Transcript CHAPTER 13

CHAPTER 16
MUSIC IN ENGLAND
England during the early Renaissance
Showing London and
Oxford. Oxford University
was greatly influenced by
the University of Paris
and so were English
musical forms influenced
by those from France. At
this time England was
very much a rural society.
Among English cities only
London, with a population
of about 75,000 in 1300,
could boast more than
10,000 inhabitants.
RONDELLUS
• Despite the influence of French music on the
English, several distinctive musical styles originated
in England. One was called rondellus. In
rondellus, two or three voices engage in voice
exchange or, more correctly, phrase exchange. J.S.
Bach later, coincidentally, used the same procedure
in some of his fugues.
Voice 1
a b c d e f
Voice 2
b c a e f d
Voice 3
c a b f d e
ROTA AND THE SUMMER CANON
• The English historically have had a fondness for
glees and catches (canons, or rounds). The most
famous of all medieval English compositions
makes use of rondellus technique as well as
canon. It is entitled Sumer is icumen in (Summer
is coming in), or simply the Summer Canon. It
involves four upper voices which sing a canon
that continually circles back to the beginning (the
English call this a rota, Latin for wheel). Beneath
the four-voice rota are two bottom voices (the
English call a supporting voice a pes, Latin for
foot). Here the two pes voices sing a rondellus,
continually exchanging the same two phrases.
The Beginning of the Summer Canon
ENGLISH FABURDEN
• The English had a fondness for faburden, a type
of singing that arose when singers improvised
around a given chant; one voice sang above the
plainsong at the interval of a fourth, and another
sang below it at a third; at the beginnings and ends
of phrases the bottom voice would drop down to
form an octave with the top one. Faburden was
just one specific type of a general class of vocal
music called English discant, an improvised
homorhythmic style making abundant use of
parallel 6/3 chords.
The technique of faburden applied to a
Kyrie (Anthology, No. 6)
CONTINENTAL FAUXBOURDON
• English faburden apparently influenced musical
practices on the Continent because soon, around
1420, a similar style emerged in France and Italy
called fauxbourdon. The only essential
differences between fauxbourdon and faburden
were
1) that in fauxbourdon the pre-existing chant was
placed in the highest voice, and
2) composers tended to write out the top and bottom
voices and leave only the middle voice to be
improvised
A portion of Guillaume Dufay’s setting in fauxbourdon of the hymn
Conditor alma with the chant (x) lightly ornamented in the upper
voice and the middle voice following it, improvising at the interval f a
fourth below.
KING HENRY V
• Henry V (r. 1413-1422) was a dashing English king
who ruled brilliantly and died young. He was also a
composer of sorts, or at least a Gloria and a
Sanctus is ascribed to “Roy Henry,” in the Old Hall
Manuscript
THE OLD HALL MANUSCRIPT
A polyphonic Gloria ascribed to King Henry in the Old Hall
Manuscript, now preserved in the British Library. The Old
Hall Manuscript is a collection of 147 English compositions,
mostly Mass movements and motets, serving the English
royal chapel. Several motets in honor of the warrior St.
George may link the book to the chapel of St. George on the
grounds of Windsor Castle, near London.
THE CAROL
• King Henry’s stunning victory at the Battle of
Agincourt (1415) was soon celebrated in music in
Agincourt Carol. The English carol, related to the
French carole (see Chapter 11), was a strophic
song for one to three voices, all of which were
newly composed. The carol begins with a refrain,
called the burden, which was also repeated at the
end of each new stanza. What results is a the
musical form of strophe plus refrain, one
frequently encountered in “Country” Music today.
The first and second burden and the first stanza of
the Agincourt Carol are as follows:
Burden I and II and first stanza of the
Agincourt Carol in honor of Henry V.
• Burden I (two voices):
Deo gratias, Anglia, redde pro Victoria! (England, give
thanks to God for the victory)
• Stanza I:
Our king went forth to Normandy
With grace and might of chivalry;
There God for him wrought marv’lously
Wherefore England may call and cry.
Deo gratias.
• Burden II (three voices):
Deo gratias, Anglia, redde pro Victoria!
The Music of Burden II of the Agincourt Carol
JOHN DUNSTAPLE AND THE
CONTENANCE ANGLOISE
• John Dunstaple (c1390-1453) was a
mathematician, astronomer, and musician who has
left us approximately sixty polyphonic compositions.
His style was said at the time to represent the
contenance angloise (English manner), though it is
uncertain precisely what this was. One element
encountered in Dunstaple’s music is panconsonance, a style in which almost every note is
a consonant interval couched within a triad or a
triadic inversion. Dunstaple’s often dissonance-free
style can be seen in his three-voice motet Quam
pulcra es (How beautiful thou art), the text of
which is drawn from the Song of Songs, a
particularly lyrical book of the Old Testament.
The beginning of John Dunstaple’s motet
Quam pulcra es
There is no dissonant note between the top voice and the bass or
between the middle voice and the bass—a dissonance free
environment.