Cello Essays

  • Cello History

    977 Words  | 2 Pages

    Today, the cello is a very important part of the musical world. The cello is very popular today because there are many pieces of music that have cello parts, even cello solos. But, the cello wasn’t always this way. The history of the cello is full of change because it has drastically changed in size, sound, and significance. One example that shows that the history of the cello is full of change is because it has drastically changed in size and shape. According to Andrew Dunn, if you were to

  • Analysis of Dmitri Shostakovich's first cello concerto

    899 Words  | 2 Pages

    powerful stimulus to the spirit of resistance and freedom. This is nowhere plainer than in Shostakovich's cello concertos, where the weeping of the cello contrasts with the harsh shrieks of the woodwind. Shostakovich wanted to create a piece whose exultant defiance and bitter sorrow sent a chilling message to the world. Composed for the great Russian cellist, Mstislav Rostropovich, the first cello concerto subdivides into four movements. To Shostakovich's astonishment, Rostropovich mastered and memorised

  • How Playing The Cello Has Influenced My Life Essay

    558 Words  | 2 Pages

    For almost 8 years of my life, playing the cello has influenced my life in so many extraordinary ways. Choosing the cello over any instrument, was probably one of the best decisions I will have ever made, in the 5th grade. The violin was way too high, the viola was way too small, while the upright bass was way too big. I knew at that very moment that the cello was the instrument that I wanted to play. The warmth of the instruments tone, and the powerful sound that came out of the f-holes drew me

  • Being A Viola Essay

    724 Words  | 2 Pages

    string orchestras there are four instruments used: the violin, viola, cello, and bass. Most high schools contain this type of orchestra; however there are many other instruments that can be added to create a symphonic orchestra. From the string instruments the best is actually the most undervalued instrument. The “Middle Child” of the family of strings. The one that everyone should want to play is obviously the viola. The violin, cello, and bass are all wrong. Each one has their own handicap that prevents

  • The Phoenix Symphony Performance At Estrella Mountain Community College

    550 Words  | 2 Pages

    the room in which the conductor, Marc Dix, walked occasionally. The orchestra was arranged in a "U" shape so the instruments all turned in towards each other. From the audiences' point of view, violins were on the far left, violas, to their right, cellos to their right, and on the far right side stood the double basses. The 1st violinist sat in the second to last chair to the left, and among all this, the concert master stood in the center. The opening piece was very brief and light. It resinated

  • For the love of Strangers

    1554 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Outwater’s lived in a nine room apartment on West End Avenue in Manhattan. This may seem excessive for Esther, her son Neil, a grand piano, a cello and an inherited library, but they quite often hosted guest boarders. The rooms were often occupied by foreign and American students applying for grants or entry into nearby universities and sometimes young musicians in New York auditioning or for competitions. Mrs. Outwater had memberships in various charities and had offered them the use of the

  • Listening To The Waltz Scene In The Sound Of Music

    750 Words  | 2 Pages

    instruments and a snare drum. The first segment of the piece is an orchestra composed of cello, violin and bass instruments. The segment is divided into four sub-segments. The orchestra play a forte then a decrescendo to a mezzo forte. As the four sub-segments, the transformation to the second segment is brought into by a decrescendo that is a slightly slow. The tempo is less instinct which puts emphasis on the basses and cellos. The timbre of the first segment is the balance of the string instruments with

  • Korsakov's Scheherazade: The Young Prince And The Young Princess

    720 Words  | 2 Pages

    Rimsky-Korsakov uses different instrumentation, special effects, tempos, and dynamics to paint a picture of what it is like to have a strong affect toward another person. The first and second violins come in with the melody at 20:51, accompanied by the violas, cellos and basses. Both violin sections use sul D, on the D string, rather than on the A string. In general, stringed instruments on higher strings will produce a bright, somewhat nasally

  • The Development of Instruments and Instrumental Music in the Late Renaissance and Baroque Eras

    2474 Words  | 5 Pages

    Before the Baroque era, music was rarely written specifically for instruments; most often, music played on instruments was originally for voice. The Baroque Era last from 1600 to 1750. During this time, instruments were improved, and composers began to write pieces for specific instruments. Music became more popular with the middle class, and amateur musicians became to sprout up, separate from the church and the court. Instrumental music in the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras were called

  • City Under Siege

    1424 Words  | 3 Pages

    He awoke to the sounds of cannon fire. The rumbling thunder in the distance signalled the start of another day, as surely and as steadily as it had been doing ever since the war reached Sarajevo. It would be moments before the rounds hit, chipping off more of the small European city into debris. Sometimes, with Lady Luck on their side, they would land outside of town. Things were rarely so fortunate. A series of booms sent his ears ringing, numbed and dazed from the shock. Groups of infantrymen

