Description

Book Synopsis
In Italy during the late cinquecento, printed music could be found not only in the homes of the wealthy or the music professional, but in lay homes, courts, and academies as well. This book examines these new musical forms through a study of the music books of Italian priest, poet, and composer, Orazio Vecchi.

Trade Review

[This] very well written and researched book illuminates the repertory of an individual composer and expands our understanding of what game-playing could have meant for Italian recreational singers in the last decades of the 16th century.

* Early Music *

Singing Games in Early Modern Italy is a brilliant work that helps us to broaden our understanding of the dynamics—both social and individual—that dominated music in early modern Italy.

* Fontes Artis Musicae *

Elegantly written and illustrated with many, though not excessive, examples and tables, Schleuse's monograph is an important contribution to scholarship on late sixteenth-century music. It sheds light on the work of one of the most notable—if underestimated—authors of this period, Orazio Vecchi, and, most importantly, it restores the centrality of recreational singing, placing it in the context of the fascinating early modern discourse on games and entertainment. It is strongly recommended to anyone with an interest in the music and culture of early modern Italy.

* Notes *

The wide range of avenues for further study opened by Paul Schleuse's volume is a testimony to its impressive depth and richness. Singing Games in Early Modern Italy is a well-argued, well-written work that offers new understandings of the music of one of the most important composers of the early modern era.

* Music and Letters *

[T]he author's purpose is to separate Vecchi's importance as a precursor to early opera and illustrate his success as an experimental composer who had control over the printing, dissemination, and understanding of his own works, as well as his innovations in relation to the cultural focus on social play and drama in his music.5/21/16

* Music Reference Services Quarterly *

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. The Four-Voice Canzonetta as (and in) Recreational Polyphony
2. Intertextuality in Vecchi's Canzonettas and Madrigals, 1583-1590
3. Forest and Feast: The Music Book as Metaphor
4. L'Amfiparnaso: Picturing Theatre & The Problem of the "Madrigal Comedy"
5. Competition and Conversation: Games as Music
6. Representation and Identity in Musical Performance
Appendix: Vecchi, L'hore di recreatione from Madrigali a sei (1583).
Notes
Works Cited
Index

Singing Games in Early Modern Italy

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    A Hardback by Paul Schleuse

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      View other formats and editions of Singing Games in Early Modern Italy by Paul Schleuse

      Publisher: Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 08/06/2015
      ISBN13: 9780253015013, 978-0253015013
      ISBN10: 0253015014

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In Italy during the late cinquecento, printed music could be found not only in the homes of the wealthy or the music professional, but in lay homes, courts, and academies as well. This book examines these new musical forms through a study of the music books of Italian priest, poet, and composer, Orazio Vecchi.

      Trade Review

      [This] very well written and researched book illuminates the repertory of an individual composer and expands our understanding of what game-playing could have meant for Italian recreational singers in the last decades of the 16th century.

      * Early Music *

      Singing Games in Early Modern Italy is a brilliant work that helps us to broaden our understanding of the dynamics—both social and individual—that dominated music in early modern Italy.

      * Fontes Artis Musicae *

      Elegantly written and illustrated with many, though not excessive, examples and tables, Schleuse's monograph is an important contribution to scholarship on late sixteenth-century music. It sheds light on the work of one of the most notable—if underestimated—authors of this period, Orazio Vecchi, and, most importantly, it restores the centrality of recreational singing, placing it in the context of the fascinating early modern discourse on games and entertainment. It is strongly recommended to anyone with an interest in the music and culture of early modern Italy.

      * Notes *

      The wide range of avenues for further study opened by Paul Schleuse's volume is a testimony to its impressive depth and richness. Singing Games in Early Modern Italy is a well-argued, well-written work that offers new understandings of the music of one of the most important composers of the early modern era.

      * Music and Letters *

      [T]he author's purpose is to separate Vecchi's importance as a precursor to early opera and illustrate his success as an experimental composer who had control over the printing, dissemination, and understanding of his own works, as well as his innovations in relation to the cultural focus on social play and drama in his music.5/21/16

      * Music Reference Services Quarterly *

      Table of Contents

      Introduction
      1. The Four-Voice Canzonetta as (and in) Recreational Polyphony
      2. Intertextuality in Vecchi's Canzonettas and Madrigals, 1583-1590
      3. Forest and Feast: The Music Book as Metaphor
      4. L'Amfiparnaso: Picturing Theatre & The Problem of the "Madrigal Comedy"
      5. Competition and Conversation: Games as Music
      6. Representation and Identity in Musical Performance
      Appendix: Vecchi, L'hore di recreatione from Madrigali a sei (1583).
      Notes
      Works Cited
      Index

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