Sinfonia concertante Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Sinfonia concertante is a musical genre that originated in the classical music era, and is a mixture of the Symphony and the Concerto genres:- It is Concerto, in that it has one or more soloists (in the classical music era usually more than one).
- It is Symphony in that it does not particularily put the soloist in the spotlight: the look and feel is rather symphonic as a whole, with some solistic interventions not outspokenly dominating the orchestra (in a concerto, which is the Italian word for battle, the role of the soloist is rather something like defying the orchestra, trying to prove he can do at least as good as a whole orchestra).
By the classical era both Symphony and concerto had a more definite meaning (and the concerto grosso had disappeared altogether), which lead in the last decades of the 18th century to composers, e.g. from the Mannheim school, attempting to produce a cross-over between the two genres. Mozart, acquainted with the Mannheim school from 1877 on, put considerable effort in attempts to produce convincing Sinfonia concertantes, more than he put in any other genre: while both symphonies and concertos seemed to flow from his pen almost effortlessly, there is a considerable pile of abortive attempts at Sinfonia concertantes from his hand. But there were some successes:
- Sinfonia Concertante for Violin, Viola and Orchestra K. 364 (the only one he actually considered as finished himself).
- Sinfonia Concertante for Oboe, Clarinet, Horn, Bassoon and Orchestra K. 279b
- Sinfonia Concertante (Haydn) - now sometimes numbered as his Symphony No. 105. Haydn's Sinfonia Concertante however draws still much more from the "Concerto Grosso" style (i.e. opposing a group of soloists to an orchestra) than Mozart's more symphonic treatment of the genre.
Beethoven further experimented with vocal soloists in the context of symphonic music, e.g. the Choral Fantasia and the last part of the 9th symphony: Although for the Choral Fantasia there even was, additionally, a pianoforte soloist, these works are seldomly seen in the Sinfonia Concertante tradition, but rather seen as deriving from a tradition of (semi-)secular Cantatas (e.g. Bach) and Oratorios (e.g. Haydn's Seasons), which had combined with the symphony as a novelty of the Enlightenment, by Beethoven's genius.
Few composers still called their compositions "Sinfonia concertante" after the classical music era, nonetheless all throughout the era of Romantic music, experimentation with the genre continued, leading to notable successes every now and then:
- Harold en Italie, for viola and orchestra (Berlioz): this work had been comissioned by Paganini (who was an excellent viola player too), but rejected by him, not because he didn't like the music, but because the music would not have allowed him to excell (read: dominate the orchestra) very much as a soloist, as he was used to in his own violin concertos - which was how Berlioz had however successfully tackled the difficult problem of using an instrument with little "domination" capabilities solistically.
- Camille Saint-Saëns' Symphony No. 3 features an organ that partially immerses in the orchestral sound, but also has several distinct solo passages. Also semi-solistically (but less prominent than the organ), this symphony features a four hands piano part.
- Édouard Lalo composed several sinfonia concertantes, amongst which his Symphonie Espagnole, for violin and orchestra.
- Rimsky-Korsakov's Sheherazade can be considered, besides being a symphonic suite and a ballet, as a Sinfonia concertante for violin and orchestra.
- Typically, Richard Strauss would feature a high-pitched string instrument as soloist in his symphonic poems: although symphonic poems are quite far from the Sinfonia Concertante genre as such, nonetheless Strauss appears to have succeeded like nobody before him in inserting discernable soloists in his orchestral works, without releasing any of the density of the symphonic tissue.
- Also by the end of the Romantic period both in concertos as symphonies a "one-movement" soloist could be added (to the regular soloist in the case of a concerto), which often results in a movement more or less in Sinfonia concertante style e.g.:
- César Franck, second movement of his Symphony: a cor anglais functions as soloist - described as a revolutionary feat by Franck, both because of the nature of the solistic instrument, as because of bending pre-conceived ideas about the symphonic genre (quote: "J'ai osé beaucoup, la prochaine fois, vous verrez, j'oserai encore plus" - I dared a lot, the next time, you will see, I will dare even more).
- Tchaikovsky, second movement of his second piano concerto: violin and cello added to the piano as soloists.
- Mahler, second movement of fourth symphony: scordatura violin.
- Gershwin, second movement of the Concerto in F: trumpet solo added to the piano soloist.
Deep Purple's (or: Jon Lord's) Concerto for Group and Orchestra (1969) draws attention while it displays some characteristics of as well the concerto grosso, the sinfonia concertante, and the concerto for orchestra genres:
- First movement (Moderato - Allegro): after an elaborate orchestral introduction the Group and the Orchestra work as separate blocks, trying to get dominance over the main theme - this opposition of a group of soloists against an orchestra is quite "concerto grosso" style.
- Second movement (Andante), with lyrics sung by Ian Gillan: here the group integrates more with the sound of the orchestra while still clearly on top of the orchestral tissue, giving a sinfonia concertante look and feel.
- Third movement (Vivace - Presto): apart from Ian Paice's drum solo, the music is so tighly knit that the distinction between the group and the orchestra is almost lifted: in a way the group becomes part of an extended orchestra, with one elaborate "solo" passage, by an instrument that is no soloist throughout the movement, giving a concerto touch: this is more or less what is understood by the Concerto for Orchestra genre.
See also
- Concertos for orchestra differ from , in that Concertos for orchestra have no (group of) soloists that remain(s) the same throughout the composition.
- Concertos for orchestra differ from , in that Concertos for orchestra have no (group of) soloists that remain(s) the same throughout the composition.
Trivia
- P. D. Q. Bach showed a keen interest in all classical music cross-over genres mentioned above, amongst others composing a Sinfonia Concertante.
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