The influence of the madrigali moderni on Johann Jacob Froberger's keyboard music
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Vinke, Linda Frances
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University of the Free State
Abstract
Showing abstract in English
English: The research is based upon the hypothesis that the keyboard music of Johann Jacob Froberger
(1616-1667) was significantly influenced by the music of the Italian secular madrigals of the late
16th and early 17th centuries.
In the late 16th and early 17th centuries, madrigal composers were at the forefront of musical
development and it is plausible that their innovations should have had a significant influence on
Froberger, contributing to the development of his expressive keyboard style. The madrigal
composers used various new compositional techniques, many of them aimed at expressing
emotions. Characteristics of the style of the madrigali moderni (a term used by Frescobaldi in the
1637 preface to Toccate e Partite, Libro Primo) include the variation of tempo for expressive
purposes, word painting, new types of ornamentation, adventurous harmony, chromaticism and
dissonance and quickly changing rhythmic and textural features. The aim of this thesis is to show
how Froberger adapted these techniques for use in his keyboard style.
In order to test the hypothesis, I researched the musical characteristics of the Italian secular
madrigals of the late 16th and early 17th centuries. Some Italian vocal music other than secular
madrigals was analyzed and some madrigals and other 'vocal music from a little earlier or a little
later were also consulted. However, the vast majority of the examples that I have used to illustrate
my findings come from Italian secular madrigals composed (or at least published) in the late 16th
and early 17th century when the composition of madrigals was at its peak in both volume and
brilliance: A detailed style-critical study of the entire keyboard oeuvre of Froberger was undertaken
to determine if the various characteristics of this vocal music could be found in his music. Some of
Froberger's (Italian) predecessors on the keyboard, such as de Macque, Mayone, Trabaci,
Frescobaldi and Michelangelo Rossi seem also to have been influenced by the Italian madrigalists
and where appropriate, I have included examples from the works of these composers.
Before the main body of the research, I have included a chapter on Froberger's life and travels; a
comprehensive collection of the information that is currently known. In recent years, some
fascinating research has been undertaken that has thrown light on Froberger's life and travels, but
all the information has not previously been presented in a chronological format.
The main body of the research is divided into four sections, each of which discusses a particular
musical aspect of the madrigals and shows similar usage in Froberger's works. The first of these
sections discusses the use of "madrigalisms" for expressive ends. This chapter analyses some of the
more commonly used word painting devices and shows their use in madrigals and in Froberger's
music. The second of these sections discusses sprezzatura in the wider meaning given to it by
Caccini in his Nuove Musiche (1601/2), where it encompasses not only rhapsodic tempo fluctuations
but also the use of dissonance for expressive purposes. The third section discusses the use of
ornaments in the madrigals and shows how Froberger used a variety of specifically Italian vocal
ornaments in his music, as well as the more standard range of ornaments used by keyboard
composers. The fourth section describes the continuous invention and diversity present in the
madrigals and in Froberger's music. This invention manifests itself in, amongst other things, the use
of a wide variety of rhythms and textures to portray the agitation of the passions and a delight in
complexity.
Within these sections, the theories of the time are discussed, examples are given from the madrigals
and parallel examples are drawn from Froberger's music. At the end of the thesis four case studies
are presented to show how the hypothesis fits entire works by Froberger. Froberger's oeuvre can
arguably be divided into laments (and similar forms), partitas, contrapuntal works and toccatas.
The case studies are intended to represent one of each of these forms. In each of the studies, certain
aspects of the music are compared to the madrigals and parallels are drawn to extra-musical events
or phenomena in order to place the particular composition in its historical and social context.