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  • 6/9/14 Journal of Seventeenth-Century Music | Vol. 2 No. 1 | Silbiger: Passacaglia and Ciaccona: Genre Pairing and Ambiguity from Frescobaldi to Couperin

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    ISSN: 1089-747X Copyright 19952012 by the Society for Seventeenth-Century Music

    Volume 2, no. 1:

    Alexander Silbiger*

    Passacaglia and Ciaccona: Genre Pairing and Ambiguity from Frescobaldi to

    Couperin**

    ABSTRACT

    The simultaneous survival of such closely similar genres as the ciaccona and the passacaglia can be bestunderstood by considering them as a genre pair. The distinctions between them are subtle, involving surfacefeatures more readily perceptible by ear than by score-based analysis, while the shared features notinfrequently give rise to ambiguity between members of the pair. Some composers, notably GirolamoFrescobaldi and Franois Couperin, seem to have been fond of playing with this ambiguity within acomposition, switching back and forth between genre characteristics, or even effecting a gradualmetamorphosis from one genre to the other.

    1. The Problem of the Passacaglia-Ciaccona Distinction

    2. Three Phases in the History of the Passacaglia and the Ciaccona

    3. The post-Bach Phase

    4. The pre-Frescobaldi Phase

    5. Frescobaldi Redefines the Passacaglia and the Ciaccona

    6. Comparison of a Passacaglia and a Ciaccona by Frescobaldi

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    7. Other Passacaglias and Ciacconas in Frescobaldi's Works

    8. After Frescobaldi

    9. Germany, France, and Spain

    10. Couperin's Contributions

    References

    In memory of Tom Walker, the first to shed light on this murky area. His light shall continue to shine.

    1. The Problem of the Passacaglia-Ciaccona Distinction

    1.1 The search for a universal distinction between the passacaglia and the ciaccona has remained elusive, and

    many have come to agree with Manfred Bukofzer's conclusion, voiced half a century ago, that "composers

    often used the terms chaconne and passacaglia indiscriminately and modern attempts to arrive at a clear

    distinction are arbitrary and historically unfounded." (note 1) But why then did pieces called passacaglia and

    ciaccona continue to exist side by side through a good part of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, with

    the two designations even appearing in a few instances over consecutive segments of the same piece? (note 2)

    It seems unlikely that two distinct terms would have been employed almost equally often by the same people,

    within the same contexts, and over such a long period of time, unless they were considered to have at least

    subtle differences in meaning. Are there some hidden cues that we have been missing all this time?

    1.2 I will argue here that many seventeenth- and eighteenth-century composers did indeed conceive the

    passacaglia and the ciaccona as different, even if similar. Earlier generations of musicologists mostly failed to

    recognize those differences because of the prevailing analytical perspectives, which set up the masterworks of

    the European canon as the measure of all things and which privileged formal macro-structure over surface

    gesture or affect. A contributing factor may have been that the specific nature of the differences between the

    two genres was subject to much fluctuation, which is hardly surprising, considering the time span and

    geographic spread involved; nevertheless, certain aspects of the original distinctions continued to be preserved

    or revived. But perhaps more important than the particular nature of the distinguishing features was the idea of

    co-existing sameness and difference associated with the ciaccona/passacaglia pair. The compositional

    possibilities afforded by their peculiar close relationship may well have been a significant factor in the

    attraction the pair exerted on certain composers, even if this fascination was not shared by all.

    2. Three Phases in the History of the Passacaglia and the Ciaconna

    2.1 The earliest reports on the passacaglia and the ciaconna, from around the turn of the seventeenth century,

    appear mostly in Spanish literary sources, which tell us little about their musical character. (note 3) However,

    shortly thereafter both began to make appearances as chord strumming formulas in Italian guitar tablatures, and

    during the 1630s a second phase set in with an outburst of passacaglias and ciaconnas in all types of Italian

    instrumental and vocal music. Eventually their popularity spread through the rest of Europe, as they displayed

    a dazzling variety of forms that appears to defy all attempts at generalization. The eighteenth century saw a

    gradual decline, but there have been occasional revivals in the works of late nineteenth- and twentieth-century

    composers, which form a third phase in the history of these genres.

    3. The post-Bach Phase

    3.1 For composers of this third period, Bach no doubt provided the models, first of all with the C-minor

    passacaglia for organ (BWV 582), and, perhaps to a lesser extent, with the chaconne from the D-minor partita

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    passacaglia for organ (BWV 582), and, perhaps to a lesser extent, with the chaconne from the D-minor partitafor unaccompanied violin (BWV 1004). Both were seen as varieties of the familiar form of "theme andvariations," and the passacaglia specifically as an example of the ground bass variation. The Bach associationalso provided the genres with a sense of gravity, in line with the nineteenth-century image of that composer,which was further reinforced by his passacaglia's association with the organ.

    3.2 Not just composers, but also musicologists formed their conceptions of these genres from the Bach models,as they tended--sometimes still tend--to take their norms from the canonic works of the post-1700 (and mostlyGerman-Austrian) repertory. This is a more problematic habit; strong composers like Bach or Beethoven oftenprofoundly redefined the traditional genres they inherited from their predecessors, and as a consequence earlierexamples appear in retrospect to be primitive or immature if not wrong-headed. Compounding the problem forthe case of the passacaglia and the ciaccona was the fact that Bach stood near the end of a long tradition andperhaps closer to a tributary than to the mainstream of that tradition.

