Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

The Solfeggio Tradition: A Forgotten Art of Melody in the Long Eighteenth Century

Baragwanath, Nicholas

Authors



Abstract

How did castrati manage to amaze their eighteenth-century audiences by singing the same aria several times in completely different ways? And how could composers of the time write operas in a matter of days? The secret lies in the solfeggio tradition, a music education method that was fundamental to the training of European musicians between 1680 and 1830--a time during which professional musicians belonged to the working class. As disadvantaged children in orphanages learned the musical craft through solfeggio lessons, many were lifted from poverty, and the most successful were propelled to extraordinary heights of fame and fortune.

In this first book of the solfeggio tradition, author Nicholas Baragwanath draws on over a thousand manuscript sources to reconstruct how professionals became skilled performers and composers who could invent and modify melodies at will. By introducing some of the simplest exercises in scales, leaps, and cadences that apprentices would have encountered, this book allows readers to retrace the steps of solfeggio training and learn to generate melody by 'speaking' it like an eighteenth-century musician. As it takes readers on a fascinating journey through the fundamentals of music education in the eighteenth century, this book uncovers a forgotten art of melody that revolutionizes our understanding of the history of music pedagogy.

Book Type Authored Book
Acceptance Date Mar 25, 2020
Online Publication Date Oct 12, 2020
Publication Date 2020
Deposit Date Sep 12, 2017
Publisher Oxford University Press (OUP)
Pages 1 - 432
ISBN 9780197514085
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197514085.001.0001
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1111827
Publisher URL https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-solfeggio-tradition-9780197514085?q=baragwanath%20solfeggio&lang=en&cc=us


You might also like



Downloadable Citations