Harold In Italy by Berlioz
- Created by: Charlotte_Scott
- Created on: 21-04-17 11:21
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- Harold In Italy by Berlioz
- Structure
- Ternary Form
- Saltarello-Allegro Assai (b. 1-31)
- Drone, Saltarello rhythm, Pifferi melody
- Serenade-Allegretto (b. 32-135)
- Saltarello-Allegro Assai (b. 136-165)
- Coda that combines all melodic material-Allegretto (b. 166-208)
- Saltarello-Allegro Assai (b. 1-31)
- Ternary Form
- Texture
- Mostly uses melody dominated homophony
- The opening starts with a drone
- The main melodic material is played in octaves by the oboe and piccolo.
- The first viola plays a counter melody
- The bassoon maintains a pedal throughout
- In the B section the strings play a homophonic accomp. the serenade theme
- Bar 53, the C.A, Oboe and bassoon play in octaves
- Bar 60 the horns are in 3rds and 6ths
- Bar 65-Viola solo from the idee fixe
- Bar 79-80 there is dialogue (call and response) between cor anglais/oboe, and clarinet flute/piccolo and bassoons
- Bar 202-206 there is a monophonic statement of idee
- Meoldy
- Section A
- The second viola part has lots of repetition
- There is conjunct movement in the oboes and piccolo’s
- The melody played by the oboe and piccolo has a range of a 9th
- In bar 27-29 there is use of grace notes
- The B flats represent the mixolydian mode
- One bar cells leads to a one bar idea and irregular phrasing
- Bars 10, 13 and 19 are all examples of inversions of the basic material
- Section B
- The melody is played by the Cor Anglais
- It opens with and arpeggio figure
- The viola plays the idee fixe in long notes in bar 65
- Section A
- Tonality
- The overall tonality of the piece is C
- Cadences are clearly defined
- Modulation is limited reflecting the folk character of the piece.
- Tonality of the Allegro Assai (A section) is defined by a pedal C in the bassoon
- There are modal inflections (B flat) (B flat that occurs not modulating but it hints at mixolydian mode)
- Harmony
- There is some chromaticism through the use of diminished chords
- The harmony of the opening is built on a pedal C (the second bassoon pedal C goes through the whole opening)
- Chord of F in bar 14
- Bar 39 to 40 is an imperfect cadence in A minor with and extension (4-3)
- From bar 51 the piece starts to go a bit more chromatic (lots of semitone movement)
- Bar 71 there are chromatic upper auxiliaries in the cello part
- Forces
- Viola solo
- Symphony orchestra
- Cor Anglais in F
- Horns are usually in F, and in the piece there are horns in E and C
- The piccolo is an octave higher than written
- Doesn’t use trumpets, trombones or percussion
- The violas are divided in the beginning and the lower viola part is playing open string drones
- The piccolo and the oboe at the beginning represent pifferi (a rustic oboe)
- The clarinet plays broken chords in bar 48 in the chalumeau register
- In bar 166 the strings play consodini (with mutes)
- In bar 167 the harp plays harmonics
- The viola part is quite easy/ not very demanding
- Rhythm and metre
- 6/8
- Allegro assai (A) is twice as fast as the Allegretto (B)
- Beat 2 is accented in the pifferi melody
- Bar 37: Parts of the serenade melody sounds like its in 3/4
- Bar 132: Use of semiquavers to ornament the melody
- Bar 132: Use of semiquavers to ornament the melody
- Bar 77: Triplet semiquavers
- Bar 192: Length of notes have doubled. Rhythmic augmentation
- Structure
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