    4. The pre-Frescobaldi Phase

    4.1 In the 1960s Tom Walker and another young scholar, Richard Hudson, independently tried to track downthe origins of the passacaglia and ciaccona, and this took them far from those solemn and sublime Germanvariation sets. (note 4) They discovered that by the early seventeenth century both genres were wellentrenched into the oral traditions of Spanish popular culture, but other than that had little to do with eachother. The ciaccona was a rather wild and exuberant dance song imported from the colonies; it frequentlyprovoked censure. The passacaglia was neither a song nor a dance, but a brief instrumental introduction orritornello--a kind of vamp. Their earliest traces in musical notation are in rasgueado guitar tablatures: briefchord sequences to be strummed back and forth, usually beginning on a tonic chord and ending on a dominantor full cadence. They are presented in those tablatures largely for teaching purposes, and sometimes appear tobe little more than exercises for learning to strum standard chord progressions in different keys.

    4.2 Richard Hudson attempted to address the differences between the passacaglia and ciaccona by comparingthe harmonic bass progressions in these tablatures. (note 5) He found that their progressions form in fact twofairly distinct types; that of the ciaccona, whose formulas often commence with a I-V-VI sequence, isespecially well-defined. But when Hudson cast his net wider over the ciaccona and passacaglia repertory, heencountered for each genre a wide range of variants. (note 6) The differences within each type are often assignificant as those between them, to the point that the only common denominator for each seems to be themove from I to V. Hudson tried to deal with these variations by constructing elaborate hierarchies of formulasand sub-formulas from which players presumably selected patterns when constructing a passacaglia or aciaccona, (note 7) but more likely those players simply helped themselves to the various possibilities allowedby the harmonic idiom of the period. The search for a consistent distinction based merely on harmonic bassstructures is unlikely to be productive.

    5. Frescobaldi Redefines the Passacaglia and the Ciaccona

    5.1 Of course, for the players themselves the distinction was not likely to have been an issue as long as thecontexts of performance of the two remained different. It is only when passacaglia and ciaccona startappearing together in the written repertory, in the form of fully worked-out compositions scored for variousinstrumental and vocal combinations, that the question would arise. The first composer to place them side byside in this manner appears to have been Girolamo Frescobaldi, who in his second book of keyboard toccatasof 1627 included both a passacaglia and a ciaccona. (note 8) In his subsequent publications it becomes clear

    that he enjoyed exploring the possibilities of their relationship--that is, their potential as a genre pair--and alsothat, in effect, he had redefined these genres for the "high art-music" tradition. (note 9) Thus he initiated thesecond phase in the history of the passacaglia and the ciaccona, and his conceptions of these genres wouldleave traces throughout that phase.

    5.2 A genre pair is formed by two genres that are similar and in some way associated with each other, and yet

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    5.2 A genre pair is formed by two genres that are similar and in some way associated with each other, and yet

    remain clearly distinguishable. Straightforward examples from the period are the passamezzo moderno and

    antico and the pavan and galliard, but the relationship may be more subtle. Generally, the two genres can be

    identified as members of the pair by a set of shared characteristics, while a set of distinguishing markings

    serves to tell them apart. When a composer brings together two pre-existing genres to form a pair he usually

    will accept some of their traditions, but modify others to suit his purposes. A later composer may take over that

    pair but change the formula a bit; composers are always reinventing genres, and just as much their

    relationships.

    5.3 Genre pairing seems to have held a special fascination for Frescobaldi. He also brought the romanesca and

    the ruggiero into one another's company, creating pairs for keyboard, solo voice, and instrumental ensemble.

    (note 10) We shall see that with the passacaglia and the ciaccona he went a step further, but first let us look at

    how he conceived these two genres and their differences.

    5.4 A listener exposed to a number of Frescobaldi's passacaglias and ciacconas will quickly begin to perceive a

    marked difference between the two genres and before long will be able to identify the type almost as soon as

    the piece starts--the identification can readily be made without having to hear the whole work to determine its

    structural scheme. Comparison comes to mind with the Blues: listeners don't have to identify the twelve-bar

    textbook form to know they are hearing one (indeed, some Blues don't stick to that form, and some pieces that

    do aren't Blues). Even though, as with the Blues, structural schemes do play a role in the passacaglia and the

    ciaccona, the immediately audible distinction is conveyed by local and surface features. (note 11)

    6. Comparison of a Passacaglia and a Ciaccona by Frescobaldi

    6.1 To identify some of these features, let us compare a brief representative of each genre (example 1/figure

    1/MIDI 1 and example 2/figure 2/MIDI 2). (note 12) Most of the common elements are obvious, such as a

    triple beat, a dance character, and a structure composed of brief cycles of equal length, articulated by V-I

    cadences (see Table 1). (note 13) There is a strong linkage between successive cycles, accomplished by

    overlapping the end of one and the beginning of the next cycle, or by ending one cycle on a strong beat and

    commencing the next on the following weak beat (both may be happening in different voices), or sometimes

    by ending one cycle on the dominant and beginning the next on the tonic. This continuous linking of cycles is

    the feature that most strikingly sets these genres apart from older cyclic forms of the time like the passamezzo

    and romanesca variations; probably it is also responsible for their quickly rising and long enduring popularity.

