The keyboard section of an orchestra or concert band includes keyboard instruments . Keyboard instruments are not usually a standard members of a modern orchestra or concert band, but they are included occasionally. In orchestras from the 1600s to the mid-1750s, a keyboard instrument such as the pipe organ or harpsichord was normally played with an orchestra, with the performer improvising chords from a figured bass part. This practice, called basso continuo , was phased out after 1750 (although some Masses for choir and orchestra would occasionally still have a keyboard part in the late 1700s).
Members
Common members of this section are:
Piano : although infrequent in standard symphonic repertoire, many larger-scale works call for this instrument, and often has very important roles to play. These include Ottorino Respighi 's Pines of Rome , Igor Stravinsky 's Petrushka (almost scored as a piano concerto ), Leonard Bernstein 's West Side Story , most of Bohuslav Martinů 's orchestral compositions, and many of Sergei Prokofiev and Dmitri Shostakovich 's symphonies. It is more frequently found in 20th- and 21st-century pieces, such as Aaron Copland 's "Hoedown " and Stravinsky's Symphony in Three Movements .
Pipe organ or harpsichord (in 17th- and early 18th-century works with basso continuo accompaniment; occasionally pipe organ is used in later music, such as Richard Strauss 's Also sprach Zarathustra , Gustav Mahler 's Eighth Symphony , Camille Saint-Saëns 's Organ Symphony (Symphony No. 3) , Edward Elgar 's Enigma Variations (final variation), and Gustav Holst 's suite, The Planets .
Celesta (from the late-19th century onward, in works like Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker Suite )[ 1]
Keyboard glockenspiel (from the early 18th century onward, first by Handel in 1739 in his oratorio Saul )
Ondes Martenot , an early electronic musical instrument invented in 1928 that creates eerie wavering notes. It includes both a keyboard and a wire that a ring can be slid across to produce a smoothly varying pitch, but is usually placed in the keyboard section. Notable examples of its orchestral use include Olivier Messiaen 's Turangalîla-Symphonie and Trois Petites Liturgies de la Présence Divine , as well as his opera Saint-François d'Assise , which requires three of the instruments.
Synthesizer (called for in some 20th- and 21st-century works, like John Adams 's Short Ride in a Fast Machine and the Requiem Mass by Andrew Lloyd Webber )
Less common members
Although technically not a keyboard instrument, the cimbalom , a concert hammered dulcimer , is usually placed in the keyboard section, as in Franz Liszt 's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6 and Béla Bartók 's First Rhapsody for violin and orchestra . In some cases, one or more concert harps may be placed in the keyboard section, such as in Joseph Marx 's Eine Herbstsymphonie.
See also
References
Ensembles Leaders Orchestra
Concert band