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Concertos
Music Sound
Concertos
Sinfonia concertante | Concerto grosso | Concerto for Orchestra | Piano concerto | Viola concerto | Violin concerto | Violoncello concerto | Concertino | Clarinet concerto | Harpsichord concerto
In
classical music, the word concerto (pl. concerti; from
the
Italian concerto, which means concert) is a label for
a piece in which a small musical group and a large musical group are
given distinct roles, with the smaller group to the fore. The most
common kind of concerto pairs a
solo instrument with a full
orchestra. The term also implies the form of a piece, as most pieces
called "concerto" have three
movements, in which the first movement is typically a
sonata form and the last a
rondo.
The term apparently arose in the beginning of the 17th century, and as its
etymology
suggests, came to describe chiefly compositions which bring unequal instrumental
or vocal forces into opposition.
Early usage
Early in the 17th century, and persisting in some cases into the mid-18th,
the term "concerto" was applied as one of several indiscriminate choices for any
piece that featured opposing or contrasting sonic groups, particularly voices
with
continuo (see also
concertato).
The first major influences on the concerto were made by
Antonio Vivaldi who established the ritornello form used in the movements. He
wrote the famous group of violin concerti titled The Four Seasons. By Johann
Sebastian Bach's time the concerto as a polyphonic
instrumental form was thoroughly established. The term frequently appears in the
autograph title-pages of his church
cantatas,
even when the cantata contains no instrumental
prelude. Indeed, so entirely does the actual concerto form, as Bach
understands it, depend upon the opposition of masses of tone unequal in volume
with a compensating inequality in power of commanding attention, that Bach is
able to rewrite an instrumental movement as a chorus without the least
incongruity of style.
A splendid example of this is the first chorus of a university festival
cantata, "Vereinigte Zwietracht der wechselnden Saiten", the very title
of which ("united contest of changing strings") is a perfect definition of the
earlier form of
concerto grosso, in which the chief mass of the orchestra was opposed, not
to a mere solo instrument, but to a small group called the
concertino or else the whole work was for a large orchestral mass in which
tutti passages alternate with passages in which the whole orchestra is dispersed
in every possible kind of grouping.
But the special significance of this particular chorus is that it is arranged
from the second movement of the first
Brandenburg concerto and that while the orchestral material is unaltered except
for transposition of key, enlargement of force and substitution of trumpets and
drums for the original horns, the whole chorus has been evolved from the solo
part for a kit violin
(violino piccolo).
This admirably illustrates Bach's grasp of the true idea of a concerto,
namely, that whatever the relations may be between the forces in respect of
volume or sound, the whole treatment of the form must depend upon the healthy
relation of function between that force which commands more and that which
commands less attention.
Ceteris paribus: the individual, suitably placed, will command more
attention than the crowd, whether in real life, drama or instrumental music. And
in music the human voice, with human words, will thrust any orchestral force
into the background, the moment it can make itself heard at all.
Hence it is not surprising that the earlier concerto forms should show the
closest affinity (not only in general aesthetic principle, but in many technical
details) with the form of the vocal
aria, as matured by
Alessandro Scarlatti. And the treatment of the orchestra is, mutatis
mutandis, exactly the same in both.
Concerto in music
The orchestra is entrusted with a highly pregnant and short summary of the
main contents of the movement, and the solo, or the groups corresponding
thereto, will either take up this material or first introduce new themes to be
combined with it, and, in short, enter into relations with the orchestra very
like those between the actors and the chorus in Greek drama. This relation is
often more complex according to the composer's judgment rather than any strict
rule, with the orchestral section that precedes the solo entry - the "tutti" -
often containing material whose reappearance must wait until some dramatic point
much later in the movement, or may, as in some of Mozart's piano concerti, never
be heard again at all.
