Chaconne With 49 Variations

30.07.2019

We find variations of this harmonic plan in the Chaconne for solo violin by J. Bach (it is part of the Partita BWV 1004). Here are the first 4 measures: The dominant chord is very clear in measures 4 to 8 (the first variation): In measure 17 - fourth variation - Bach uses a chromatic movement to go from tonic to dominant. “5 Variations” = HAYDN: Variations in F Minor; BIZET: Variations Chromatiques; NIELSEN: Chaconne; BRAHMS: Variations on an Original Theme; SCHUBERT: Variations on a Theme from “Rosamunde” (Impromptu in B flat, D. 3) – Andrew Rangell, p.

  1. Chaconne With 49 Variations Youtube
  2. Chaconne With 49 Variations Youtube
  3. Chaconne With 49 Variations Meaning

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about the musical form. For the last movement of JS Bach's second violin partita, called 'the Chaconne', see Solo Violin Partita No. 2 (Bach). For George Balanchine's 1976 ballet, see Chaconne (ballet).

A chaconne (French pronunciation: [ʃaˈkɔn]; Italian: ciaccona) is a type of musical composition popular in the baroque era when it was much used as a vehicle for variation on a repeated short harmonic progression, often involving a fairly short repetitive bass-line (ground bass) which offered a compositional outline for variation, decoration, figuration and melodic invention. In this it closely resembles the Passacaglia.

The ground bass, if there is one, may typically descend stepwise from the tonic to the dominant pitch of the scale, the harmonies given to the upper parts may emphasize the circle of fifths or a derivative pattern thereof.

  • 3Examples of chaconnes

History

Though it originally emerged during the late sixteenth century in Spanish culture, having reputedly been introduced from the New World, as a quick dance-song characterized by suggestive movements and mocking texts,[1] by the early eighteenth century the chaconne had evolved into a slow triple meter instrumental form.

One of the best known and most masterful and expressive examples of the chaconne is the final movement from the Violin Partita in D minor by Johann Sebastian Bach. This 256-measure chaconne takes a plaintive four-bar phrase through a continuous kaleidoscope of musical expression, in both major and minor modes.

Chaconne With 49 Variations Youtube

After the baroque period, the chaconne fell into decline, though the 32 Variations in C minor by Ludwig van Beethoven belong to the form.

Chaconne With 49 Variations Youtube

Chaconne and Passacaglia

The chaconne has been understood by some nineteenth and early twentieth-century theorists—in a rather arbitrary way—to be a set of variations on a harmonic progression, as opposed to a set of variations on a melodic bass pattern (to which is likewise artificially assigned the term passacaglia),[2] while other theorists of the same period make the distinction the other way around.[3] In actual usage in music history, the term 'chaconne' has not been so clearly distinguished from passacaglia as regards the way the given piece of music is constructed, and 'modern attempts to arrive at a clear distinction are arbitrary and historically unfounded.'[4] In fact, the two genres were sometimes combined in a single composition, as in the Cento partite sopra passacaglia by Girolamo Frescobaldi, and the first suite of Les Nations (1726) as well as in the Pièces de Violes (1728) by François Couperin.[5]

Frescobaldi, who was probably the first composer to treat the chaconne and passacaglia comparatively, usually (but not always) sets the former in major key, with two compound triple-beat groups per variation, giving his chaconne a more propulsive forward motion than his passacaglia, which usually has four simple triple-beat groups per variation.[6] Both are usually in triple meter, begin on the second beat of the bar, and have a theme of four measures (or a close multiple thereof). (In more recent times the chaconne, like the passacaglia, need not be in 3/4 time.)[citation needed]

A chaconne's bass line—let alone the chords involved—may not always be present in exactly the same manner, although the general outlines remain understood. (Handel's 'Chaconne' in G minor for keyboard[7] has only the faintest relationship to the understood form.[citation needed])

Examples of chaconnes

17th century

  • Dieterich Buxtehude: Prelude, Fugue, and Chaconne in C Major (BuxWV 137), Chaconne in C minor (BuxWV 159), Chaconne in E minor (BuxWV 160); all for organ
  • Jean-Baptiste Lully: Chaconne from Phaëton (1683)
  • Marin Marais: Chaconne in G major, for two violas da gamba and continuo, no. 47 from the Première Livre de pièces de violes (1686–89)
  • Marin Marais: Chaconne, from Suite no. 1 in C major in the Pièces en trio pour les flûtes, violon, et dessus de violes (1692)
  • Marin Marais: Chaconne, from the Suitte d'un goût Etranger, from the [Quatrième Livre de] Pièces à une et à trois violes (1717)
  • Claudio Monteverdi: Zefiro Torna from Scherzi musicali cioè arie et madrigali (Venice, 1632) an early example of vocal music sung to a chaconne accompaniment.[citation needed]
  • Johann Pachelbel: six organ chaconnes (including Chaconne in D minor and Chaconne in F minor), two chamber chaconnes in Musicalische Ergötzung
  • Henry Purcell: Chacony for strings and continuo in G minor Z. 730 (1680)
  • Robert de Visee: Chaconne in A minor for theorbo.

