Music of the Baroque

Today, Wednes­day June 8th, we explore the music of the Baroque era. We’ll be includ­ing the work of a wide range of composers.

And at 12 noon and 4pm Pacif­ic Time/SLT, tune in for the lat­est episode of “Where Have You Been?”, where this time we take you on a clas­sic pil­grim­age: The Camino de San­ti­a­go — a trib­ute expe­ri­ence cre­at­ed by Vik­tor Sav­ior and Orpheus Paxlapis around Brazil­ian author  Paulo Coelho’s 1987 book,  “The Pilgrimage.”

The Pil­grim­age at Unit­ed Artists of Sec­ond Life: an art instal­la­tion cre­at­ed by Vik­tor Sav­ior and Orpheus Paxlapis; Region: Kar­pov (Mod­er­ate)
SLURL: http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Karpov/132/133/2802

And every four hours from 4am Pacific/noon in the UK, tune in for “The Engines of Our Inge­nu­ity”, from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Hous­ton, about the machines that make our civ­i­liza­tion run and the peo­ple whose inge­nu­ity cre­at­ed them.

Says Wikipedia on the music of the Baroque:

Baroque music is a peri­od or style of West­ern music com­posed from approx­i­mate­ly 1600 to 1750. This era fol­lowed the Renais­sance music era, and was fol­lowed in turn by the Clas­si­cal era, with the galant style mark­ing the tran­si­tion between Baroque and Clas­si­cal eras.

The Baroque peri­od is divid­ed into three major phas­es: ear­ly, mid­dle, and late. Over­lap­ping in time, they are con­ven­tion­al­ly dat­ed from 1580 to 1650, from 1630 to 1700, and from 1680 to 1750.

Baroque music forms a major por­tion of the “clas­si­cal music” canon, and is now wide­ly stud­ied, per­formed, and lis­tened to. The term “baroque” comes from the Por­tuguese word bar­ro­co, mean­ing “mis­shapen pearl”.

Key com­posers of the Baroque era include Johann Sebas­t­ian Bach, Anto­nio Vival­di, George Frid­er­ic Han­del, Clau­dio Mon­tever­di, Domeni­co Scar­lat­ti, Alessan­dro Scar­lat­ti, Hen­ry Pur­cell, Georg Philipp Tele­mann, Jean-Bap­tiste Lul­ly, Jean-Philippe Rameau, Marc-Antoine Char­p­en­tier, Arcan­ge­lo Corel­li, François Couperin, Giuseppe Tar­ti­ni, Hein­rich Schütz, Jan Pieter­szoon Sweel­inck, Dieterich Bux­te­hude, and oth­ers, and you will hear many of them today.