mozart. The child was beaten, overworked and forced to practice long hours. He played in public when he was eight years old. But his precocity was not similar to Mozart’s. He was removed from school at eleven, in order to be concentrated in music. He had instructions on the piano, organ and violin. He studied composition with a remarkable composer in the baroque tradition, called Neefe who was an organist from Bonn. At 13 years old, he had a position as an assistant organist. At 17, he went to study in Vienna. There he probably had some lessons with Mozart, who prophesied a bright future for him. Then he had to go back home to see his dying mother. Afterwards he had to take care of his family because his father was a drunkard. His main duty was to play viola in the theater orchestra of the court of Count Waldstein. Since Bonn was too small for a developing composer, then Beethoven went to Vienna again to study with Haydn in 1792. The lessons were not succesful. Then he studied with the leading teachers of the day, including Gluck and Salieri. Meanwhile he was establishing himself as a bright pianist. As a pianist, Beethoven had a deep fire, brillance and fantasy. His first published work was also for his instrument: A piano trio of op.1 in 1795.
For thirthy years, he produced music of all kinds in a steady flow. His first public appearance was a soloist in his second piano concerto (in order of composition, no.1), in 1795. Five years later he conducted his first symphony in Vienna. In 1805, his only opera Fidelio (Leonora) was performed. Then his famous symphonies followed each other ending with the 9th, which has a choral final by the text of Schiller (1824), “Ode to Joy”.
Beethoven stayed in Vienna until his death. He always ran after an unattainable love, which is a characteristic of the romantic composer. During his lifetime he head a couple of crises. His first crises caught him when he discovered his deafness to be perpetual. The second crises of his lifetime occured when he had to come to an end with his love affair. This should be an affair with the wife of one of his best friends. In 1825 his brother Karl died. Beethoven wanted to legalize his son as of his. This procedure took quite a long time and afterwards the nephew Carl, at 10, tried to commit suicide. This event was to cause another crises period for Beethoven. He spent a few months at his nephew’s house. As he came back home, he was a sick man. For three months he lay in his bad. On the 27th of March, 1827, in a stormy weather, with a thunder he gave his last breath. His tomb is in the central cemetery of Vienna.
Beethoven’s music, more than that of any composer before him, gives the impression of being a direct outpouring of his personality. This is a step to Romanticism, where the content became more important than the form. But Beethoven also kept the tradition of Classical age where the form should balance the content. Comparing to his predecessors, the main outstanding characteristics of Beethoven’s music, is the quality of passionate energy. The energy breaks forth also as humor, not like the playfulness of Haydn or the gaity of Mozart. He had something more robust, and hearty, a romantic irony. Still his music is not always volcanic or exuberant; it may melt into tenderness, like in the second movement of his piano sonata op.90; or sadness, like the Adagio of his op.59. Sudden change of mood is another characteristic of his works, like the finale of the 9th symphony.
Beethoven’s deafness had started as early as 1798, when he was 28 years old. And it grew worse and worse until 1820, then he became totally deaf. As a gifted and thoroughly trained musician, with a perfect inner ear, he could hear music, by looking at it, and could write the ideas that came into his head. As time went on, he became more and more sensitive and he turned to himself, unable to share his thoughts with others, growing steadily more touchy, eccentric and more aggressive. He kept notebooks and sketchbooks for his compositions. He had a habit of taking long walks and composing out-of-doors. His physical appearance was described as a “Red face with small piercing eyes, bushy eyebrows, white hair, and wearing a black overcoat all the time. He used to have a forceful laughter that was painful to his listeners.

