The Classical Music Book

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movement, the Renaissance. As
the taboo surrounding secular
music disappeared, composers
expressed themselves more freely,
and their music spread through
Europe, especially after the
invention of a method for printing
and therefore distributing music.
No longer controlled by the Church,
musicians sought employment
in the aristocratic courts of Italy,
France, Britain, and the Netherlands,
where they made a comfortable
living providing entertainment.
The Church still wielded some
power, however, and after the
Reformation, a more austere musical
style was imposed on the Protestant
churches in northern Europe, and
even the Catholic authorities looked
to curb the complexity of polyphony.
Composers thus developed a simpler
yet more expressive harmonic
style. Monteverdi’s Vespers of 1610
broke new ground for sacred music
by incorporating elements of this
exciting new style.

Musical explosion
Around the same time, in Florence,
a group of intellectuals called the
Camerata de’ Bardi came up with
a new form of entertainment,
combining music and drama to
create opera. This was a success
in the aristocratic courts, which

continued to act as patrons to
composers and performers, but
there was also an increasing public
demand for opera and music in
general, prompting investment in
opera houses, concert halls, and
public theaters.
As the Baroque period
progressed, composers such as
J.S. Bach and George Frideric
Handel created works of increasing
complexity, taking advantage of
the orchestras provided by their
aristocratic patrons. The music
of the “High Baroque” era was
particularly expressive, often
ornamented with trills and other
embellishments, and sometimes
dazzlingly virtuosic.
For a while, the concertgoing
public flocked to hear the latest
orchestral showpieces, operas,
and choral works, but then the
Enlightenment, the Age of Reason,
dawned, and fashions changed.
There was suddenly a demand for
more elegant music emphasizing
balance and clarity, leading to
the Classical period from which
“classical music” gets its name.
In a short time, Classical
composers, such as Mozart, Haydn,
and Beethoven, established the
musical forms that are the staple
of modern concert repertoires,
including the four-movement

symphony, the solo concerto,
and the string quartet. Music
also became popular in the home
as the swelling middle class
acquired leisure time and musical
instruments, including the piano,
became more affordable.

The Romantic period
Despite its enduring influence, the
Classical period gave way to a new
cultural movement almost as soon
as it had begun. As Romanticism,
with its emphasis on the individual,
swept through Europe, expression
took precedence over clarity.
Composers stretched the Classical
forms to their limits in the quest
for new sounds. They looked to
extramusical sources of inspiration,
such as art, literature, landscapes,
and human experience. ❯❯

INTRODUCTION


What passion cannot
music raise and quell.
John Dryden

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