  • Themes and Variations of the Trout Quintet

    684 Words  | 2 Pages

    Themes and Variations of the Trout Quintet A quintet is a work for five instruments, in this case piano, violin, viola, cello and double bass (piano quintet). The fourth movement of this quintet is a theme and variations on Schubert's song 'Die Forelle' (The Trout). Schubert (1797-1828) was a prolific song / lied composer. Many of his songs took their inspiration from the beauty of nature; 'The Trout' being a good example. Much of his 'lieder' display pictorial word painting effects in

  • The Physics and Science of the Violoncello

    1376 Words  | 3 Pages

    The violoncello, or more commonly known as the cello, is often referred to as the tenor of the string family. The name ‘violoncello’ literally means “little violone”- where ‘one’ means big and ‘cello’ means little. The violone was the lowest-pitched instrument of the Viol family. By the end of the 19th century, the term “violincello” has been more or less replaced with “cello”. The cello has four strings, tuned in relations of perfect 5ths. This fact is derived from the phenomenon of the overtone

  • Night at the Symphony

    1238 Words  | 3 Pages

    music, and mine is just beginning, the Seattle Symphony production certainly brought many of the musical ideas and terms such as texture and clarity to life. The three works featured February 17th, Johannes Brahms' Tragic Overture, Edward Elgar's cello in E-minor, and Sergey Prokofiev's Symphony Number 6 in E-flat minor were new music that I have not been exposed to. Also the treat of hearing the work of world renounced guest cellist, Antonio Meneses was without doubt a treat. I much enjoyed this

  • Luigi Boccherini

    1199 Words  | 3 Pages

    Boccherini (his baptismal first name Rudalfo was never used) was the son of a cello or double bass player, Leopoldo Boccherini. Luigi was born in Lucca, Italy in February 19, 1743. The Boccherini family had considerable artistic gifts. Luigi's brother Giovan Gastone (1742-1800) was a poet and a dancer, Luigi's sister Maria Ester had a distinguished career in Vienna as a ballet dancer. Boccherini first studied music on the cello with his father. Then Luigi's father, "Leopoldo handed over Luigi to the Abbate

  • The Orion String Quartet and Nash Ensemble: A Concert Review

    786 Words  | 2 Pages

    that provides depth and poignancy to the music. Section 3 is more merry and cheerful with the violins leading what feels like a race to be won. As they slow slightly we are soon dragged back to full speed and the race is on again. The violins and cello play off of each other as if in composition to see who will win the race. The bass brings in a dramatic flair as if building the suspense for the final climax of the music. The music slows to the point where you feel you have reached the end, but soon

  • Ana Vidovic, Croatian Virtuosa

    754 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ana Vidovic Coming from a very talented family, Ana has been known through her music since the age of 5 with her father and brother being guitarist themselves. She later explained that her brother influenced her on playing the guitar. She was born in a small town in Croatia, November 8th 1980. She was so popular, at the age of the thirteen she became the youngest attendee of a very high-status musical institute. By her early twenties, Vidovic had already received numerous prizes. Her well-kept status

  • The Cello Site Analysis

    683 Words  | 2 Pages

    In this essay, the article The Cello Site: About the Cello will be analyzed to determine whether the author made the subject clear and interesting to the readers by using the several different techniques. Definition, explanation, description, comparison, contrast, and examples, are the six techniques that will be analyzed. Furthermore, this essay will consider any points in the article that was not fully understandable and will discuss what additional information the author could have provided that

  • The Glorious Stradivari Revolution

    991 Words  | 2 Pages

    and was buried in the church of San Domenico in Cremona where his family had originated. A luthier is defined as a creator and maker of stringed instruments. Stradivari’s main focus was perfecting violins, but would often branch into violas and cellos which are much more rare to find today. Through his life ... ... middle of paper ... ... The shaping of the instrument was done in much finer detail unparalleled to any maker at the time. Stradivari’s varnish was always a question of mystery

  • Stradivari, Hermes and Apollo

    760 Words  | 2 Pages

    Antonio Stradivari, the most famous violin-maker in all the human world, was a favorite of both the god of Delos, the fair Apollo, and of the trickster god, Hermes. His creations sang with the lilt of dance and with the song of birds; many of the Olympians would stop their affairs to listen for even a hint of Stradivari's sound. In short time, it came to be that both Apollo and Hermes would covet a violin from the luthier and both came down in their human forms one day to make their request of him

  • William Primrose: What Is A Viola Like A Lawsuit?

    1502 Words  | 4 Pages

    How is a viola like a lawsuit? Everyone is happy when the case is closed. Often the butt of many jokes, the viola has never been the most recognized instrument. It seems as though it has always been overshadowed by its younger brother, the violin. This association has probably stemmed from the fact that violas are difficult to discern in an orchestra, and rarely get the melody in most pieces, as they are tuned a perfect fifth below the violins. Nowadays, the viola is recognized as an instrument