Sonata pian' e forte
Sonata pian' e forte was composed by Italian composer and organist Giovanni Gabrieli and published in 1597.[1] This is one of the earliest known pieces of music to specify loud and quiet passages in print.[2][3] (The distinction of being the first belongs to Adriano Banchieri's "Canzon undecima 'In echo' (L'organistina bella)" in 1596).[4]
Description
The title Sonata pian’e forte refers to an instrumental piece that uses soft and loud dynamics. The piece is an example of the Venetian polychoral style, which developed in sixteenth-century northern Italy, and found particular favor at St Mark's Basilica due to architectural features of the interior.[clarification needed] The term "sonata" at this time in Baroque music referred specifically to a work originally conceived for instruments, as opposed to those based on vocal works. It was most probably intended for a Catholic service at either St Mark's, Venice, or the Scuola Grande di San Rocco. It was written for eight instruments divided into two groups of four players, spatially separated: cornetto, 3 sackbuts (group 1); viola, 3 sackbuts (group 2).
Form
Gabrieli's Sonata pian ’e forte is a
The overall form can be represented as follows:
- Mm. 1–14: Antecedent in choir 1 (piano) / 14 measures / G Dorian
- Mm. 14–25: Consequent in choir 2 (piano) / 12 measures / G Dorian with harmonic excursions into D major (m. 17) and F major (m. 21)
- Mm. 26–31: Both choirs tutti (forte) / 6 measures / C Mixolydian
- Mm. 31–71: Antiphonal middle section (continual alternation between piano and forte) / 40 measures total, divided into 12 + 12 + 8 + 8 measures; structured into phrases of differing lengths: 4 measures ( mm. 31–34), 2 measures (mm. 37/38) or 1 measure (m. 59) / continually modulating
- Mm. 71–81: Final section (piano, then forte) / 11 measures / cadence in G Dorian
Within the each section there are frequent examples of phrase
References
- ISBN 0-19-315247-9.
- ^ Fenlon, Iain (November 1990). "Gabrieli and St Mark's Venetian Brass Music". Gramophone (review of Nimbus Records NI5236). Retrieved 29 March 2017.
- ^ Giovanni Gabrieli Opera Omnia, Richard Charteris (ed.), vol. X, p. XIII (American Institute of Musicology, 1998)
- .
External links
- Sonata pian' e forte: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project