Early Basso Continuo - ca.1600-ca.1650

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024
  • For the sources lists with links see this page: www.earlymusic...
    Created by Elam Rotem, Oren Kirschenbaum and Johannes Keller
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Комментарии • 55

  • @moseycreativeproduction
    @moseycreativeproduction Год назад +7

    and a legend was born.

  • @constantineeleftheriadis6642
    @constantineeleftheriadis6642 5 лет назад +24

    So that was the beginning of your beautiful channel! Well done, all the episodes you post are amazing!

  • @VoicesofMusic
    @VoicesofMusic 8 лет назад +21

    Great video! There is a realization of Caccini's Amarilli in Musical Banquet which was used for the Hitchcock edition.

  • @emilyplayscello
    @emilyplayscello 8 лет назад +14

    Really great, looking forward to future videos!

  • @DenisBonenfantclaveciniste
    @DenisBonenfantclaveciniste 8 лет назад +18

    If I had this vidéo insrtead of my teachers I would be better off today with continuo... thanks

  • @CembaloMontes
    @CembaloMontes 8 лет назад +6

    Very well realized video!! We need more of this!!!

  • @arash402003
    @arash402003 7 лет назад +1

    What an incredible contribution this channel/website is...thank you!

  • @jazzjedi
    @jazzjedi 8 лет назад +4

    Extremely practical, compact and precise material (and pleasant to follow), Elam, congratulations. Wow, thanks for sharing it.

  • @victorgallardo1583
    @victorgallardo1583 8 лет назад +10

    This is one of the most interesting and informative videos I've ever seen on RUclips.
    I'm a beginner in Continuo practice and by now I'm teaching myself and sometimes I get lost or stuck, so this information is very useful to me.
    Please keep up the good work, can't wait for your new videos! Thank you.

    • @donna25871
      @donna25871 6 лет назад

      Víctor Gallardo there is a great Hungarian book I was using in my solfege class at the Kodály Institute. As I said, it’s completely in Hungarian, but you won’t have too many problems understanding.

    • @victorgallardo1583
      @victorgallardo1583 4 года назад

      Donna Cianciosi hello Donna, what’s the name of that book? Do you have a digital copy of it? Thanks

  • @fnersch3367
    @fnersch3367 4 года назад

    A nice & tantalizing sampler of what's to come. I continue my struggle in procuring music of this genre. A real challenge.

  • @ULLafayetteChoirs
    @ULLafayetteChoirs 8 лет назад +14

    Well done! As a harpsichordist and bc organist, I've had to do my own research into these questions, and the answers you came to matched my own! Looking forward to the next video!

  • @kerekesabel
    @kerekesabel 8 лет назад +4

    Very good work,I loved the editing too.Please make more videos.😊

  • @roohawkins7412
    @roohawkins7412 5 лет назад +2

    I love this channel! very well done

  • @paulsmith5752
    @paulsmith5752 8 лет назад +2

    I love the way Elam (who is awesome, and I'm looking forward to seeing my first PDQ gig) uses Professor Farnsworth...

  • @vincentbernhardt
    @vincentbernhardt 8 лет назад +3

    Absolument génial !!! MERCI !

  • @millennial8441
    @millennial8441 5 лет назад

    Great one! It's always instructive to watch vids of you.

  • @TheresedeGoede
    @TheresedeGoede 8 лет назад +8

    Wonderful! I like very much the approach and the style. The way the images are used and move is really beautiful and very attractive. And, most important, the information is objective, useful and helpful! As for doubling the solo part, of course doubling was the general practice, as Elam tells us, but it is possible that Agazzari differs from his contemporaries because he takes the stilo recitativo in account, is also referring to that style when he explains that basso continuo has been invented for practical reasons (Per tre cagioni dunque `e stato messo in uso questo modo: prima per lo stile moderno di cantar recitativo). A similar attitude is expressed by Marco da Gagliano in the preface to his opera La Dafne (1608).

    • @EarlyMusicSources
      @EarlyMusicSources  8 лет назад +3

      +Therese de Goede Thanks Therese! Why do you take it that stilo recitativo means not doubling? Cavalieri constantly doubles during recitatives (only main notes of course). Gagliano write not to "riperquotare la consonanza cantata" - that is, not to repeat with the singer all the little notes one finds in a recitative; to play only the first notes is enough. This is something worth mentioning when recitative started to be notated, although kind of obvious to us. This is at least how I understands it.

    • @TheresedeGoede
      @TheresedeGoede 8 лет назад +2

      +Early Music Sources So we totally agree! As you pointed out that doubling all the parts of the composition was a long standing Renaissance practice and only mentioned that Agazzari's remark related to avoiding making mistakes, it was not clear to me that you were aware of the relation between stilo recitativo and the avoidance of doubling.
      Of course It is just a matter of what meaning we give to terminology. What do we consider exactly as "doubling"? If Da Gagliano and Agazzari suggest not to double the solo voice, my interpretation is indeed that they simply ask not to double EVERY note. Of course they didn't ask us to avoid doubling at all costs (in the way I was trained when I was a student:-)). However, only doubling the main notes can certainly be considered as "not doubling", compared to the practices of Luzzaschi and his contemporaries.

    • @isabelyedra8699
      @isabelyedra8699 6 лет назад

      Therese de

  • @servirantico4603
    @servirantico4603 8 лет назад +1

    Excellent video - clear and concise.

  • @namets
    @namets 6 лет назад

    Wow, I want to know more, now I go to the link in the description, thank you!

