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Reading Renaissance Music Theory Cristle Collins Judd (Dean for Academic Affairs, University of Pennsylvania)

Reading Renaissance Music Theory By Cristle Collins Judd (Dean for Academic Affairs, University of Pennsylvania)

Summary

Taking Renaissance theorists' music examples as a point of departure, this study explores fundamental questions about how music was read, and by whom, in specific cultural contexts. In particular it illuminates the ways in which the choices of Renaissance theorists have shaped later interpretation of earlier praxis.

Reading Renaissance Music Theory Summary

Reading Renaissance Music Theory: Hearing with the Eyes by Cristle Collins Judd (Dean for Academic Affairs, University of Pennsylvania)

This book examines a central group of music theory treatises that have formed the background to the study of Renaissance music. Taking theorists' music examples as a point of departure, it explores fundamental questions about how music was read, and by whom, situating the reading in specific cultural contexts. Numerous broader issues are addressed in the process: the relationship of theory and praxis; access to, and use of, printed musical sources; stated and unstated agendas of theorists; orality and literacy as it was represented via music print culture; the evaluation of anonymous repertories; and the analysis of repertories delineated by boundaries other than the usual ones of composer and genre. In particular this study illuminates the ways in which Renaissance theorists' choices have shaped later interpretation of earlier practice, and reflexively the ways in which modern theory has been mapped on to that practice.

Reading Renaissance Music Theory Reviews

'... present[s] some interesting ideas about the many levels at which theory has shaped and influenced our understanding of music.' BBC Music
'Judd's book is a significant contribution to the history of music theory and ... the history of music theorists ... this is a valuable book that looks at familiar material in an original way. It received the Society of Music Theory's Wallace Berry Award in November 2001, deservedly so in my opinion, and it will be essential reading for anyone interested in the history of music theory and of writing about music in general.' American Musicological Society

About Cristle Collins Judd (Dean for Academic Affairs, University of Pennsylvania)

Cristle Collins Judd is Assistant Professor of Music Theory at the University of Pennsylvania and editor of Tonal Structures in Early Music (1998).

Table of Contents

List of illustrations; Foreward Ian Bent; Preface; Part I. Beginnings: 1. Prologue: Exempli gratia ...; 2. Music theory incunabula: printed books, printed music; Part II. 1520-1540: Pietro Aron and Seybald Heyden: 3. Pietro Aron and Petrucci's prints; 4. Music anthologies, theory treatises, and the Reformation: Nuremberg in the 1530s and 1540s; Part III. The Polyphony of Heinrich Glarean's Dodecachordon (1547): 5. Exempla, commonplace books, and writing theory; 6. The polyphony of the Dodecachordon; Part IV. Gioseffo Zarlino's Le Istitutioni Harmoniche (1558): 7. Composition and theory mediated by print culture; 8. 'On the modes': the citations of Le Istitutioni Harmoniche part IV; Part V. Readings Past and Present: 9. Exempli gratia: a reception history of Magnus es tu Domine/Tu pauperum refugium; 10. Epilogue: reading theorists reading (music); Bibliography; Index.

Additional information

NLS9780521028196
9780521028196
0521028191
Reading Renaissance Music Theory: Hearing with the Eyes by Cristle Collins Judd (Dean for Academic Affairs, University of Pennsylvania)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2006-11-02
364
N/A
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