Wednesday, October 16, 2019
Critique 1 Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 750 words
Critique 1 - Essay Example For this Partita there were six individual movements announced in the recital program: sinfonia, allemande, courante, sarabande, rondeau and capriccio. Sinfonia part is a kind of introduction, or prelude for the following four individual parts. ââ¬Å"A partita is made up of popular Baroque instrumental dancesâ⬠and thus, next four parts naturally were stylized as different dances of 16-17th centuries, and named after them (The Bach Partitas). The last part, capriccio is a flexible academic form of music, which in case of this Partita was also composed by Bach in a style of Baroque dance. At the beginning of this Partita, a piano served to convey a melody and a rhythm in turns. Naturally, a melody was played by Pavey right hand, while rhythmically accompanied by a left one and was absolutely distinguishable, until the very technical end of a first part. There were a lot of short notes, so Pavey tried not only to play them right, but play them light. Yet I noticed, how focused on a technique Pavey was when playing some fast parts of this Partita. Compering to other music performed that night, Paveyââ¬â¢s Bach sounded most full of notes, most technically, but less complicated. Though melody did sound distinguishable, it was sounding very inseparably from dance rhythms, even in the most ââ¬Å"freeâ⬠capriccio part. I think it was the most academic sounding part of a recital and most successfully performed by Pavey. When Pavey started performing a second piece of music, - Sonata in E Major, Op. 109 by Ludwig van Beethoven, - he revealed how more independent a piano sounded in 1820 when Beethoven composed this Sonata, comparing to Baroque piano. It no longer required a dance activity. Pavey used piano to convey Beethovenââ¬â¢s specific idea, which was highly lyrical and emotional. Sometimes it was undistinguishable where the rhythm was, because more attention was paid on a melody development. While developing melody,
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