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overture
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overture

In music, the opening piece of a concert or opera. It has two roles: settling the audience before the main music starts, and allowing the conductor and musicians to become acquainted with the acoustics of a concert auditorium. See also prelude.

The use of an overture in opera began during the 17th century; the ‘Italian’ overture consisting of two quick movements separated by a slow one, and the ‘French’ of a quick movement between two in slower tempo.



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On this re-edition of a recording by Collegium 1704, a Czech group specialising in the performance of Bohemian, Moravian, Saxon, Bavarian and Austrian Baroque music, we find compositions written for the celebration of the coronation of the Habsburg emperor Charles VI as King of Bohemia in Prague in 1723: Ouverture a 7 concertanti ZWV 188 and Hipocondrie a 7 concertanti ZWV 187.
 
 
 
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