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Orchestral
Suite #2 in B Minor
Dancing
was very popular during the Baroque era (of course, the same could
be said for all eras, including the present). And dance music often
inspired composers, not the least of whom was Bach. Although the
influence of dance is most obvious in his suites for keyboard and
suites for orchestra, dance-like gestures and forms are present
in Bach's works of every genre, including some of his sacred choral
music.
But
here we really are only concerned about the dance and his orchestral
suites. In this case, composers like Bach and Handel wrote what
was called "stylized dances," which were intended for
listening, not for dancing. This means that the dances followed
their particular stylistic norms, but allowed for more musical elaboration
and ornamentation than would have been possible in a floor dance.
The
orchestral suites of Bach all use traditional French dances. (Bach
wrote several French suites and several English suites for keyboard.)
The dance suite in fact traces its origin to the early Baroque period
in France, most notably in the keyboard works of the celebrated
harpsichordist/ organist/ composer/ teacher François Couperin
(1668-1733). Couperin did not call his compositions "suites,"
but rather "ordres." An ordre contains as few
as 4 or as many as 24 short pieces, though 8-12 seems to be the
norm. All the pieces contained in a single ordre are in
the same key or in parallel tonalities (that is, they keep the same
tonic note, but switch from major to minor; for example, D minor
and D major). Often, the pieces were arranged in alternating fast
and slow movements. Some use the names of popular dances; more commonly,
individual pieces feel like a particular dance, though they may
only bear a tempo marking or nothing at all. Others have more descriptive
titles, such as Le Rossignol en amour (The nightingale in love).
At any rate, it is from this kind of organization of shorter pieces
that is the origin of the dance suite of Bach and Handel.
The
Orchestral Suite in B minor is scored for string, continuo,
and solo flute. It contains 8 movements, each described below.
Overture
[Bach did not label this movement]
Though
Bach did not provide a designation for this movement, it is clearly
written in French overture style. Bach used the French overture
design to open all four of his orchestral suites. A French overture,
developed by Lully in the 1650s and 1660s, is a two-part movement
which opens with a slow, dotted-rhythm section leading to a faster
imitative section. The slow section may or may not return to close
the movement. (In this suite, the slow part does indeed return at
the end.) The convention in the dotted-rhythm section is to "double-dot"
the rhythms, making the shorter notes shorter still, and giving
them more "snap."
Rondeau
A
rondeau in the Baroque refers to any piece that consists
of a refrain (A) and different "couplets," which were
8- to 16-measure contrasting strains. The "couplets" might
be in related keys, or remain in the original tonic. This form later
developed into the rondo, so popular in the time of Mozart. In this
rondeau by Bach, the main theme appears as follows:
What's
interesting to me about this movement is that it fuses two separate
genres (or, if you prefer, two clearly different conventions) into
one movement. The rondeau is obvious in the repetition of the melody
given above. Using A to indicate this refrain, and the subsequent
letters of the alphabet for each new couplet, we find the following
form: A (repeated) B A C A. But
at the same time, notice that each phrase (the one above serves
well as an example) begins in the middle of a measure, and ends
in the middle -- the phrasing is two beats "off." This
kind of phrase structure is typical of the gavotte, a moderate-tempo
dance in 4/4 or cut time (as in the excerpt above).
Sarabande
The
sarabande has always been my favorite of the Baroque stylized
dances, perhaps because Bach wrote so many lovely examples. (The sarabande
from the French Suite in d minor for keyboard is one of the
most hauntingly beautiful, plaintive examples out there.) Interestingly
enough, though the sarabande is often included in French
dance suites, its origin is Spanish, perhaps coming to Spain from
Mexico in the 16th century.
The
sarabande is a slow, dignified dance in triple meter. In
contrast to the gavotte, the sarabande rarely uses an upbeat (although
this example does). Frequently, the second beat receives an accent,
sometimes by virtue of the placement of a longer note value on the
second beat. Phrases tend to have "feminine" endings,
that is, with the resolution to the tonic chord occurring off the
downbeat, though that is not the case in this example. In this movement,
the flute doubles the first violin part throughout, and thus reducing
this movement to a more intimate four-part texture. This intimate
texture is hardly simple, however, as Bach writes very busy lines
for all four parts. Here is just a brief example:
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