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单词 chamber music
释义

chamber music


chamber music

n. Compositions traditionally intended for performance in a private room or small concert hall and written for an instrumental ensemble, such as a trio or quartet, with one player for each part.

chamber music

n (Classical Music) music for performance by a small group of instrumentalists

cham′ber mu`sic


n. music suited for performance in a room or a small concert hall and played by a small ensemble. [1780–90]

chamber music

1. A style of music that first appeared in the fifteenth century, written for performance in a chamber, or room, rather than in a church or theater. Although chamber music has long been a staple of the concert hall, it retains an air of intimacy, with the number of musicians usually limited to eight.2. Music for a small group of musicians, suitable for playing in small halls.
Thesaurus
Noun1.chamber music - serious music performed by a small group of musiciansclassical, classical music, serious music - traditional genre of music conforming to an established form and appealing to critical interest and developed musical taste
Translations
室内乐

chamber

(ˈtʃeimbə) noun1. a room. 房間 房间2. the place where an assembly (eg Parliament) meets. There were few members left in the chamber. 會議廳 会议厅3. such an assembly. the Upper and Lower Chambers. 議院 议院4. an enclosed space or cavity eg the part of a gun which holds the bullets. Many pistols have chambers for six bullets. 彈膛 弹膛ˈchambermaid noun a female servant or hotel worker in charge of bedrooms. 飯店客房女服務員 女服务员chamber music music for a small group of players, suitable for a room rather than a large hall. 室內樂 室内乐

chamber music


chamber music,

ensemble music for small groups of instruments, with only one player to each part. Its essence is individual treatment of parts and the exclusion of virtuosic elements. Originally played by amateurs in courts and aristocratic circles, it began to be performed by professionals only in the 19th cent. with the rise of the concert hall. In the broadest sense it existed as early as the Middle Ages. The ricercare and the concerted canzone of the 16th cent. are properly chamber music, although unlike later forms they were not for specific instruments but were usually performed by voices and whatever instruments were at hand. During the baroque period the chief type was the trio sonatasonata
, in music, type of instrumental composition that arose in Italy in the 17th cent.

At first the term merely distinguished an instrumental piece from a piece with voice, which was called a cantata.
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. About 1750 the string quartet with its related types—trio, quintet, sextet, septet, and octet—arose. As developed by Haydn and Mozart the quartet became the principal chamber-music form. It was used by Beethoven and Schubert, whose quartets are the last of the classical period, and by the chief composers of the romantic period—Mendelssohn, Schumann, Brahms, Dvořák, Franck, d'Indy, and Reger. In the early 20th cent. the coloristic possibilities of the quartet were exploited by Debussy and Ravel. More recently the different forms of chamber music have been used extensively for experiments in atonality, percussive rhythms, and serial techniques by such composers as Schoenberg, Bartók, Webern, Berg, Stravinsky, Sessions, and Piston.

Bibliography

See D. F. Tovey, Essays in Musical Analysis: Chamber Music (1944, repr. 1989); W. W. Cobbett, ed., Cyclopedic Survey of Chamber Music (3 vol., 2d ed. 1963, repr. 1987); H. E. Ulrich, Chamber Music (2d ed. 1966); M. Berger, Guide to Chamber Music (1985); J. M. Keller, Chamber Music: A Listener's Guide (2010).

Chamber Music

 

a specific type of music differing from that performed in theaters and concert halls; chamber works are designed to be performed in small halls and for domestic or “room” use (hence the name). Compositions of this type are written for small instrumental groups (from a single soloist to a chamber ensemble). The music is characterized by economy and subtle and detailed expressive effects; it has great potential for conveying lyrical emotions and spiritual nuances. Chamber music originated in the Middle Ages. Until the end of the 16th century the term was applied only to vocal genres; in the 17th century it was extended to instrumental music as well. In the 16th—18th centuries the term “chamber music” gradually came to mean secular music as opposed to church music (chamber sonata versus church sonata).

The modern forms of the instrumental chamber ensemble— sonata, trio, quartet, quintet, and so on—developed in the works of the Viennese classicists Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, who created profound and perfectly formed models. With its rich expressive possibilities, the instrumental ensemble (especially the string quartet) attracted the attention of nearly every composer; it reflected all the basic trends of music of the 18th-20th centuries. The romantics (Schubert, Mendelssohn, Schumann) and later composers (Brahms, Dvorak) paid tribute to it. High artistry distinguishes the chamber music of such Russian composers as Tchaikovsky, Borodin, and Glazunov, whose traditions have been carried on by the Soviet composers N. Ia. Miaskovskii, Prokofiev, and Shostakovich.

Vocal chamber music was prominent in the late 18th century and particularly in the 19th. Schubert, Schumann, and other romantic composers created the art song, a new genre with great expressive possibilities. The art song was richly developed in Russia by M. I. Glinka, A. S. Dargomyzhskii, Tchaikovsky, Borodin, Mussorgsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, and Rachmanin off. The genre of instrumental miniatures (character pieces, pieces in dance forms) also acquired great importance in that period.

Chamber-music concerts were given, mostly in small concert halls, in the 19th century, leading to the formation of societies of lovers of chamber music and numerous performing chamber ensembles.

REFERENCES

Vasina-Grossman, V. A. Russkii klassicheskii romans. Moscow, 1956.
Vasina-Grossman, V. A. Romanticheskaia pesnia XIX veka. Moscow, 1967.
Vasina-Grossman, V. A. Mastera sovetskogo romansa. Moscow, 1968.
Raaben, L. Instrumental’nyi ansambl ’ v russkoi muzyke. Moscow, 1961.
Raaben, L. Sovetskaia kamerno-instrumentaVnaia muzyka. Leningrad, 1963.
Walthew, R. H. The Development of Chamber Music. London-New York [1909].
Mersmann, H. Die Kammermusik, vols. 1–4. Leipzig, 1930–33.
Kilburn, N. Chamber Music and Its Masters.London, 1932.
Ulrich, H. Chamber Music, 2nd ed. New York-London, 1966.
Coeuray, A. La Musique de chambre. Paris, 1953.
Richter, J. Fr. Kammermusik-Katalog. Leipzig, 1960.
Cobbett, W. W. Cyclopedic Survey of Chamber Music, 2nd ed., vols. 1–3.London, 1963.

L. N. RAABEN

chamber music

music for performance by a small group of instrumentalists
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chamber music


  • noun

Words related to chamber music

noun serious music performed by a small group of musicians

Related Words

  • classical
  • classical music
  • serious music
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