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  1. Jan 11, 2018 · Chamber music is music for a small ensemble of solo instruments that is sophisticated and performed in an intimate setting. This excludes almost all vocal music, unaccompanied solo music, symphonic music, and music that is primarily virtuosic. While solo violin and violoncello music is sometimes regarded as chamber music, it lacks the ensemble ...

  2. May 24, 2017 · Music is central to cultural life and therefore also often perceived as central to social life. The study of music in society has been of interest to canonic social thinkers, including Weber, Simmel, and Adorno, since the establishment of sociology. The study of music has also concerned scholars in adjacent disciplines, particularly musicology ...

  3. systematically listing (by poet, then by title toward complete textual fidelity and ex- of the poem) all the settings that Wenk treme economy of musical means (p. 234). was able to find from the pens of such One never undertakes the rewriting of other composers as Faure, Charpentier, a dissertation lightly.

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    chamber music, music composed for small ensembles of instrumentalists. In its original sense, chamber music referred to music composed for the home, as opposed to that written for the theatre or church. Since the “home”—whether it be drawing room, reception hall, or palace chamber—may be assumed to be of limited size, chamber music most often permits no more than one player to a part. It usually dispenses with a conductor. Music written for combinations of stringed or wind instruments, often with a keyboard (piano or harpsichord) as well, and music for voices with or without accompaniment have historically been included in the term.

    An essential characteristic of chamber music results from the limited size of the performing group employed: it is intimate music, suited to the expression of subtle and refined musical ideas. Rich displays of varied instrumental colour, and striking effects produced by sheer sonority, play little part in chamber music. In place of those effects are refinement, economy of resources, and flawless acoustical balance.

    Instrumental music designed for home use has existed since about the middle of the 15th century. It became customary in Germany to supply folk-song melodies with two or three countermelodies, to expand and elaborate the whole, and to arrange the result for groups of instruments; original melodies were given similar treatment. The instruments were not often specified, but on the basis of many paintings of the time one may assume that groups of viols of various sizes predominated.

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    A Music Lesson

    A more important source of later chamber music is to be found in the arrangements of 16th-century chansons (songs of French origin composed usually for four voices on a variety of secular texts), some for voices and lute, others for lute alone. The typical chanson was characterized by contrasts in musical texture and often in metre; the effect of the whole was that of a short composition in several even shorter sections. That sectional form retained in the arrangements later became a striking feature.

    The chanson travelled to Italy about 1525, became known as canzona, and was transcribed for organ. The earliest transcriptions differed from the French arrangements in treating the original chanson with greater freedom, adding ornaments and flourishes, and sometimes inserting new material. Soon original canzonas for organ, modelled on the transcriptions, and for small instrumental ensembles, were composed. One such type, characterized by elaborate figurations and ornamented melodies, became influential in England late in the 17th century and played a role in the works of Henry Purcell.

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  5. chamber music DEFINITION From c1500 to the mid-1700s (Renaissance and Baroque eras), all music was classified by its social function as being either (1) church music , (2) theater music , or (3) chamber music --a term which included all secular music that was performed in private household--whether vocal or instrumental, solo or ensemble, or ...

  6. Chamber music is a form of classical music that is composed for a small group of instruments —traditionally a group that could fit in a palace chamber or a large room. Most broadly, it includes any art music that is performed by a small number of performers, with one performer to a part (in contrast to orchestral music, in which each string ...

    Number Of Musicians
    Name
    Common Ensembles
    Instrumentation[instr 1]
    2
    Duo
    Piano duo
    2 pianos
    2
    Duo
    Instrumental duo
    any instrument and piano
    2
    Duo
    Instrumental duo
    any instrument and basso continuo
    2
    Piano duet
  7. Mar 16, 2016 · Starting from the metaphor of “playing chamber music at a rock festival” used by Peter L. Berger in 1992 to describe the impact of The Social Construction of Reality on US sociology, this article works out how the book’s somewhat puzzling legacy as a bestseller and a classic with remarkably rare direct follow-ups in the US discourse can indeed be conceived. I argue that one needs to take ...

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