Who Were The Major Baroque Composers and Where Were They From?
Who Were The Major Baroque Composers and Where Were They From?
Derived from the Portuguese barroco, or “oddly shaped pearl,” the term “baroque” has been widely used since the
nineteenth century to describe the period in Western European art music from about 1600 to 1750. Comparing
some of music history’s greatest masterpieces to a misshapen pearl might seem strange to us today, but to the
nineteenth century critics who applied the term, the music of Bach and Handel’s era sounded overly ornamented
and exaggerated. Having long since shed its derogatory connotations, “baroque” is now simply a convenient catch-
all for one of the richest and most diverse periods in music history.
In addition to producing the earliest European music familiar to most of us, including Pachelbel’s Canon and
Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons, the baroque era also greatly expanded our horizons. The acceptance of Copernicus’s
16th century theory that the planets didn’t revolve around the earth made the universe a much larger place, while
Galileo’s work helped us get better acquainted with the cosmos. Advances in technology such as the invention of
the telescope made what was believed to be finite seem infinite. Great thinkers like Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza
and Locke tackled the big questions of existence. Geniuses like Rubens, Rembrandt and Shakespeare offered
unique perspectives through their art. European nations grew more and more involved with foreign trade and
colonization, bringing us into direct contact with parts of the globe that were previously unfamiliar. And the
growth of a new middle class breathed life into an artistic culture long dependent on the whims of church and
court.
Who were the major baroque composers and where were they from?
Many of the well known personalities from the first part of the baroque period hail from Italy, including
Monteverdi, Corelli and Vivaldi. (By the mid eighteenth century, our focus shifts to the German composers Bach
and Handel.) Many of the forms identified with baroque music originated in Italy, including the cantata, concerto,
sonata, oratorio and opera. Although Italy played a vital role in the development of these genres, however, new
concepts of what it meant to be a nation increased the imperative of a “national style.” Differences between nations
are often audible in music from the period, not only in the way music was composed, but also in conventions of
performance; particularly obvious was the contrast between Italy and France. While certain countries may seem to
claim a larger piece of our experience of baroque music today, however, every nation played a role. As musicians
and composers traveled all over Europe and heard each other’s music, the new conventions they encountered made
subtle impressions on them. Some of the best known composers from the period include the following:
England: Purcell
Although a single philosophy cannot describe 150 years of music from all over Europe, several concepts are
important in the baroque period.
I have ofttimes heard it said of Sieur Claudin Le Jeune (who has, without wishing to slight anyone, far surpassed
the musicians of ages past in his understanding of these matters) that he had sung an air (which he had composed
in parts)…and that when this air was rehearsed at a private concert it caused a gentleman there to put hand to arms
and begin swearing out loud, so that it seemed impossible to prevent him from attacking someone: whereupon
Claudin began singing another air…which rendered the gentleman as calm as before. This has been confirmed to
me since by several who were there. Such is the power and force of melody, rhythm and harmony over the mind.
In 1605, the Italian composer Claudio Monteverdi actually defined a “first” and “second” practice: in the first,
harmony and counterpoint took precedence over the text; in the second, the need to express the meaning of the
words surpassed any other concern. In the baroque, it is the spirit of the second practice—using the power of music
to communicate—that came to dominate the era.
The new interest in music’s dramatic and rhetorical possibilities gave rise to a wealth of new sound ideals in the
baroque period.
Along with the emphasis on a single melody and bass line came the practice of basso continuo, a method of
musical notation in which the melody and bass line are written out and the harmonic filler indicated in a type of
shorthand. As the Italian musician Agostino Agazzari explained in 1607:
Since the true style of expressing the words has at last been found, namely, by reproducing their sense in the best
manner possible, which succeeds best with a single voice (or no more than a few), as in the modern airs by various
able men, and as is the constant practice at Rome in concerted music, I say that it is not necessary to make a
score… A Bass, with its signs for the harmonies, is enough. But if some one were to tell me that, for playing the
old works, full of fugue and counterpoints, a Bass is not enough, my answer is that vocal works of this kind are no
longer in use.
Because basso continuo, or thorough bass, remained standard practice until the end of the baroque period, the era
is sometimes known as the “age of the thorough bass.”
pitch: In 1939, modern orchestras agreed to tune to a’=440hz (the note A pitched at 440 cycles per second), which
replaced a previously lower pitch (a’=435hz) adopted in 1859. Before 1859, however, there was no pitch standard.
