Everything about Ritornello totally explained
In
Baroque music,
ritornello was the word for a recurring passage for
orchestra in the first or final movement of a
solo concerto or
aria (also in works for
chorus). In ritornello form, the
tutti opens with a
theme called the ritornello (refrain). This theme, always played by the tutti, returns in different keys throughout the movement. However, it usually returns in incomplete fragments. It was favoured by composers such as Bach, Vivaldi and Handel and was used frequently in concertos, chamber works and vocal and choral pieces, though most prominently in the solo concerto where it created a ‘tutti-solo-tutti-solo-tutti’ pattern, with the ritornello being the ‘tutti’ section. When the
classical music era started, the ritornello form was altered to resemble
sonata form, though it later transformed to become
rondo form.
The final section of the
fourteenth century madrigal was also called the
ritornello and the ritornello technique was employed by
Giovanni Gabrieli in his 16th century
motets. The Ritornello form can be found in many Baroque and Classical period music such as
J.S. Bach's
Brandenburg Concerto No. 3. Other pieces in ritornello form include a sonata in F Major by
Joseph Haydn (using the form at a late date, as a classical period composer).
Beginning with the late
Classical and extending through the duration of the
Romantic era, the use of the ritornello construction faded with the advent of the far more standard classical concerto; however, with the advent of the 20th century and the general feeling of malaise within the composition field regarding the limits of form, the ritornello experienced an uptake in interest.
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