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      I

      Impressionism

      Impressionism was a term at first used mockingly to describe the work of the French painter Monet and his circle, who later made use of the word themselves. It was similarly used to describe an element of vagueness and imprecision coupled with a perceived excess of attention to color in the early music of Debussy, who did not accept the criticism or the label, although his harmonic innovations and approach to composition have points in common with the ideals of Monet.

      It was a style whose artistic language included suggestive colors, lines, words, melodies, and harmonies.  The listener, viewer, and reader were called upon to supply the details and complete the images.  Led by Debussy, composers denied both the objectivity of programmatic composers and the pathos of the Romantic idealists.  Impressionistic music was a music of coloristic effects, of vague harmonies, and loosely knit forms.
       
       

      Impromptu

      The word impromptu was first used as a title for a musical composition in 1822 by the Bohemian composer Vorisek for six piano pieces, to be imitated by Schubert’s publisher in naming a set of four piano Impromptus, to be followed by four more, perhaps so named by the composer. Chopin used the title for four compositions in this seemingly improvised form, and there are further impromptus by other composers from that period onwards, generally, but not always, for a single instrument.
       
       

      Improvisation

      Improvisation was once a normal part of a performer’s stock-in-trade. Many of the greatest composer-performers, from Bach to Mozart and Beethoven, were masters of improvisation, but in the 19th century this became a less common part of public performance, although it remained and remains a necessary skill for a church organist, traditionally required to provide a musical accompaniment of varying length to liturgical ritual. In baroque music the realisation of a figured bass, the improvisation of a keyboard part from a given series of chords, was a necessary musical accomplishment, while the improvisatory element in the addition of ornaments to a melodic part remained normal in opera and other kinds of solo performance.
       
       

      Instrumentation

      Instrumentation is generally used to mean orchestration, the art of writing music for instruments, or, alternatively, the actual scoring of a particular composition.
       
       

      Interlude

      In the theatre an interlude performs the same function as an entr’acte, music between acts or scenes, designed to bridge a gap. It may also be used to indicate music played or sung between two other works or two sections of a work.
       
       

      Intermezzo

      Earlier signifying a comic interlude inserted between the acts of an opera seria, the 19th century intermezzo was often either a musical interlude in a larger composition or a piece of music in itself, often for solo piano. In this second sense it is used by Schumann and later by Brahms in their piano music, while both Mendelssohn and Brahms use the word as a movement title in chamber music.
       
       

      Interval

      In music an interval is the distance in pitch between two notes, counted from the lower note upwards, with the lower note as the first of the interval. The violin, for example, is tuned in intervals of a fifth, G to D, D to A and A to E, the double bass in fourths, from E to A, A to D and D to G. Harmonic intervals occur simultaneously, as when a violinist tunes the instrument, listening carefully to the sound of two adjacent strings played together. Melodic intervals occur between two notes played one after the other.
       
       

      Interval class (ic)

      The distance, measured in semitones, between two pitch classes. Interval classes group the eleven perfect and imperfect consonances (excluding octaves and unisons) into six discrete classes by including an interval and its inversion in the same class.   Hence:
        ic1 = m2 / M7
        ic2 = M2 / m7
        ic3 = m3 / M6
        ic4 = M3 / m6
        ic5 = P4 / P5
        ic6 = tritone

       

      Intonation

      Intonation is the exactness of pitch or lack of it in playing or singing. Collective intonation is that of a group of instruments, where slight individual variations in pitch can be lost in a generally more favourable effect.
       
       

      Invention

      The two-part Inventions of Johann Sebastian Bach are contrapuntal two-voice keyboard compositions, and the word is often understood in this sense, although it had a less precise meaning in earlier music.
       
       

      Isorhythmic Motet

      (see Isorhythm and Motet)
       
       

      Istesso tempo

      L’istesso tempo, the same speed, is found as an instruction to the player to return to the previous speed of the music.