Chinese music
Chinese music the classical music forms of China.
Origins and Characteristics
Chinese music can be traced back as far as the third millennium BC Manuscripts and instruments from the early periods of its history are not extant, however, because in 212 BC, Shih Huang-ti of the Ch'in dynasty caused all the books and instruments to be destroyed and the practice of music to be stopped. Certain outlines of ancient Chinese music have nevertheless been ascertained. Of primary significance is the fact that the music and philosophy of China have always been inseparably bound; musical theory and form have been invariably symbolic in nature and remarkably stable through the ages. Ancient Chinese hymns were slow and solemn and were accompanied by very large orchestras. Chamber music was also highly developed. Chinese opera originated in the 14th cent. as a serious and refined art.
Tone and the Instruments
In Chinese music, the single tone is of greater significance than melody; the tone is an important attribute of the substance that produces it. Hence musical instruments are separated into eight classes according to the materials from which they are made—gourd (sheng); bamboo (panpipes); wood ( chu, a trough-shaped percussion instrument); silk (various types of zither, with silk strings); clay (globular flute); metal (bell); stone (sonorous stone); and skin (drum). Music was believed to have cosmological and ethical connotations comparable to those of Greek music. The failure of a dynasty was ascribed to its inability to find the proper huang chung, or tone of absolute pitch.
The huang chung was produced by a bamboo pipe that roughly approximated the normal pitch of a man's voice. Other pipes were cut, their length bearing a definite mathematical ratio to it. Their tones were divided into two groups—six male tones and six female. These were the lüs, and their relationship approximated the Pythagorean cycle of fifths. Legend ascribes their origin to birdsong, six from that of the male bird and six from that of the female, and the tones of the two sets were always kept separate.
The lüs did not constitute a scale, however. The scale of Chinese music is pentatonic, roughly represented by the black keys on a piano. From it, by starting on different notes, several modes may be derived. The melody of vocal music is limited by the fact that melodic inflection influences the meaning of a word. Likewise, quantitative rhythms are not easily adaptable to the Chinese language.
Musical Notation
Several types of notation were used. Singers used the syllabic symbols for the five notes of the pentatonic scale, as did players of pipes. Players of the stone and bell chimes, which were tuned to the lüs, used symbols that represented the pitch names of the lüs. Players of flutes and zithers used a kind of tablature. None of this notation indicated rhythm.
Modern History
Throughout the political and social turmoil following World War I, Western (classical and popular) and Japanese sources dominated Chinese music. At present, Western concepts of harmony are in active use but are generally applied to vocal genres, such as cantatas and music dramas, which have educational as well as musical value. The Beijing Opera has produced numerous new works since 1949, most of them concerning political topics. It is one of the few forums of traditional performance style, although there is an ongoing effort directed by the Beijing Institute of National Music to preserve the few remainders of ancient musical practice.
Bibliography
See J. H. Levis, Foundations of Chinese Musical Art (2d ed. 1964); E. Halson, Peking Opera (1966); bibliography by F. Lieberman (1970, 2d ed. 1979).
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Luca Marenzio: the career of a musician between the renaissance and the counter-reformation.(Classical Composers)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Notes; 9/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; Luca Marenzio: the Career of a Musician between the...translation into English of Marco Bizzarini's Marenzio: La carriera di un musicista tra Rinascimento...published before the quatrocentenary of Marenzio's death in 1999. That book was quickly...
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Bibliografia delle opere dei musicisti resciani pubblicate a stampa dal 1497 al 1740. Opere di singoli autori.
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 6/22/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...and grant from the Centro di Studi Musicali "L. Marenzio" in Brescia, the noted musicologist Oscar Mischiati...being the birthplace (i.e., Coccaglio) of Luca Marenzio. Although Marenzio never practiced his profession in Brescia, it...
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Giovanni Contino.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: Notes; 9/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...Brescia as maestro di cappella (where he may have taught Luca Marenzio), and for Duke Guglielmo Gonzaga in Mantua, where...later. Thanks in part to the Centro di Studi Musicali "Luca Marenzio" in Brescia, Contino's music has begun to appear...
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Singers find splendor
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 10/12/2003; ; 619 words
; ...Costanzo Festa, Sanctus also by Palestrina, Agnus Dei by Luca Marenzio -- woven among motets by Johannes Bonnevin, Johannes...Melchor Robledo, Tomas Luis de Victoria, Palestrina, Marenzio and Felice Anerio. The program covered about 80 years...
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Hexachords in Late-Renaissance Music.(Review)
Magazine article from: Notes; 6/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...de Lassus, Cipriano de Rore, Giaches de Wert, and Luca Marenzio. Similarly, in chapter 4, he examines settings of...Cruda Amarilli" (from Il pastor fido) by Wert, Marenzio, Benedetto Pallavicino, and Claudio Monteverdi. A...
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CLEMSON CHORAL CONDUCTOR TO MAKE DEBUT PERFORMANCE
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 11/10/2009; 700+ words
; ...want to die), "Contre Qui Rose" (Against whom, Rose) by Morten Lauridsen, and "Sweet Singing Amarills" by Luca Marenzio. "These three selections showcase the development of the madrigal from its height during the Renaissance through...
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Paolo Quagliati.(Review)
Magazine article from: Notes; 12/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...polyphonic. The polyphonic sections of these works are airy in texture, resembling the four-voice madrigals of Luca Marenzio, Giovanni Croce, and their English imitators. They feature short contrapuntal points, which quickly blend into...
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Le fonti liturgiche a stampa della Biblioteca musicale L. Feininger presso il Castello del Buonconsiglio di Trento.
Magazine article from: Notes; 12/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...Roman musicians but also Orazio Benevoli, Giacomo Carissimi, Agostino Diruta, Giovanni Gabrieli, Orlando di Lasso, Luca Marenzio, and Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina). Relatively few works in the collection have been edited. By contrast...
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Madrigali a cinque voci.
Magazine article from: Notes; 12/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...Willaert, Cipriano de Rore, Orlando di Lasso, Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, Andrea Gabrieli, Giaches de Wert, Luca Marenzio, and Claudio Monteverdi. And filling in the picture further are the works of some slightly less-central figures...
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Glorious Voices: Renowned female vocal quartet Anonymous 4 to perform works celebrating classical deities
Newspaper article from: The Independent Weekly; 4/10/2002; ; 511 words
; ...musicians and composers associated with St. Mark?s Cathedral in Venice during the 16th century. In the same period, Luca Marenzio and Jacob Arcadelt were papal chapel musicians in Rome. But it?s the curious things they did on their nights off...
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Luca Marenzio
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Luca Marenzio The Italian composer Luca Marenzio (c. 1553-1599) was the greatest master of the Italian...influence in the development of the English madrigal school. Luca Marenzio was born in Coccaglio and may have been a chorister in the...
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madrigal
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...imitative style, the expression closely allied to the text. In the last part of the 16th cent. composers such as Luca Marenzio, Carlo Gesualdo (c.1560-1613), and Monteverdi intensified the expression of the text by the use of chromaticism...
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