The note to which baroque ensembles tuned, therefore, varied widely at different times and in different places. As
a result, the music notated on a score might have sounded as much as a half tone lower than how it would
traditionally be performed today. In an effort to allow for this discrepancy, many baroque ensembles adjust their
tuning to the repertoire being performed: a’= 415hz for late baroque music, a’=392hz for French music, a’=440hz
for early Italian music and a’=430hz for classical repertoire.
timbre: While most of the instruments in a baroque ensemble are familiar, there are several prominent members
no longer featured in modern ensembles. The harpsichord was the primary keyboard instrument (and an important
member of the continuo group), and instruments important in the 16th and 17th centuries like the lute and viol, still
continued to be used. Variations in instruments still popular today also gave the baroque ensemble a different
sound. String instruments like the violin, viola and cello used gut strings rather than the strings wrapped in metal
with which they are strung today, for example, giving them a mellower, sweeter tone.
performance technique: A baroque score contains little (if any) information about elements like articulation,
ornamentation or dynamics, and so modern ensembles need to make their own informed choices before each
performance. Mechanical differences between baroque and modern instruments also suggest that the older
instruments would have sounded differently, so ensembles like Music of the Baroque often adjust their technique
to allow for this. Because baroque and modern bows are structurally different, for example, string players using
modern bows often use a gentler attack on the string and crescendos and diminuendos on longer notes. 17th and
18th century performance treatises also imply that finger vibrato (a technique in which a string player rocks his or
her fingertip on the string to enrich the tone) was used sparingly for expressive moments, while bow vibrato (an
undulating movement of the bow) was generally preferred.
While forms from earlier eras continued to be used, such as the motet or particular dances, the interest in music as
a form of rhetoric sparked the development of new genres, particularly in the area of vocal music. Many of the
forms associated with the baroque era come directly out of this new dramatic impulse, particularly opera, the
oratorio and the cantata. In the realm of instrumental music, the notion of contrast and the desire to create large-
scale forms gave rise to the concerto, sonata and suite.
Vocal music
Opera: A drama that is primarily sung, accompanied by instruments, and presented on stage. Operas typically
alternate between recitative, speech-like song that advances the plot, and arias, songs in which characters express
feelings at particular points in the action. Choruses and dances are also frequently included. The advent of the
genre at the turn of the seventeenth century is often associated with the activities of a group of poets, musicians
and scholars in Florence known today as the Florentine Camerata. The first surviving opera was Jacopo Peri’s
Dafne, based on a libretto by Ottavio Rinuccini and performed in Florence in 1598; the earliest opera still
performed today is Claudio Monteverdi’s Orfeo (1607). The subjects of the first operas are all taken from Greek
myth, reflecting the genre’s close alliances with attempts to recreate the music and drama of ancient cultures, and
were performed solely in aristocratic circles for invited guests.
When the first public opera houses opened in Venice in 1637, the genre was altered to suit the preferences of the
audience. Solo singers took on a sort of celebrity status, and greater emphasis was placed on the aria as a result.
Recitative grew less important, and choruses and dances virtually disappeared from Italian opera. The financial
realities of staging frequent opera productions also had an effect. The spectacular stage effects associated with
opera at court were greatly downplayed, and librettos were constructed to take advantage of stock scenic devices.
By the early 18th century (particularly in Naples), two subgenres of opera became evident: opera seria, in which
the focus was on serious subject matter and the da capo aria, and opera buffa, which had a lighter, even comic
tone and sometimes used duets, trios and larger ensembles. The Italian tradition of opera gradually dominated most
European countries. In late 17th century France, however, the Italian-born Jean-Baptiste Lully and librettist
Philippe Quinault created a uniquely French version of opera known as tragédie-lyrique.
Oratorio: an extended musical drama with a text based on religious subject matter, intended for performance
without scenery, costume or action. Oratorio originally meant prayer hall, a building located adjacent to a church
that was designed as a place for religious experiences distinct from the liturgy. Although there are late sixteenth
century precedents for the oratorio in the motet and madrigal repertoire, the oratorio as a distinct musical genre
emerged amidst the excellent acoustics of these spaces in the early 1600s. By the middle of the 17th century,
oratorios were performed in palaces and public theaters and were growing increasingly similar to operas, although
the subject matter, division into two parts (rather than three acts) and absence of staged action still set it apart.