    It produces an almost irresistible momentum that can sustain such pieces over seemingly endless successions of

    cycles.

    6.2 There is, however, a notable difference in character between the two pieces. The passacaglia has a gentle

    rocking feeling, perhaps with a touch of melancholy, whereas the ciaccona strides forward in a joyful, up-beat

    manner. The passacaglia achieves its character by smooth, oscillating melodic motion and, of course, its minor

    mode, whereas the ciaccona is in major and has strongly directed melodic lines with frequent skips. Meter and

    rhythm support the character differentiation: the ciaccona gets through a cycle after only two groups of three

    beats; the passacaglia takes more time to go about its business, not reaching the end of a cycle until after four

    groups of three beats. Also note that the passacaglia tends to stress the second beat of each group (which

    momentarily restrains forward motion) and the ciaccona the third beat (which helps it glide along). Finally, the

    passacaglia has a much higher incidence of dissonances on strong beats than the ciaccona, especially as

    downbeat suspensions. (note 14)

    6.3 What about the overall forms of these pieces: are they ground bass variations or perhaps some other type of

    "theme and variations"? The bass line of this passacaglia certainly hints at a recurring bass pattern of a

    descending tetrachord E to B, but the pattern is not foregrounded, as is the ostinato phrase of Bach's organ

    passacaglia, which is formally introduced as a pedal solo and later made into the subject of a grand closing

    fugue. In fact, in Frescobaldi's passacaglia the pattern is not rigidly adhered to, and in his longer sets the

    departures are more radical. The bass of the ciaccona, reminiscent of Monteverdi's well-known "Zefiro"

    ground, is treated more freely, although certain elements keep recurring. In either piece the sense of a "theme"

    subjected to variations, is not really present, the way it is, for example, in Bach's violin chaconne.

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    subjected to variations, is not really present, the way it is, for example, in Bach's violin chaconne.

    6.4 Although the two genres may now appear solidly differentiated, the distinction is in fact quite fragile; aslittle as the shift of a single accent or the change of a single interval may cause a momentary ambiguity. Fromthe quite similar rhythms of the bass lines in the examples it is clear that the generic distinction depends onwhether the fourth or fifth quarter-note beat is accented. In much triple-meter music of the period, metricregroupings, either in individual voices or in the entire texture, are an almost constant recurrence, especiallynear cadences--and in passacaglia and ciaccona, cadences are rarely more than a few beats away. Thus therhythmic distinction is in constant danger of being subverted. The melodic and harmonic distinctions arehardly more reliable. Raising the second note of the ciaccona bass pattern by a third, as at the beginning of thesecond cycle, is enough to suggest the passacaglia's descending tetrachord, and chromatic alterations, likely toappear sooner or later in any Frescobaldi composition, may destabilize the major or minor mode. But far fromtrying to suppress these ambiguities, the composer clearly delights in such genre bending and begins toexperiment with how far it can be pushed before the genre beg ins to lose its identity. Eventually, he will pushfarther.

    7. Other Passacaglias and Ciacconas in Frescobaldi's Works

    7.1 Table 2 lists the passacaglias and ciacconas in Frescobaldi's published works. One can observe a cleardevelopment in his conception of each genre, from the original pair of 1627, which was withdrawn from asubsequent edition of the volume, through the vocal settings of 1630, which introduced mode and keyswitching, to the cornucopia of passacaglias and ciacconas in the Aggiunta, the 1637 supplement to the FirstBook of Toccatas. (note 15) However, tracing that development must remain the subject of another article.(note 16) I do want to note the differences in the texts and their affects in the 1630 settings: in the ceccona fortwo tenors, the poet with light-hearted pastoral banter tries to seduce a shepherdess to join him, whereas in thepassacaglia for soprano he (the persona clearly is male) plays the scorned lover and assumes a bitter, mockingstance.

    7.2 The passacaglia and ciaccona occupy a central place in Frescobaldi's Aggiunta, his last publication.Distributed over five sets are a total of one hundred passacaglia and fifty-four ciaccona cycles, among themthose shown in examples 1 and 2. By and large the other cycles in the Aggiunta exhibit the characteristics anddifferences observed earlier for that pair. The minor mode remains the norm for the passacaglia and the majorfor the ciaccona--as they will continue to do during the further history of the pair--but the possibility ofswitching the modes is demonstrated right away. (note 17) Note the symmetry in the order of presentation: theE-minor passacaglia is followed by one in B flat major, and the G-major ciaccona by one in A minor. (note18) The two sets frame the Cento partite sopra passacagli, an extended essay in genre crossing, encompassingseveral cycles of passacaglias and ciacconas as well as a corrente. (note 19)

    7.3 The Cento partite is an astounding composition whose messages we have barely begun to understand.Among other things it is a study in transformations. There are transformations of meter as we pass through avariety of signatures and notational forms; transformations of key (see Table 2); and finally, transformations ofgenre. Although the beginnings of different genres are marked in the score, most transitions are smoothlyaccomplished by what one might call genre modulation. Often these will exploit the potential ambiguities ofvarious distinguishing markings to effect a gradual shift.7.4 A particularly nice move from a passacaglia to a ciaccona is shown in example 3/figure 3/MIDI 3. (note20) At the beginning of the excerpt, which follows a 3/2-6/4 meter shift, the passacaglia character is clear: notethe four groups of three quarter-note beats with emphasis on the second beats, the leaning toward C minor andrelatively smooth melodic motion. By m. 178 listeners will have little doubt that they are hearing a ciaccona,although they may not be quite sure how they got there. The accent shift from the fourth to the fifth quarter-note beat is firmly established, and similarly the major mode, after much back-and-forth flirtation, is no longerin question. The actual transition marked in the score, at m. 174, passes by almost imperceptibly, althoughhints of the ciaccona bass were dropped well before that point.

