Guide to the Edward E. Lowinsky Papers 1920-1986
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Universiv Microtlms International 300 N
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Jean Berger (1909–2002): a Biographical Chronology
AMERICAN MUSIC RESEARCH CENTER JOURNAL Volume 18 2010 Thomas L. Riis, Editor-in-Chief American Music Research Center College of Music University of Colorado at Boulder THE AMERICAN MUSIC RESEARCH CENTER Thomas L. Riis, Director Laurie J. Sampsel, Curator Eric J. Harbeson, Archivist Sister Mary Dominic Ray, O.P. (1913–1994), Founder Karl Kroeger, Archivist Emeritus William Kearns, Senior Fellow Daniel Sher, Dean, College of Music William S. Farley, Research Assistant, 2009 –2010 K. Dawn Grapes, Research Assistant, 2009–2011 EDITORIAL BOARD C. F. Alan Cass Kip Lornell Susan Cook Portia Maultsby Robert R. Fink Tom C. Owens William Kearns Katherine Preston Karl Kroeger Jessica Sternfeld Paul Laird Joanne Swenson-Eldridge Victoria Lindsay Levine Graham Wood The American Music Research Center Journal is published annually. Subscription rate is $25.00 per issue ($28.00 outside the U.S. and Canada). Please address all inquiries to Lisa Bailey, American Music Research Center, 288 UCB, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309-0288. E-mail: [email protected] The American Music Research Center website address is www.amrccolorado.org ISSN 1058-3572 © 2010 by the Board of Regents of the University of Colorado INFORMATION FOR AUTHORS The American Music Research Center Journal is dedicated to publishing articles of general interest about American music, particularly in subject areas relevant to its collections. We welcome submission of articles and pro - posals from the scholarly community, ranging from 3,000 to 10,000 words (excluding notes). All articles should be addressed to Thomas L. Riis, College of Music, University of Colorado at Boulder, 301 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309-0301. -
The Secular Latin-Texted Works of Adrian Willaert
University of Connecticut OpenCommons@UConn Doctoral Dissertations University of Connecticut Graduate School 5-12-2015 The ecS ular Latin-Texted Works of Adrian Willaert Jonathan Harvey University of Connecticut - Storrs, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://opencommons.uconn.edu/dissertations Recommended Citation Harvey, Jonathan, "The eS cular Latin-Texted Works of Adrian Willaert" (2015). Doctoral Dissertations. 798. https://opencommons.uconn.edu/dissertations/798 The Secular Latin-Texted Works of Adrian Willaert Jonathan Wil Harvey, DMA University of Connecticut, 2015 Abstract In addition to a large body of extant works including masses, hymns, psalm settings, motets, chansons, madrigals, canzone villanesche, and instrumental ricercares, sixteenth-century composer Adrian Willaert (1490 – 1562) also wrote nine settings of secular Latin texts. These nine works can be divided into three categories: five civic motets (Adriacos numero, Haud aliter, Inclite Sfortiadum princeps, Si rore Aonio, and Victor io salve); three settings of excerpts from Virgil’s Aeneid (O socii and two settings of “Dulces exuviae”); and one unique, enigmatic outlier (Flete oculi). These pieces are rarely considered in the existing literature, and many scholars conflate the two “Dulces exuviae” settings as a single work. The texts of six of the nine pieces have never been translated into English before. This study examines these nine pieces through their text, musical material, and cultural-political background in order to determine their function and context. The first chapter of this study consists of a brief summary of Willaert’s life and an examination of the extant sources of his work. In the next chapter, I discuss the genre of the civic motet and examine Willaert’s five contributions to it. -
Orlando Di Lasso Studies
Orlando di Lasso Studies Orlando di Lasso was the most famous and most popular composer of the second half of the 1500s. This book of essays written by leading scholars from Europe and the United States is the first full-length survey in English of a broad spectrum of Lasso’s music. The essays discuss his large and varied output with regard to structure, expressive qualities, liturgical aspects, and its use as a model by other composers, focusing in turn on his Magnificat settings, masses, motets, hymns and madrigals. His relationship to contemporaries and younger composers is the main subject of three essays and is touched on throughout the book, together with the circulation of his music in print and in manuscript. His attitude toward modal theory is explored in one essay, another considers the relationship of verbal and musical stress in Lasso’s music and what this implies both for scholars and for performers. Peter Bergquist is Professor Emeritus of Music at the University of Oregon. He has edited works by Orlando di Lasso for Bärenreiter Verlag and A-R Editions. Orlando di Lasso at the age of thirty-nine, from Moduli quinis vocibus (Paris: Adrian Le Roy and Robert Ballard, RISM 1571a), quinta vox partbook, reproduced by courtesy of the Musikabteilung, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich. Orlando di Lasso Studies edited by peter bergquist CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, São Paulo Cambridge University Press The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 2RU, UK Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521593878 © Cambridge University Press 1999 This publication is in copyright. -