Evolution of the form
If the aria
before
Mozart may be regarded as a single large
melody expanded
by the device of the
ritornello
so as to give full expression to the power of a singer against an instrumental
accompaniment, so the polyphonic concerto form may be regarded as an expansion
of the aria form to a scale worthy of the larger and purely instrumental forces
employed, and so rendered capable of absorbing large polyphonic and other types
of structure incompatible with the lyric idea of the aria.
The da capo form, by which the aria had attained its full dimensions
through the addition of a second strain in foreign keys followed by the original
strain da capo, was absorbed by the polyphonic concerto on an enormous
scale, both in first movements and finales (see Bach's Clavier concerto in E,
Violin concerto in E, first movement), while for slow movements the ground bass diversified by changes of key (cavier concerto in D minor), the more
melodic types of
binary
form, sometimes with the repeats ornamentally varied or
inverted (Concerto for 3 klaviers in D minor, Concerto for clavier, flute
and violin in A minor), and in finales the rondo form (Violin concerto in E
major, Clavier concerto in F minor) and the binary form (3rd Brandenburg
concerto) may be found.
When conceptions of musical form changed and the modern
sonata style arose (see also
sonata
form), the peculiar conditions of the concerto gave rise to problems the
difficulty of which only the highest classical intellects could appreciate or
solve. The number and contrast of the themes necessary to work out a first
movement of a sonata are far too great to be contained within the single musical
sentence of Bach's and
George Frideric Handel's ritornello, even when it is as long as the thirty bars
of Bach's Italian Concerto (a work in which every essential of the polyphonic
concerto is reproduced on the harpsichord by means of the contrasts between its full register on the lower
of its two keyboards and its solo stops on both).
Bach's sons had taken shrewd steps in forming the new style; and Mozart, as a
boy, modelled himself closely on
Johann Christian Bach, and by the time he was twenty was able to write
concerto ritornellos that gave the orchestra admirable opportunity for asserting
its character and resource in the statement in charmingly epigrammatic style of
some five or six sharply contrasted themes, afterwards to be worked out with
additions by the solo with the orchestra's co-operation and intervention.
Solo and tutti passages
As the scale of the works increases the problem becomes very difficult,
because the alternation between solo and tutti easily produces a sectional type
of structure incompatible with the high degree of organization required in first
movements; yet frequent alternation is evidently necessary, as the solo is
audible only above a very subdued orchestral accompaniment, and it would be
highly inartistic to use the orchestra for no other purpose. Hence in the
classical concerto the ritornello is never abandoned, in spite of the enormous
dimensions to which the sonata style expanded it.
And though from the time of Mendelssohn onwards most composers have seemed to
regard it as a conventional impediment easily abandoned, it may be doubted
whether any modern concerto, except the four magnificent examples of Johannes
Brahms, and Dr Joachim's Hungarian concerto, possesses first
movements in which the orchestra seems to enjoy breathing space. And certainly
in the classical concerto the entry of the solo instrument, after the long
opening tutti, is always dramatic in direct proportion to its delay.
The great danger in handling so long an orchestral prelude is that the work
may for some minutes be indistinguishable from a symphony and thus the entry of
the solo may be unexpected without being inevitable. This is especially the case
if the composer has treated his opening tutti like the exposition of a sonata
movement, and made a deliberate transition from his first group of themes to a
second group in a complementary key, even if the transition is only temporary,
as in Ludwig van Beethoven's C minor concerto.
Balance in the classical concerto
Mozart keeps his whole tutti in the
tonic, relieved only by his mastery of sudden subsidiary modulation; and so
perfect is his marshalling of his resources that in his hands a tutti a hundred
bars long passes by with the effect of a splendid pageant, of which the meaning
is evidently about to be revealed by the solo. After the C minor concerto,
Beethoven grasped the true function of the opening tutti and enlarged it to his
new purposes. With an interesting experiment of Mozart's before him, he, in his
G major concerto, Op. 58, allowed the solo player to state the opening
theme, making the orchestra enter pianissimo in a foreign key, a wonderful
incident which has led to the absurd statement that he abolished the opening
tutti, and that Mendelssohn in so doing has followed his example.