    7.5 Each of the transitions is handled slightly differently; example 4/figure 4 show one from a ciaccona to a

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    7.5 Each of the transitions is handled slightly differently; example 4/figure 4 show one from a ciaccona to a

    passacaglia that happens much more abruptly, with simultaneous shifts in key and in note values. (note 21) In

    m . 148 one still hears a typical ciaccona cycle--note the bass and the metric pattern--but in the next,

    modulatory cycle the upper voice performs a 4 X 3 pattern, clearly anticipating that of the following

    passacaglia cycle.

    8. After Frescobaldi

    8.1 Frescobaldi no doubt based his own formulas and characteristics--if not the idea of pairing--on earlier forms

    of the genres. Because of his fame and authority, his examples soon drew wider attention to the genres and

    came to serve as prototypes throughout much of Europe. (note 22) Other composers took over the idea of

    treating the ciaccona and passacaglia as a pair, juxtaposing examples of each within a collection. The

    differences these show don't necessarily coincide with those introduced by Frescobaldi and are not always as

    striking. Nevertheless, almost from the time of Frescobaldi's 1637 publication until at least a century later,

    several of the distinctions outlined in Table 1 continue to recur in one form or another, both in Italy and

    elsewhere. I do not claim that all composers who wrote passacaglias or ciacconas during this period were

    interested in the pairing relationship--or were even aware of it--and several, in fact, seem to have preferred to

    stick to one term or the other. (note 23) But whenever a composer used both terms in close proximity, my

    (admittedly provisional) survey suggests that one or more traditional distinctions were operative, whether they

    be minor/major key contrast, prevalent conjunct/disjunct motion, calmer/livelier tempo or character, (note 24)

    or contrasting bass formulas similar to those that opened the two Frescobaldi examples. (note 25) Comparative

    descriptions of the genres in contemporary sources are scarce, but usually mention a minor-major contrast and

    sometimes also a tempo difference; Brossard in 1703 writes that in the passacaille "the tempo is ordinarily

    slower than that of the chaconne, the melody more gentle, and the expressions less lively." (note 26)

    8.2 Some composers used the ciaccona and the passacaglia as topics (topoi) or employed their bass formulas assigns, sometimes just in passing reference(note 27); see for example Massimo Ossi's fine article on

    Monteverdi's Zefiro torna and related pieces, Geoffrey Burgess' interesting work on Lully's use of thechaconne, and, of course, Ellen Rosand's classic study on the descending tetrachord as emblem of lament

    (although it is still not clear to what extent the seventeenth century identified the descending tetrachord ostinato

    with the passacaglia dance-genre). (note 28) Whether the polarity implied by the pairing has itself been used as

    a sign is a subject that remains to be studied, but Ossi provides a suggestive example in an aria attributed to

    Monteverdi, "Voglio di vita uscir," in which the ciaccona bass and the lament bass underline the text in

    symbolic contrast. (note 29)

    9. Germany, France, and Spain

    9.1 A few more words about the later non-Italian traditions. The two genres followed rather different courses in

    Germany and in France. The German organists created a tradition of majestic ground-bass compositions that

    were given shape and cohesion by increasingly brilliant figurations. (note 30) Although the earliest known

    example, a pair by the Roman-trained Viennese organist Johann Caspar Kerll (1629-93), uses traditional

    ground-bass formulas for both his passacaglia and his ciaccona, (note 31) later composers like Pachelbel and

    Buxtehude introduce formulas of their own devising, and relationships to the genres' origins became

    increasingly tenuous. (note 32)

    9.2 This also would become true to some extent in France, where past mid-century the genres enjoyed

    unprecedented popularity, both in music for intimate chamber settings and for the public stage, and where

    characteristically French varieties were created which differed both from the improvisatory and occasionally

    rambling Italian cycles and the climactic ascents of the German ones, relying instead on orderly and well-

    balanced structures like the couplet-and-refrain scheme. Lully's grandiose instrumental and vocal production

    numbers continued to be emulated in the eighteenth century by Rameau and Gluck, and Mozart still includes

    an orchestral chaconne in the ballet for Idomeneo, which is altogether innocent of the German variationtradition. (note 33)

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    tradition. (note 33)

    9.3 We must not fail to mention the traditions of the homeland of these genres; in Spain passacalles andchaconas continued to flourish well into the eighteenth century. Often the passacalles are in duple time, (note34) suggesting roots that predate the Italian appropriation and redefinition of the genres.

