Handel Video Lesson
- Daniel Stewart, Anonymous
- Dec 3, 2015
- 2 min read

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iGwOuPVcheQ is the link to learn Handel's gavotte from his Keyboard Suite no. 14 in G also the Handel : Suite No 4 in D Minor, HWV 437, Sarabande is also well to learn. this intermediate piece is very famous and perhaps handels most famous keyboard piece. More on the baroque:
Lully, to convert the string players of the French court in a well harmonized set to accompanyoperas, also laid the foundations of modern orchestra. In the second half of the seventeenthcentury oboe had settled in France as an acceptable musical instrument, while in Italy the besttrumpeters also refined their style to the point that they could interpret sonatas accompanied bystringed instruments. The oboes and trumpets (as well as bassoons) found a place of artisticexpression in the orchestral ensemble, although they maintained their original function asinstruments to play outdoors or military. With the evolution of music for strings in the second halfof the seventeenth century, the supremacy went to Italy, where the golden age in themanufacture of instruments like the violin by luthiers as Amati, Guarneri and Antonio Stradivarifamily, followed by the development of a style of soft instrumental composition by composerssuch as Giuseppe Torelli and Tommaso Vitali, whose compositions became the concert forstring orchestra and the trio sonata for large ensemble, in the most important instrumentalgenres.
As the Italian opera aria grew in length and processing, so did the sonatas andconcertos of Italian composers who, gradually expanded the scope of individual movements,overlapping in a succession of short, contrasting sections characteristics of primitive workssonata type would. The diffusion of new Italian instrumental style was quick and important,partly due to emigration of Italian musicians and partly thanks to a favorable market concertosand sonatas already circulating in print: Venice, Amsterdam and then London became the maincenters of music publishing. The popularity of Italian compositions led to the establishment of amusical terminology and dynamic in Italian which was the common language for musicians from
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