HIPP Baroque
May 12, 2012 at 5:17 am
(This post was last modified: May 12, 2012 at 5:27 am by Tea Earl Grey Hot.)
Hey everyone, if you have any background in classical music, or maybe even music in general, you might find this of interest. This is rather long post, but I hope you'll find it worthwhile. I'm a harpsichordist/organist and this is the sort of stuff I'm absolutely fascinated in.
If you've seen the music I've posted here, you probably know by now that I'm a huge baroque music nerd. Baroque is the period of music roughly 1600-1750. Most people only know the music of the late-baroque which is comprised of everyone's favorite powered-wig wearing composers in the period of 1685-1750 such as Bach, Vivaldi, Handel, Scarlatti etc.
It's not simply baroque music I'm into, but specifically a type of performance style of baroque music called Historically Informed Performance Practice. It's very different than what you're probably use it. This is a style of performance that has its roots in a small number of performers and scholars starting about 100 years ago, but it didn't really catch on until the 60's. It's actually become mainstream in academia in the past 20 years or so but modern classical musicians still get the most attention from the general public.
Basically, in this style we use older instruments (originals, or replicas) rather than the modern counterparts. The most dramatic example of this is the use of the harpsichord instead of the piano. But it's not just keyboard instruments that are different. The whole family of instruments have many differences compared to their modern counterparts. Violins for instance back in the baroque did not have shoulder or chin rests, had shorter finger boards, used gut strings, and had very different bow design. The later two differences make the greatest difference. Natural gut strings have a much warmer and textured sound than modern metal strings. Most bows back then had the wood of the bow curved slightly outward rather than inward on the modern bow. The older bow is lighter and enables greater articulation and nuance than the modern bow for baroque music. Trumpets back then were natural. They didn't have valves and were fairly basic. They also sound very different than modern trumpets. You'll find differences like these between on the old and modern instruments and they make a huge difference in the sound of the ensemble.
But it's not just what version of the instrument you use, HIPP practice also involves how you play the instrument. It's not just the instruments that have changed since the baroque, but much of our fundamental musicality has changed as well. The way we might play an old piece today is not necessarily the way they original audience would have expected it or liked it to be played. Thankfully though, we can reconstruct the way the music was likely played due mainly to the extensive performance literature that was left behind. Many famous musicians across the period left behind writing in the form of both small (letters, articles) and large (books) on how the subject of good musicianship and performance. It's quite surprising too to see how different they thought music should sound compared to way modern classical players might think it should sound. Vibrato (the expressive trembling sound) for instance, the most cherished basic expression of string and woodwind instruments in modern playing, had a very different role back then. In modern violin playing, violinists use a heavy amount of vibrato on every note they can use it on. But in almost every piece of historical writing we see vibrato being relegated to a role as a special ornament being used only occasionally which creates a completely different overall sound and blend in string playing.
Tempo (the speed at which you play the piece) was also considerably different apparently. Modern musicians tend to play baroque music at fairly moderate tempos. In the interests of historical performance, we want to know what tempos musicians generally played different types of music at. They left behind basic words of course on their music such as adagio and allegro, but how fast exactly is an allegro (is it 80-100, 100-120, or 120-160, etc)? A problem with knowing what general tempos baroque musicians played the music at comes from the fact that metronomes weren't invented until the late classical era. Thankfully, we can know the basic tempos they played at by other accounts they left behind. A famous german flute player named Quantz wrote one of the best tempo accounts in 1752. He established tempos for all the styles of music in his day in relation to the average human pulse rate (which he explicitly considered 80 beats per minute). From this, we can get accurate tempos and it's interesting to see that many of the tempos are faster than what most musicians today would expect. There are several other examples from across the period and from different lands that give us hard data about tempos and they all share remarkable similarities to each other. These come by appealing to things such as average walking speed, counting speed, clocks, intervals between church bell strikes, the time to sip a soup spoon (a rather odd example), as well as fine mechanical instruments and pendulums. A few works of music had the approximate time in minute and seconds and by a simple calculation you can get the approximate tempo. A classic example of how dramatic some of the differences can be is with the Minuet dance type. Most musicians play the Minuet today at a rather moderate pace of about 120 bpm. Almost all of the data though that we've reconstructed has Minuets ranging from 160 - 210 bpm.
Another difference is improvisation. Classical musicians don't usually improvise much anymore but it was a common practice back then. Soloists would deviate extensively from the written score, especially in slower movements. The primary job too of the harpsichordist/organist, lutist, and guitarist (yes, guitars often were used in ensembles back then) was to improvise a thick and complex accompaniment to the soloist and/or ensemble much like jazz performers might do today. This was a basic skill.
These are just a few of the differences. I could go on further, but it's better to hear the difference yourself.
Here's a piece you've likely heard billions of times, first performed by a modern classical ensemble. Note the slow tempo, the constant vibrato, and the overall heavy legato (smooth) playing:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdRNTXaweoo
Here's the same piece, played at the more historically likely tempo. Also, note the smaller ensemble size, the little use of vibrato, the nuances of articulation, and the improvised accompaniment by the lute and organ:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E33kSyh2g40
Here's one more example:
modern:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xq2WTXtKurk
historical:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3E9hozQMYwY
Anyway, hope you didn't find this boring.