    10. Couperin's Contributions

    10.1 As a pair, our two genres may have enjoyed their last flowering in the works of Franois Couperin leGrand, a composer, like Frescobaldi, much interested in the interplay of styles and genres. In the first suite ofLes Nations,(note 35) a collection of chamber music from 1726, there is a piece entitled "Chaconne ouPassacaille." (note 36) Did Couperin choose this title to flaunt his indifference to the distinction? But why thendid he include in the second and third suites of Les Nations (1726) respectively a passacaille and a chaconne,(note 37) the former suitably in minor and marked noblement, the second in major with a bass stronglyreminiscent of the old ciaccona formulas? (note 38) A look at the "Chaconne ou Passacaille" shows thatCouperin too may be playing a game of pairs; see example 5. At the beginning, marked "Moderment," adescending bass supports smooth four-bar phrases with suspensions, but the 9th cycle at m. 41 is marked "Vif,et marqu," corresponding to a sudden switch of tempo and character: melodic direction now changes quickly,the phrase is broken in two with a V-I root progression, and the bass begins with the descending fourth thatonce was the hallmark of the ciaccona. Evidently Couperin had so much fun with his game, and perhaps withthe consternation it may have caused, that two years later he decided to play it again in his Pices de Violes,(note 39) this time with a "Passacaille ou Chaconne"; see example 6. He starts clearly enough in chaconnecharacter: short two-bar phrases and a bass that moves immediately to V, but there is a second section inminor, which commences with a four-bar descending tetrachord. Whether or not my explanation of the title isthe right one (at this point it seems as good as any), Couperin's exciting composition is a worthy apotheosis ofthe two genres, recapturing the high spirits that accompanied them during their early days. Vida vida; vidabona; vida bamanos a chacona!

    Return to beginning of article

    References

    * Alexander Silbiger ([email protected]) teaches at Duke University. His publications include ItalianManuscript Sources of Seventeenth-Century Keyboard Music, Frescobaldi Studies; and Keyboard MusicBefore 1700, as well as editions of music of Nicola Vicentino and Matthias Weckmann, and the GarlandSeries of facsimiles, Seventeenth-Century Keyboard Music. He is currently working on a book on thebeginnings and early history of keyboard music notation. Return to text** An earlier version of this article was presented at the Fourth Annual Conference of the Society forSeventeenth-Century Music at Wellesley College, April 18-21, 1996. The author is working on a larger studyof the passacaglia (passacaille) and the ciaccona (chaconne), and welcomes comments and information on thesubject. He hopes to incorporate results of this work in his "Chaconne" and "Passacaglia" articles for therevised edition of the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians and in a detailed study of Frescobaldi'sCento partite sopra passacagli. Return to text

    1. Manfred Bukofzer, Music in the Baroque Era (New York: Norton, 1947), 42. A classic example of such anattempt--if not ultimately successful--is the wide-ranging and still useful survey by Kurt von Fischer:"Chaconne und Passacaglia: ein Versuch," Revue belge de musicologie, 12 (1958): 18-34. Return to text

    2. An example of this, in addition to that of the Frescobaldi's Cento partite discussed below, is a chaconne in

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    2. An example of this, in addition to that of the Frescobaldi's Cento partite discussed below, is a chaconne inLa Lande's Mirtil et Mlicerte (1698); the minor section is marked "Passacaille," and the return to major"Chaconne" (ed. in Richard Hudson, The Folia, the Saraband, the Passacaglia, and the Chaconne, 4 vols.,Musicological Studies and Documents, 35 [Neuhausen-Stuttgart: American Institute of Musicology, 1982], 4:119-24). Return to text

    3. For the early history of the passacaglia and ciaccona, see Thomas Walker, "Ciaccona and Passacaglia:Remarks on Their Origin and Early History." Journal of the American Musicological Society 21 (1968): 300-320 and Richard Hudson, " Further Remarks on the Passacaglia and Ciaccona." Journal of the AmericanMusicological Society 23 (1970): 302-14. Hudson concerned himself with the two genres in several otherimportant studies; particularly valuable is Hudson's study cited in the previous note, which includes acomprehensive anthology of each, covering their history to the middle of the eighteenth century. I shall refer toitems in vol. 3 of that anthology (The Passacaglia) as HP followed by their numbers, and to items in vol. 4(The Chaconne) as HC, followed by their numbers. Return to text

    4. Walker, "Ciaccona and Passacaglia" and Hudson, "Further Remarks." Return to text

    5. Hudson, "Further Remarks," especially pp. 310-14. Return to text

    6. Example 5 in Hudson, "Further Remarks" shows six forms for the passacaglia, three forms for the ciaccona,and three "neutral" forms which could serve either type (p. 312). Return to text

    7. See also Hudson, The Folia, 3: xiv-xxxi and 4: xiv-xxix. Return to text

    8. Girolamo Frescobaldi, Il secondo libro di toccate (Rome: Borbone, 1627), 87, 88; mod. ed. in GirolamoFrescobaldi, Opere complete 3: Il secondo libro di toccate, ed. Etienne Darbellay, Monumenti musicaliitaliani, 5 (Milan: Suvini Zerboni, 1979), 114-19. Return to text

    9. By "high art-music tradition" I mean (at least for this period) the tradition in which musical compositions arepreserved and disseminated in the form of carefully notated scores. Return to text