In his C minor concerto, Beethoven also gave considerable variety of key to
the opening tutti by the use of an important theme which executes a considerable
series of modulations, an entirely different thing from a deliberate modulation
from material in one key to material in another. His
fifth and last piano concerto, in E flat, commonly called the Emperor,
begins with a rhapsodical introduction of extreme brilliance for the solo
player, followed by a tutti of unusual length which is confined to the tonic
major and minor with a strictness explained by the gorgeous modulations with
which the solo subsequently treats the second subject.
In this concerto, Beethoven also dispenses with the only really conventional
feature of the form, namely, the
cadenza, a
custom elaborated from the operatic aria, in which the singer was allowed to
extemporize a flourish on a pause near the end. A similar pause was made in the
final ritornello of a concerto, and the soloist was supposed to extemporize what
should be equivalent to a symphonic coda, with results which could not but be
deplorable unless the player (or cadenza writer) were either the composer
himself, or capable of entering into his intentions, like Joachim, who has
written the finest extant cadenza of classical violin concerti.
Contrast and the romantic concerto
Brahms's
first piano concerto in D minor, Op. 15, was the result of an immense amount
of work, and, though on a mass of material originally intended for a symphony,
was nevertheless so perfectly assimilated into the true concerto form that in
his next concerto, the
violin concerto, Op. 77, he had no more to learn, and was free to make true
innovations. He succeeds in presenting the contrasts even of remote
keys
so immediately that they are serviceable in the opening tutti and give the form
a wider range in definitely functional key than any other instrumental music.
Thus in the opening tutti of the D minor concerto the second subject is
announced in B-flat minor.
In the
B-flat piano concerto, Op. 83, it appears in D minor, and in the double
concerto, Op. 102, for violin and violoncello in A minor it appears
in F major. In none of these cases is it in the key in which the solo develops
it, and it is reached with a directness sharply contrasted with the symphonic
deliberation with which it is approached in the solo. In the violin concerto,
Brahms develops a counterplot in the opposition between solo and orchestra,
inasmuch as after the solo has worked out its second subject the orchestra
bursts in, not with the opening ritornello, but with its own version of the
material with which the solo originally entered.
In other words we have now not only the development by the solo of material
stated by the orchestra but also a counter-development by the orchestra of
material stated by the solo. This concerto is, on the other hand, remarkable as
being the last in which a blank space is left for a cadenza, Brahms having in
his friend Joachim a kindred spirit worthy of such trust. In the piano concerto
in B-flat, and in the double concerto, the idea of an introductory statement in
which the solo takes part before the opening tutti is carried out on a large
scale, and in the double concerto both first and second subjects are thus
suggested.
Structure of movements
It is unnecessary to speak of the other movements of concerto form, as the
sectional structure that so easily results from the opposition between solo and
orchestra is not of great disadvantage to slow movements and finales, which
accordingly do not show important differences from the ordinary types of
symphonic and chamber music. The
scherzo, on
the other hand, is normally of too small a range of contrast for successful
adaptation to concerto form, and the solitary great example of its use is the
second movement of Brahms's B-flat piano concerto.
Nothing is more easy to handle with inartistic or pseudoclassic effectiveness
than the opposition between a brilliant solo player and an orchestra; and, as
the inevitable tendency of even the most artistic concerto has been to exhaust
the resources of the solo instrument in the increased difficulty of making a
proper contrast between solo and orchestra, so the technical difficulty of
concerti has steadily increased until even in classical times it was so great
that the orthodox definition of a concerto is that it is an instrumental
composition designed to show the skill of an executant, and one which is almost
invariably accompanied by orchestra.
This idea is in flat violation of the whole history and aesthetics of the
form, which can never be understood by means of a study of averages. In art the
average is always false, and the individual organization of the greatest
classical works is the only sound basis for generalizations, historic or
aesthetic.
Media
See also
References
Layton, Robert, ed. A Companion to the Concerto. New York: Schirmer
Books, 1989.
ISBN 0028719611.
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