Actually, it's very interesting. Because the composers of that time avoided dissonances without resolution. Bach especially did not like them - biographers say that when the sons of Johann Sebastian Bach were practicing the harpsichord, and their mother called them to dinner, they ran without completing the cadenza. Because of this, Father Bach could not fall asleep, he would get up from the couch and complete the chords, then lie down and fall asleep!
This seems intrinsic to the musically sensitive. My aunt was a music teacher with a university qualification. She taught both her sons. To tease her they would occasionally end something with a hanging G7 or the like. She would feel compelled to get up and resolve it. Harmless family fun. Listen also to the last bars of Schubert's 4-hand Fantasy in F, and realise how seductively he led you miles away from F. and then pointedly brings you back in a few crashing chords.
It's simple. Biber is German for beaver, Bach means creek. Bach washed the beaver dam away, releasing the congestion, kindof. In hydrology, this is known as the difference between turbulant and laminar flow.
@Mikosch2 That is in no way an explanation of the difference between turbulent and laminar flow. I know you like to hear yourself talk about things that you have no clue about but it rarely works out. Jesus.🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤡🙄
I discover this piece a few years ago and I was so surprised 'cause of the politonality but also because in the 4th movement (I believe it is the 4th mov but can't remember quite accurately) he uses extended techniques, asking the bass players to put a piece of paper in between the strings for a particular sound, he was so innovarive, I love Biber
@@kathyjohnson2043 that is a wonderful and haunting work ( . Decades ago when I first heard it there was only one recording available in the US, on the Vox label. Now there are numerous renditions.
The thing about an era before it becomes ossified is precisely this kind of experimentation, that then seems to heretical to us later. Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandy is the literary case in point.
My mother, an LRAM, was brought up largely on Beethoven and Schumann. A friend of mine, a music teacher, played a piano piece of Schoenberg's to her. He asked her what she thought of it. After a short pause, one word "Hateful." I've heard music being called many names, but thhis was the first time I heard "hateful"
an anecdote about the Bach family from Bach's biographer (I got this from the Wikipedia page on Goldberg Var.30): "As soon as they were assembled a chorale was first struck up. From this devout beginning they proceeded to jokes which were frequently in strong contrast. That is, they then sang popular songs partly of comic and also partly of indecent content, all mixed together on the spur of the moment. This kind of improvised harmonizing they called a Quodlibet, and not only could laugh over it quite whole-heartedly themselves, but also aroused just as hearty and irresistible laughter in all who heard them."
One of my favorite composers. Wonderfully inventive baroque music with a rock-n-roll attitude. In the same piece he instructed the violone players to place a sheet of paper under their strings so that the vibration would give the illusion of snare drums being played in the distance.
The thing that blew me away the most was the last two chords. Absolutely stunning. I couldn’t help but start laughing because of how ridiculously awesome it was.
The tune you are highlighting is the "Bergamasca", a Renaissance Italian evergreen dance based on a repetitive I-IV-V harmonic pattern. Frescobaldi, Scheidt, Uccellini... and many others developed legendary renderings and variations of the theme. Both Biber and Bach chose to quote it for sure with full knowledge ^^ Enjoy Uccellini's :) ua-cam.com/video/_gRO8jW9rTU/v-deo.html
The Bergamasca melody is used for the German folk song Kraut und Rueben, part of the Quodlibet in the 3oth Goldberg variations against Ich bin so lang g’wezt over the original bass melody. There’s a quote from the folk song as pointed out in a 1603 lute manuscript of Mein Junges Leben hat ein End’ which Sweelinck wrote his famous variations. The information was from an article from 2005 on the Bach Cantata website which goes into greater detail of the capstone nature of the Quodlibet and its references to earlier canons both in the use of Ich bin so lang so with a variant end, and also in the Cantata BWV 212 with a variant ending.
Forget to mention the Bach families would sing quolibets extempore at family gatherings for humorous effect. The two lyrics has cabbage and another vegetable (with inferred gas/flatulence) and the other lyric with the commanding come here, come here…
@@klegdixal3529 @klegdixal Thank you for the translation. That's the translation I learned in my two years study of the German language. Currently, I do not have access to a 17th century or early 18th century German dictionary. After the controversy down under claim over the Anna Magdelena Bach's alleged composing the Violin Sonatas and additional claim of the "French" Suites for Harpsichord, (the French word now used composed was in JSB's time the word for copied), I now take the precaution to double check words from the time period. There's no doubt as to Kraut=cabbage (from my last contact with an 18th century dictionary), and yet a mid 20th century source on the Quolibet then "two songs" translated Kraut as Kale. Although all members of the Cabbage family are Brassica oleracea cultivars, and Rueben is turnip, I now, if I have time, take the precaution to double check with a then contemporary dictionary. The change of word or phrase meanings is fairly common in French Harpsichord music, the tempo indication Vivement for the the fifth piece in Francois Couperin "Ordre 6ème de clavecin" at that the time translates as "Deeply," however, current usage includes "strongly," "briskly," and also in comments of "can't wait." Consequently most Harpsichord (and piano) players speed through Les Barricades Mystérieuses. This piece is translated as The Mysterious Barricades, Barricades also refers to (music) chords. The 19th century publishers of Couperin's Harpsichord music (Friedrich Chrysander and Johannes Brahms also interpreted the title concluding piece of the Ordre (suite) as Gnat or Urchin, while the late Emirtus Professor of French at UCSB translated the title as fly. (The latter more appropos). in English, By and By as in modern usage as a noun is defined as future time or occassion. In the first century of the 17th century English, by and by meant immediately. The Merriam-Webster dictionary still list the 17th c. definition as an adverb, but vernacular usage in the 20th Century to present whether noun or adverb is understood as some undefined future occurence or event. Hence my reluctance to confirm turnip and left it as vegetable. Not having ever eaten turnips, I was unaware of their reputation of producing really foul-smelling farts!
