Ritual Meanings in the Fifteenth-Century Motet
著 者: Robert Nosow
出版社: Cambridge University Press
出版时间:2012
ISBN号:978-0-521-19347-4
页 数: 275页
索书号:J608/N938
所在库室:锦江校区教参阅览室
内容简介:
The first fulllength study of how motets were used and performed in the fifteenth century, this book dispels the mystery surrounding these outstanding works of vocal polyphony. It covers four areas of intense compositional activity: England, the Veneto, Bruges and Cambrai, with reference to the works of Dunstaple, Forest, Ciconia, Grenon and Du Fay. In every documented instance, motets functioned as ceremonial vehicles, whether voiced in procession through the streets of a city or the chapel of a king, at the guild chapel of a parish church or the high altar of a cathedral. The motet was an entirely vocal genre that changed radically during the period from 1400 to 1475. Robert Nosow outlines the motet's social history, demonstrating how the incorporation of different texts, musical dialects, cantus firmus materials and melodic styles represents an important key to the evolution of the genre, and its adaptability to widely variant ritual circumstances.
媒体推荐:
'… the study enlarges our understanding of music's role in ritual and broadens our view of the individuals involved in every musical enterprise.' Renaissance Quarterly
作者简介:
Robert Nosow has published widely on fifteenth-century Latin polyphony and the relationship of written and oral traditions in the performance of Italian poetry. His writing has appeared in many publications including The New Grove, the Journal of Musicology, Early Music History and Musical Quarterly. He also edited the first scholarly edition of the three 'Concertos for Violoncello' of C. P. E. Bach.
目录:
Introduction;
1. Motets in the chronicles of Henry V;
2. The motet as ritual;
3. Processions in the Veneto;
4. The motet as ritual embassy;
5. Motets for the citizens of Bruges;
6. Contemplation;
7. The canons of Cambrai;
8. The dialogic motet;
Appendix