User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -əʊniə
- A symphony.
- A piece or music serving as an overture, interlude or ritornello.
- A small symphony orchestra.
Finnish
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: sin·fo·ni·a
- /ˈsiɱfːo̞n̪iɑ/|lang=fi
Noun
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
Sinfonia is the Italian (Spanish, and also
Portuguese) word for symphony (see that article for
etymology). In music Sinfonia has however some specific meanings
and connotations, that are understood when the word sinfonia is
used outside the realm of Latin-based languages:
Late Renaissance - Early Baroque
In the very late Renaissance and early Baroque, a sinfonia was an alternative name for a canzona, fantasia or ricercar. These were almost always instrumental forms, all rooted however in a polyphonic tradition. Later in the Baroque period it was more likely to be a type of sonata, especially a trio sonata or one for larger ensemble. Still later in the Baroque era, the word was used to designate an instrumental prelude, as described in the next section.Overture and/or early symphony
In larger vocal-instrumental forms of the 17th and 18th centuries, for example operas and oratorios, a sinfonia was generally an instrumental prelude, sometimes also an interlude/intermezzo or postlude, providing contrast with adjacent vocal or otherwise different sections.A specific form of such kind of preluding piece,
in the early 18th century, was the three-movement sinfonia which
became the standard type of overture to an Italian opera. Most
of the time these pieces were in D major (for maximizing
open-string resonance on string instruments), opening and ending
with a fast movement, with a slow movement in the middle. Examples
of this type of Italian sinfonia are the numerous three-movement
opera overtures by Alessandro
Scarlatti, all archetypical Italian
overtures.
In France however overtures had always been
one-movement preluding pieces, usually in a A-B-A form, where the
"A" sections had a slow tempo with a stately
(double)dotted rhytm, while the "B" middle section was
comparatively fluent and fast. This musical form
became known as the French
overture. By the time this type of overture was adapted by
German composers like Bach
and Handel
from the early 18th century on, it could be as well the preluding
movement of a (dance) suite, in which case overture was
sometimes used as a synonym for the entire suite (e.g. Bach's
French
Overture, BWV 831).
Most of Handel's operas and oratorios start with
the French type of overture movement, even if he occasionally calls
such movement a sinfonia (as he did for the Messiah,
actually calling it a
Sinfony). But Handel would use the Italian type of orchestral
prelude/interlude too, for instance the Introduzione to the cantate
Delirio
amoroso, HWV
99. Also the instrumental
Pifa featuring in the Messiah did not so much derive from
French examples. An interesting anecdote is that when Mozart
made a German version of the Messiah, some 30 years after Handel's
death, he changed the name of the opening Sinfony to Ouvertüre, but
more or less did away with its French characteristics: he softened
the dotted rhythm of the "A" section with some more flowing horn
melodies, and by speeding it up a bit also made it less distinct
from the "B" section: the result is that the "A" part appears as
not much more than a moderate preamble to a "fast" symphonic
movement (the "B" section).
In the mean while, also from the early 18th
century on, the 3-movement Italian type of sinfonia had started to
lead a life on its own: it could be composed as an independent
concerto-like piece
(without soloists however). For instance Vivaldi
composed as well 3-movement independent sinfonias, not so different
from some of his string concertos, as well as composing similar
sinfonia preludes for his operas.
Bach sometimes used
the term sinfonia in the then-antiquated meaning of an instrumental
single-movement piece, e.g. for the keyboard Inventions
and Sinfonias BWV 787-801, using a three-voice polyphonic
style. Note that in 20th century, publishers started to publish
these sinfonias as "Three-Part Inventions", where "Part" is an
independently flowing melody ("voice", but in the instrumental
meaning) in a single-movement work.
If Bach opened a vocal work with one or more
separate instrumental movements (which was all in all not so
often), he would usually call such piece a sinfonia or
alternatively a sonata. For the sinfonias the style would be rather
Italian (also for the single-movement ones) than French:
- One-movement sinfonia opening the secular cantatas Non sa che sia dolore, BWV 209 and Mer Hahn en neue Oberkeet, BWV 212
- Sinfonia followed by an "adagio" opening the Easter oratorio, BWV 249. Although the chorus joins in the third movement of that oratorio, these three successing opening movements could be seen as a 3-movement "Italian" sinfonia to the oratorio.