Wonderful, thank you for bringing this to my attention. There is no need for the animations expressing distress about the cacophony, all the notes are in the right place.
But can you really be a modernist before your time? That’s like being a postmodernist in retrospect. Don’t get me wrong - I’m a belieber, I couldn’t lieber if I tried. Tip your server ... and try the veal!
Back then the highlighted melody was sung with the text „Kraut und Rüben haben mich vertrieben, hätt‘ meine Mutter Fleisch gekocht so wär ich noch geblieben“. - „(Sauer)Kraut and beets drove me away. Had my mother cooked meat I should have stayed“ Bach ingeniously mixes it with another song that starts with „Ich bin schon lang nicht bei dir gewest“ - „I haven’t been with you since a long time“. So the contemporary would hear in his mind „I haven’t been with you since a long time - Kraut and beets drove me away“. Now „this looks like Kraut und Rüben“ is a colloquial term for „it’s a complete mess“. And all that appears when the original unmodified theme comes back. So Bach tongue-in-cheek calls his variations „Kraut und Rüben“.
We just did an Xmas concert at the orchestra and the finale was like 3/4? Carols mashed up and overbearing chorals singing something else. But at the end it all came together and played out beautifully!
Yes, indeed. In fact Schnittke was mentioned in an earlier video about Rebel: ua-cam.com/video/WH9Ae_tnAYc/v-deo.html and I think I recommended this Concerto Grosso: ua-cam.com/video/NtGTJ6_KD2c/v-deo.html
this is absolutely my favorite baroque piece, and while a lot of it like the polytonality was for fun it actually sounds super awesome and sounds similar to composers a few hundred years later! there’s also bartok pizz and literally putting a piece of paper under the violone’s strings, among other neat techniques! biber also did some really cool stuff in other pieces, for example literally crossing the a and d strings behind the bridge and at the scroll in his Resurrection Sonata
You seem to have a keen interest in modern musical ideas such as Polytonality and Atonality; In his Harvard Norton Lectures, Leonard Bernstein talked about the "20th Century Crisis" and how in search of new ways to keep music fresh, looking for new "tonal ambiguities", music split in two: The Polytonality of Stravinsky and the Atonality of Schoenberg. As someone who obviously has knowledge of both, I think you might enjoy an exploration of this 20th Century Crisis.
@@themusicprofessor I cannot wait to see what happens! I'm not too big in the music spotlight at the moment, but I do know my Stravinsky, so if you ever want someone to talk to about it, I'd be more then happy to tell you what I know!
I think, Bach uses this subject for a very different reason. It is always said, that with this stupid "Kraut und Rüben" song he wanted to produce some comic effect. But in reality it is the subject of the famous La Capricciosa variations by Dietrich Buxtehude. This harpsicord work is in G major and has 32 movements, which is exactly the same number as in Bach's cyclus (Aria + 30 variantions + Aria da capo) and so the model and prototype for the Goldberg Variations. When Bach in the last variation quotes La Capricciosa, it is a just a tribute to Buxtehude, who was his beloved teacher.
If you're not already aware of it, you might enjoy Farina's Capriccio Stravagante which dates back to 1627. Strings emulating cats meowing and dogs barking :)
Aaah La Battaglia! One of my favorite tunes from the baroque! Its very interesting how he expressed many things associated with war, that arent only battles. He inspired this music in the 30 years war, that was still raging on in the year he was born, and would only end 4 years later. This movement in particular its said that it represents a military encampment, as there were many soldiers of different places that occasionally would sing their songs at night, resulting in this cacophony of many different tunes stacked one upon another.
Thank you. Yes, the connection with the 30 years war is fascinating. The impact of war upon artists is a topic that has come up in other short films on this channel, particularly these two about Ravel: ua-cam.com/video/ts7K4yCP5tI/v-deo.html and ua-cam.com/video/q6oOo8izmyo/v-deo.html
Great post! There is a composer before Biber who likewise employed some rather far out harmonizations, but his name now escapes me. George Amirkhanian aired many of these works on KPFA in the 70s.
Interesting... it seems a whole orchestra warming before a concert. Is there more info about the coincidence of one of the themes and the Bach's Goldgberg variations?
