OK—if you’ve been to more than ten weddings in your life,
you’ve heard it: the Pachelbel Canon. What’s interesting is that, up until the
70’s, nobody had ever heard of it. Then, it was everywhere—especially after the
movie Ordinary People used it.
Two things about the piece—it’s got a ground bass, the
musical way of saying that the cello plays the same damn thing over and over.
Trust me, any cellist who doesn’t have the Pachelbel Canon memorized has a
serious problem.
And yes, it’s a true canon. Nope, it doesn’t fire a ball—it
has three violins all playing the same thing two bars apart. It a more
sophisticated version of “Row, Row, Row Your Boat.”
It’s a bit ironic that Pachelbel is known, now, for just one
work, because in his life his music was well known and well received. But there’s
a lot of music, only a bit of which I’ve listened to. So let’s start, yes, with
the famous Canon.
And here, because I couldn’t resist…..
And everybody loves to change it.....
Right, so it may just have gone over the edge, there, but
it’s actually in the good baroque tradition, which was to deem the written
music as a starting point, never an end, for playing. So yes, there was always
room for invention, for throwing in a new riff, for ornamenting. Music at the
time was like jazz—much more open.
The Chaconne is a musical form that takes a short fragment
of music and spins off endless variations of it. And this chaconne has a ground
bass, as did the canon, and as do many chaconnes.
OK—that was a bit not on the slow side. But how’s this—the famous
Adagio from Albinoni?
There are other famous adagios—not the least of which is
Barber’s Adagio for Strings. But that’s the work of a different day!
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