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LASALLE College of the Arts

Classical Improvisation: A Form of Lost Art?

Chua Tung Khng 14455 Contemporary Music Culture Natalie Alexandra Tse 13 November 2013

Chua Tung Khng 14455 Classical Natalie Alexandra Tse Improvisation, also known as extemporisation, is defined in music as the spontaneous invention, composition, embellishment or performance of music. It comes from the Latin word improvisus meaning unforeseen or unexpected. Improvisation is usually done in a manner stylistically similar to the piece, and yet not bound by conventions of the original conventions of the music. Not only is this applied to music, but also to other forms of art like acting, dancing, singing or artworks creation. Improvisation is an integral part of music, and it has been around for as long as there has been music. When prehistoric man first struck on a makeshift drum, or blew down a hollowed out bone with holes in it (Hanson), he was playing based on instinct, without any form of notation or direction to follow. By doing so, he became one of the first improvisers.

The term Classical Music in this essay includes but is not limited to art music composed during the Baroque, Classical, Romantic era and beyond. This essay examines how different compositional and notation techniques throughout the classical period led to the gradual decline of improvisation, and discusses whether Classical Improvisation is a form of lost art today.

Chua Tung Khng 2 Ex.1 Kyrie of Machaults Messe de Notre Dame (Abeele).

Plainchants rely on neumatic notation which developed into the notational forms that are in use today. Gregorian Chants were preserved in plainsong notation, which assures that chants would be sung the same way everywhere. The earliest substantial information about improvisation appeared in treatises, instructing the singer how to add another line to a liturgical chant as it was performed. The ability of improvising a counter melody to harmonise with the original chant would require technical knowledge about vertical consonance and dissonance and of melodic intervals available on the diatonic system. The earlier improvising singers might have relied on melodic memory to recall the chant, and eventually the chant would be notated so they could anticipate the notes (Collins 99). The first manuals on improvisation were concerned with foundation of contrapuntal theory and practice and with the development of staff notation. Notating the melodies would then ensure the consistency of the chants. Thus, notation was both a result of the striving for uniformity and a means of perpetuating that uniformity (Grout 38). The ability to improvise counterpoint over a cantus firmus was observed as the most important kind of unwritten music, and was incorporated into every musicians studies during the Middle Ages.

Chua Tung Khng 3 Modes of improvisation practised in Italy during the renaissance were brought over into the Baroque period; the embellishment of an existing part and the creation of entirely new part(s) were two principal types of improvisation. Composers would only write out the melody and the bass, with the bass played on harpsichord, organ or lute and coupled by a sustaining instrument like the cello or bassoon. Performers had to realise notated figured bass by improvising from simple chords to passing tones to counterpoint, which completes the harmony as well as produces a fuller sonority.

Sometimes active melodic lines are varied with consonants with longer note values and their own melodic shape. The parts may be inverted with the hands shifting roles a common practice and a method of composition favoured by Scarlatti and Handel in the opening of their compositions (Ex. 1). Ex.1 Scarlatti Sonata in a minor, K.54

The example above is taken from one of Scarlattis Keyboard Sonatas, which shows the piece beginning with a single melodic line played with the right hand. The melody line is then repeated in bar 3, but played with the left hand and slightly varied at the end, while right hand harmonises the melody with thirds.

Chua Tung Khng 4 Composers began to exercise control over ornamentation by writing out symbols or abbreviations in some instances. Although they were indicated by ornamentation symbols, they still retained certain spontaneity. Many modern musicians view ornaments as merely decorative, and eventually brought about the term melodic decoration. Baroque musicians believed that ornamentations were means of colouring the notated piece with dissonance especially with trills and appoggiatura.

Ex.2 Embellished Opening of Corellis Violin Sonata Op.5 No.3, with ornamentation notated.

