Baroque Era

  • Period: 1551 to

    Giulio Caccini

    One of the founders of opera
  • Period: 1557 to

    Giovanni Gabrieli

    Noted for his use of instruments in sacred music
  • Period: 1561 to

    Jacopo Peri

    Another founder of Opera; claimed to be the first in 1597 with his Dafne
  • Period: 1563 to

    John Dowland

    Leading composer of lute music
  • Period: 1564 to

    William Shakespear

    English Playwright and poet
  • Period: 1567 to

    Claudio Monteverdi

    Most important composer of early baroque era, inventor of new seconda prattica
  • Period: 1570 to

    Florentine Camerata

    Group of intellectuals that met to discuss the arts, included Caccini, Peri, Girolamo Mei, Vincenzo Galilei
  • Period: to

    Orlando Gibbons

    Composer of Anglican Church
  • Period: to

    Girolamo Frescobaldi

    First modern keyboard virtuoso and composer
  • Period: to

    Heinrich Schutz

    Most important German composer of the Middle Baroque
  • Development of functional tonality, basso continuo, Doctrine of Affections

    Courts and Churches Primary institutions for musical production.
  • Period: to

    Opera invented in Florence, Italy.

    Components of Recitative and monody
  • Period: to

    Melody, Rhythm and Harmony (Early Baroque)

    Recitative: a style of text setting that emphasizes the natural rhythms and accents of speech. Pitch range was confined. Free Rhythm, tonality determined by diatonic scale. Introduction of homophony
  • Period: to

    Instruments

    Organ, bassoon, oboe.
  • Period: to

    Giacomo Carissimi

    Leading composer of Roman Cantatas
  • Establishment of Jamestown in the Americas

  • Period: to

    Barbara Strozzi

    Virtuoso singer and most prolific composer of cantatas in the 17th century
  • Period: to

    Giovanni Legrenzi

    Italian composer and organist
  • Period: to

    Jean-Baptiste Lully

    Establisher of French opera and ballet; dancer and violinist
  • Period: to

    Dieterich Buxtehude

    German organist and composer; most important composer before Bach
  • Period: to

    Marc-Antoine Charpentier

    Composer of French opera
  • Period: to

    John Blow

    English composer of odes
  • Period: to

    Middle Baroque

    Fugues, chaccones, and passacaglias, spread of Italian Opera, 1637 Venice opens first public opera house
  • Period: to

    Melody, Rhythm, Harmony

    Lyrical bel canto arias and solo songs. Basso continuo and dotted rhythms. String instruments dominated.
  • Period: to

    Arcangelo Corelli

    Most important Italian composer of sonatas and concertos, influential violinists
  • Period: to

    Johan Pachelbel

    German composer and organist
  • Period: to

    Giuseppe Torelli

    Contributed to the development of the concerto around 1700
  • Period: to

    Henry Purcell

    Most important English composer in 17th century
  • Period: to

    Alessandro Scarlatti

    Important Italian composer
  • Period: to

    Francois Couperin

    French composer, keyboardist
  • Period: to

    Antonio Vivaldi

    laid the foundations for late Baroque instrumental music , pioneer of orchestral music
  • Period: to

    Georg Philipp Telemann

    The most prolific German composer of his day
  • Period: to

    Jean-Philippe Rameau

    French composer and theorist
  • Period: to

    Johann Sebastian Bach

    Considered the Baroque master, wrote no operas
  • Period: to

    Georg Friedrick Handel

    German musician; inventor of the English oratorio
  • Period: to

    Domenico Scarlatti

    Son of Alessandra; keyboard composer and virtuoso
  • Period: to

    Johann Joachim Quants

    German composer; flutist and flute teacher for Fredrick the Great in Berlin
  • Period: to

    Late Baroque

    Opera seria, castrati
  • Period: to

    Melody, Rhythm, Harmony

    Virtuosity with melody, basso continuo, era of sixteenth notes, homophony was modern style, polyphony was church style. Pianoforte prototypes