The video description above explains a little. The tune is called Kraut und Rüben haben mich vertrieben (“cabbages and turnips have driven me away”). It's an old German folk song, and seems to have been popular in quodlibet singing of the time. In Bach's Goldberg Variations it appears as a sort of joke implying that we have been 'driven away' from the original theme for too long.
@@themusicprofessor that makes sense, as Goldbergs are based on the bass line of a Haendel's variations on an aria and it may be a quodlibet approach to put together two apparently distant worlds.
FINALLY someone talking about it!!!!!! I've been listening to that piece every now and then and I've always been amazed by that part... Anyway, the recording isn't Savall's one, it's from Voices of Music
In my opinion came the atonality from some mistake - the atonal row could be writen e.g. in key for B-trumpet or something like that, and so the melody became other than Biber intended... But I am not sure, it is only my theory.
The entry of the 2nd and 3rd voices is the most Stravinsky-sounding thing I've ever heard that's not by Stravinsky. (Histoire du Soldat, specifically.)
@@themusicprofessor Trying to think of an example where Ives used that many at the same time, and I'm drawing a blank. ::illustration of Charles Ives grinding his teeth in frustration::
This is very far out. Glad I stumbled upon this. What fascinates me most about the Baroque era is the fact that many of the seeds for the Prog Rock and Extreme Metal I love were planted there. Hearing such dissonance on bowed strings rather than plucked strings is always fun.
Well this is extremely interesting. I am 50 and always have thought that the "liberation" of musical invention from tonality rules, at least deliberately, is a product of the 20th century. Well of course there have been some earlier experiments in some chords or passages. However, this piece is absolutely defying that thought of mine. This is not an experiment. This is a deliberate and well organised idea, leading to an apparent chaos, in which there is order. 4 centuries later came the dodecaphonists, under a similar axiom. Thank you for this!
I know both pieces, and I once had to write program notes for “Les élements”. Anyway, the approach of both Biber and Rebel has little to do with Schoenberg. Rather, they are forerunners of Charles Ives.
WOW! I've been in love with Biber's work ever since I first heard his Mystery Sonatas, but WOW! And Bach using that theme as well in his Goldberg Variations? Mind blown.
Your videos are interesting and intelligently made: short, so as not to bore; detailed on a few clear elements; open to new insights; with fun and tasteful graphics. ✨I congratulate you, Maestro.👍
In my opinion Mr. Biber was not interested introducing here a new technique of composition,he wanted to create confusion and maybe,make a little joke which he liked to do sometimes also in several other pieces.
Really interesting ,thank you. Another baroque composer, this time from France, is also known for his musical 'innovations'. Check out his Les Elemens (ua-cam.com/video/dnlaCenlNHk/v-deo.html) which opens on a dissonant cluster chord, containing all the notes of the d harmonic minor scale. I believe Rebel was the first composer to set the biblical tale of creation to music, and no doubt contains of one of the few truly shocking opening measures up to that time. Contemporary attitudes of depicting chaos through music appear somewhat fearful that such 'experimentation' could herald an era of music that transcends the order, stability and idealism that dominated the time.
Whenver anybody mentions Bach, I have to think of this German joke: Eventually Mozart arrives in heaven. He sees an old man playing the pipe organ and asks the angel Metatron: "Who is that over there?" - the Metatron annoyed: "Uhm, well, this is God, he thinks he is Bach.".
meh, it's just an effect that the composers are employing. it's interesting and unique but has nothing to do with modern polytonality. like that picture from the 1930s where you can see a man dressed in today's fashion, we might notice it as something special but it really is merely one of many experiments done by baroque composers.
We're not suggesting it's modernism, since any composer in any era can only be a composer of their time. Nevertheless, it is polytonal, and a fascinating experimental movement. There are equally striking effects later on in the suite. When Stravinsky described Beethoven's Grosse Fuga as 'contemporary forever' he seemed to imply that some music can innovate far beyond its time, and even beyond our own time.
@@themusicprofessor I guess I see it as an accident, not worthy any more than "hmm, interesting". it is an conceivable idea... some music is really forever however that's a completely different realm to simple tricks and effects. I don't think it was beyond our time, it was acceptable back then and was within the bounds of liberty that the composer can take, so it really was of that time, not beyond it.
there's always a "meh" comment to these unique and seemingly anachronistic examples. for me, i would wonder if composers in those days would maybe get bored and want to do something as "crazy" as this. and some of them apparently did! and this particular effect is very similar to what Charles Ives has done, and most people think of that as "modern".
As a serious listener of 20th Century music, I too think it would’ve made Schoenberg blush. He probably would’ve slapped Berg on the back of the head asking why no one told him about this guy Biber before.
cute! I've subscribed... Actually, I love dissonance in Bach. Love that you picked the phrase from Goldberg Variations. Gould always brings out the dissonance. Nice find.
I was playing this in my car and I thought someone else was playing another classical music in their phone. But i was alone !!! I couldn't wait to go home and understand what the hell is wrong with this music.