The figure above shows early examples of composers dictating performance of their piece. Corelli published both the embellished and original parts, which may have influenced later performers to depend on such performance directions given to them by the composers. Another form of embellishment commonly found in opera and some of the instrumental music of Arcangelo Corelli was an elaborated extension of the final cadential chord (Grout, A History of Western Music, 362). Performers had the liberty to display their virtuosity freely by adding, subtracting or changing the cadenzas in the written scores. Composers of variations, suites and sonatas were well aware that selected movements from their compositions could be excluded at the performers discretion.

Chua Tung Khng 5 Ex.3 Cadenza in first movement of Corellis Violin Sonatas Op.5 No.3

Bachs Brandenburg Concerto No.5 in D major, BWV 1050 was also notated with a lengthy cadenza (Brandenburg Concertos 1-6). This is similar to compositional practices in later periods when the orchestra stops playing during a portion of the concerto, which allows the soloist to play alone ad libitum, with a flexible pulse.

From these examples we can see how Baroque composers integrated improvisational techniques into their compositions. The organ improvisations of Sweelinck, Frescobaldi and Buxtehude won the admiration of crowd, and Bach is known to have improvised a prelude and fugue, an organ trio, a chorale prelude and a final fugue all on a single hymn tune (Collins 111). An organist was scheduled to compete against Bach in improvising, but promptly left town after hearing him improvise while warming up (Barnhill). The dictation of their own compositions by adding ornamentation or actual florid notation for their passages was a practice that became common in the 18th century. It diminished the trend of leaving embellishment to the performer. It was generally felt that with less specific notation, the music served as something of a blueprint, and could be constantly refreshed and kept current by the idiomatic addition of improvised graces (Collins 107).

Chua Tung Khng 6 During the early 18th century, a new style of music surfaced to succeed the older Baroque styles. This new style sounded more songful and less contrapuntal, more natural and less artificial, and more sentimental and less intensely emotional than its Baroque counterpart (Hanning 249). During this period, composers started to give explicit directions on dynamics, phrasing and tempi. They began to notate and dictate exactly how they wanted their compositions to be played.

Performers and composers of the classical period preserved three types of Baroque improvisation embellishment, free fantasies and cadenzas. They were still frequent during performances, with soloists likely improvising during orchestral ritornellos1 while performing keyboard concertos.

Ornament directions began to appear soon after the beginning of the 18th century. This was the beginning of precise notation and performance of ornaments, which limits the performers freedom. The standardisation of ornamentation signs and symbols was developed, as there was no standard system yet. Composers also notated embellishments for the benefit of amateurs or students who have not mastered the art of improvisation. This, to a certain extent created a form of dependency on the composers absolute directions (Bach 203).

Chua Tung Khng 7 Ex.4 Mozart Piano Sonata in F major, K332/330K, 2nd movement

From Ex.4 we can see the differences between Mozarts autograph edition and the published first edition. By the 1790s composers were writing elaborate embellishments into thematic reprises, having expropriated embellishments from the domain of improvisation (Collins 113).

Early dictations for cadenzas could be traced back to the late 16th century, where Caccini wrote a cadenza in Io che dal ciel cader (the fourth intermedio for Lapellegrina). Composers were in a sense paranoid about their compositions being spoilt by eager performers of questionable compositional talents. They thus included ornamented cadences, or condensed embellishments at the end of the piece. Cadenzas occupy the penultimate position in the musical structure (Sadie 785), where they precede the final tutti of the concerto movement or aria, and are always indicated by a fermata over a 6-4 Chord followed by a perfect cadence. Beethoven wrote out a complete cadenza for his Piano Concerto No.5 in E-flat Major, Op.73, and some composers have followed suit. However sometimes it is still up to the performers discretion to ignore the notated cadenzas and give their personal renditions (Barber 110).

