COMPOSERS AND THEIR SONGS, 1400–1521
ebook

COMPOSERS AND THEIR SONGS, 1400–1521 (ebook)

DAVID FALLOWS

$1,320.00
IVA incluido
Editorial:
ROUTLEDGE
ISBN:
9781000947465
Formato:
Epublication content package
Idioma:
Inglés
DRM
Si

This second selection of essays by David Fallows draws the focus towards individual composers of the 'long' fifteenth century and what we can learn about their songs. In twenty-one essays on the secular works of composers from Ciconia and Oswald von Wolkenstein via Binchois, Ockeghem, Busnoys and Regis to Josquin, Henry VIII and Petrus Alamire, one repeated theme is how a consideration of the songs can help the way to a broader understanding of a composer's output. Since there are more song sources and more individual pieces now available for study, there are more handles for dating, for geographical location and for social alignment. Another theme concerns the various different ways in which particular songs have their impact on the next generations. Yet another concerns the authorshop of poems that were set to music by Binchois and Ciconia in particular. A group of essays on Josquin were parerga to the author's edition of his four-voice secular music for the New Josquin Edition (2005) and to his monograph on the composer (2009).

Otros libros del autor

  • SONGS AND MUSICIANS IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY
    DAVID FALLOWS
    The essays in this volume are concerned with song repertories and performance practice in 15th-century Europe. The first group of studies arises from the author's long-term fascination with the widely dispersed traces of English song and , in particular, with the most successful song by any English composer, O rosa bella. This leads to a set of enquiries into the distribution a...

    $1,480.00

  • HENRY V AND THE EARLIEST ENGLISH CAROLS: 1413–1440
    DAVID FALLOWS
    As a distinctive and attractive musical repertory, the hundred-odd English carols of the fifteenth century have always had a ready audience. But some of the key viewpoints about them date back to the late 1920s, when Richard L. Greene first defined the poetic form; and little has been published about them since the burst of activity around 1950, when a new manuscript was found ...

    $1,240.00