0:55 *Today we have programs such Sibelius that can help us so we can hear, at the same time, all the different melodies that we are composing, and so we can correct our work. But these old composers did all that just in their minds, or they had some other musicians willing to play the melodies while the composer was writing and correcting errors?*
Composers were very well schooled in practical harmony and counterpoint from an early age, and so they were trained to hear everything they wrote. The musicologist, Robert Gjerdingen has an interesting channel devoted to this topic: www.youtube.com/@ChildComposers/featured
so this is the piece the string section is always playing before rehearsal starts
Best line I read in a lon, long time. SO TRUE!
In fact, this is the very piece I heard the high-school orchestra doing the other day. What? That was supposed to be Brandenburg #3?
Oh my God 😂
So true!
Actually always had a liking for that pre concert "chaos". Great to open up some uncommon brain paths.
Actually, it's very interesting. Because the composers of that time avoided dissonances without resolution. Bach especially did not like them - biographers say that when the sons of Johann Sebastian Bach were practicing the harpsichord, and their mother called them to dinner, they ran without completing the cadenza. Because of this, Father Bach could not fall asleep, he would get up from the couch and complete the chords, then lie down and fall asleep!
bach composed things with melodies or notes out of tune, but that worked well, in the Brandenburg concerts for example.
Opening of Johannes passion has quite some dissonances.
I think Bach was never driven by seeking consonances, but his sons actually were …
madlad
This seems intrinsic to the musically sensitive. My aunt was a music teacher with a university qualification. She taught both her sons. To tease her they would occasionally end something with a hanging G7 or the like. She would feel compelled to get up and resolve it. Harmless family fun. Listen also to the last bars of Schubert's 4-hand Fantasy in F, and realise how seductively he led you miles away from F. and then pointedly brings you back in a few crashing chords.
Those two last chords (1'27") are absolutely gorgeous
Aren't they?!
1:27
Em7add11 - Dm/Em7
Absolutely, they sound sort of 'fresh' and absolutely not like anything from baroque, they'd fit in a horror movie probably
Absolutely. I would expect such harmony in a messiaen work, or maybe at least a passion piece and not some - excuse me - random folk suite. ':D
It's simple. Biber is German for beaver, Bach means creek. Bach washed the beaver dam away, releasing the congestion, kindof. In hydrology, this is known as the difference between turbulant and laminar flow.
This was one of the best comments I've ever seen on YT. Unexpected but relevant to the subject of the video.
But doesn't the beaver dam prevent flooding?🤔 The creek flooding = Bach proliferation. 🌊
I learned a lot from this one comment. I love that you connect the arts, linguistics, and the natural sciences so succinctly.
@@facundoboms8955You’re going to want to find some sort of standards, ffs.🤦♂️🤦♂️🤡🤡🤡🙄
@Mikosch2 That is in no way an explanation of the difference between turbulent and laminar flow.
I know you like to hear yourself talk about things that you have no clue about but it rarely works out.
Jesus.🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤡🙄
I've been a proud Beliber for more than 300 years.
hahahahahahahahaahhahaahhaah
Yeah he was awesome on the trumpets. 🤣
beliber
Thought I recognised it.
Epic comment
I discover this piece a few years ago and I was so surprised 'cause of the politonality but also because in the 4th movement (I believe it is the 4th mov but can't remember quite accurately) he uses extended techniques, asking the bass players to put a piece of paper in between the strings for a particular sound, he was so innovarive, I love Biber
Yes. The use of extended techniques in the 4th movement is fascinating. Perhaps we will look at this at some point in the future.
His Rosary Sonatas for violin are equally fascinating with unusual tunings including crossing 2 of the strings to represent the crucifixion.
@@kathyjohnson2043 that is a wonderful and haunting work ( . Decades ago when I first heard it there was only one recording available in the US, on the Vox label. Now there are numerous renditions.
The thing about an era before it becomes ossified is precisely this kind of experimentation, that then seems to heretical to us later. Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandy is the literary case in point.
Loved the illustration of Schoenberg blushing..ha ha! This has just made my day. Any student who thinks old music is boring should give this a listen.
That's so kind. Thank you!
My mother, an LRAM, was brought up largely on Beethoven and Schumann. A friend of mine, a music teacher, played a piano piece of Schoenberg's to her. He asked her what she thought of it. After a short pause, one word "Hateful." I've heard music being called many names, but thhis was the first time I heard "hateful"
I also love the one with Mr.Bean fainting. Happy to see the music to this.
an anecdote about the Bach family from Bach's biographer (I got this from the Wikipedia page on Goldberg Var.30):
"As soon as they were assembled a chorale was first struck up. From this devout beginning they proceeded to jokes which were frequently in strong contrast. That is, they then sang popular songs partly of comic and also partly of indecent content, all mixed together on the spur of the moment. This kind of improvised harmonizing they called a Quodlibet, and not only could laugh over it quite whole-heartedly themselves, but also aroused just as hearty and irresistible laughter in all who heard them."
One of my favorite composers. Wonderfully inventive baroque music with a rock-n-roll attitude. In the same piece he instructed the violone players to place a sheet of paper under their strings so that the vibration would give the illusion of snare drums being played in the distance.
Imagine if you gave this lad effect pedals.