    10. Respectively in Toccate e partite ... primo libro (Rome: Borbone, 1615), 41, 46; Arie musicali, 2 vols.(Florence: Landini, 1630), 1: 17, 2: 16; and Canzoni da sonare (Rome: Vincenti, 1634), 53, 54. Return to text

    11. Whether in the seventeenth century unnotated nuances of performance contributed to the distinction, willhave to remain a matter of speculation. Return to text

    12. Girolamo Frescobaldi, Toccate d'intavolatura..libro primo (Rome: Borbone, 1637), 70 [example 1/figure1/MIDI 1] and 91 [example 2/figure 2/MIDI 2]; mod. ed. in Girolamo Frescobaldi, Opere complete 2: Il primolibro di toccate, ed. Etienne Darbellay, Monumenti musicali italiani, 4 (Milan: Suvini Zerboni, 1977), 89 and119 respectively. Return to text

    13. I shall use "cycle" to refer to an individual variation or unit, and "set" for the entire piece.

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    Return to text

    14. Tim Carter drew my attention to the role of these suspensions in avoiding parallels when the bass descends

    by steps, as in m. 4 of the passacaglia. At the beginning of the ciaccona, where the bass descends by fourths

    followed by ascents by steps, such suspensions are not necessary, but they appear in m.4, after a descent by

    step. Clearly there is a close connection between the character of the bass line and that of the contrapuntal

    texture.

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    15. Frescobaldi, Toccate ... libro primo, 69-94. Return to text

    16. Such a study might also take account of the passacaglias and ciacconas during the preparatory, pre-

    publication stages of the Aggiunta, about which thanks to Etienne Darbellay's work we are now fairly wellinformed; see his Le toccate e i capricci di Girolamo Frescobaldi: Genesi delle edizioni e apparato critico,Girolamo Frescobaldi, Opere complete, suppl. to vols. 2-4 (Milan: Suvini Zerboni, 1988), 56-60 and "LeCento partite di Frescobaldi: metro, tempo e processo di composizione 1627-37," in Girolamo Frescobaldi nelIV centenario della nascita, eds. Sergio Durante and Dinko Fabris, 359-73 (Florence: Olschki, 1986). Return to text

    17. That Frescobaldi regarded the association of the passacaglia with minor and the association of the ciaccona

    with major as the norm is evident from the way each begins and ends in their appearances in the 1627 and

    1630 publications, as well as from their initial appearances in the Cento Partite. Later composers, too, whenpresenting an example of each in the same context (e.g., publishing them in the same collection), will usually

    observe this distinction, although not necessarily when one or the other is presented by itself. As with

    Frescobaldi, this distinction never precluded internal excursions to the other mode, which in France became

    almost the rule.

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    18. In its final version, the B-flat major passacaglia consists of fourteen cycles in B flat followed by five

    cycles, marked "altro tuono," in G minor; according to Darbellay the G-minor portion was a later addition, and

    originally formed part of an early version of the Cento Partite; see Darbellay, Le toccate e i capricci, 59. Return to text

    19. Frescobaldi, Toccate, 74 and Opere complete, 2: 96 Return to text

    20. Frescobaldi, Opere complete, 2: 104-05, mm. 164-82. Return to text

    21. Frescobaldi, Opere complete, 2: 103-04, mm. 146-56. Return to text

    22. The 1637 editions of the two books of toccatas received unusually wide circulation, and copies still survive

    in many parts of the world.

    Return to text

    23. Of Bernardo Pasquini, for example, only passacaglias survive among the keyboard works, and of

    Pachelbel only ciacconas. Instances of a composer's changing the designation when recycling a piece are very

    rare (and, in any case, could mean that the composer changed his mind about which term was more

    appropriate rather than that he was indifferent). Georg Muffat reworked a "passacaglio" from a sonata into a

    "ciacona" for a concerto grosso, but with a meter change from 3/2 to 3/4 (cited in Fischer, "Chaconne," 30),

    and Gluck renamed a "Passacaille" from Iphignie en Aulide"Chaconne" when reusing it in Paride et Hlna(Fischer, "Chaconne," 33).

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    (Fischer, "Chaconne," 33). Return to text

    24. Slower tempo for the passacaglia is sometimes suggested by a meter based on larger note values (e.g., 3/2rather than 6/4 or 3/4), or higher levels of sub-divisions of the beat (e.g., sixteenth-note divisions rather thaneighth-note divisions of a quarter-note beat); for examples of the former, compare HP 59 and HC 84(Falconiero, 1650), for the latter, HP 67 and HC 93 (Mazzella, 1689). Both the Mazzella pieces are in 3/4, butthe passacaglia is marked "largo" at its beginning, whereas the ciaccona is marked "presto"; furthermore, eachhas subsequent sections crossing over into the opposing tempo, analogous to the mode switching mentioned inn. 17. Return to text

