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Description of Baroque

 
As an adjective, "baroque" means anything highly intricate or very ornate. While most Baroque music has both those qualities, the term refers specifically to classical music composed between the end of the sixteenth century and 1750 (the year Johann Sebastian Bach died). Much of the way westerners hear music today is based on the principles of harmony and melody solidified in this period: major and minor scales, previously considered dissonant, eventually became the norm. Pioneers Arcangelo Corelli and Antonio Vivaldi began writing music with more dramatic twists and turns than audiences were accustomed to hearing; other composers experimented with long passages for multiple voices and instruments, resulting in the dense sonorities and almost mathematical precision exemplified by Pachelbel's "Canon." Other notable achievements of this era include Claudio Monteverdi's Orfeo, perhaps the first truly great opera, and the complex, bombastic oratorios of George Frideric Handel. The orchestra also came into being during this period, and the lute, harpsichord and organ became increasingly prominent. Bach's music was a culmination of the compositional techniques of the age.
 

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Baroque Key Artists

 
Alessandro Scarlatti

The prolific Baroque master
stationed in Naples taught
Handel and fathered
Domenico, the other famous
Scarlatti. In 1684, he took...

Antonio Vivaldi

Vivaldi was most influential
for his development of the
concerto, a work for
orchestra that features a
solo instrument. Vivaldi se...

Arcangelo Corelli

The extremely popular
Corelli performed
throughout Europe and was
one of the most famous
musicians working out of...

Claudio Monteverdi

An early Baroque
composer, Monteverdi
borrowed many of his
melodies and scales from
the Medieval and Renaissa...

Dietrich Buxtehude

Buxtehude was a Danish
Baroque master who greatly
influenced Bach with his
organ fugues and toccatas.
Danish composer Dietrich...

Domenico Scarlatti

Scarlatti was born in the
same year as both Handel
and Bach (1685). Keyboard
works feature complex,
interwoven melodies that...

Georg Philipp Telemann

During the first half of the
eighteenth century, Georg
Philipp Telemann was
considered Germany's
greatest living composer....

George Frideric Handel

Handel spent most of his life
in England, and was
well-loved by his fellow
country folk. Handel was
extremely popular in his...

Heinrich Schutz

Schutz created dramatic
sacred music for the
Protestant Church, much as
Bach did later did for the
Catholic Church.

Henry Purcell

After Purcell, England
produced no composers of
international reputation
until Benjamin Britten. His
style was distinctly Englis...

Jean-Baptiste Lully

This envied egomaniac of
Louis XIV's court
epitomized French Baroque
music and died of a
conducting accident.

Johann Pachelbel

Music teacher to Bach's
older brother Johann
Christoph, Pachelbel is
known today solely by his
recognizable Canon in D...

Johann Sebastian Bach

Bach's music is complex,
densely polyphonic with
running independent lines.
His 1750 death marks the
end of the Baroque era. A...

John Eliot Gardiner

Sir John Eliot Gardiner is an
English conductor who
specializes in Baroque era
composers. Gardiner
started conducting at 15 a...

The Academy Of Ancient Music

The Academy of Ancient
Music is one of the world's
first "authentic instrument"
ensembles. The ensemble
was founded in 1726 in Lo...

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