From Conservapedia The Serenade as a musical form began life as the Italian serenata, a vocal work, usually a love song, to be sung outdoors. (The lady at her window or on the balcony was not obbligato.) As such, serenades appeared in Mozart’s operas Abduction from the Seraglio and Don Giovanni; but at the same time, increasingly, the form was being taken over by the instrumental serenade – a sort of divertimento – music to be played outdoors in the evening purely as entertainment – a diversion. Mozart himself wrote many of them - some extremely well known – for a variety of combinations of instruments.
The nineteenth century saw the serenade become more orchestral, whether for full orchestra, string orchestra or winds, at the same time having the odd foray into chamber music (surely an oxymoron).
The twentieth century brought some interesting concoctions. The ”anything goes” attitude of the times led to variations.
Meanwhile, the song has gone on, with the serenade in its most ancient form having spent the centuries pouring from the lips of ardent lovers from the early chansons and madrigals to opera, operetta and stage musicals, continuing to refuse to show its age. A Hollywood film musical even has a serenade, ostensibly to a donkey.
References:
“Oxford Companion to Music”
“The Grove Concise Dictionary of Music”
Categories: [Musical Forms]
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