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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SCY-SHA |
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SERENADE (from Ital. serenata, Lat. serenus, bright; the Italian term being applied, partly by confusion with serus, late, and partly through the use of Serenacf. Gr. ve?i7vrias an epithet for the moon, to a form of courting music played at night in the open air; whence also the synonym Notturno), in music; a term
movement
march
instruments
minor (which he afterwards arranged as a string
work
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The typical scheme of a large serenade or divertimento differs from that of a symphony only in having six movements instead of four, the additions being another slow movement
violin
scheme (though without the serenade style) was adopted by Beethoven in one of the profoundest and most serious works in all music, the string
Brahms's first essays in symphonic form took the shape of two orchestral serenades, of which the first was originally sketched for a large group of solo instruments
Other applications of the term in music are merely literary. Even its use, from the 17th century onwards, for a kind of operetta was clearly no more than a natural allusion to the notion of serenades as addressed at night by minstrels to ladies and by clients to patrons. (D. F. T.) End of Article: SERENADE (from Ital. serenata, Lat. serenus, bright; the Italian term being applied, partly by confusion with serus, late, and partly through the use of Serenacf. Gr. ve?i7vrias an epithet for the moon, to a form of courting music played at night in the If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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