ArundoDonax

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    Welcome to Tafelmusik Orchestra's

    Baroque Adventure...

    The Quest ForARUNDO DONAX

    TEACHER AND STUDENT MATERIALS

    This guide was created by Alison Mackay to accompany Tafelmusiks

    music education initiatives.

    There is no specific CD referred to in this guide.To hear the sound of a baroque orchestra you may wish to listen to:

    A Baroque Feast(CD# AN 2 9811)

    Analekta 2002

    Music by: J.S. Bach, Purcell, Marcello, Vivaldi, Handel, and Locatelli

    Soloists include: John Abberger, oboe; Maxine Eilander, harp;

    Genevive Gilardeau, violin; Jeanne Lamon, violin;

    Christina Mahler, cello and Allen Whear, cello

    These materials are intended for educational purposes only and are protected under copyright.

    Tafelmusik, 2002

    Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra & Chamber Choir

    427 Bloor Street West Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1X7 Phone: 416-964-9562 Fax: 416-964-2782

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    What is Arundo Donax?

    One of the most important instruments in the Tafelmusik Orchestra is the baroque

    oboe. Oboists make their sound by blowing into a "double reed" made from two

    pieces of a rare bamboo-like plant which grows in the south of France. Thebotanical name for this plant is "arundo donax". Our concert is built around an

    adventure story, narrated by Shaw Festival actor Blair Williams, concerning a

    dangerous mission to procure arundo donax for oboe players in baroque England.

    What other instruments will we hear at the Tafelmusik concert?

    Our concert will feature the most common instruments of a baroque orchestra

    baroque violins, violas, cellos, double bass, harpsichord and baroque oboes. The

    accompanying guide gives detailed information about each of the instruments and

    about the Tafelmusik Orchestra and its way of performing baroque music.

    Our concert also features an ancient Chinese instrument. the "pipa." This plucked,

    four-stringed lute (a guitar-like instrument) was introduced into China from central

    Asia before the fifth century. The most famous compositions played on the pipa,

    such as "Snow in Spring," which will be performed at our concert, date back at

    least to the eighteenth century, the time of our story. The pipa is a very virtuosic

    instrument which often imitates phenomena of nature in its music.

    Our distinguished performer on the pipa is Wen Zhao, who has been a guest artistthis year in Tafelmusik's Four Seasons Project a multi-disciplinary study for

    grade-six students on the theme of the four seasons in art and music. (This project,

    in partnership with the Royal Conservatory of Musics Learning through the Arts

    ProgrammeTM

    , develops aspects of the Ontario grade-six curriculum in the areas of

    science, art, music, and dance.)

    When does the story take place?

    Our story is set in 1704, during the War of Spanish Succession.

    England and France were fighting over the choice of the next king of Spain, andabout whether England or France would control Newfoundland and Nova Scotia.

    During this war, French forces captured St. John's, Newfoundland, and the English

    gained control over Port-Royale and Acadia. (See "War of Spanish Succession" in

    the Canadian Encyclopedia for more details). The queen of England at this time

    was Queen Anne. The king of France was the famous "Sun King", Louis XIV.

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    Where does the story take place?

    Our story begins in London, England, where our hero and heroine, Edward and

    Frances Purcell, live. The orphaned teenaged children of the great English

    composer, Henry Purcell, they are sent on a quest which takes them by boat to the

    Italian city of Venice, and then to France, where they visit the palace of Versailles,outside of Paris. Students can locate London, Venice, Paris and Versailles on a map

    of Europe.

    What composers will we hear in the concert?

    The two most famous composers whose works will be heard are Henry Purcell and

    Antonio Vivaldi.

    Henry Purcell was born in London in 1659. For his entire life he lived within

    walking distance of Westminster Abbey, the great cathedral where English kingsand queens are crowned. Purcell became the organist of Westminster Abbey just

    before his twenty-first birthday and when he died at the tragically young age of 36

    he was buried there at the foot of the organ.

    Purcell had been a boy soprano in the choir of the king's chapel, where he was

    given lessons in singing, violin, organ and composition. He showed such youthful

    talent as a composer that at 18 he was appointed special composer to King Charles

    II. He remained in the employ of the royal family for the rest of his life.

    His compositions include hundreds of works for every type of musical occasion. He

    wrote anthems and cantatas for church services, songs for solo singers, and

    instrumental works for organ, harpsichord and string ensembles.

    Toward the end of his life he began to compose more and more music for the

    theatre, which was extremely popular in London at this time. The works by Purcell

    in our programme are all pieces of incidental music from theatrical works.

    The concert will open with the overture to the Purcell's music drama, "King

    Arthur". Baroque overtures were divided into two sections - the first, a slow, stately

    processional, was designed for the formal entrance of the King or Queen into the

    theatre. The second, more lively section set the stage for the adventures to follow.

    The other short pieces by Henry Purcell on our concert are rhythmic and tuneful

    dance pieces reminiscent of the English popular music of the time.

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    Antonio Vivaldi was born in Venice, the beautiful Italian city of canals, gondolas

    and carnivals. On March 4, 1678, the day of his birth, an earthquake shook the city.

    The baby was not expected to live long because of a lung ailment, but he survived

    for 63 years to become one of the most important composers of the baroque period.

    Ordained at the age of 25, Vivaldi had red hair and was known as the "red priest".Like many baroque composers he was famous as a virtuoso performer - people

    came to Venice from all over to hear him play the violin.

    He was also famous as a teacher. He was associated for most of his career with an

    orphanage in Venice which trained young girls in singing and instrumental music.

    Many of his most famous works were composed for an orchestra of girls and young

    women at this institution.

    Vivaldi's most beloved composition today is The Four Seasons, a set of four violinconcertos depicting the weather and activities of the changing seasons. We will be

    performing the first movement of "Winter", which depicts the following piece of

    poetry:

    Frozen and trembling in (the instrumental parts enter one

    the chilly snow at a time with staccato repeated

    notes and violin trills

    representing shivers)

    Exposed to horrible (the solo violin enters with wild

    winds arpeggios representing the wind)

    We run and stamp (a repeated "stamping" motif in

    our feet the orchestra)

    Our teeth chatter in the extreme (tremelo double stops

    cold in the solo violin)

    If you have a chance to listen to this movement on a CD try to pick out these

    special effects which Vivaldi uses to represent chattering, shivering and winds.