Chua Tung Khng 8 Mozart and Beethoven were celebrated improvisers, with their solo concerts featuring solo improvisation. To a great extent, the improvisations were metrical, giving the impression that they were composed in advance. Beethovens Fantasia in G minor, Op. 77 (might have been a revision of an improvisation at his Akademie at the Theater an der Wien) did contain several ametrical passages. Walthur Drr suggested that improvisations on Schuberts songs would be frequent due to the lack of piano introductions. Competitions were held during this period by aristocratic families and nobles, where composers and performers were invited to compete against each other. Mozart competed at least once in improvisation with Muzio Clementi (Albert 624), and Beethoven won many improvisatory battles over contemporaries like Hummel, Steibelt and Woelfl (Solomon 78).

A substantial rise in the popularity of improvisation was seen in the early 19th century, which then declined to near-extinction in 1840 after suffering an apotheosis of bad taste (Wangerme, 1950). Improvisation progressively became mundane by pandering to a musicconsuming middle class that craved brilliance and sensation. Artistic originality which distinguished improvisation during its 18th century heyday became insignificant, encouraging its rapid decline. Other factors that led to extirpation of public improvisation included the rising importance of the performer as the interpreter of the composition, the separation of composition from performance. The evolution of musical technique away from bassorientated, systematic structural outlines towards a more melodically, generically or programmatically held frameworks, thus loosening the threads that held extemporised music together.

Chua Tung Khng 9 Ex. 5 Example of notated embellishment which is greatly improvisatory from Chopins Nocturne in D-flat Major, Op. 27 No.2

Cadenzas and embellishments lost their improvisatory characteristics as they were notated by the composers in concertos, while improvised embellishments were scorned by Liszt as sacrilegious violations of the spirit and letter of composed music. Following in the steps of Beethovens 5th Piano Concerto, pianist-composers usually notated cadenzas into their compositions or transcriptions. Liszt rarely left the performer to improvise on a fermata sign, and he supplied all improvisation materials himself. Even in his transcriptions of operatic arias by Rossini and Bellini, Liszt wrote out cadenzas at points where fermatas indicate their insertion (Sadie 789).

Beethovens music in the 18th century was absolute: he indicated his intentions in notation, dynamics, phrasing and even explanatory remarks. Romantic composers conformed, and later into the 19th century even the preference for certain individual strings, fingerings, number of players, and seating arrangements were indicated in great detail. Composers aimed to make their scores as self-explanatory and as safe from modification as possible; printed scores were revised for the masses to become more explicit, inhibiting the performers creative freedom. Brahms once said that the so-called instructive or practical editions are seldom concerned with art.

Chua Tung Khng 10 Improvisatory styles and procedures were incorporated into composers formal compositions also influenced the decline of improvisation, as the emancipation and stretched conventions grew into compositional practices, adversely affecting its distinction from composition. Improvisation however, did not disappear altogether but became restricted to domains like organ playing, often in the strict fugal style described by Czerny and contemporaries (Collins 121). 19th century improvisation was still practiced, with Bruckner captivating audiences with remarkable improvisation on the organ, Chopin and Liszt improvising publicly on two pianos.

The early 20th century added extempore piano accompaniment to silent films, and of course the most prominent of new improvised music was jazz. The latter half of the 20th century saw passionate debates about issues as to whether trills ought to start with the upper note, or whether grace notes should be played before or on the principal beat. A new form of classical music also placed certain importance on improvisation, by using ambiguous notation, and rules instead of scores, placing fewer restrictions on the performer. In the 1950s a new type of improvisation was created with the birth of aleatory music. Charles Ives had earlier exhorted performers of his music to improvise and often wrote unrealizable notations which tacitly forced the performer to create his own music (Kirshnit).

With the dawn of electronic music, new-age composers tried to exercise near-total control over performance by including a plethora of detailed indications for dynamics, manner of attack and tempo. Composers who did not follow the common practices like John Cage and Harry Partch which requires both the composer performer to improvise might have contributed to the restoration of improvisation, albeit different from before other factors includes the growth of live electronic music, the evolution of jazz to a point where it

Chua Tung Khng 11 enveloped everything in the contemporary classical tradition and the emergence of aleatory music. Improvisation was soon acknowledged as second to composition.