    25. For examples, see HP 50 and HC 74 (Piccinini, 1639); HP 59 and HC 84 (Falconiero, 1650); HP 65 andHC 91 (Vitali, c. 1680); HP 66 and HC 92 (Vitali, 1682); HP 67 and HC 93 (Mazzella, 1689); HP 80 and HC111 (Marais, 1701); HP 85 and HC 118 (Campion, 1731); HP 87 and 119 (Fischer, c. 1738); as well asBernardo Storace, Selva di varie compositione (Venice, 1664), Johann Caspar Kerll, Modulatia organica(Munich, 1686) [see n. 31 below]; Jean-Baptiste Lully, Acis et Galate (1687); Nicolas-AntoineLebgue,Second livre de clavessin (Paris, 1687); Jean-Henry d'Anglebert, Pices de clavecin (1689); GeorgMuffat, Apparatus musico-organisticus (Salzburg, 1690); Marc-Antoine Charpentier, Mde (1694). Thescarcity of German examples may in part derive from the fact that most seventeenth-century keyboard musicfrom that region survives in manuscript anthologies rather than in printed, composer-prepared collections. Return to text

    26. "...le mouvement en est ordinairement plus grave que celuy de la Chacone, le Chant plus tendre, & lesexpressions moins vifves;" Sebastien de Brossard, Dictionaire de musique (Paris: Ballard, 1703), s. v."PASSACAGLIO, veut dire, PASSACAILLE"; see also the English translation by Albion Gruber (MusicalTheorists in Translation, vol. 12 [Henryville: Institute of Mediaeval Music, Ltd., 1982], 76). JohannMattheson, writing somewhat retrospectively (as well as disparagingly) about the "Ciacona, Chaconne, withits brother, or its sister, the Passagaglio, or Passecaille," claims that the passacaglia ought to go faster than theciaccona ("and not the other way around"), because, he asserts, it is only used for dancing (!), whereas theciaccona is also used for singing (Der Vollkommene Capellmeister [Hamburg: Herold, 1739; R/Kassel:Brenreiter, 1954], part 2, chap. 13, sect. 133-135; see also the English translation by Ernest C. Harriss[Studies in Musicology, no. 21; Ann Arbor: UMI Research Press, 1981]). Return to text

    27. A nice example of the latter can be heard in Act I, Scene 6 of Monteverdi's L'Incoronazione di Poppea,when Valletto warns Ottavia that Seneca's pompous advice is nothing but songs; as he holds the final syllableof "canzoni," the continuo bass quickly plays twice through the ciaccona bass (in Monteverdi's favorite,"Zefiro" version).Return to text

    28. Massimo Ossi, "L'armonia raddoppiata: on Claudio Monteverdi's Zefiro torna, Heinrich Schtz's Es stehGott auf, and Other Early Seventeenth-Century Ciaccone," Studi musicali 17 (1988): 225-53; GeoffreyBurgess, "Chaconne and Passacaille in the tragdie en musique from Lully to 1750" (unpublished paper);Ellen Rosand, "The Descending Tetrachord: An Emblem of Lament," Musical Quarterly 65 (1979): 346-59. Return to text

    29. Ossi, "L'armonia raddoppia, 240-53. Return to text

    30. A few modest examples of this format also show up in late seventeenth-century Italy; see for example thePassacallo (1691) by Bartolomeo Laurenti, HP 68. Return to text

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    31. Johann Caspar Kerll, The Collected Works For Keyboard, ed. David C. Harris (New York: The BroudeTrust, 1995), 1: 113, 118. The ciaccona and the passacaglia appear side-by-side in the two principal sourcesfor his keyboard music (see the Critical Report in the Harris edition) as well as in the thematic index of hiswork appended by the composer to his Modulatia organica ("Subnecto," p. 6). Although the claim that Kerllstudied with Frescobaldi is probably without foundation (he would have been only 16 when the older masterdied), Frescobaldi's pervasive influence on his works is evident. His archetypical pair, the passacaglia in Dminor on a descending tetrachord bass, and the ciaccona in C major on a I-V-vi-IV-V formula, may havebrought the potential of these two genres to the attention of German keyboard players and, at the same time,provided a model for the characteristic German addition of virtuoso figurations. Return to text

    32. On Pachelbel, see n. 23. We cannot tell whether the passacaglia and two ciacconas of Buxtehudepreserved in the Andreas Bach Book (BuxWV 159-161)--the only keyboard examples by this composerexcept for a "ciacona" section in the Prelude in C (BuxWV 137)--had a common origin. The three works arevery similar in construction, all three are in minor keys and have four-bar ostinatos with long-short rhythms;however, the passacaglia is written in 3/2 meter suggesting a slower tempo than the 3/4 of the ciacconas; I hearsome other differences in character, but whether those are meaningful is difficult to assess with such a smallsample. There is little question about the "ciaccona" character of the section in BuxWV 137. Return to text

    33. Many earlier German chaconnes and passacailles owed as much to French as to Italian models, as was trueof much eighteenth-century German music. Return to text

    34. See, for example, HP 75a (Guereau, 1694); HP 81 (Fernandez de Huete, 1702); HP 83a (anon. Spanish,1707); HP 86a (de Murcia, 1732), as well as several examples by Juan Cabanilles (see his Opera omnia 2, ed.Higinio Angls [Barcelona: Institut d'estudis Catalans, Biblioteca de Catalunya, Seccin de musica, 1933], 43-55). Return to text

    35. Les Nations: Sonades et suites de simphonies en trio (Paris: by the author, 1726); mod. ed. in uvrescompltes, 9, ed. Amde Gastou (Paris: ditions de l'Oiseau-Lyre, 1933), 49. Return to text