AMS/SMT Vancouver 2016 Abstracts Thursday Afternoon
AMS2016printbleeds.pdf 1 9/9/2016 11:40:21 AM Theodore Front Musical Literature is pleased to offer AMS/SMT & Abstracts Program American 2016 Vancouver Musicological Society Béla Bartók Complete Critical Edition Society for Music Theory Published jointly by G. Henle Verlag Münich and Editio Musica Budapest The Complete Edition comprises published and posthumous works by Bartok. It also presents very divergent versions – including ones that have not previously been accessible. The accompanying texts for all of the volumes contain a descrip- Vancouver tion and evaluation of all available sources, as well as critical commentaries. In addition to providing an introduction to the work’s genesis, each volume also con- 3-6 November 2016 tains editorial notes for the performer. Editors : László Somfai, László Vikárius, Márton Kerékfy. With critical commentaries and footnotes in English. Edition Program & Abstracts sources : Bartók Archives of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. This scholarly edition will be comprised of 48 volumes in seven series: I. Stage works (six volumes) V. Piano works (nine volumes) II. Vocal works (five volumes) VI. Piano reductions (four volumes) III. Orchestral works (fifteen volumes) VII. Appendix (two volumes) C IV. Chamber works (seven volumes) M Y CM MY CY CMY The first six volumes scheduled to be published: K Volume 37 : For Children – early and revised versions with critical commentaries: HN 6200 Volume 24 : Concerto for Orchestra – with critical commentaries: HN 6201 Volume 38 : Works for Piano Solo 1914-1920 – with critical commentaries : HN 6202 Volume 9 : Choral Works – with critical commentaries : HN 6205 Volume 29 : String Quartets - score : HN 6206 Volume 30 : String Quartets – critical commentaries : HN 6207 All volumes are stitch-bound in teal-colored cloth with silver embossing. -
University of Cincinnati
UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI Date:___________________ I, _________________________________________________________, hereby submit this work as part of the requirements for the degree of: in: It is entitled: This work and its defense approved by: Chair: _______________________________ _______________________________ _______________________________ _______________________________ _______________________________ Musical Rhetoric in the Multi-Voice Chansons of Josquin des Prez and His Contemporaries (c. 1500-c. 1520) A dissertation submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Cincinnati In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY In the Division of Composition, Musicology and Theory of the College-Conservatory of Music By VASSILIKI KOUTSOBINA B.S., Chemistry University of Athens, Greece, April 1989 M.M., Music History and Literature The Hartt School, University of Hartford, Connecticut, May 1994 Committee Chair: Dr. Stephanie P. Schlagel 2008 ABSTRACT The first quarter of the sixteenth century witnessed tightening connections between rhetoric, poetry, and music. In theoretical writings, composers of this period are evaluated according to their ability to reflect successfully the emotions and meaning of the text set in musical terms. The same period also witnessed the rise of the five- and six-voice chanson, whose most important exponents are Josquin des Prez, Pierre de La Rue, and Jean Mouton. The new expanded textures posed several compositional challenges but also offered greater opportunities for text expression. Rhetorical analysis is particularly suitable for this repertory as it is justified by the composers’ contacts with humanistic ideals and the newer text-expressive approach. Especially Josquin’s exposure to humanism must have been extensive during his long-lasting residence in Italy, before returning to Northern France, where he most likely composed his multi- voice chansons. -
Introduction. Defining the Renaissance in Music