BEETHOVEN’S CREATIVE LIFE
Bethoven’s creative life has traditionally been divided into three periods. Vincent d’Indy, the French composer and musicologist (at the same time he was the tudor of Adnan Saygun during his stay in Paris, aronud 1928) calls them the periods of Imıtation, Externalization and Reflection.
Imitation Period (1795-1802)
These years are Beethoven’s youth and early manhood, with his establishment as a major composer, imitating the works of Haydn and Mozart. The first three piano sonatas are influenced by Haydn and dedicated to him. Instead of three movements, Beethoven’s sonatas are in four. Same structure reflects to his symphonies as well: The classical Minuetto is replaced by a brisky Scherzo.
His works in this period carry a classical form with a romantic content. Piano Sonatas (OP.7, 10, 13); piano trios, Quartets op.18; violin sonatas no.1, op 12, violoncello sonata op.5, septet for strings op.20; First symphony (Haydnesque), second symphony and the piano concerto no.2, which is indeed the first in order of composition, belong to this period.
Externalization Period (1803-1816)
This is his middle life in which he handled all musical forms with full command and produced many of his most famous works. Beethoven never in his life had to write music for anyone else’s command. He wrote for himself, for an ideal universal audience and not for a patron. Therefore his music is strongly pernsonal, a direct expression of himself and of his historical epoch. In this period we find an eccentricity of speech and manner in his works: Third Symphony (Eroica-heroic-idealization of Napoleon); fourth; fifth (fate knocking the door with the famous four chords); sixth (Pastoral-descriptive titles, suggesting scenes from country life, storm, man’s glad acceptance of nature); seventh and eigth were written in this period.
His orchestral overtures are related in style to these symphonies (Egmont, Leonora, Coriolan). The last three piano concertos, the only violin concerto, trio concerto; his only opera Fidelio, Razumovsky quartets; violin sonatas, piano sonatas, are the products of this period. ( Sonatas like Moonlight, Apassionata, Waldstein).
Reflection Period (1816-1827)
The years around 1815 were the most pleasant years for Beethoven. His music was much played in Vienna and he was celebrated both home and abroad. His financial affairs were in good order thanks to the demand of publishers and the generosity of patrons. But his deafness cuased him to loose contact with others and he became very suspicious even towards his close friends. He retreated into himself and isolated from others. The trials social and personal, that Beethoven underwent seem to have a clear reflection in his music. His deafness prevented him to hear new works of other composers, so his own idiom instead of altering as the years passed, stayed basically the same, only growing more refined and concentrated. The great climaxes to his life’s work were still to come: They consist of two choral works (9th Symphony and Missa Solemnis) and a group of string quartets Op.135. “Diabelli Variations” for piano show how he changed his concept on theme and variation form where he discovered new layers of meaning in each variation. His last five piano sonatas are also in this group.
The character of his third style works are meditative. A feeling of tranquility and calm affirmation replaced his former agitation and passionate outpouring. His musical language became more abstract and concentrated. He invented new sonorities. His 9th Symphony is a vision of perfection and eternal human bliss. First performed in 1824, Beethoven introduced a choir, soloists and orchestra together to join in the expression of the feelings about humanity and universal brotherhood. The words are from Schiller’s “Ode to Joy”.
Only a few of his contemporaries understood his late works. They were so personal that they could hardly be imitated. Beethoven was chiefly concerned with the truth (content), not beauty (form) in his last string quartets (Op.135). The revolutionary element, the demon like spirit and the underlying conception of music as a mood of self-expression fascinated the romantic generation.

“Müzikten İbaret Bir Dünyada Gezintiler”



“Dünya Kitapları tarafından yeni anılar ve resimlerle zenginleştirilen ikinci baskıda kitaba ekli CD’lerde besteciyle yapılmış söyleşiler ve her döneminden müzikler yer alıyor. Yeni baskıda, Seher Tanrıyar’ın çaldığı “Hatıradan İbaret bir Şehirde Gezintiler” başlıklı piyano yapıtı da ilk kez CD üstünde sunulmuş oldu. Osmanlı’dan Cumhuriyet’e geçişin bir simgesi olan, besteciliği, şefliği, piyanistliği, öğretmenliği ve kuruculuğuyla Türk çoksesli müziğinin başlıca öncüsü olan Cemal Reşit Rey’in yaşamı yüzlerce belgeyle anlatılıyor.