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A suite, in Western classical music and jazz, is an ordered set of instrumental or orchestral/concert band pieces. It originated in the late 14th century as a pairing of dance tunes and grew in scope to comprise up to five dances, sometimes with a Prelude (music), prelude, by the early 17th century. The separate Movement (music), movements were often thematically and tonally linked. The term can also be used to refer to similar forms in other musical traditions, such as the Ottoman Classical Music, Turkish fasıl and the Arab music, Arab nuubaat. In the Baroque music, Baroque era, the suite was an important musical form, also known as ''Suite de danses'', ''Ordre'' (the term favored by François Couperin), ''Partita'', or ''Ouverture'' (after the theatrical "overture" which often included a series of dances) as with the orchestral suites of Christoph Graupner, Georg Philipp Telemann, Telemann and Johann Sebastian Bach, J.S. Bach. During the 18th century, the suite fell out of favour as a cyclical form, giving way to the symphony, sonata and concerto. It was revived in the later 19th century, but in a different form, often presenting extracts from a ballet (''Nutcracker suite, Nutcracker Suite''), the incidental music to a play (theatre), play (''L'Arlésienne (Bizet), L'Arlésienne'', ''Masquerade (Khachaturian), Masquerade''), opera, film score, film (''Lieutenant Kijé (Prokofiev), Lieutenant Kije Suite'') or video game (Motoaki Takenouchi's 1994 suite to the ''Shining (series), Shining'' series), or entirely original movements (''Holberg Suite'', ''The Planets'').


History

Estienne du Tertre published ''suyttes de branle, bransles'' in 1557, giving the first general use of the term "suite" 'suyttes' in music, although the usual form of the time was as pairs of dances. The first recognizable suite is Paul Peuerl, Peuerl's ''Newe Padouan, Intrada, Dantz, and Galliarda'' of 1611, in which the four dances of the title appear repeatedly in ten suites. The ''Banchetto musicale'' by Johann Hermann Schein, Johann Schein (1617) contains 20 sequences of five different dances. The first four-movement suite credited to a named composer, ''Sandley's Suite'', was published in 1663.


Baroque era

The Baroque music, Baroque suite consisted of allemande, courante, sarabande, and gigue, in that order, and developed during the 17th century in France, the gigue appearing later than the others. Johann Jakob Froberger is usually credited with establishing the classical suite through his compositions in this form, which were widely published and copied, although this was largely due to his publishers standardizing the order; Froberger's original manuscripts have many different orderings of the movements, e.g. the gigue preceding the sarabande. The publisher's standardized order was, however, highly influential especially on the works of Bach. Many later suites included other movements placed between sarabande and gigue. These optional movements were known as ''galanteries'': common examples are the minuet, gavotte, passepied, and bourrée. Often there would be two contrasting ''galanteries'' with the same name, e.g. Minuet I and II, to be played ''alternativement'', meaning that the first dance is played again after the second (but without the internal repeats), thus I, II, I. The later addition of an overture to make up an "overture-suite" was extremely popular with German composers; Georg Philipp Telemann, Telemann claimed to have written over 200 overture-suites, Christoph Graupner wrote 86 orchestral overture-suites and 57 partitas for harpsichord, Johann Sebastian Bach, J.S. Bach had his four orchestral suites along with other suites, and George Frideric Handel, Handel put his ''Water Music (Handel), Water Music'' and ''Music for the Royal Fireworks'' in this form. Handel wrote 22 keyboard suites; Bach produced multiple suites for lute, cello, violin, flute, and other instruments, as well as English Suites (Bach), English suites, French Suites (Bach), French suites and Partitas for keyboard (Bach), Partitas for keyboard. François Couperin's later suites (which he called "Ordres") often dispensed entirely with the standard dances and consisted entirely of Character piece, character pieces with fanciful names.