Some of the composers associated with the genre in Italy include Giocomo Carissimi, Alessandro Scarlatti and
Antonio Vivaldi. The oratorio grew in popularity in other parts of Europe as well. In Protestant Germany, dramatic
music composed for use in the Lutheran church gradually became fused with elements of the oratorio, especially in
the inclusion of non-Biblical texts. The oratorio passion, as it came to be called, culminated in the great works of J.
S. Bach. Other well known examples outside of Italy include the English oratorios of George Frideric Handel, who
popularized the genre in London as a result of the English distaste for Italian opera. Works such as Messiah, Israel
in Egypt and Judas Maccabeus remain audience favorites to this day.
Cantata: an extended piece consisting of a succession of recitatives and set pieces such as arias, duets and
choruses. Originating in early 17th century Italy, the cantata began as a secular work composed for solo voice and
basso continuo, most likely intended for performance at private social gatherings. Many of these works were
published, suggesting that they were performed by professional musicians and amateurs alike. By the middle of the
century cantatas were published less frequently, suggesting that performances were increasingly being done by
professionals. By the end of the 17th century, cantatas began incorporating the da capo aria and often had
orchestral accompaniments. Major composers in the Italian cantata genre include Luigi Rossi, Antonio Cesti,
Alessandro Stradella, and in the first half of the 18th century Alessandro Scarlatti, Handel, Benedetto Marcello and
Johann Adolf Hasse. Outside of Italy, the expanding genre of the Lutheran motet began incorporating many
elements of the Italian cantata, especially techniques of dramatic expression like recitative and aria. Bach’s many
cantatas show the wide ranging influence of their Italian counterparts.
Instrumental music
Sonata: Used to describe several types of pieces in the baroque era, the term sonata most commonly designated a
work in several movements for one or more instruments (most frequently violins) and bassocontinuo; a sonata for
two violins or other treble instruments plus bass was usually called a trio sonata. By the 1650s, sonatas were often
classified either as sonatas da chiesa (“church sonatas”), usually comprised of four movements alternating
between slow and fast tempos and performed in church, or sonatas da camera (“chamber sonata”), which
consisted of a series of dances akin to the suite. Examples of both types can be found in the late 17th century
works of Corelli. In the 18th century, Telemann, Bach and Handel wrote numerous sonatas modeled on Corelli’s
sonatas da chiesa. The rise to prominence of solo sonatas for keyboard instruments begins late in the baroque
period, including those for organ (Bach) and harpsichord (Handel, Domenico Scarlatti). Other famous examples of
solo sonatas include Bach’s works for unaccompanied violin and cello.
Concerto: Derived from the Italian concertare (to join together, unite), the concerto took several forms during the
baroque era. Until the early 18th century, a concerto was simply a composition that united a diverse ensemble
consisting of voices, instruments or both. Sacred works for voices and instruments were often called concertos,
while similar secular works were generally termed arie (airs), cantatas or musiche. While large scale sacred
concertos can be found in the works of Claudio Monteverdi, more intimate compositions for one to four voices,
continuo and additional solo instruments were far more common. In Germany, wonderful examples of the sacred
concerto can be found in the works of Johann Hermann Schein, Michael Praetorius, Samuel Scheidt and Heinrich
Schütz (especially his Kleine geistliche Concerte, or “Small Sacred Concertos,” of 1636–39).
Later in the seventeenth century, the concerto began to assume its modern definition: a multimovement work for
instrumental soloist (or group of soloists) and orchestra. Taking its cue from the canzonas and sonatas of the late
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, which used contrasting groups of instruments to great effect, the concerto
grosso alternates a small group of soloists with a larger ensemble. The works of Corelli, particularly his Op. 6
collection, provide perhaps the best known examples of the late 17th century concerto grosso. While Corelli’s
works were emulated in the 18th century, most notably in Handel’s Op. 6 collection, many 18th century examples
of the concerto grosso show the increasing influence of the solo concerto (for example, the Brandenburg Concertos
of J. S. Bach).
The most dominant type of concerto in the 18th century was the solo concerto, which featured a single instrument
in contrast with an ensemble. The most prolific composer of the solo concerto was Antonio Vivaldi, who wrote
approximately 350 and established the concerto’s standard three-movement form (two fast outer movements, one
middle movement in a slower tempo). While most solo concertos were written for violin, trumpet concertos were
also popular, and concertos were also composed for cello, oboe, flute and bassoon. In the 1730s, Handel wrote 16
organ concertos, and Bach also composed several concertos for harpsichord around the same time (most of these
are arrangements of preexistent works).
