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Sources and the Circulation of Renaissance Music

Sources and the Circulation of Renaissance Music

  • Author: Lewis, Mary S.
like a well-curated museum exhibition, the whole is more than the sum of its parts. This volume provides valuable context: it places many of the field's defining studies in dialogue with each... More…

Book

$282.25

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Estimated despatch time 7 - 10 days

Contents

  • Contents: Introduction
  • Part I Scribes and the Making of Manuscripts: Manuscript structure in the Dufay era, Charles Hamm
  • Simon Mellet, scribe of Cambrai cathedral, Liane Curtis
  • A contemporary perception of early 15th-century style: Bologna Q15 as a document of scribal editorial initiative, Margaret Bent
  • The origins of the Chigi Codex: the date, provenance, and original ownership of Rome, Biblioteca Vaticana, Chigiana, C.VIII.234, Herbert Kellman
  • Jean Michel, Maistre Jhan and a chorus of beasts: old light on some Ferrarese music manuscripts, Joshua Rifkin. Part II Sources, Politics and Transmission: European politics and the distribution of music in the early 15th century, Reinhard Strohm
  • A gift of madrigals and chansons: the Winchester Part Books and the courtship of Elizabeth I by Erik XIV of Sweden, Kristine K. Forney
  • Danish diplomacy and the dedication of Giardino novo II (1606) to King James I, Susan G. Lewis [Hammond]. Part III Sources and the Transmission of Repertory: The early Tudor court, the provinces and the Eton Choirbook, Magnus Williamson
  • Antwerp's role in the reception and dissemination of the madrigal in the North, Kristine K. Forney. Part IV Patrons and Collectors: The purpose of the gift: for display or for performance?, Stanley Boorman
  • Music in the library of Johannes Klein, Tom R. Ward
  • Music for the nuns of Verona: a story about MS DCCLXI of the Biblioteca Capitolare in Verona, Howard Mayer Brown
  • The salon as marketplace in the 1550s: patrons and collectors of Lasso's secular music, Donna G. Cardamone. Part V Music Printing: 1501-1528: The 500th anniversary of the first music printing: a history of patronage and taste in the early years, Stanley
  • The printing contract for the Libro primo de musica de la salamandra (Rome 1526), Bonnie J. Blackburn. Part VI Printing and Printing Houses after 1528: The Libro Primo of Constanzo Festa, James Haar
  • Twins, cousins, and heirs: relationships among editions of music printed in 16th-cen