A very short history of the improvisation
In the 10th century A.C., the Benedictine
monk Guido d'Arezzo placed a milestone
in the musical history: his notation score system at last allowed musicians to leave their creations to something more reliable than the oral tradition. A goal that fiction and poetry had already reached thousands of years before, with the invention of writing. Thanks to Guido's invention, nowadays we are able to know the thoughts of artists as Palestrina, Bach or Mozart.
But the origin of music is very much prior than d'Arezzo's time, lost and
confused
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Ancient Roman and Egyptian artists left us
wonderful sculptures and paintings
portraying people playing musical instruments, even though we know close to nothing about their music. We know a little more about ancient Greeks music, whose modes were taken as model by mediaeval monks for their Gregorian modes. And what about the Egyptian engineer Ktesibios, who projected and built an hydraulic organ in the 3th century B.C., or about that famous Hittite bas-relief portraying a musician playing a guitar like instrument? |
Music had always been a faithful companion
of man, thousands years before its official
birth. During that long period without historical memory, that music prehistory , musicians used to improvise for their and other's pleasure, on feasts or dances. All musicians had necessarily to be good improvisers. Even after the adoption of the modern notation, musicians kept improvising.
We can't even imagine how much mediaeval music was born and died, without
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In the Rinascimento, a very great deal
of manuals teaching the right way of improvising
were published. The "tastar de corde" (trying the strings) was an improvisation form, as the "preludio" or the "toccata". The art of "diminuire" was the capability of improvising on the structure of a known air. A written piece wasn't played two times in the same way, and a musician unable of improvising was considered a bad one. And this attitude didn't change in the following centuries. J.S.Bach used to improvise intricate fugues
on the organ and the Musical Offering he
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Mozart was considered a great improviser too, and this tradition went on in the following century with Beethoven, Paganini and List. Famous pianists as Thalberg or Dreyschock used to study even ten or more hours a day, just because they had to master improvisation, that was a fundamental attraction for the public. So they used to practice daily improvising formulas in every key, keep harmonizing and contra punctual techniques under their fingers, in order to impress their audience.
The "virtuosi", rather than musicians were considered heroes, and the concert
pieces
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Mozart was considered a great
improviser too, and this tradition went on in the
following century with Beethoven, Paganini and List. Famous pianists as Thalberg or Dreyschock used to study even ten or more hours a day, just because they had to master improvisation, that was a fundamental attraction for the public. So they used to practice daily improvising formulas in every key, keep harmonizing and contra punctual techniques under their fingers, in order to impress their audience.
The "virtuosi", rather than musicians were considered heroes, and the concert
pieces
With the gradual diffusion of the recital,
born in the 19th century, and the consequent
Nowadays, with the total separation between composer and player roles,
the very
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