My Account Log in

1 option

Hearing homophony : tonal expectation at the turn of the seventeenth century / Megan Kaes Long.

LIBRA ML1402 .L66 2020
Loading location information...

Available from offsite location This item is stored in our repository but can be checked out.

Log in to request item
Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Long, Megan Kaes, author.
Contributor:
Alfred Reginald Allen Memorial Fund of The Savoy Company.
Series:
Oxford studies in music theory
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Vocal music--16th century--History and criticism.
Vocal music.
Vocal music--16th century--Analysis, appreciation.
Vocal music--17th century--History and criticism.
Vocal music--17th century--Analysis, appreciation.
Vocal music--Analysis, appreciation.
Genre:
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Vocal music.
Physical Description:
viii, 288 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
Place of Publication:
New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2020]
Summary:
""This book examines a repertoire of homophonic vernacular partsongs composed around the turn of the seventeenth century, and considers how these partsongs exploit rhythm, meter, phrase structure, and form to craft harmonic trajectories. Giovanni Giacomo Gastoldi, Thomas Morley, Hans Leo Hassler, and their contemporaries engineered a particular kind of centricity that is distinctively tonal: they strategically deployed dominant harmonies at regular periodicities and in combination with poetic, phrase structural, and formal cues, thereby creating expectation for tonic harmonies. Homophony provided an ideal venue for these experiments: spurred by an increasing demand for comprehensible texts, composers of partsongs developed rigid text setting procedures that promoted both metrical regularity and consistent phrase rhythm. This rhythmic consistency had a ripple effect: it encouraged composers to design symmetrical phrase structures and to build comprehensive, repetitive, and predictable formal structures. Thus, homophonic partsongs create and exploit trajectories from dominants to tonics on multiple scales, from cadence to sub-phrase to phrase to form. Ultimately, this book argues for a model of tonality-and of tonality's history-that centers not pitch, but rhythm and meter. Metrically oriented harmonic trajectories encourage tonal expectation. And we can locate these trajectories in a variety of repertoires, including those that we traditionally understand as "modal." ""-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
1 How We Got into Harmonic Tonality, and How to Get Out p. 1
Modality is not the Renaissance version of tonality p. 13
Tonal expectation p. 17
On sixteenth-century listening p. 21
2 La questione delta lingua: Transmission and Translation of Musical Style p. 24
Popular song p. 25
The transmission of Gastoldi's Balletti a cinque voci p. 26
Englishing English, entdeutschen Deutschen p. 33
An art form meets a commercial enterprise p. 44
Per cantare, sonare, e ballare p. 44
Per cantare p. 45
Per sonare p. 48
Per ballare p. 51
Delightful new inventions p. 55
3 The Work of the Words p. 57
Schematic text-setting p. 58
How to match the measure p. 64
Quinari p. 65
Settenari p. 71
Endecasillabi p. 76
Thinking ahead p. 83
German words should be "pronounced daintily and with refinement" p. 86
From text-setting to meter p. 91
Minutes and seconds, minims and semiminims p. 96
4 Halves Requiring Completion p. 99
Phrase structure has a voice problem p. 103
From subsequence to consequence p. 107
What to expect when you're expecting (a cadence) p. 113
A fair divided excellence: How to build a half that requires completion p. 119
Paratactic construction p. 121
Exact repetition p. 124
Transposed homophonic blocks p. 125
Action-reaction phrases p. 134
Fullness of perfection p. 135
5 From Phrase Structure to Form: The Balletto p. 140
The balletto as miniature p. 140
Italian madrigals Englished p. 145
Clear harmonic style p. 148
Morley and his models p. 149
Morley and the minor mode p. 154
Hassler and the German balletto p. 158
Polar and solar tonality p. 163
From phrase structure to form p. 165
6 Tonal Orientation: New Tools for Navigating the Formal Landscape p. 170
Composing comprehensible forms p. 176
Every strain repeated p. 180
Listening to the future p. 184
Rearranging landmarks: Deviant forms and meaning production p. 194
Putting form on the map p. 199
7 Humanism and the Invention of Homophony p. 203
Music made to order: The frottola p. 204
Music and poetry in the Este court p. 209
Tonal expectation and the improvisational matrix p. 213
Humanism in theory and practice: Musique mesurée p. 221
The laws of another measure p. 227
A universal priesthood of all believers proclaims the Word p. 233
Why should the devil have all the good tunes? p. 237
Humanism and the invention of homophony p. 245
Invention, innovation, intention p. 247.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Local Notes:
Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the Alfred Reginald Allen Memorial Fund of The Savoy Company.
Other Format:
Online version: Long, Megan Kaes, Hearing homophony
ISBN:
9780190851903
0190851902
OCLC:
1122688473
Publisher Number:
99984776130

The Penn Libraries is committed to describing library materials using current, accurate, and responsible language. If you discover outdated or inaccurate language, please fill out this feedback form to report it and suggest alternative language.

Find

Home Release notes

My Account

Shelf Request an item Bookmarks Fines and fees Settings

Guides

Using the Find catalog Using Articles+ Using your account