
The Cambridge History of Seventeenth-Century Music
Butt, John
;Carter, Tim
Cambridge University Press. 2005Ficha técnica
- EAN: 9780521792738
- ISBN: 978-0-521-79273-8
- Editorial: Cambridge University Press
- Fecha de edición: 2005
- Encuadernación: Cartoné
- Dimensiones: 23x15
- Idioma: Inglés
- Nº páginas: 956
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The Cambridge History of Seventeenth-Century Music seeks to provide the most up-to-date knowledge on seventeenth-century music together with a vital questioning of the way in which such a history can be told or put together for our present purposes. Written by a distringuished team of experts in the field, the chapters not only address traditional areas of knowledge such as opera and church music, but also look at the way this extremely diverse and dynamic musical world has been categorised in the past and how its products are viewed from various cultural points of view. While this history does not depart entirely from the traditional study of musical works and their composers, there is a strong emphasis on the institutions, cultures and politics of the age, together with an interrogation of the ways in which music related to contemporary arts, sciences and beliefs.
- Comprehensive coverage of seventeenth-century music by experts in the field
- A rich multi-disciplinary approach that relates music of this era to a large number of cultural currents
- Contains a separate chronology and dictionary-style entries on individuals, places and institutions
CONTENIDO:
Notes on contributors
Editor?s Preface
1- Renaissance, Mannerism, Baroque (Tim Carter)
2- The seventeenth-century musical ?work? (John Butt)
3- Music in the marketplace (Stephen Rose)
4- Music in New Worlds (Victor Anand Coelho)
5- Music and the arts (Barbara Russano Hanning)
6- Music and the sciences (Penelope Gouk)
7- The search for musical meaning (Tim Carter)
8- Power and display: music in court theatre (Lois Rosow)
9- Mask and illusion: Italian opera after 1637 (Tim Carter)
10- The church triumphant: music in the liturgy (Noel O?Regan)
11- Devotion, piety and commemoration: sacred songs and oratorios (Robert Kendrick)
12- Image and eloquence: secular song (Margaret Murata)
13- Fantasy and craft: the solo instrumentalist (Alexander Silbiger)
14- Form and gesture: canzona, sonata and concerto (Gregory Barnett)
Appendices (Stephen Rose)
- I. Chronology
- II. Places and Institutions
- III. Personalia
Index