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by HAL Université de Tours Introduction. Defining the Renaissance in Music Philippe Vendrix To cite this version: Philippe Vendrix. Introduction. Defining the Renaissance in Music. Music and the Renaissance : Renaissance, Reformation and Counter-Reformation, Ashgate, pp.xiii-xxxiv, 2011, A library of essays on Renaissance music, 978-0-7546-2928-3. <halshs-00980777> HAL Id: halshs-00980777 https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00980777 Submitted on 21 Apr 2014 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L'archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destin´eeau d´ep^otet `ala diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publi´esou non, lished or not. The documents may come from ´emanant des ´etablissements d'enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche fran¸caisou ´etrangers,des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou priv´es. INTRODUCTION DEFINING THE RENAISSANCE IN MUSIC Philippe VENDRIX (UMR7323 – Centre d’études supérieures de la Renaissance – Université François‐Rabelais – CNRS) I – Musicology and Renaissance: the history of a debate THE CONCEPT OF THE RENAISSANCE as a period in the history of music does not appear, in a strict sense, until relatively late in writings on music by comparison with those on general history or art history. In 1868 A.W. Ambros gave the third volume of his encyclopaedic history of music the title Geschichte der Musik im Zeitalter der Renaissance bis zu Palestrina (Leipzig, 1862–1878)1. -
American Musicological Society Records Ms
American Musicological Society records Ms. Coll. 221 Finding aid prepared by Rebecca C. Smith, Leah Germer. Last updated on May 12, 2020. University of Pennsylvania, Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts 2009 American Musicological Society records Table of Contents Summary Information....................................................................................................................................3 Biography/History..........................................................................................................................................4 Scope and Contents....................................................................................................................................... 8 Administrative Information......................................................................................................................... 19 Controlled Access Headings........................................................................................................................19 Other Finding Aids......................................................................................................................................20 Collection Inventory.................................................................................................................................... 21 Correspondence......................................................................................................................................21 Minutes [Files are restricted for fifty -
Josquin Des Prez in Fact and Legend
Personal Prayer : Music from the Earliest Notations to the Sixteent... http://www.oxfordwesternmusic.com/view/Volume1/actrade-9780... Oxford History of Western Music: Richard Taruskin See also from Grove Music Online Marian antiphon Guillaume Du Fay PERSONAL PRAYER Chapter: CHAPTER 13 Middle and Low Source: MUSIC FROM THE EARLIEST NOTATIONS TO THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY Author(s): Richard Taruskin These Marian antiphon settings sound a conspicuously personal note that we have not previously encountered in liturgical music. That is another aspect of “middling” tone; but it accords well with the votive aspects of Marian worship, the component of the Christian liturgy that in those days was most intensely “personal.” That, too, was something that could be thematized by a knowing composer, especially a knowing churchman-composer. The supreme case in point for a fifteenth-century motet is the third and most splendid setting Du Fay made of the Marian antiphon Ave Regina coelorum, copied into the choirbooks of Cambrai Cathedral in 1465. It is as impressive a motet as Du Fay or anyone ever composed, but it is impressive in an altogether different way from his earlier large-scale motet settings. Where the isorhythmic Nuper rosarum flores (Ex. 8-8) had impressed by its monumentality, Ave Regina coelorum impresses with an altogether unprecedented expressive intensity—unprecedented, that is, within the motet genre. The personal and votive aspect of this motet are epitomized in a moving set of tropes that Du Fay interpolated into the canonical text of the antiphon, representing a prayer for his own salvation that he wanted sung at his deathbed, and that he wanted to go on being recited after his death in perpetuity, for which, a rich man, he provided an endowment in his will: Ave regina coelorum, Hail, O Queen of Heaven! Ave Domina angelorum, Hail, O Ruler of the Angels! Miserere tui Have mercy on labentis Dufaÿ Thy failing Du Fay, Ne peccatorum throw him not into the in ignem fervorum. -
American Choral Review