If you've seen the music I've posted here, you probably know by now that I'm a huge baroque music nerd. Baroque is the period of music roughly 1600-1750. Most people only know the music of the late-baroque which is comprised of everyone's favorite powered-wig wearing composers in the period of 1685-1750 such as Bach, Vivaldi, Handel, Scarlatti etc.
It's not simply baroque music I'm into, but specifically a type of performance style of baroque music called Historically Informed Performance Practice. It's very different than what you're probably use it. This is a style of performance that has its roots in a small number of performers and scholars starting about 100 years ago, but it didn't really catch on until the 60's. It's actually become mainstream in academia in the past 20 years or so but modern classical musicians still get the most attention from the general public.
Basically, in this style we use older instruments (originals, or replicas) rather than the modern counterparts. The most dramatic example of this is the use of the harpsichord instead of the piano. But it's not just keyboard instruments that are different. The whole family of instruments have many differences compared to their modern counterparts. Violins for instance back in the baroque did not have shoulder or chin rests, had shorter finger boards, used gut strings, and had very different bow design. The later two differences make the greatest difference. Natural gut strings have a much warmer and textured sound than modern metal strings. Most bows back then had the wood of the bow curved slightly outward rather than inward on the modern bow. The older bow is lighter and enables greater articulation and nuance than the modern bow for baroque music. Trumpets back then were natural. They didn't have valves and were fairly basic. They also sound very different than modern trumpets. You'll find differences like these between on the old and modern instruments and they make a huge difference in the sound of the ensemble.
But it's not just what version of the instrument you use, HIPP practice also involves how you play the instrument. It's not just the instruments that have changed since the baroque, but much of our fundamental musicality has changed as well. The way we might play an old piece today is not necessarily the way they original audience would have expected it or liked it to be played. Thankfully though, we can reconstruct the way the music was likely played due mainly to the extensive performance literature that was left behind. Many famous musicians across the period left behind writing in the form of both small (letters, articles) and large (books) on how the subject of good musicianship and performance. It's quite surprising too to see how different they thought music should sound compared to way modern classical players might think it should sound. Vibrato (the expressive trembling sound) for instance, the most cherished basic expression of string and woodwind instruments in modern playing, had a very different role back then. In modern violin playing, violinists use a heavy amount of vibrato on every note they can use it on. But in almost every piece of historical writing we see vibrato being relegated to a role as a special ornament being used only occasionally which creates a completely different overall sound and blend in string playing.
Tempo (the speed at which you play the piece) was also considerably different apparently. Modern musicians tend to play baroque music at fairly moderate tempos. In the interests of historical performance, we want to know what tempos musicians generally played different types of music at. They left behind basic words of course on their music such as adagio and allegro, but how fast exactly is an allegro (is it 80-100, 100-120, or 120-160, etc)? A problem with knowing what general tempos baroque musicians played the music at comes from the fact that metronomes weren't invented until the late classical era. Thankfully, we can know the basic tempos they played at by other accounts they left behind. A famous german flute player named Quantz wrote one of the best tempo accounts in 1752. He established tempos for all the styles of music in his day in relation to the average human pulse rate (which he explicitly considered 80 beats per minute). From this, we can get accurate tempos and it's interesting to see that many of the tempos are faster than what most musicians today would expect. There are several other examples from across the period and from different lands that give us hard data about tempos and they all share remarkable similarities to each other. These come by appealing to things such as average walking speed, counting speed, clocks, intervals between church bell strikes, the time to sip a soup spoon (a rather odd example), as well as fine mechanical instruments and pendulums. A few works of music had the approximate time in minute and seconds and by a simple calculation you can get the approximate tempo. A classic example of how dramatic some of the differences can be is with the Minuet dance type. Most musicians play the Minuet today at a rather moderate pace of about 120 bpm. Almost all of the data though that we've reconstructed has Minuets ranging from 160 - 210 bpm.
Another difference is improvisation. Classical musicians don't usually improvise much anymore but it was a common practice back then. Soloists would deviate extensively from the written score, especially in slower movements. The primary job too of the harpsichordist/organist, lutist, and guitarist (yes, guitars often were used in ensembles back then) was to improvise a thick and complex accompaniment to the soloist and/or ensemble much like jazz performers might do today. This was a basic skill.
These are just a few of the differences. I could go on further, but it's better to hear the difference yourself.
Here's a piece you've likely heard billions of times, first performed by a modern classical ensemble. Note the slow tempo, the constant vibrato, and the overall heavy legato (smooth) playing:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdRNTXaweoo
Here's the same piece, played at the more historically likely tempo. Also, note the smaller ensemble size, the little use of vibrato, the nuances of articulation, and the improvised accompaniment by the lute and organ:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E33kSyh2g40
Here's one more example:
modern:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xq2WTXtKurk
historical:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3E9hozQMYwY
Anyway, hope you didn't find this boring.
My ignore list
"The lord doesn't work in mysterious ways, but in ways that are indistinguishable from his nonexistence."
-- George Yorgo Veenhuyzen quoted by John W. Loftus in The End of Christianity (p. 103).
"The lord doesn't work in mysterious ways, but in ways that are indistinguishable from his nonexistence."
-- George Yorgo Veenhuyzen quoted by John W. Loftus in The End of Christianity (p. 103).