The thing that blew me away the most was the last two chords. Absolutely stunning. I couldn’t help but start laughing because of how ridiculously awesome it was.
Yes. They are beautiful.
1st final chord: Ebm7(add11).
2nd final chord: Ebm7b9(add11).
And i would would all of that with C#maj7add9.
The tune you are highlighting is the "Bergamasca", a Renaissance Italian evergreen dance based on a repetitive I-IV-V harmonic pattern. Frescobaldi, Scheidt, Uccellini... and many others developed legendary renderings and variations of the theme. Both Biber and Bach chose to quote it for sure with full knowledge ^^
Enjoy Uccellini's :)
ua-cam.com/video/_gRO8jW9rTU/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/EYZ79HjPh2M/v-deo.html
The Bergamasca melody is used for the German folk song Kraut und Rueben, part of the Quodlibet in the 3oth Goldberg variations against Ich bin so lang g’wezt over the original bass melody. There’s a quote from the folk song as pointed out in a 1603 lute manuscript of Mein Junges Leben hat ein End’ which Sweelinck wrote his famous variations. The information was from an article from 2005 on the Bach Cantata website which goes into greater detail of the capstone nature of the Quodlibet and its references to earlier canons both in the use of Ich bin so lang so with a variant end, and also in the Cantata BWV 212 with a variant ending.
Forget to mention the Bach families would sing quolibets extempore at family gatherings for humorous effect. The two lyrics has cabbage and another vegetable (with inferred gas/flatulence) and the other lyric with the commanding come here, come here…
@@Renshen1957 turnip.
@@klegdixal3529 @klegdixal Thank you for the translation. That's the translation I learned in my two years study of the German language. Currently, I do not have access to a 17th century or early 18th century German dictionary. After the controversy down under claim over the Anna Magdelena Bach's alleged composing the Violin Sonatas and additional claim of the "French" Suites for Harpsichord, (the French word now used composed was in JSB's time the word for copied), I now take the precaution to double check words from the time period. There's no doubt as to Kraut=cabbage (from my last contact with an 18th century dictionary), and yet a mid 20th century source on the Quolibet then "two songs" translated Kraut as Kale. Although all members of the Cabbage family are Brassica oleracea cultivars, and Rueben is turnip, I now, if I have time, take the precaution to double check with a then contemporary dictionary.
The change of word or phrase meanings is fairly common in French Harpsichord music, the tempo indication Vivement for the the fifth piece in Francois Couperin "Ordre 6ème de clavecin" at that the time translates as "Deeply," however, current usage includes "strongly," "briskly," and also in comments of "can't wait." Consequently most Harpsichord (and piano) players speed through Les Barricades Mystérieuses. This piece is translated as The Mysterious Barricades, Barricades also refers to (music) chords. The 19th century publishers of Couperin's Harpsichord music (Friedrich Chrysander and Johannes Brahms also interpreted the title concluding piece of the Ordre (suite) as Gnat or Urchin, while the late Emirtus Professor of French at UCSB translated the title as fly. (The latter more appropos).
in English, By and By as in modern usage as a noun is defined as future time or occassion. In the first century of the 17th century English, by and by meant immediately. The Merriam-Webster dictionary still list the 17th c. definition as an adverb, but vernacular usage in the 20th Century to present whether noun or adverb is understood as some undefined future occurence or event.
Hence my reluctance to confirm turnip and left it as vegetable. Not having ever eaten turnips, I was unaware of their reputation of producing really foul-smelling farts!
424 years later I am shocked.
Thank you for existing, been needing a channel like this
Wonderful, thank you for bringing this to my attention. There is no need for the animations expressing distress about the cacophony, all the notes are in the right place.
Drunk at midnight trying to finish that composition for His Excellency.
That is the funniest idea for a work. Musical humor seems timeless in its effectiveness.
Yes it's hilarious 🤣 totally agree
This is really amazing... thank you so much
Revelatory. Great work in bringing this gem to light.
This is why I think Biber was one of the best baroque composers. He was a modernist before it was cool.
But can you really be a modernist before your time? That’s like being a postmodernist in retrospect.
Don’t get me wrong - I’m a belieber, I couldn’t lieber if I tried.
Tip your server ... and try the veal!
Thanks!
Thank you so much for your support!
Back then the highlighted melody was sung with the text „Kraut und Rüben haben mich vertrieben, hätt‘ meine Mutter Fleisch gekocht so wär ich noch geblieben“. - „(Sauer)Kraut and beets drove me away. Had my mother cooked meat I should have stayed“ Bach ingeniously mixes it with another song that starts with „Ich bin schon lang nicht bei dir gewest“ - „I haven’t been with you since a long time“. So the contemporary would hear in his mind „I haven’t been with you since a long time - Kraut and beets drove me away“. Now „this looks like Kraut und Rüben“ is a colloquial term for „it’s a complete mess“. And all that appears when the original unmodified theme comes back. So Bach tongue-in-cheek calls his variations „Kraut und Rüben“.
Wow, this is amazing. I immediately thought I knew this simple tune but couldn’t remember. Kraut und Rüben - a big mess. Thanks for the clarification.