  • @ikeymusicchannel2263
    @ikeymusicchannel2263 2 года назад

    great work! thank you for sharing your knowledge

  • @Juliaart
    @Juliaart 8 лет назад +1

    great! look forward to continue

  • @SarahSouzaSimonViols
    @SarahSouzaSimonViols 8 лет назад +2

    Fantastico Elamino!

  • @tatianahalevo2338
    @tatianahalevo2338 3 года назад

    Fantastic and very laconically!!! Bravo!

  • @nanithelo
    @nanithelo 7 лет назад +1

    such a good, clear, documented job! bravissimi ragazzi!

  • @RitaPas
    @RitaPas 4 года назад

    kudos for your work and for your very good Italian pronunciation!

  • @RockStarOscarStern634
    @RockStarOscarStern634 4 года назад +1

    @UCJOiqToQ7kiakqTLE7Hdd5g
    I don't know if you know this or not, the written out realization for Corelli's 12 Sonatas for Violin & Continuo Op 5 was done by another well known composer named Antonio Tonelli.

  • @marcelobrunorodrigues7630
    @marcelobrunorodrigues7630 2 года назад +1

    Today I have a small question: how about the explicit accompaniments that Manuel Rodrigues Coelho did for his 23 Magnificat sung verses?

  • @ganaelschneider
    @ganaelschneider 8 лет назад

    You guys rock!

  • @RichardAuber
    @RichardAuber 8 лет назад

    Great job!

  • @neilwalsh3977
    @neilwalsh3977 6 лет назад +1

    I'm a composer and would love to know how Baroque composers generally went about the process of composition. Ie from the basso first or melody etc?

  • @galuppimusic
    @galuppimusic 4 года назад

    Wonderful video and channel! Might I ask - and forgive me if you've answered this elsewhere - about the paucity of figures in many early continuo parts. In cases of absent figures, do you think there was an expectation that keyboardists would a) consult the other parts, b) operate according to some convention, c) something else? I am thinking of cases for example where one cannot discern whether a root-position chord should be major or minor, things like this. As a continuo player, I feel like I'm cheating when I have to write in the figures based on the score or the other parts. And I always wonder what they did at the time.

  • @InventorZahran
    @InventorZahran Год назад +1

    What I want to know is why does basso continuo exist in the first place? Wouldn't it be easier for composers and performers if the accompaniment was completely written?

    • @Ekvitarius
      @Ekvitarius Год назад +2

      The finer details weren’t as important as just notating the chords themselves, and basso continuo was the way of notating chords back then. It would have just saved time and ink to not come up with a full realization

    • @InventorZahran
      @InventorZahran Год назад

      @@Ekvitarius I see. Thanks for explaining!

  • @RockStarOscarStern634
    @RockStarOscarStern634 4 года назад +1

    You can play Basso Continuo on Piano as well.

  • @dongsoks
    @dongsoks 8 лет назад

    very nice!

  • @ANGELOMARCIO_oficial
    @ANGELOMARCIO_oficial 6 лет назад

    Muito explicativo!

  • @dennismenezes9423
    @dennismenezes9423 6 лет назад

    great channel
    could have some links with music as examples

  • @erikhn9331
    @erikhn9331 3 года назад

    How does Monteverdi fit in in the sources? I often hear ham referred to as “the inventor of the b.c.” but he’s not on your list of sources 🤔Maybe it’s just a myth about him 😉

  • @umutyldz6107
    @umutyldz6107 5 лет назад

    wow your the best

  • @lior1328
    @lior1328 6 лет назад

    Hay elam!
    You can make a video on alla breve?
    Tenk's!😃❤

  • @FrancescoBianchiOtto
    @FrancescoBianchiOtto 8 лет назад +1

    Beautiful and interesting video, I'm waiting for the next part. But it's funny that Mr Rotem speaks about almost only Italian authors and is possible to understand that probably he knows Italian very well... Why do not put subtitles in Italian or realise an Italian version? Italian - you know - is the language of music, isn't it? :D

  • @sylber55
    @sylber55 8 лет назад

    nice!

  • @bubleum
    @bubleum 8 лет назад +2

    Mooore, please!

  • @JiveDadson
    @JiveDadson 3 года назад

    I have a question: what is basso continuo?

  • @patrickcunningham618
    @patrickcunningham618 3 года назад

    Mille gratze!!!!!!!!!!

  • @cameronsteuart1197
    @cameronsteuart1197 Год назад

    disagree! dislike! How could I? This is to the point and full of good information.

  • @KaterinaLK
    @KaterinaLK 8 лет назад

    accompanement should also not follow the singer, but maintain a steady beat, where singer can swing and catch up with tactus every so often.
    about the number of voices: it's not as important as not having the continuo higher than A440 and never starting spreading before the beat. "Not doubling the soprano part" relates to this.

  • @mela28xcom
    @mela28xcom 7 лет назад

    Man! this is so not inviting! I know some people are really into the Baroque music and know every word of the style but you really should make more engaging videos. So that more people could understand it and could relate to it. No wonder the genre is disappearing. KEEP THINGS SIMPLE

    • @andreafalconiero9089
      @andreafalconiero9089 6 лет назад +13

      Wow. In 5 sentences you managed to say absolutely nothing I can agree with. In fact, if you inverted all your statements they might make some sense. In my own words: this is perfectly clear, beautifully presented, and very useful to its intended audience, and no -- interest in baroque music is NOT in decline (though the baroque period itself ended ca. 1750).