Renaissance Beginnings:
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Transcript Renaissance Beginnings:
. . . there
does not exist a single piece of music
not composed within the last forty years regarded by
the learned as worth hearing . . .
Johannes Tinctoris, 1477
Quirky, nervous rhythms (syncopation)
Lots of dissonance
Mathematically derived isorhythm
John Dunstable: How Beautiful You Are
(Quam pulchra es)
How beautiful and fair you are, my beloved,
Most sweet are your delights.
Your stature is like a palm-tree,
And your breasts are like fruit.
I. Renaissance Music: Cultural Context
A. Dates for the Renaissance:
1400-1600 or 1475-1600?
I. Renaissance Music: Cultural Context
A. Dates for the Renaissance:
1400-1600 or 1475-1600?
B. The “Problem” of Rebirth for Music
No models of music from ancient Greece or Rome
C. The Geography of Renaissance Music
I. Renaissance Music: Cultural Context
A. Dates for the Renaissance:
1400-1600 or 1475-1600?
B. The “Problem” of Rebirth for Music
C. The Geography of the Renaissance
Age of the Burgundians or Netherlanders
D. The Rise of Humanism
Humanism vs. Scholasticism
•Decreasing reliance on authority (chant or pre-existing music)
•Composer not mere conduit, but creator
•What “sounds good” matters (counterexample = Machaut’s
“My End is My Beginning”)
II. Musical Characteristics: Renaissance
A. Method of Composing: Simultaneous, not Successive
B. Preferred Intervals (“sweet” 3rds” not “hollow” 5ths)
& Dissonance Treatment (used carefully, sparingly)
C. Voices become more nearly equal in importance
D. Predominant Texture: Imitative Polyphony
(melodies presented in imitation)
E. Secondary Texture: Block Homophony
F. The Sound Ideal: a cappella
G. Musical Genres of the Renaissance
III. Guillaume Dufay
A. Other Early Renaissance Composers (1400-1475)
Gilles Binchois, John Dunstable, Johannes Ockeghem
B. Dufay’s Bio. & the Typical Renaissance Career
Born in North (i.e., Burgundy or Netherlands)
Career includes time in Italy
Major composers tend to hold posts at secular courts
III. Guillaum Dufay (cont.)
C. Dufay Hymn: Veni Creator, basic features
A. Based on a Chant
B. Hymns use strophic form: same music for each verse
C. Alternatim setting
D. 4 line poem= 4 phrases in chant
E. Dufay’s verses = three voices
F. Cadences mark 4 phrases
G. Paraphrase Technique
Dufay’s Veni Creator Spiritus (hymn):
Paraphrase Technique
Chant
Top voice of Dufay’s setting
Paraphrase Technique:
1. Chant in top voice (where most audible)
2. Rhythmicized, but retains audible relationship to chant
3. Notes of chant rewritten or “paraphrased”
IV. New and Old in Dufay’s Veni
Creator Spiritus
A. New or Renaissance Features
1. “Sweet” sounds of 3rds
2. Voices move at equal speed
3. Chant altered via paraphrase
B. Old or Medieval Features
1. syncopation
2. Open 5ths still predominate at cadences
3. Triple meter
4. Still based on Gregorian chant