Oratorio Test #1
Antecedents
Liturgical drama – within or near the church and relating stories from the Bible
Miracle Plays – presents a real or fictitious account of the life of a saint
Morality Plays – the characters personify moral qualities or abstractions in which moral lessons are taught
Mystery Plays – usually representing biblical subjects
Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179) – German nun, composers, and the founder of a convent
Oldest surviving Morality Play – Ordo Virtutum
Movements
Reformation (1517) – more spiritual reform
Counter Reformation
Council of Trent: 1545-1563 – addressed corruption and abuse
Oratorio Volgare – use of languages of that specific region in oratorios
Oratorio Latino – use of Latin in oratorios, upholding tradition
People
Martin Luther (1483-1546)
Reform without (abuse and corruptions within the Catholic Church)
Filippo Neri (1515-1595)
Reform within the church
Giacomo Carissimi (1605-1674)
A “Musical orator” and employed musical rhetorical devices in his compositions
Churches
• San Girolamo della Carità
• Chiesa Nuova
o (formerly Santa Maria in Vallicella)
• Congregazione dell'Oratorio
• San Marcello and Oratorio del Santissimo Crocifisso
Oratory
• Specific room designated primarily for prayer within the church
The Music
• Lauda - in Italian, poetic, dialogue, strophic, AABB
• Examples: “Anima mia che pensi” and “Nell’apparir del sempiterno Sole
The People and the Music
• Emelio de’ Cavalieri (1550-1602), Rappresentatione di anima, et di corpo (1600)
o Representation of the Soul and the Body
• Giovanni Francesco Anerio (ca. 1567– 630), Teatro armonico spirituale (1619)
o Harmonic Spiritual Theater
• Pietro Della Valle (1586-1652), Oratorio della Purificatione (1640)
o Oratorio of the Purification
Rhetorical Devices
• palillogia – Repetition of the same word, with none between, for vehemence and repeating the same group of tones at the same pitch level
• epizeuxis - A rhetorical term for the repetition of a word or phrase in immediate succession, usually with no words in between.
o The most common is coupled with sequential repetition at the interval of the perfect fourth or fifth. Palillogia can be a sub-grouping within a larger epizeuxis.
• homoeoteleuton - the use of word-endings that are similar or the same, either intentionally for rhetorical effect or by mistake during copying of text
o i.e. He saw the boat and then he wrote a note,” the repetition of the “-ote” sound in “boat” and “note”
• pathopoeia - Speech that evokes strong emotions in the audence
• hypotyposis - lifelike description of a thing or scene. In music, “word painting.”
Antecedents
Liturgical drama – within or near the church and relating stories from the Bible
Miracle Plays – presents a real or fictitious account of the life of a saint
Morality Plays – the characters personify moral qualities or abstractions in which moral lessons are taught
Mystery Plays – usually representing biblical subjects
Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179) – German nun, composers, and the founder of a convent
Oldest surviving Morality Play – Ordo Virtutum
Movements
Reformation (1517) – more spiritual reform
Counter Reformation
Council of Trent: 1545-1563 – addressed corruption and abuse
Oratorio Volgare – use of languages of that specific region in oratorios
Oratorio Latino – use of Latin in oratorios, upholding tradition
People
Martin Luther (1483-1546)
Reform without (abuse and corruptions within the Catholic Church)
Filippo Neri (1515-1595)
Reform within the church
Giacomo Carissimi (1605-1674)
A “Musical orator” and employed musical rhetorical devices in his compositions
Churches
• San Girolamo della Carità
• Chiesa Nuova
o (formerly Santa Maria in Vallicella)
• Congregazione dell'Oratorio
• San Marcello and Oratorio del Santissimo Crocifisso
Oratory
• Specific room designated primarily for prayer within the church
The Music
• Lauda - in Italian, poetic, dialogue, strophic, AABB
• Examples: “Anima mia che pensi” and “Nell’apparir del sempiterno Sole
The People and the Music
• Emelio de’ Cavalieri (1550-1602), Rappresentatione di anima, et di corpo (1600)
o Representation of the Soul and the Body
• Giovanni Francesco Anerio (ca. 1567– 630), Teatro armonico spirituale (1619)
o Harmonic Spiritual Theater
• Pietro Della Valle (1586-1652), Oratorio della Purificatione (1640)
o Oratorio of the Purification
Rhetorical Devices
• palillogia – Repetition of the same word, with none between, for vehemence and repeating the same group of tones at the same pitch level
• epizeuxis - A rhetorical term for the repetition of a word or phrase in immediate succession, usually with no words in between.
o The most common is coupled with sequential repetition at the interval of the perfect fourth or fifth. Palillogia can be a sub-grouping within a larger epizeuxis.
• homoeoteleuton - the use of word-endings that are similar or the same, either intentionally for rhetorical effect or by mistake during copying of text
o i.e. He saw the boat and then he wrote a note,” the repetition of the “-ote” sound in “boat” and “note”
• pathopoeia - Speech that evokes strong emotions in the audence
• hypotyposis - lifelike description of a thing or scene. In music, “word painting.”