Musical Improvisation and Open Forms in the Age of Beethoven

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Allegro
Andante Amoroso
Angela Carone
Anna Bolena
Beethoven
Beethoven's Time
Beethoven’s Time
Cadential Tonic
Cadential Trill
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Category=AVLA
Catherine Coppola
Chopin
Cinti Damoreau
classical era performance
Didacticism
Die Wahre Art Das Clavier
Donizetti's Anna Bolena
Donizetti's Lucia Di Lammermoor
Donizetti’s Anna Bolena
Donizetti’s Lucia Di Lammermoor
eighteenth century music theory
Elaine Sisman
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fantasia genre analysis
Fantasia Topic
Formal functionality
Giorgio Pagannone
Giuditta Pasta
Half Cadence
Hans-Joachim Hinrichsen
historical musicology
Home Key
improvisation in classical composition research
Improvisational composition
Jan Philipp Sprick
Laure Cinti Damoreau
Marco Targa
Mozart
Musical composition
Musical improvisation
Nicola Vaccai
Open form
PAC
Piano Sonata
Pieter Berge
Quasi Una Fantasia
Rohan H. Stewart-MacDonald
Romantic period musical forms
Scott Burnham
Sonata Form
Subordinate Theme
Torsten Mario Augenstein
vocal ornamentation techniques
William E. Caplin
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138222960
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Dec 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Improvisation was a crucial aspect of musical life in Europe from the late eighteenth century through to the middle of the nineteenth, representing a central moment in both public occasions and the private lives of many artists. Composers dedicated themselves to this practice at length while formulating the musical ideas later found at the core of their published works; improvisation was thus closely linked to composition itself. The full extent of this relation can be inferred from both private documents and reviews of concerts featuring improvisations, while these texts also inform us that composers quite often performed in public as both improvisers and interpreters of pieces written by themselves or others. Improvisations presented in concert were distinguished by a remarkable degree of structural organisation and complexity, demonstrating performers’ consolidated abilities in composition as well as their familiarity with the rules for improvising outlined by theoreticians.

Gianmario Borio is Professor of Musicology at the University of Pavia and director of the Institute of Music at the Giorgio Cini Foundation, Venice. His publications deal with several aspects of the music of the twentieth century, the history of musical concepts and the theory of musical form.

Angela Carone has been a collaborator at the Giorgio Cini Foundation in Venice since 2013. Among other topics, she has published essays on Carl Czerny, Franz Schubert and Robert Schumann’s instrumental works and the concepts of musical work and style in the eighteenth to early nineteenth century.