I'm a violinist and I like this for two reasons:
It's not difficult to play, and it keeps the listener awake!
Sometimes one has to shake up the house!
*keeps the listener away
fixed that for you 😁
@@TomJakobW No, no, no, Tom! Awake!
Hahaha...
Vidéo très instructive et vraiment amusante aussi... Merci !
Thank you! I love baroque but have never heard this type of composition.
Biber is absolutely amazing.
those harmonies at the end are so good omg
We just did an Xmas concert at the orchestra and the finale was like 3/4? Carols mashed up and overbearing chorals singing something else. But at the end it all came together and played out beautifully!
My favorite thing is that now i know you can call what you guys did a Quodlibet. Who drinketh, in latin.
Goodness gracious. Fantastic content! I have Biber's Rosary Sonatas, and a few other pieces, but I never knew about the Battaglia. Well done indeed!
This gives me Schnittke concerto grosso vibes, nice!
Yes, indeed. In fact Schnittke was mentioned in an earlier video about Rebel: ua-cam.com/video/WH9Ae_tnAYc/v-deo.html and I think I recommended this Concerto Grosso: ua-cam.com/video/NtGTJ6_KD2c/v-deo.html
this is absolutely my favorite baroque piece, and while a lot of it like the polytonality was for fun it actually sounds super awesome and sounds similar to composers a few hundred years later! there’s also bartok pizz and literally putting a piece of paper under the violone’s strings, among other neat techniques!
biber also did some really cool stuff in other pieces, for example literally crossing the a and d strings behind the bridge and at the scroll in his Resurrection Sonata
Yes, the Battalia has other movements are equally spectacular. The Resurrection Sonata is extraordinary. He is a fascinating composer.
Silent Grass Step
sounds he was micro-dosing on ergot. thx for the post.
You seem to have a keen interest in modern musical ideas such as Polytonality and Atonality; In his Harvard Norton Lectures, Leonard Bernstein talked about the "20th Century Crisis" and how in search of new ways to keep music fresh, looking for new "tonal ambiguities", music split in two: The Polytonality of Stravinsky and the Atonality of Schoenberg. As someone who obviously has knowledge of both, I think you might enjoy an exploration of this 20th Century Crisis.
Yes, hopefully, as this channel continues, and with the support of our patrons, we will explore a whole range of topics like this
@@themusicprofessor I cannot wait to see what happens! I'm not too big in the music spotlight at the moment, but I do know my Stravinsky, so if you ever want someone to talk to about it, I'd be more then happy to tell you what I know!
I think the first chord you show right at the beginning of this excellent video is the opening of "Les éléments" by J-F Rebel.... non?
I think, Bach uses this subject for a very different reason. It is always said, that with this stupid "Kraut und Rüben" song he wanted to produce some comic effect. But in reality it is the subject of the famous La Capricciosa variations by Dietrich Buxtehude. This harpsicord work is in G major and has 32 movements, which is exactly the same number as in Bach's cyclus (Aria + 30 variantions + Aria da capo) and so the model and prototype for the Goldberg Variations. When Bach in the last variation quotes La Capricciosa, it is a just a tribute to Buxtehude, who was his beloved teacher.
Ahh man I just wrote this. You got there first.
Those last two chords at 1:27 said " You don't know me very well, do you? " in perhaps a most calm, yet foreboding way...
If you're not already aware of it, you might enjoy Farina's Capriccio Stravagante which dates back to 1627. Strings emulating cats meowing and dogs barking :)
Adrian Belew does cats, rhinos, and elephants on his guitar.
Love it!!! Thank you very much.
What an excellent video!
Instant subscription
Thank you!
YO WHO IS THE GUY FROM 0:11 HE LOOKS LIKE ME LOL
What a great video! All these dissonances and polyphony remind me of Antonio Lotti's Crucifixus...
Great music, wonderful commentary
Aaah La Battaglia! One of my favorite tunes from the baroque! Its very interesting how he expressed many things associated with war, that arent only battles. He inspired this music in the 30 years war, that was still raging on in the year he was born, and would only end 4 years later. This movement in particular its said that it represents a military encampment, as there were many soldiers of different places that occasionally would sing their songs at night, resulting in this cacophony of many different tunes stacked one upon another.
Thank you. Yes, the connection with the 30 years war is fascinating. The impact of war upon artists is a topic that has come up in other short films on this channel, particularly these two about Ravel: ua-cam.com/video/ts7K4yCP5tI/v-deo.html and ua-cam.com/video/q6oOo8izmyo/v-deo.html
Did you ever hear Giovanni Valentini's 'Enharmonic Sonata'? Then this is probably a good time to check it out.
Very interesting suggestion.
Yes this music is really amazing!! I wanted to speak about this composer too!!
ua-cam.com/video/fLnp-1lgc44/v-deo.html 🔥🔥🔥🙈🙉🙊
Great post! There is a composer before Biber who likewise employed some rather far out harmonizations, but his name now escapes me. George Amirkhanian aired many of these works on KPFA in the 70s.
Let me know if you remember!