Chaconne With 49 Variations Meaning

18th century

  • Johann Sebastian Bach: 'Chaconne' from Partita No. 2 for Solo Violin in D minor
  • Johann Sebastian Bach: 'Meine Tage in dem Leide' chaconne from Nach dir, Herr, verlanget mich, BWV 150 (c.1707-08)
  • Marc-Antoine Charpentier: Sans frayeur dans ce bois, H.467 for soprano and continuo
  • François Couperin: 'La Favorite, Chaconne a deux tems,' Troisième ordre.
  • Tomaso Antonio Vitali: Chaconne in G minor for Solo Violin (dubious authorship)
  • Sylvius Leopold Weiss: Ciacona in G minor
  • Jean-Philippe Rameau: 'L'hymen—Chaconne', Scene VI from Les fêtes d'Hébé (1739)
  • George Frideric Handel: 'Chaconne' from Suite in G minor for clavier
  • George Frideric Handel: 'Chacconne' from the Terpsichore prologue added to the second revision of the opera Il pastor fido, HWV 8c (rev. 1734)

19th century

  • Johannes Brahms: Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op. 98, finale

20th century

  • John Adams: second movement 'Chaconne: Body Through Which the Dream Flows' from Violin Concerto (1993)
  • Cornelis Dopper: Ciaconna gotica (1920)
  • Philip Glass: Echorus for two violins and string orchestra (1995)
  • Philip Glass: Symphony No. 3, third, slow movement (1995)
  • John Corigliano: Chaconne for Violin and Orchestra
  • Benjamin Britten: 'Chacony', third movement of the String Quartet No. 2, in C (1946)
  • Carl Nielsen: Chaconne, op. 32, for piano (1916–17)
  • Gustav Holst: 'Chaconne' from First Suite in E-flat major for Military Band (according to one writer, technically a passacaglia, but according to others, technically a chaconne)[8]
Youtube

21st century

  • Roman Turovsky: Chaconnes in C-major, c-minor and d-minor for baroque lute.
  • Paulo Galvão: Chacoinas (2) in a-minor for baroque guitar.

References

  1. ^ Alexander Silbiger, 'Chaconne', The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. S. Sadie and J. Tyrrell (London: Macmillan, 2001).
  2. ^ Percy Goetschius, The Larger Forms of Musical Composition: An Exhaustive Explanation of the Variations, Rondos, and Sonata Designs, for the General Student of Musical Analysis, and for the Special Student of Structural Composition ([New York]: G. Schirmer, 1915), 29 and 40.
  3. ^ Lucas, Clarence Lucas, 1908. The Story of Musical Form (The Music Story Series, edited by Frederick J. Crowest. London: The Walter Scott Publishing Co., Ltd.; New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1908), 203.
  4. ^ Manfred Bukofzer, Music in the Baroque Era (New York: Norton, 1947), 42.
  5. ^ Alexander Silbiger, 'Passacaglia and Ciaccona: Genre Pairing and Ambiguity from Frescobaldi to Couperin', Journal of Seventeenth-Century Music 2, no. 1 (1996).
  6. ^ Alexander Silbiger, 'Chaconne' The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. S. Sadie and J. Tyrrell (London: Macmillan, 2001).
  7. ^ Händel, Georg Friedrich. 'Chaconne,' Klavierwerke / Keyboard Works IV. Einzelne Suiten und Stücke / Miscellaneous Suites and Pieces. Zweite Folge / Second Part. Herausgebegen von / Edited by Terence Best. Kassel: Bärenreiter, c1975, pp. 47-49.
  8. ^ Budd Udell, 'Standard Works for Band: Gustav Holst's First Suite in E♭ Major for Military Band.' Music Educators Journal 69, no. 4 (1982) page 28. (JSTOR subscription access) - Pam Hurry, Mark Phillips, and Mark Richards,[1] (Oxford: Heinemann Educational Publishers, 2001. ISBN 0435812580) page 238. - Clarence Lucas, The Story of Musical Form (The Music Story Series, edited by Frederick J. Crowest. London: The Walter Scott Publishing Co., Ltd.; New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1908) page 203.

External links

Georg Friedrich Händel (1685 – 1759) was a true European. He had a German work ethic, Italian passion and a Dutch head for business. And after training in Germany and Italy, from 1711 he went on to win the hearts of the British. He wooed them with his many operas and oratorios, and with instrumental works like his Water Music and Music for the Royal Fireworks.
Yet during his lifetime, he was renowned not only as an organist, but also as one of the greatest harpsichordists of his day. The public couldn’t get enough of him on the harpsichord, either as a composer or a musician. Evidently times change. However, if we take a closer look at the period during which Handel settled in London, we soon see that people were occupied with the same issues then as they are today.
Contemporary publications of Handel's keyboard suites fall into groups, a set of eight published in London in 1720, and a further group, also consisting of eight sonatas, which appeared in 1733. The latter was printed by the London publisher John Walsh, apparently without Handel's authorization, and no doubt with a mind to the great success achieved by the 1720 set in the ever increasing market for domestic music. The best-known work included in this second set is in fact not a multi-movement suite, but a Chaconne in G succeeded by twenty-one variations. The principle of using a chaconne bass-pattern as the foundation to build a continuously developing series of variants is familiar from seventeenth-century keyboard music, and such movements were frequently used as the culmination of a suite of dances or even as a grand concluding gesture to round off a group of suites. The descending four-note bass pattern Handel employed here goes back to one used by, among others, Purcell. It would also be employed in Bach's Goldberg Variations, and the great Chaconne in G with which the Viennese composer Gottlieb Muffat brought his outstanding set of harpsichord suites Componimenti Musicali to a conclusion. In keeping with the usual characteristics of such pieces, tension is gradually built by means of increasingly demanding writing.
Source: AllMusic (https://www.allmusic.com/composition/chaconne-for-harpsichord-in-g-major-suite-no-2-of-the-2nd-set-of-harpsichord-suites-hwv-435-mc0002356528).
Although originally written for Keyboard, I created this Arrangement of the Chaconne & Variations in G Major (HWV 435 No. 10) for Concert (Pedal) Harp.

Pages10
Duration11:46
Measures177
Key signature1 sharp
Parts1
Part namesHarp
Privacy Everyone can see this score
License None (All rights reserved)
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