AMERICAN CHORAL REVIEW JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHORAL FOUNDATION, INC. VOLUME XII · NUMBER 2 • APRIL, 1970 AMERICAN CHORAL REVIEW ALFRED MANN, Editor ALFREDA HAYS, Assi.rtant Editor Associate Editors BoWARD TATNALL CANBY ANDREW C. MINOR RICHARD F. FRENCH MARTIN PICKER RICHARD JACKSON JACK RAMEY The AMERICAN CHORAL REVIEW is published quarterly as the official journal of the Association of Choral Conductors sponsored by the American Choral Foundation, Inc. The American Choral Foundation also publishes a supplementary Research Memorandum Series and maintains a Choral Library, administered by the Free Library of Philadelphia and coordinated with the Drinker Library of Choral Music. Membership in the Association of Choral Conductors is available under the following arrangements: Full Membership privileges, for an annual membership contribution of $15, including a subscription to the AMERICAN CHoRAL REVIEW, a subscription to the Research Memorandum Series, unlimited use of the American Choral Foundation Library at mailing cost, use of the Drinker Library of Choral Music on a rental basis, and unlimited use of the Foundation's Advisory Services Division. Publications Membership privileges, for an annual membership contribution of $12, including a subscription to the AMERICAN CHORAL REVIEW, and a subscription to the Research Memorandum Series. Participating Membership privileges, for an annual membership contribution of $7 .50, including a subscription to the AMERICAN CHORAL REVIEW and unlimited use of the American Choral Foundation Library and the Drinker Library of Choral Music on a rental basis. Single issues of the AMERICAN CHoRAL REviEW are available to members at $1.25 a copy. Single issues of the Research Memorandum Series are available to members at $1. -
Jackson's Letter to Novack
I: Jac~on's fetter to Novack. Tim Jackson, Connollystr. 3 Cl12, 8000 Muenchen 40, BRD 20 Dec. 1985 Dear Prof. Novack, Enclosed please find the notes and bibliography for my paper. Some of the notes are incomplete because I have been unable to obtain certain books here in Germany. I am aware that the version of the paper I sent you contains tyvus. Some of the most important: Part II, p. 42, see Ex. 8b not 2b. Part III, p. 12, bottom line: rising "sixth" instead of "third". Part III, p. 28, 6th line from the top of the page, Ex. 25a instead of 14a, etc. Dr. Leuchtmann, the Lasso specialist, has read the paper and made many helpful suggestions. I am looking forward to greatly expanding the paper - perhaps into a short book since I have had many new insights. I hope this letter finds you in good health. Wishing you and your wife all the best for the new year, sincerely, - 1 Notes to Part I 1. Leo Steinberg, The S xuality of Christ in Renaissance Art and Modern Oblivion, New York: Pantheon, 1981, p. 108. 2. Knud Jeppesen, Der Palsetrinastil und die Dissonanz, Leipzig: Breitkopf und Haertel, 1925, p. 69. English translation, The Style of Palestrina and the Dissonance 2nd ed'tion, London: Oxford University Press; reprinted, New York: Dover Publicat'ons, 1970, p. 84. 2b. Felix Salzer, Sinn und ivesen der abendlaendischen Mehrstimmigkeit, Vienna: Saturn-Verlag, 1935. 3. Jeppesen, ibid. 4. Deryck Cooke, The Language of Mu ie, 5. Ben"to R~vera, "Harmonic Theory n Musical Treatises of the Late Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Centuries," Music Theory Spectrum, 1 (1979), pp. -
Contents and Sample Pages (PDF)
001-006_FM_v10.qxp_MD_Layout 7/12/19 20:14 Page 1 MUSICA DISCIPLINA A YEARBOOK OF THE HISTORY OF MUSIC Edited by PAUL L. RANZINI VOLUME LXI, 2018 American Institute of Musicology 001-006_FM_v10.qxp_MD_Layout 7/12/19 20:14 Page 2 MUSICA DISCIPLINA A YEARBOOK OF THE HISTORY OF MUSIC VOLUME LXI, 2018 Edited by PAUL L. RANZINI Editorial Board Tim Carter University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA Anthony Cummings Lafayette College, USA Mark Everist University of Southampton, GB Dinko Fabris Conservatorio di Bari, Italy Barbara Haggh University of Maryland, USA David Hiley Universität Regensburg, Germany Karl Kuegle Universiteit Utrecht, Netherlands Birgit Lodes Universität Wien, Austria Laurenz Luetteken Universität Zurich, Switzerland Anne MacNeil University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA Anne Smith Schola Cantorum Basiliensis, Switzerland Anne Stone CUNY, USA AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF MUSICOLOGY The American Institute of Musicology publishes seven series of critical editions, scholarly studies, reference works, and this journal, all dedicated to the study of the music and culture of the Medieval, Renaissance, and early Baroque eras. The publications of the Institute are used by scholars and performers alike and constitute a major core collection of early music, theoretical writings on music, and the scholarly analysis of that music and its sources. For information on establishing a standing order or subscription to this journal or any of our series, or for editorial guidelines on submitting proposals, please contact: American Institute of Musicology Mergelberg 84, D–48161 Münster, Germany http://www.corpusmusicae.com [email protected] / [email protected] © 2019 by the American Institute of Musicology, Verlag Corpusmusicae, GmbH.