@@themusicprofessor perhaps the reference was to Carlo Gesualdo ( 1566 -1613 ), known for his use of "advanced" chromaticism.
When you think to be a composer after a half lesson of harmony
Well I know what you mean but Biber was an expert harmonist.
@@themusicprofessor Just kidding ^^ , I didn't want to disrespect the composer, I Just react to what I listened and the impact of It on my ears
It's so fantastically interesting!)) Thanks a lot for publishing this!)) ,🙏🙏🙏❤
Man, I love The Battle.
You could say I have Biber Fever...
Fantastic!!! Thank You very much!!!
Interesting... it seems a whole orchestra warming before a concert. Is there more info about the coincidence of one of the themes and the Bach's Goldgberg variations?
The video description above explains a little. The tune is called Kraut und Rüben haben mich vertrieben (“cabbages and turnips have driven me away”). It's an old German folk song, and seems to have been popular in quodlibet singing of the time. In Bach's Goldberg Variations it appears as a sort of joke implying that we have been 'driven away' from the original theme for too long.
@@themusicprofessor that makes sense, as Goldbergs are based on the bass line of a Haendel's variations on an aria and it may be a quodlibet approach to put together two apparently distant worlds.
It is incredible, weirdly gorgeous and fantastic.
Thank you. Yes it is!
@@jerryatrick6127 we’ll, yeah, but I was raised on Barton and Stravinsky, so there’s that.
Gracias!
Its a famous melody, the words are "cabbage and beets drove me away; had my mother cooked meats I might have stayed"
At 1:48 (measure 32), the C that falls on the 4th beat should be a C natural if my ears don't fool me.....??? Please verify.
Yes, a C natural.
No, because it is a baroque tuning, so the notes which we hear in this recording are actually lower than "today's pitch".
FINALLY someone talking about it!!!!!! I've been listening to that piece every now and then and I've always been amazed by that part...
Anyway, the recording isn't Savall's one, it's from Voices of Music
Oh yes, silly mistake. Duly amended.
In my opinion came the atonality from some mistake - the atonal row could be writen e.g. in key for B-trumpet or something like that, and so the melody became other than Biber intended... But I am not sure, it is only my theory.
The entry of the 2nd and 3rd voices is the most Stravinsky-sounding thing I've ever heard that's not by Stravinsky. (Histoire du Soldat, specifically.)
Bi-tonal folky fiddle sound - yes, I see what you mean!
I’m not a musician or composer, but for me that was so exciting and interesting to watch. Music is a whole Universe. Thanks
Thank you.
At one point it feels like... listening to Charles Ives!
It's a very similar effect. Ives also liked to take existing tunes and play them simultaneously in different keys
@@themusicprofessor Trying to think of an example where Ives used that many at the same time, and I'm drawing a blank.
::illustration of Charles Ives grinding his teeth in frustration::
Great to hear. Thanks
This is very far out. Glad I stumbled upon this. What fascinates me most about the Baroque era is the fact that many of the seeds for the Prog Rock and Extreme Metal I love were planted there. Hearing such dissonance on bowed strings rather than plucked strings is always fun.
Thank you. Interesting comment. I've always liked the fact that Handel's house in London was later occupied by Jimmy Hendrix!
Well this is extremely interesting. I am 50 and always have thought that the "liberation" of musical invention from tonality rules, at least deliberately, is a product of the 20th century. Well of course there have been some earlier experiments in some chords or passages. However, this piece is absolutely defying that thought of mine. This is not an experiment. This is a deliberate and well organised idea, leading to an apparent chaos, in which there is order. 4 centuries later came the dodecaphonists, under a similar axiom. Thank you for this!
There's no doubt Mr. Biber had a good sense for anarchy.. like some childs singing their own fave song at the same time.. what a fun!😁
Admittedly, this was a frightening listen, and fear is unlike me, as I am not of this realm.
Bravo, sir.
*"My ears!!!"*
There's also the first movement of Jean-Fery Rebel's "Les Elements" as well. Puts Mozart's "Dissonance" quartet in its place.
ua-cam.com/video/WH9Ae_tnAYc/v-deo.html
I know both pieces, and I once had to write program notes for “Les élements”. Anyway, the approach of both Biber and Rebel has little to do with Schoenberg. Rather, they are forerunners of Charles Ives.
The best music never dies...
How would we know it it did?
WOW! I've been in love with Biber's work ever since I first heard his Mystery Sonatas, but WOW! And Bach using that theme as well in his Goldberg Variations? Mind blown.
Your videos are interesting and intelligently made: short, so as not to bore; detailed on a few clear elements; open to new insights; with fun and tasteful graphics.
✨I congratulate you, Maestro.👍
Thank you very much.
Very interesting video so good job for that, but next time make the comment actually readable please
That Dm/Em7 chord at the end really feels like Stravinsky.
Like the Sage at the end of the first Act of Rite of spring or maybe the introduction of the exalted sacrifice.
Wow, I didn't know this, amazing!
This is like something Charles Ives would have thought of.
1:07 Oh shit. There must be something wrong with the clefs.
Or did they wrote the music so they play all th keys but the ones sounding good?