Suite: Based on the traditional pairing of dances in the Renaissance, the suite was the first multi-movement work
for instruments. The suite was essentially a series of dances in the same key, most or all of them in two-part form.
Around the middle of the 17th century in Germany the sequence of allemande, courante, sarabande and gigue
became relatively standard, although other dance movements, such as additional allemandes or courantes,
bourreés, gavottes and minuets, were often inserted. Most suites also began with an introductory movement such
as a prelude, ouverture or fantasia. To many baroque composers, the different dances embodied specific characters.
In his Der volkommene Capellmeister (The Complete Music Director), 1739, German theorist Johann Mattheson
gave a list of each dance’s character: the minuet was “moderate gaiety,” the gavotte “jubilant joy,” the bourreé
“contentedness,” the courante “hope,” the sarabande “ambition” and the gigue could signify a number of emotions
ranging from anger to flightiness. Baroque suites were scored for solo instruments as well as orchestra; those
written for one or two melody instruments and continuo are sometimes titled sonata da camera. French suites for
keyboard are sometimes called ordres (as in the works of François Couperin, who inserted many non-dance
movements including evocative character sketches of court personnel.
In modern times, going to a concert is an event. We hear an ad on the radio or see a listing in the newspaper; we
purchase tickets; we go to a concert hall and sit quietly until it is time to applaud. In the baroque era, this kind of
public concert was rare. Many of the most famous baroque compositions were performed in churches for a service,
or as part of a private concert or celebration in the home of a wealthy patron. During the course of the baroque,
however, public performances became more common, particularly in the genres of opera and oratorio, and our
modern concert tradition began to coalesce in many European cities. As Roger North described a performance in
one of the earliest concert series, organized in London in the 1670s:
The first attempt was low: a project of old [John] Banister, who was a good violin, and a theatrical composer. He
opened an obscure room in a public house in White friars; filled it with tables and seats, and made a side box with
curtains for the music. Sometimes consort, sometimes solos, of the violin, flageolet, bass viol, lute and song
all’Italiana, and such varieties diverted the company, who paid at coming in. One shilling a piece, call for what
you please, pay the reckoning, and Welcome gentlemen.
The advent of the public concert made the growing middle class an important source of income for musicians. By
the end of the baroque, this social subset had become a musical patron almost as powerful as the church or court.
By the middle of the eighteenth century, the baroque idea of music as a form of rhetoric was under attack. Music
had a marvelously potent power to express even the most difficult concepts—but only in its most “natural” form,
which the baroque era had ostensibly muddled. As Johann Adolph Scheibe said of J. S. Bach in 1737,
This great man would be the admiration of whole nations if he made more amenity, if he did not take away the
natural element in his pieces by giving them a turgid and confused style, and if he did not darken their beauty by
an excess of art. Since he judges according to his own fingers, his pieces are extremely difficult to play; for he
demands that singers and instrumentalists should be able to do with their throats and instruments whatever he can
play on the clavier, but this is impossible… Turgidity has led [him] from the natural to the artificial, and from the
lofty to the somber; and…one admires the onerous labor and uncommon effort—which, however, are vainly
employed, since they conflict with Nature.
Scheibe’s insistence on clarity and ease of performance hints at a major change in musical aesthetics: throughout
his diatribe, the final arbiter of taste is not Plato or Aristotle, but ultimately the listeners and performers
themselves. This new emphasis on direct melodic expression and clear musical architecture points the way to the
classical period, the age of Mozart and Haydn.
Although the baroque period ended over 250 years ago, vestiges of the era can be heard everywhere. Some of the
most influential and beloved compositions are regularly performed in concert halls, and a wealth of recordings
make the baroque available on demand. Many of the musical genres still in use today, like the oratorio, concerto
and opera, originated in the period. Twentieth century composers such as Ralph Vaughn Williams, Igor Stravinsky
and Benjamin Britten paid homage to the baroque in their works. Its influence can even be heard outside the realm
of art music: the free movement between solo and group in jazz is sometimes compared to baroque music, and
snippets of Bach and Vivaldi frequently appear in the solos of heavy metal guitarists. And the spirit of the baroque
—an unwavering belief in the power of music to touch people’s lives—changed music history forever.