1. Classicism Vs. Romanticism
ā¢ Classic-defined by Aulos
Gallius, 2nd century A.D.
grammarian
ā¢ āA correctness of language and
style for a unique, elite,
civilized class of people
ā¢ Romantic-from āromanceā
ā¢ A Medieval tale of poem
treating heroic personages or
events written in one of the
Romance languages
2. Classicism
ā¢ Reason prevails in all provinces of thought. The universe
is capable of rational explanation as orderly, purposive,
structured, and regular
ā¢ Belief in reality, leaving little of validity to emotion.
Mystery and miracle are dispelled
ā¢ Uniform excellence desired in morals, social function,
and art
ā¢ The artist sought to appeal to rational good taste
ā¢ For the species, not the individual
ā¢ For seeking what is common to all
ā¢ For revealing the order and form inherent in a work of art
to thinking people of good taste
3. Romanticism
ā¢ Distrust of universal formulae and impatience with rules
of procedure
ā¢ Development of a sense of awe and mystery
ā¢ Cultivation of individual, national, and racial peculiarities
ā¢ High value place upon originality
ā¢ Every person appreciates and understands through his
senses
ā¢ The glorification of self-rebellion & struggle
ā¢ Strong, Byronic heroes, masculine; later the emphasis shifts
to the willful, dominant female ideal
4. Romanticism
ā¢ Nature not as rational and ordered but as a mirror of
unpredictability of human emotion and of the
uncertainties of life
ā¢ Fascination with the remote, the distant past. Revival
in interest in Roman Catholicism as a timeless
institution rooted in mystery
ā¢ Life is ever becomingā¦evolving. Romantic artists
express a longing for the unattainable. Death becomes
an obsession as the only haven for fulfilling the
struggle toward completeness
5. ā¢ Romantic spirit
ā¢ āSomething far off, legendary,
fictitious, fantastic, and
marvelous-imaginary and
ideal contrasted to the world
of the present.ā
ā¢ Implies a freedom of the
individual, represents all that
man can become, possibility
Romanticism
6. ā¢ Traits:
ā¢ Remoteness from everyday
world
ā¢ Emphasis on the strange and
the fantastic
ā¢ Boundless: Aspires
ā¢ To transcend the
immediate
ā¢ To reach backward and
forward in time
ā¢ To range outward to
reach the cosmos
Romanticism
7. Romanticism
ā¢ Traits
ā¢ Cherishes freedom, passion, and endless pursuit of the
unattainable-a yearning after the impossible with longing
ā¢ The personality of the artists merges with the work of art
ā¢ The arts themselves merge
ā¢ Instrumental music seen as the only perfect vehicle for
communicating deep emotions, abstract and divorced from
the world, it is detached completely from the world and
therefore free to work on the mind and heart
8. ļ® Instrumental music is dominated by lyrical spirit of the
Lied
ļ® Composers were also writers
ļµ Carl Maria von Weber
ļµ Robert Schumann
ļµ Hector Berlioz
ļµ Richard Wagner
ļ® Program music was the solution to imbuing
instrumental music with the poetic & the pictorial
ļ® Instrumental accompaniment of vocal music is
endowed with pictorial qualities itself
Music & Words
9. Romanticism
ā¢ As containing contradictions and opposites
ā¢ The crowd and the individual
ā¢ Composers sought haven with a few friends, while at the same time
writing for a large new audience
ā¢ Disappearance of patronage system
ā¢ Composers write for posterity-an āidealā audience which would
appreciate work
ā¢ Rise of the virtuoso performer-Paganini, Liszt-performer as hero
ā¢ The composer as prophet, along & struggling heroically against a hostile
environment
ā¢ The simple & complex existing side by side
ā¢ The Lied & Character piece-small, intimate forms
ā¢ The Program Symphony & Romantic Opera: enormous works in which the
composer creates an entire universe
10. ā¢ While the nineteenth century
saw an expansion of exact
knowledge, music delved into the
unconscious and the
supernatural, into dreams and
myth.
ā¢ Nature was seen as fraught with
mysterious significance way
beyond scientific fact-finding
Science & the Irrational
11. ā¢ A secular, materialistic age
ā¢ Rise of the Industrial
Revolution
ā¢ A turning away from organized
religion, revival of interest in
Catholicism was for its
tradition & mystery of ritual
ā¢ The arts were seen as a
religion in themselves
ā¢ Sacred music was often
idealistic and of immense
proportion, a longing for the
eternal
Materialism & Idealism
12. ā¢ A patriotic movement
which glorified the heritage
of a country by using its folk
music and historical
subjects in theatrical or
program music
Nationalism