18th and 19th century

By the 1750s, the suite had come to be seen as old-fashioned, superseded by the symphony and concerto, and few composers were still writing suites during that time. But since the 19th century, composers have frequently arranged ballets, operas, and other works into suites for concert performance. Arrangement into a suite can make the music more accessible and available to a wider audience, and has greatly helped popularize the music itself, such as in Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker suite, suite from ''The Nutcracker'', or Aaron Copland's suite from ''Appalachian Spring''. Suites for orchestra or concert band usually consist of one or more movement (music), movements. An example is Edvard Grieg, Grieg's ''Peer Gynt (Grieg), Peer Gynt'' Orchestral Suites I and II, each consisting of four movements. Such suites may consist of :* an instrumental selection from a larger work such as an opera, ballet, film score, or musical; :* a sequence of smaller pieces tied together by a common theme, such as the nationalistically inflected suites of Grieg, Jean Sibelius, Sibelius, or Tchaikovsky and ''The Planets'' by Gustav Holst, Holst; :* a work deliberately referential of Baroque themes, as in the mischievous Suite for Piano by Arnold Schoenberg, Schoenberg. Carl Nielsen made a Suite for String Orchestra (Nielsen), Suite for String Orchestra his Opus number, Opus 1 in 1888 at the age of 23. In the late 19th century, Sibelius's ''Karelia Suite'' was written for the students of the Helsinki university.


20th century

Brought on by Impressionism, the piano suite was reintroduced by early 20th-century French composers such as Maurice Ravel, Ravel and Claude Debussy, Debussy. Debussy's ''Pour le piano'' is a suite in three movements, published in 1901, and his ''Suite bergamasque'', revised in 1905, is probably one of the most famous suites, especially the third movement, ''Clair de lune (Debussy), Clair de Lune''. Ravel is particularly well known for his ''Miroirs'' suite for piano and lesser known for ''Le tombeau de Couperin'', both requiring tremendous skill and dexterity from the pianist. Arnold Schoenberg's first use of the twelve-tone technique throughout an entire work was in his Suite for Piano (Schoenberg), Suite for Piano, op. 25. Modeled on the Baroque keyboard suite, the piece consists of six movements entitled ''Präludium'' (Prelude), ''Gavotte'', ''Musette'', ''Intermezzo'', ''Menuett'' (Minuet, with Trio), and ''Gigue''. Other famous examples of early 20th-century suites are ''The Planets'' by Gustav Holst, a "Suite for Orchestra" in which each piece represents the astrology, astrological significance of one of the seven uninhabited planets then known, as well as his First Suite in E-flat for Military Band, First Suite in E-flat and Second Suite in F for Military Band. There are as well several examples of suites being used in the jazz genre. Perhaps the most notable composer is Duke Ellington/Billy Strayhorn, who produced many suites, amongst them: ''Black, Brown and Beige'', ''Such Sweet Thunder'', ''The Far East Suite'', the ''New Orleans Suite'', the ''Latin American Suite'', and many more. Suites are also used in free jazz (Max Roach: ''Freedom Now Suite'', Don_Cherry_(trumpeter), Don Cherry, John Coltrane's ''A Love Supreme'', etc.).