No, the clefs are right. Biber just wanted a cacophonous 'drunken' effect.
Absolutely incredible!! So shocked I've never heard this before!! It's almost Ligeti/Penderecki-like...!!
I can listen to Schoenberg and other modern composers without any problems, but this is on a different level
Just found your channel, please keep making these videos I'm a big fan!
Thank you!
I’ve returned today to this clip…something eerily charming about it.
In my opinion Mr. Biber was not interested introducing here a new technique of composition,he wanted to create confusion and maybe,make a little joke which he liked to do sometimes also in several other pieces.
Hic dissonant ubique, nam enim sic diversis cantilenis clamore solent!
Really interesting ,thank you. Another baroque composer, this time from France, is also known for his musical 'innovations'. Check out his Les Elemens (ua-cam.com/video/dnlaCenlNHk/v-deo.html) which opens on a dissonant cluster chord, containing all the notes of the d harmonic minor scale. I believe Rebel was the first composer to set the biblical tale of creation to music, and no doubt contains of one of the few truly shocking opening measures up to that time. Contemporary attitudes of depicting chaos through music appear somewhat fearful that such 'experimentation' could herald an era of music that transcends the order, stability and idealism that dominated the time.
Thank you. Yes, we made a video about this a couple of weeks ago: ua-cam.com/video/WH9Ae_tnAYc/v-deo.html
It is interesting. And the opening and closing parts are really excellent.
This composer is very underrated. We need to spread awareness.
No.
I think that radio channels ought to have the guts to include this in their broadcasting schedules.
Whenver anybody mentions Bach, I have to think of this German joke:
Eventually Mozart arrives in heaven. He sees an old man playing the pipe organ and asks the angel Metatron:
"Who is that over there?" - the Metatron annoyed: "Uhm, well, this is God, he thinks he is Bach.".
Yes - mind you, Bach had a high opinion of God! (e.g. ua-cam.com/video/eTq3gszPsIQ/v-deo.html)
@@themusicprofessor I'm sure it was shared. It probably still is.
meh, it's just an effect that the composers are employing. it's interesting and unique but has nothing to do with modern polytonality. like that picture from the 1930s where you can see a man dressed in today's fashion, we might notice it as something special but it really is merely one of many experiments done by baroque composers.
We're not suggesting it's modernism, since any composer in any era can only be a composer of their time. Nevertheless, it is polytonal, and a fascinating experimental movement. There are equally striking effects later on in the suite. When Stravinsky described Beethoven's Grosse Fuga as 'contemporary forever' he seemed to imply that some music can innovate far beyond its time, and even beyond our own time.
@@themusicprofessor I guess I see it as an accident, not worthy any more than "hmm, interesting". it is an conceivable idea... some music is really forever however that's a completely different realm to simple tricks and effects. I don't think it was beyond our time, it was acceptable back then and was within the bounds of liberty that the composer can take, so it really was of that time, not beyond it.
@@handavid6421 You must be fun at parties
@@captainhaddock6435 I apologize if I annoyed you
there's always a "meh" comment to these unique and seemingly anachronistic examples. for me, i would wonder if composers in those days would maybe get bored and want to do something as "crazy" as this. and some of them apparently did! and this particular effect is very similar to what Charles Ives has done, and most people think of that as "modern".
Wonderful work by Biber and you!
Thank you
@@themusicprofessor Thank you!
He got back to tonality Pretty Darn Quick.
Wow - my kind of guy! Thanks for this video!!
As a serious listener of 20th Century music, I too think it would’ve made Schoenberg blush. He probably would’ve slapped Berg on the back of the head asking why no one told him about this guy Biber before.
This might have made Schoenberg blush, but it would have made Charles Ives smile.
Your videos are full of humor and very interesting😂❤🎉
The quolibet in the goldberg variations was using some popular themes back in the days !
I come here only to say that asking if this was legal must be punishable with a deafsentence.
cute! I've subscribed... Actually, I love dissonance in Bach. Love that you picked the phrase from Goldberg Variations. Gould always brings out the dissonance. Nice find.
Predating even Ives (whom it bears some resemblance) by 200 years... love it, thanks for sharing.
That whole thing sounded like a very skilled symphony orchestra warming up before a performance.
My hs orchestra director is really into baroque music and my orchestra played this piece at a concert. very cool to hear it being covered like this
I was playing this in my car and I thought someone else was playing another classical music in their phone. But i was alone !!!
I couldn't wait to go home and understand what the hell is wrong with this music.
Have you heard "Spem in Alium" by Thomas Tallis? I think it could be an interesting piece for one of your videos
the thumbnail is hilarious
0:55 *Today we have programs such Sibelius that can help us so we can hear, at the same time, all the different melodies that we are composing, and so we can correct our work. But these old composers did all that just in their minds, or they had some other musicians willing to play the melodies while the composer was writing and correcting errors?*
Composers were very well schooled in practical harmony and counterpoint from an early age, and so they were trained to hear everything they wrote. The musicologist, Robert Gjerdingen has an interesting channel devoted to this topic: www.youtube.com/@ChildComposers/featured