In a sense, the idea of classical improvisation that has been in practice until the late 19th century has taken a whole new direction, in accordance to the compositional styles and harmonic language that has evolved from the medieval modes to aleatoric or atonal music. Contemporary classical music generally deals with the deconstruction of everything that has been done before, in the name of creating something that is thoroughly new (Harris). In recent musical cultures, without the elements of common practice on which improvisation depends, the idea of extemporising cadenzas to an atonal piece (e.g. Schoenbergs Violin Concerto) would be senseless.

The birth of the music business, the dwarfing of classical music by popular music and the obsession of creating the perfect recording might have led to the penultimate chapter of classical music. Music education is provided in public school curriculum, but it has been rendered almost worthless by a politically correct tendency to treat all music as equal the primitive and the refined, the commercial with the spiritual (Lebrecht xiv). From When the Music Stops by Norman Lebrecht: For this state of impotence, music had only itself to blame. An art that once paid its own way had, through ambition and greed, fallen upon the charity of politicians and businessmen. This dependency culture, created by the avarice of millionaire conductors, singers and their agents, reached a point where it was no longer sustainable by public and corporate funds. In the final years of the twentieth century, orchestras and opera houses that upheld the traditions of Bach and Beethoven were facing a daily threat of foreclosure.

Chua Tung Khng 12 Composers were among the most famous improvisers of their time. Great composers we know today earned their reputation first as an improviser, then a composer. From the 19th century, composers dictated over previously improvised elements of their compositions, which clouded the distinction between composition and improvisation even further. With the focus of creativity and originality demands slowly shifting towards technical perfection and the technical revolution of 20th century which encouraged musicians to record and perfect their performances, classical improvisation gradually dwindled in the Classical realm.

Compared to improvisation in non-Western and native music, improvisation plays a small role in Western art music. Today, classical artists who put spontaneity in their art are rare, as are those who give improvisatory performances as part of their concert.

(2,549 Words)

Chua Tung Khng 13 Bibliography Abeele, Hendrik Vanden. Machaults Messe de Notre Dame. Digital image. Psallentes: Plainchant and Polyphony. N.p., 19 Jan. 2013. Web. 14 Nov. 2013. Abert, Hermann, Stewart Spencer, and Cliff Eisen. W.A. Mozart. New Haven [Conn.: Yale UP, 2007. 624-25. Print. Bach, Carl Philipp Emanuel, and William J. Mitchell. Essay on the True Art of Playing Keyboard Instruments. New York: Norton, 1948. 203. Print. Barnhill, Eric. "The Daily Improvisation." The Daily Improvisation. N.p., Mar. 2006. Web. 09 Nov. 2013. Barber, David W., and David C. Donald. "Concerted Efforts." If It Ain't Baroque: More Music History as It Ought to Be Taught. Toronto: Sound & Vision, 1992. 110. Print. Brandenburg Concertos 1-6. Dir. Andreas Morell. Perf. Claudio Abbado and Ottavio Dantone. EuroArts Music International, 2008. DVD. Chopin, Frdric Franois. Nocturne in D-flat Major Op. 27 No. 2. 1836. Leipzig: Breitkopf & Hrtel, 1878. Print. Corelli, Arcangelo. Violin Sonata in C major Op. 5 No. 3. N.d., Amsterdam: Estienne Roger. Print. Scarlatti, Domenico. Keyboard Sonata in A minor K. 54. 1 Nov. 1986. New York: G. Schirmer, Inc. Print. Grout, Donald Jay., and Claude V. Palisca. A History of Western Music. New York: Norton, 2001. 37. Print. Hanning, Barbara Russano, and Donald Jay. Grout. Concise History of Western Music. New York: Norton, 1998. 249-349. Print.

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