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Our solo
flute
repertoire is filled to overflowing with pieces entitled "sonata",
with much of it being written approximately two to four hundred years
ago. Why do so many of these pieces share the
same
title? What exactly is a sonata,
anyway? In the following article we'll
explore the history of the sonata in the Baroque and Classical periods
to give
you a better understanding of this music that makes up so much of the
flute
repertoire.
The Baroque Period
(1600 - 1750)
In the early Baroque
period, the term "sonata"
referred to a musical composition of
several movements for a solo instrument with an accompaniment called a basso continuo
(usually keyboard plus cello). If two
solo instruments with basso continuo were used it, was referred to as a
trio sonata. Basically, no more than two solo instruments
could be used in a sonata of this time. The
early sonata had about six movements, which were often arranged as
thus:
1) Adagio or Grave: a
slow, short introduction, often with dotted rhythms called notés
inegále (unequal notes) in
the French
overture style, which was not always indicated
with dotted notation
2) Allegro: usually fast and fugal (imitative) in style
3) Adagio: slow,
short
and aria-like
(free-form)
4) Dance: a fast,
dance-like movement in triple meter
5) Adagio: another
slow, short, contrasting section
6) Allegro: fast
and
fugal or dance-like, usually a gigue, but sometimes an allemande
or gavotte
As
the Baroque period
progressed, the sonata was categorized according to its performance
function,
either sacred or secular. The sonata da camera,
or chamber sonata was the secular form and utilized several dance
movements,
whereas the sonata
da chiesa or church sonata did not use any dance movements. In the middle Baroque, the sonata da camera
often consisted of four or five movements, usually starting with a slow
introduction followed by three or four dance movements such as
allemande, gigue
and sarabande. Again, the movements were
often arranged with alternating tempos of slow-fast-slow-fast, etc. Some composers, however, used a
three-movement arrangement of slow-fast-faster or two movements of slow
and
fast. The general rule was that the
greater the number of movements used, the shorter the duration of those
movements and vice versa. Ornamentation
of the melodic line with trills
or shakes, grupettos (turns), mordents, or long and
short appoggiaturas
(grace notes) was left up to the performer although it was considered
to be in
bad taste by the time of the late Baroque to overly ornament a line. Style of articulation was governed to some
extent by the type of instrument being played; for example, staccato
was not
considered acceptable when done on the flute or oboe according to a
treatise, An Essay on Musical Expression, written
in 1752 by Ch. Avison. It is interesting
to note that the "staccato" dots found in music of the Baroque period
were actually indications by the composer that the performer was not to play it in the style of the
French notés inegále or dotted rhythms but with equal
notes, strictly as
written. Staccato was generally
indicated by the use of wedged dots above the notes. For
the flutist, this wedged dot was instead
to be articulated with a "ti" syllable as opposed to the standard
"di" syllable.

The Classical Period
(1750 - 1810)
As the Baroque period
merged into the Classical period between 1725 and 1775 (this period
sometimes
referred to as the Rococo
period) the sonata began to become more
standardized. By the time the Classical
period was well under way, the sonata generally had three to four
movements
that were of longer length than their Baroque counterparts. The usual arrangement of movements was either
fast-slow-fast or fast-slow-minuet (or scherzo)-fast, with the
movements having
the following characteristics:
1) Allegro: a fast
allegro, usually sonata-allegro
form (a two-part form having (a) an introduction
and exposition
or statement of theme(s) and (b) a development of theme(s) with modulation of key, and
(c) a recapitulation
or restatement of the opening theme(s) followed by an ending coda
2) Adagio: a slow movement such as an adagio (or largo,
or andante, etc.) being either free in form, sonata-allegro form or binary form (a
two part, A-B, form with each section repeating)
3) Minuet (or Scherzo) and Trio:
a moderate (or fast) tempo in a triple meter using ternary
(three-part, A-B-A) form
4) Allegro: a fast
allegro or presto using sonata-allegro form or rondo form (a theme alternating
with several contrasting sections: A-B-A-C-A-B-A, etc.)