Dance suite

The dance suite was a collection of dance music popular in the Baroque era. It consists of the following movement (music), movements in this order: * Allemande: Literally translates from French as "German”, but by the time of its canonization in the suite it was thoroughly French, and was archaic as an actual dance by the 17th century. It is a moderate dance with a meter of characterized by uniform movement in sixteenth notes, a mostly homophonic texture, even rhythms, and a generally restrained mood. * Courante or Corrente: A courante is a highly structured French dance in time featuring polyphonic textures, characteristic hemiola effects implying especially in its formulaic cadences, and bursts of motion over a moderate underlying pulse. The Corrente is an Italian version in quick or , generally in two parts with a simpler harmonic structure, more uniform note values, more virtuosic character, and freer form than its French counterpart. * Sarabande: A slow, stately dance in time, infrequently in . The original Spanish dance (inherited through Mexico) was very lively and quick, and famously controversial owing to its perceived lascivious character. However, by the time of its inclusion in the suite via France, it had been totally reimagined as a sedate centerpiece. The Sarabande tends toward harmonic richness and lyrical melody. * Gigue: The gigue or 'jig' originates in Britain and Ireland, and is a fast dance, almost always in compound time and/or triple meter, with and most common. However, the Gigue permits by far the most variation among the standard dances, with prominent examples in practically every time signature. The French gigue is characterized by a distinct jaunty dotted rhythm in and invariably written in two-part counterpoint, whereas the Italian (sometimes ‘Giga’) is a more varied and virtuosic format with running small notes in acrobatic passages. The Italian style largely superseded the French by the early-mid 18th century, at which point German composers had established it as a showpiece for not only technical virtuosity but also contrapuntal complexity, with some of JS Bach’s gigues nearly qualifying as proper fugues. A suite may be introduced by a movement such as the following. * Prelude (music), Prelude * Entrée (ballet): Sometimes an entrée is composed as part of a suite; but there it is purely instrumental music and no dance is performed. It is an introduction, a march-like piece played during the entrance of a dancing group, or played before a ballet. Usually in time. It is related to the Italian 'intrada'. * French overture, Overture Between the Sarabande and Gigue, the following Galanterie, Galanteries may be included. * Badinerie: a brief quick dance in time that merged with the Scherzo to give rise to a movement of fast tempo in duple meter common in the Romanticism as a substitute to the Minuet. * Bourrée: A light, quick dance in time. A bourée begins with the last beat of a bar and continues with two or three bars until the 4th beat of one bar takes a light stress giving a sense of return to the beginning of the rhythm structure. * Chaconne (Chacona): a slow Spanish dance in triple meter, much used as a vehicle for Variation (music), variation on a repeated short harmonic progression with a short, repetitive, bass-line. * Gavotte: The gavotte is a dance in or related time signature. It begins on the third beat of an incomplete bar. It continues for a few bars where the third beat takes a light stress giving a sense of returning to the beginning of the rhythm structure. The gavotte tends to feature even staccato rhythms and has a charming rustic character. * Intermezzi: This section consists of two to four dances at the discretion of the composer that may include a minuet, bourrée, polonaise (dance), polonaise, and/or a gavotte. * Loure: a slow dance of French origin named after the Loure (bagpipe), instrument of the same name, though examples found in suites diverge almost completely from the idiom of that instrument. Sometimes likened to a ‘slow gigue’, the Loure is usually in . * Minuet (Menuetto): A dance in a stately and graceful manner. It is often short and simple often with only clear theme and little variation. In many suites there are two minuets, in such cases the first minuet is played with repeats, then follows the second minuet with repeats, then the first minuet is repeated (''da capo'') usually without repeats. This order is standard whenever an optional dance is doubled, but the practice is most common with Minuets. The Minuet is notable in surviving the transition to the Classical music, Classical period, becoming standard as the third movement in the Sonata form which replaced the suite as the most prominent cyclical instrumental genre. * Passacaglia (Pasacalles): a lively, often serious Spanish dance in or meter. Commonly based on a Ostinato, bass-ostinato. * Passepied: A French dance movement in or . The rhythm is almost always in quaver form. It begins on the last beat of an incomplete bar though the upbeat does not resolve until the end of each section (unlike the bourée or gavotte where there can be a resolution of the upbeat(s) every three or four bars. It is a light dance with a strong feeling of movement. * Pavane: A slow dance in or time of Spanish and/or Italian origin. * Polonaise (dance), Polonaise: A dance in which comes in cycles of two bars. A heavy stress is placed on the first beat of the first bar and a lighter stress is placed on the second beat of the second bar giving a slight feeling of disorientation. * Siciliana (Sicilienne): A dance in or in which most of the dance is fixed to one of three typical rhythms involving syncopation and inversion of the rhythm structure. It is often in a minor key and somewhat sombre.


See also

* List of musical medleys


References

{{Authority control Musical form Suites (music),