The northern composers of the later fifteenth century

Download Report

Transcript The northern composers of the later fifteenth century

The Spread of New Musical Ideas
and Practices to 1600
The Franco-Netherlands group
(or just Netherlands or Franco-Flemish)
• After the Burgundians, many prominent
musicians grew up and trained in present-day
northern France, Belgium, and the Netherlands
• Traveled widely — especially to Italy
Johannes Ockeghem (ca. 1410–1497)
•
•
•
•
•
Singer, composer, director
Student of Du Fay, possibly also of Binchois
1443 — choir of Notre Dame
1445 — Burgundian chapel
Paris — court of the kings of France
– Charles VII through Louis XI
Ockeghem’s works
• Twelve Masses — expanded on Du Fay’s style
– cantus firmus type
– complex styles — intricacies reflect lingering medievalism
• Ten motets in new style
–
–
–
–
monotextual
equality of parts, no c.f.
panconsonance with imperfect consonances
through-composed
• Twenty chansons — older cantilena type and newer style
like motet
Ockeghem’s style
• Scoring
•
•
•
•
– more homogeneous than preceding style
– dark sound — dense
– low pitch (composer sang bass), added bass part in
clearly lower range than tenor
Rhythm — fluid
Melody — long phrases, little direction
Modal — mystical effect
Canon — “rule” for realizing several parts out of one
— takes place of isorhythm for showing composer’s
skill
Josquin des Prez (ca. 1450–1521)
• Regarded in the sixteenth century
as culminator of period style,
most skillful
• "Josquin is master of the notes,
which must express what he
desires; other choral composers
must do what the notes dictate."
Martin Luther
Josquin’s career
• Netherlands native and died there, wide-ranging career
– born in northern France
– studied with Ockeghem
• Travel to Italy — characteristic for Netherlands composers
– Milan
• cathedral 1459
• patronage of Sforza dukes 1474–1484
– Rome — Papal chapel 1486–1494
• Return to France — royal court 1501–1503
• Return to Italy — Ferrara, court of Duke Ercole 1503
• Netherlands — collegiate church of Condé
Josquin’s works
• Twenty Masses — conservative — often derivative material
– cantus firmus
– fuga based on paraphrase of preexisting melody
– parody
– soggetto cavato
• Ninety-five motets — offered more freedom, textual inspiration than Mass
Ordinary
– more progressive than Masses
– texts from liturgy, Bible, prayer
– techniques — c.f., paraphrase, free
• Ca. seventy secular pieces — most progressive
– Netherlands style of chanson — like motet
• generally more familiar style, rhythmic, syllabic
• some in fixed forms, others free
• four parts in fuga or familiar style, rather than older three-part texture
– Italian — frottola — lighter
• Some instrumental (untexted) pieces
Secular music in the fifteenth and
sixteenth centuries
Amateur music-making
Regional traditions
Printing and the spread of literacy
• Johannes Gutenberg (late
fourteenth century to
1468)
– invention of printing
from movable type
– Bible completed by 1455
Music printing
• Ottaviano Petrucci (1466–1539)
– music printing from movable type
– Harmonice musices odhecaton A (Venice, 1501)
Music for social use
• Rise of educated, literate class
• Musical self-entertainment in the home
• Musical participation as mark of social status and
culture
Netherlands chanson
• Conservative — motet style
– polyphonic — fuga
– rhythmically fluid
• Important publisher — Tilman Susato (ca. 1500–1560),
Antwerp
French chanson
• Familiar style, rhythmic
• Composers
– Claudin de Sermisy (ca. 1490–1562) — court of Francis I,
traveled to Italy with court
– Clément Janequin (ca. 1485 to ca. 1560) — church musician,
but known mostly for secular pieces
• onomatopoeic pictorialisms — La Guerre, Le Chant des oiseaux
• Publisher — Pierre Attaingnant (1494–1552), Paris —
from 1528
German Lied
• Monophonic tradition of noble Minnesinger continued
by trade-guild Meistersinger
• Polyphonic pieces tend to older style
– often canonic imitation
– tenor-oriented
– frequently incorporated existing monophonic song tunes
• Composers
– Heinrich Isaac (ca. 1450–1517)
– Ludwig Senfl (ca. 1490–1543)
Spanish villancico
• Popular song or modeled on style of popular music
• Rhythm — strongly marked, generally duple, but rather
irregular
• Texture — homorhythmic; three to four voices, early
with text in highest part only, later more parts sung
• Form — similar to earlier fixed forms
– estribillo (refrain) — text abba or abab, music A = abcd
– coplas (stanzas), separated by return of estribillo
• mudanza — text cddc or cdcd, music BB = efef
• vuelta — text abba or dbab, music A = abcd
• Composer Juan del Encina (1468 to ca. 1530)
Italy — the frottola
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Vernacular poetry on amorous or satirical topics
Syllabic
Familiar style (top-voice orientation)
Strong, patterned rhythms
Simple, diatonic harmony
Strophic form
Representative composer, Marco (Marchetto) Cara (ca.
1465–1525)
Italy — the madrigal
• Sources
– Netherlands-style polyphonic chanson
– frottola
– excellent poetry
• Petrarch sonnets — from fourteenth century
• Italian humanist poets of sixteenth century
• Stages of development
– Netherlands composers — simple, restrained style
• ex., Jacques Arcadelt (1504–1567)
– growing expressive devices, complexity
• ex., Cipriano de Rore (1516–1565)
Questions for discussion
• Did national taste, the predilections of particular
patrons, and the personalities of composers affect
music more in the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
than in earlier periods?
• How did the printing of music affect musical style
starting in the sixteenth century? Might it have had any
negative effects on music?
• In what ways did the relationship of music to words
increase the vitality of music in the sixteenth century?
What might music have lost in exchange?