Some of the sonatas of
the late Baroque and early Classical periods also used a structure of fast-slow-minuet
I-minuet II, which can be seen in some of the
flute sonatas of
J. S. Bach and W. A. Mozart. All of the
movements in a Classical sonata could be in the same key and
ornamentation was
written out by the composer, rather than left to the discretion of the
performer as was done in the Baroque period. Although
these were the characteristics of the mature Classical sonata
as standardized by such composers as Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven, there
were
exceptions made by other composers, some of whom continued to write in
a style
more characteristic of the Baroque sonata than that of the Classical
sonata.
The sonatina,
meaning a small or short
sonata, was used in both the Baroque and Classical periods, often
appearing as
an instructional piece of music. Its
nature was generally simple in both theme and form and was usually only
two movements
in length. The sonata as a musical
composition has since been borrowed for other types of instrumentation
in
addition to the one or two part solo with basso continuo accompaniment
used in
the Baroque period. For example, the
symphony as a composition is in reality a sonata for orchestra, the
string
quartet is a sonata for a quartet, and the concerto is a sonata for
solo
instrument(s) with the orchestra as the accompaniment. All
three employ the structure and form of
movements used in the mature, Classical sonata.
| Sources for This
Article: |
Dart,
Thurston
(1963)
The Interpretation of Music
Dolmetsch, Arnold (1977)
The Interpretation of Music in the 17th
and 18th Centuries
Palisca, Claude V.
(1968)
Baroque Music
Pauly, Reinhard G.
(1973)
Music in the Classical Period
Quantz, Johann Joachim
(1752) On Playing
the Flute
Randel, Don Michael
(1978) The Harvard Concise Dictionary of Music |
Some Composers of Flute
Sonatas
in the Baroque and
Classical Periods |
Baroque
Period
(1600 - 1750)
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Classical Period
(1750 - 1810) |
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Albinoni, T.
(1671-1750)
Bach, C. P. E. (both) (1714-1788)
Bach, J. S. (1685-1750)
Benda, F. (both)
(1709-1786)
Blavet, M. (1700-1768)
Boismortier, J. B. de (1691-1755)
Chèdeville, E. P. (1696-1762)
Corelli, A. (1653-1713)
Corrette, M. (both) (1709-1795)
Frederick the Great (II) (both) (1712-1786)
Geminiani, F. (1680-1762)
Graun, K. H. (1704-1759)
Hasse, J. A. (both) (1699-1783)
Handel, G. F. (1685-1759)
Hotteterre, J. M. (1680?-1761?)
Leclair, J. M. (1697-1764)
Locatelli, P. (1695-1764)
Loeillet, J. B. (1680-1730)
Marcello, M. (1686-1739)
Naudot, J. C. (?-1762)
Pergolesi, G. B. (1710-1736)
Platti, G. (1690-1763)
Quantz, J. J. (both) (1697-1773)
Sammartini, G. B. (1693-1750)
Scarlatti, A. (1660-1725)
Scarlatti, D. (1685-1757)
Telemann, G. P. (1681-1767)
Valentino, R. (born c. 1715)
Vinci, L. (1690-1730)
Vivaldi, A. (1675-1741)
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Bach,
C. P. E. (both) (1714-1788)
Bach,
J. C. (1735-1782)
Beethoven,
L. van (1770-1827)
Benda,
F. (both) (1709-1786)
Clementi,
M. (1752-1832)
Corrette,
M. (both) (1709-1795)
Danzi,
F. (1763-1826)
Devienne,
F. (1759-1803)
Hässe,
J. A. (both) (1699-1783)
Hassler, J. W. (1747-1822)
Haydn,
F. J. (1732-1809)
Haydn,
J. M. (1737-1806)
Hummel,
J. N. (1778-1837)
Mozart,
W. A. (1756-1791)
Pleyel, I. J. (1757-1831)
Quantz,
J. J. (both) (1697-1773)
Wanhal, J. B. (1739-1813)

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