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The Heaven Singing: Music in Early English Religious Drama I

The Heaven Singing: Music in Early English Religious Drama I

  • Author: Rastall, Richard
Deserves to be read widely by those interested in the plays as literature and drama as well as by those seeking to ... build up a picture of the musical culture the plays imply

Book

$49.25

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Contents

  • Part 1 Introduction: music in Middle English drama
  • the repertory - historical and fictional drama
  • the repertory - civic, community and institutional plays. Part 2 The internal literary evidence: the manuscripts
  • dramatic directions
  • text references
  • the banns
  • lyrics and song-texts
  • the use of Latin. Part 3 The surviving music: the Shrewsbury and Pepys fragments
  • York
  • Coventry
  • Chester. Part 4 Documentary evidence: a note on money
  • guild accounts and related records
  • Chelmsford - nthe summer of 1562. Part 5 Music as representation: the music of heaven
  • the music of mortals
  • the sounds of hell
  • realism and representation. Part 6 Music and dramatic structure: the dynamic functions of music
  • the music of numbers - structure and proportion. Part 7 Music and liturgy: the dramatic uses of liturgical material
  • the Presentation in the Temple
  • the angelic announcement to the shepherds
  • the Purification
  • the entry into Jerusalem
  • the Last Supper - Maundy and Mass, the mandatum, the eucharist
  • the harrowing of Hell
  • miscellaneous scaraments and offices - baptism, betrothal, marriage, burial, scarifice and oblation, blessing
  • questions of provenance. Part 8 The performers: professional and amateur
  • the problem of female roles
  • the angels
  • the shepherds
  • instumentalists
  • the audience. Appendices: editions and reconstructions - the Washington "Ave regina celorum . . . Mater", the Chester "Gloria in excelsis", "Wee happy heardsmen here".