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Johannes Tinctoris (1435–1511), a renowned composer and the most prominent theorist of his generation, Tinctoris based his historical evaluation on actual composers and on works he knew. He did not rely on or even refer to the commentaries of past authorities. In short, he trusted “the judgment of my ears” over tradition. Dictionary of Music (published in 1473) |
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As early as 1442, the French poet Martin le Franc had singled out [Binchois, Du Fay, Ockeghem, Regis, Busnois] as exemplars of what he called the contenance angloise, the “English guise,” which he characterized as a “new way of composing with lively consonances.” Although le Franc does not describe this style in any detail, he seems to have been responding to a new kind of sonority, in which the music is dominated by thirds, fifths, and sixths. |
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it is likely he spent time in France in the service of the Duke of Bedford, who was fighting the French in the Hundred Years’War. If so, he would have been well situated to influence French composers. And, indeed, almost all of his music is preserved in continental rather than English manuscripts. Dunstable and his followers used these intervals in a manner that has since been described as one of panconsonance, a harmonic idiom that makes ample use of triads (vertical alignments of three notes whose basic pitches are separated by major or minor thirds) and limits the use of dissonance considerably. |
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The Old Hall Manuscript contains about 150 Mass movements and motets by Leonel Power and other (mostly English) composers of the late 14th and early 15th centuries written in isorhythm, in English descant style (note against note), or in the style of contemporary chansons. He wrote entire cycles of the Mass Ordinary based on a single cantus firmus. All the movements of Power’s Missa Alma redemptoris mater, for example, are based on the same cantus firmus, which is stated once in its entirety in the same rhythm in the tenor (the lowest voice) of every movement. He served in the Household Chapel of Thomas, Duke of Clarence, who was the brother of Henry V. In the last decade of his life, Power was master of the Lady Chapel Choir in Canterbury. Many of his works are included in the Old Hall Manuscript, and his settings of the Mass are among the earliest to use a single cantus firmus in all movements. |
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credited with six complete settings of the Mass |
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Josquin wrote in virtually every vocal genre of his time. He composed some 18 Masses and 6 individual Mass movements, almost 100 motets, and about 70 chansons, most of which are in French, some in Italian, and others with no text at all. These numbers are approximate because of the uncertain status of some of the works attributed to him. |
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fascination with canon and other elaborate structural devices is typical of the Franco-Flemish composers who flourished in the late 15th and early 16th centuries. Fascination with canon and other elaborate structural devices is typical of the Franco-Flemish composers who flourished in the late 15th and early 16th centuries. |
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Wrote a popular early chanson--chordal, yet with more fluid, melodic lines. |
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In his Missa carminum (“Mass of Songs”), he incorporated a whole series of German popular songs into his own setting of the Mass Ordinary. |
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The Venetian publisher (1466–1539) published three books devoted exclusively to Josquin's Masses. |
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The frottola was cultivated with greatest intensity by him and Cara. Worked in Mantua in Italy. |
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The frottola was cultivated with greatest intensity by him and Tromboncino. Worked in Mantua in Italy. |
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Notable composer of Parisian chanson. |
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a poet in his own right, championed Petrarch’s work and urged his contemporaries to emulate Petrarch’s combination of piacevolezza (“pleasingness”) and gravità (“seriousness” or “weight”) along with his attention to the rhymes, rhythms, and sonorities of the Italian language. |
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a 14th century poet, whose work supplied text for many composers of Italian madrigal |
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pervert. From the Low Countries, he was among the earliest composers to cultivate the Italian madrigal. He spent most of his career in Rome and in France. |
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Monteverdi considered Rore one of the true founders of what he called “modern music” precisely because of the way he had shaped his compositions around the text at hand. Born in the region of present-day Belgium, he succeeded Willaert at San Marco in Venice in 1562. He published eight books of madrigals in his lifetime. |
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The first professional woman composer to see her vocal music in print. Feminist, naturally. She wrote madrigals. The documentary evidence on Casulana’s life is lamentably scant. She was composing, singing, and teaching both music and composition in Venice in the late 1560s, but we know little of her whereabouts in the 1570s or 1580s, and it is not known exactly when or where she died. She is believed to have married sometime after 1570 and moved away from Venice. No known image of her has survived. |
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a group of extraordinarily talented singers whose performances were something of a legend throughout musical Europe. |
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Meistersinger--thus, German. |
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Published 12 villancicos in his El Maestro (Valencia, 1536), a large collection of works for solo vihuela—a guitarlike instrument with five to seven courses of gut strings tuned in the same manner as a lute—and for voice and vihuela. |
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Composer who complained about the Italian fad in England, when he himself was trying to sell his own music. A number of his madrigals were based on Italian madrigals. |
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Chief proponent of lute song. |
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