Fr. 172.90

The Church Music of Fifteenth-Century Spain

English · Hardback

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The arrival of Francisco de Peqalosa at the Aragonese court in May 1498 marks something of an epoch in the history of Spanish music: Peqalosa wrote in a mature, northern-oriented style, and his sacred music influenced Iberian composers for generations after his death. Kenneth Kreitner looks at the church music sung by Spaniards in the decades before Peqalosa, a repertory that has long been ignored because much of it is anonymous and because it is scattered through manuscripts better known for something else. He identifies sixty-seven pieces of surviving Latin sacred music that were written in Spain between 1400 and the early 1500s, and he discusses them source by source, revealing the rapid and dramatic change, not only in the style and sophistication of these pieces, but in the level of composerly self-consciousness shown in the manuscripts. Within a generation or so at the end of the fifteenth century, Spanish musicians created a new national music just as Ferdinand and Isabella were creating a new nation. KENNETH KREITNER teaches at the University of Memphis.

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Kenneth Kreitner

Product details

Authors Kenneth Kreitner
Publisher Boydell Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2004
 
EAN 9781843830757
ISBN 978-1-84383-075-7
No. of pages 181
Weight 598 g
Series Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Music
Studies in Medieval and Renais
Studies in Medieval and Renais
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Religion/theology > Christianity

MUSIC / Religious / Christian, Religion - Church Music

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