- Some opening movements of his church cantatas were like up-time movements of organ concertos (BWV 29, 35, 49, 169) - later Bach would rework some of these sinfonias to harpsichord concerto movements.
Both Handel and Bach used the French type of
overture to start their orchestral suites. For suites they composed
for a solo instrument there often was no preluding movement. If
there was, that opening movement would usually be either an
Overture/Ouverture (in that case always referring to the French
style), or otherwise a Prelude/Praeludium. The style of such
preludes was less defined but would often emulate the style of a
fast movement of an Italian sinfonia.
As the 18th century progressed, the usual name
for an instrumental prelude to a vocal/theatrical work would settle
on overture. Although such overtures would generally be
one-movement pieces, they were no longer in the French style, but
rather adapted the Italian preluding sinfonia, for instance a loud,
triadic,
motto-type leading motif, a
reprise preceded with minimal thematic development, and an overall
mood of expectation rather than resolution.
The idea of the Italian 3-movement sinfonia as an
independent orchestral composition lived on too: the earliest
symphonies of Haydn and Mozart were composed
in this format. Mozart also composed divertimentos in the
Italian sinfonia format, with some ambiguity whether such
divertimentos were indeed intended as independent instrumental
compositions, or rather as instrumental interludes (for theatre
productions etc).
But then Haydn made the Italian
sinfonia/non-solistic concerto and the French type of
overture/suite meet again: he took the three movements of a
sinfonia, and inserted a fourth between the two last movements of
the Italian model. That additional movement was a menuet, which had until then only
been an almost obligatory movement of a suite. He also took some
characteristics of the French style overture movement, as well as
of what was the sonata in
those days, amongst others the possibility to start the first
movement of such four-movement composition with a slow introductory
passage. But the resulting composition was no longer called a
"sinfonia" (at least not outside Italy and Spain): the symphony was born.
Symphony with an alternative scope
Later sinfonia would occasionally be used as an alternative name for a symphony, from the Romantic era on. Often, but not always, the title "sinfonia" is used when the work is seen as, or intended to be, lighter, shorter, or more Italianate or Baroquish in character than a full-blown (romantic) symphony (with its dominantly Germanic pedigree).Examples of such "sinfonias" composed after the
classical
era include:
- Felix Mendelssohn's twelve early symphonies, most of them string symphonies in three movements and all of them composed before his five other more elaborate symphonies, are sometimes called "sinfonias", to distinguish them from the Symphonies 1 to 5 that were published during - or shortly after - the composer's lifetime. The Italian is a composition of the latter series, so always called a "symphony". On the other hand Mendelssohn used the term sinfonia in the "overture" meaning for the first movement of his Lobgesang symphony. This can be seen as one of the many Bach reminiscences Mendelssohn inserts in his music: these references to the old master were especially thick in this "symphony-cantata", as it was to be premiered in the Thomaskirche in Leipzig.
- Vincent d'Indy wrote a Sinfonia brevis de bello Gallico that is: "Brief sinfonia of the War in Gaul".
- Richard Strauss chose the name Sinfonia Domestica ("Domestic Symphony") for a full scale symphony he composed 1902-1903. Maybe this symphony shows a somewhat sunnier side than most of his other orchestral compositions - but then large parts of the work also portray domestic tiffs and other tensions, ending in an elaborate fugue restoring coherence in the household.
- Benjamin Britten wrote a Sinfonia da Requiem in 1941. Here Sinfonia is rather an allusion to seriousness and/or solemnity, than to any kind of lightness.
- Luciano Berio wrote his Sinfonia in 1968-69.
Sources
- Manfred Bukofzer, Music in the Baroque Era. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1947. ISBN 0-393-09745-5
- The New Harvard Dictionary of Music, ed. Don Randel. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1986. ISBN 0-674-61525-5
- Article Sinfonia, in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
External links
- A selection of sinfonias (from the Mutopia project)
sinfonia in Danish: Sinfonia
sinfonia in French: Sinfonia
sinfonia in Hebrew: סינפוניה
sinfonia in Dutch: Sinfonia