    36. The title has a precedent in a keyboard piece by Couperin's uncle Louis Couperin, which in theposthumous Bauyn MS is called "Chaconne ou Passacaille," although it appears in its only other (alsoposthumous) source, the Parville MS, as simply "Passacaille"; see Louis Couperin, Pices de clavecin, ed.Davitt Moroney (Monaco: ditions de l'Oiseau-Lyre, 1985), 146-47 and 216-17. It is not clear what Louismeant by the title (if indeed it was his), since his chaconnes are generally quite distinct from his passacailles(including the tendency--not uncommon in France--to use rondeau forms as opposed to variation forms), andthis one, unlike the one by Franois, appears to be a straightforward chaconne. Return to text

    37. uvres compltes, 9: 123 and 204. Return to text

    38. Most of Couperin's other passacailles and chaconnes conform to the traditional opposition, includingstately passacailles for harpsichord (in the Huitime ordre [1717] and in the Vingt-quatrime ordre [1730]--thelatter one marked "noblement") and light-hearted chaconnes for instrumental ensemble (Troisime concert[1722] and Treizime concert [1724]--both marked "Chaconne leger"), although his first book of Pices declavecin (Paris, 1713) contains an altogether anomalous chaconne in duple time: "La Favorite, chaconne adeux temps." Return to text

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    39. Pices de violes avec la basse chifre (Paris: Boivin, 1728); mod. ed. in uvres compltes, 10, ed.Amde Gastou (Paris: ditions de l'Oiseau-Lyre, 1933), 129-39.

    Return to text

    Tables

    N.B.: Alternative, pre-formatted views of the following tables are available for users accessing the JSCM witha WWW browser that does not support formatted tables of graphics. Select from Table 1 or Table 2.

    Table 1: Frescobaldi's Passacagli and Ciaccone in the 1637 Aggiunta

    CommonElements

    triple beat

    dance character

    cyclic structure (cycles marked by V-I cadences)

    linking of cycles

    end of one cycle coincides with beginning of next:

    cycle ends on strong beat:

    cycle begins on tonic and ends on dominant:

    cross-rhythms:

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    ContrastingElements

    Passacaglia Ciaconna

    rocking, restrained stepping, lively

    at beginning of cycle bass moves:

    by scale stepsby descending

    fourths

    upper voices:

    conjunct and oscillatingdisjunct and

    directed

    minor mode major mode

    frequent dissonances, especially dissonant

    suspensions on strong beatsfewer dissonances

    4 groups of 3 beats:2 groups of 3 (subdivided)

    beats:

    predominant pattern:

    Return to paragraph 6.1/paragraph 8.1

    Table 2: Passacagli and Ciaccone in the works of Frescobaldi

    Il secondo libro di toccate (1627)

    Partite sopra CIACCONA

    15 cycles: C

    Partite sopra PASSACAGLI

    33 cycles: d

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    33 cycles: d

    Arie musicali (1630)

    Aria di PASSACAGLIA [a canto solo]: "Cos mi disprezzate?"

    25 cycles: d - F - d - recitative - G [ciaccona?] - e - recitative - d

    CECCONA a due tenori: "Deh, vien da me pastorella"

    22 cycles: C - G - recitative - G - F - C - recitative - G - C

    Il primo libro di toccate, Aggiunta (1637)

    PASSACAGLI (preceded by Balletto and Corrente del Balletto)

    6 cycles: e

    PASSACAGLI (preceded by Balletto and Corrente del Balletto)

    19 cycles: B flat - g

    CENTO PARTITE SOPRA PASSACAGLI

    113 cycles: d - corrente - passacagli - F - ciaccona - C/c - passacagli - a - passacagli -

    ciaccona - d - passacagli - a - e

    CIACCONA (preceded by Balletto)

    8 cycles: G

    CIACCONA (preceded by Corrente)

    8 cycles: a - e - a

    Return to text

    List of MIDI Examples

    (performed by Andrew Unsworth on a Yamaha TG77 synthesizer at the Duke University Electronic MusicStudio)

    MIDI 1. Girolamo Frescobaldi, Passacagli, Toccate ... primo libro (1637), 70

    MIDI 2. Girolamo Frescobaldi, Ciaccona, Toccate ... primo libro (1637), 91

    MIDI 3. Girolamo Frescobaldi, Cento partite sopra passacagli, mm. 164-82, Toccate ... primo libro (1637), 79

    List of Music Examples

    (set in Finale by Igor Pecevski)

    Example 1. Girolamo Frescobaldi, Passacagli, Toccate ... primo libro (1637), 70

    Example 2. Girolamo Frescobaldi, Ciaccona, Toccate ... primo libro (1637), 91

    Example 3. Girolamo Frescobaldi, Cento partite sopra passacagli, mm. 164-82, Toccate ... primo libro (1637),79

    Example 4. Girolamo Frescobaldi, Cento partite sopra passacagli, mm. 148-56, Toccate ... primo libro (1637),79

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    Example 5. Franois Couperin, Chaconne ou Passacaille, mm. 1-5 and 41-45, Premier ordre: La Franoise,Les Nations (1726)

    Example 6. Franois Couperin, Passacaille ou Chaconne, mm. 1-4 and 73-76, 1ere Suite, Pices de violes(1728)

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