Dictionary Definition
cadenza n : a brilliant solo passage occuring
near the end of a piece of music
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A part of a piece of music, such as a concerto, that is very decorative and is played by a single musician.
Translations
decorative solo piece of music
- French: cadence
- German: Kadenz
- Hungarian: kadencia
- Italian: cadenza
Italian
Noun
Extensive Definition
In music, a cadenza (Italian for
cadence)
is, generically, an improvised or written-out ornamental passage
played or sung by a soloist or
soloists, usually in a "free" rhythmic style, and often allowing
for virtuosic display.
Cadenza often refers to a portion of a concerto in which the orchestra stops playing,
leaving the soloist to play alone in free time (without a strict,
regular pulse) and can be written or improvised, depending on what
the composer specifies. This normally occurs near the end of the
first movement, though it can be at any point in a concerto; an example is
Tchaikovsky's
First Piano Concerto, where in the first five minutes a cadenza
is used. It usually is the most elaborate part that the solo
instrument plays during the whole piece. At the end of the cadenza,
the orchestra re-enters, and generally finishes off the movement on
their own, or, less often, with the solo instrument.
The cadenza was originally, and remains, a vocal
flourish improvised by a performer to elaborate a cadence
in an aria. It was later
used in instrumental music, and soon became a standard part of the
concerto. Originally, it was improvised in this context as well,
but during the 19th
century, composers
began to write cadenzas out in full. Third parties also wrote
cadenzas for works in which it was intended by the composer to be
improvised, so the soloist could have a well formed solo that they
could practice in advance. Some of these have become so widely
played and sung that they are effectively part of the standard
repertoire, as is the case with Joseph
Joachim's cadenza for Johannes
Brahms' Violin
Concerto, Beethoven's
set of cadenzas for Mozart's
Piano Concerto no. 20, and Estelle Liebling's edition of
cadenzas for operas such as Donizetti's's
La fille du Régiment and Lucia
di Lammermoor.
Nowadays, very few performers improvise their
cadenzas, and very few composers have written concertos or vocal
pieces within the last hundred years that include the possibility
of an improvised cadenza.
Perhaps the most notable deviations from this
tendency towards written (or absent) cadenzas are to be found in
jazz, most often at the end
of a ballad,
though cadenzas in this genre are usually brief and somewhat
immaterial. Saxophonist John Coltrane, however, usually improvised
an extended, spell-binding cadenza when performing "I Want To Talk
About You", in which he showcased his predilections for scalar
improvisation and multiphonics; the recorded examples (see
"Coltrane Live At Birdland" and "Afro Blue Impressions"-- both live
recordings) of Coltrane's "I Want To Talk About You" are
approximately 8-minutes in length, with Coltrane's unaccompanied
cadenza taking up approximately 3-minutes. More sardonically, Jazz
critic Martin Williams once described Coltrane's improvisations on
"Africa/Brass" as "essentially extended cadenzas to pieces that
never get played."http://www.reitzes.com/coltrane1.html
Equally noteworthy is saxophonist Sonny Rollins' shorter improvised
cadenza at the close of "Three Little Words" (from his album "Sonny
Rollins on Impulse!").
Cadenzas are also found in instrumental solos
with piano or other accompaniment, where they are placed near the
beginning or near the end or sometimes in both places. (e.g. "The
Maid of the Mist," cornet solo by Herbert
L. Clarke, or a more modern example: the end of "Think of Me"
where Christine Daaè sings a short but involved cadenza, in
Andrew Lloyd Webber's
The Phantom of the Opera.)
Notable examples of Cadenzas
- Concertos are not the only pieces that feature cadenzas; Scena di Canta Gitano, the fourth movement of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's Capriccio espagnol, contains cadenzas for violin, harp, clarinet, and flute in its beginning section.
- The end of the first movement of Bach's fifth Brandenburg Concerto features a harpsichord solo.
- The first movement of Grieg's Piano Concerto in A minor. It is a long and impassioned cadenza which ends with the orchestra and piano playing together in a dramatic and rousing finale.
- Mozart wrote a cadenza into the third and final movement of his Piano Sonata in B-flat major, K. 333, which was an unusual (but not unique) choice at that time because the movement is otherwise in Sonata-Rondo form.
- Beethoven's "Emperor" Concerto begins with three short cadenzas. These are notable because the composer specifies that the soloist should play the music that is written out in the score, and not improvise his own.
- Beethoven famously included a cadenza-like solo for oboe in the recapitulation section of the first movement of his Symphony No. 5.
- Rachmaninov's Third Piano Concerto, in which the first movement features a long and difficult toccata-like cadenza with an alternative or ossia cadenza written in a heavier chordal style.
- Fritz Kreisler's cadenzas for the first and third movements of Beethoven's Violin Concerto.
- Carl Baermann's cadenza for the second movement of Mozart's Clarinet Concerto.
- Aaron Copland: Clarinet Concerto to connect the two movements.
- Karol Szymanowski's two violin concertos both feature cadenzas written by the violinist who was intended to play them Pavel Kochańsk
Composed cadenzas
Composers who have written cadenzas for other performers in works not their own include:- Benjamin Britten: Haydn's Cello Concerto in C, for Mstislav Rostropovich.
- Karlheinz Stockhausen: various Mozart concerti for wind instruments, for his children.
- Friedrich Wührer composed and published cadenzas for Mozart's piano concerti in C Major, K. 467; C Minor, K. 491; and D Major, K. 537 http://www.di-arezzo.co.uk/scores-of-Friedrich+Wuhrer.html.
External links
Cadenza - dance group in Lund, Sweden founded 1984 specializing on medieval and Renaissance dances in Europe.References and further reading
- Badura-Skoda, Eva, et al. "Cadenza". Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (subscription required). Accessed 2007-04-06.
- Randel, Don (1986). The New Harvard Dictionary of Music. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-61525-5
cadenza in German: Kadenz (Solokonzert)
cadenza in Modern Greek (1453-): Kαντέντσα
cadenza in Spanish: Cadenza
cadenza in Esperanto: Kadenco
cadenza in Italian: Cadenza
cadenza in Hungarian: Kadencia
cadenza in Dutch: Cadens
cadenza in Japanese: カデンツァ
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
acciaccatura, appoggiatura, arabesque, cadence, coloratura, division, embellishment, extempore, fioritura, flight, flourish, grace, grace note, hot lick,
impromptu, improvisation, incidental, incidental note,
interpolation,
lick, long mordent,
mordent, ornament, passage, pralltriller, riff, roulade, run, single mordent, turn, vamp