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10 ‘The spirit moves me to speak of forms changed into new bodies’: Anton Webern, Philippe de Vitry, and the Reception of the Ars Nova Motet
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Lawrence Earp
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- List of Music Examples ix
- List of Tables xv
- List of Contributors xvii
- Acknowledgements xix
- List of Music Manuscript Sigla xxi
- Introduction 1
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Songsters and Their Repertories
- 1 The Progeny of Bernart de Ventadorn’s Can vei la lauzeta mover 11
- 2 Medieval Iberian Song in its Mediterranean Context: From Andalusian Muwashshahat to the Cantigas de Santa Maria 61
- 3 The Estampies of Douce 308 77
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Close Readings
- 4 Anonymous IV and the Antiqui 121
- 5 The Development of the Latin Liturgical Psalter in England 153
- 6 Forgotten Levers of Harmony: Where Are the Grammarians’ Claviculi? 173
-
Creating Polyphony
- 7 The Variable-Voice Conductus 195
- 8 Making Sense of Omnis / Habenti: An Ars Nova Motet in England 221
- 9 Super omnes speciosa: Machaut Reading Vitry 247
- 10 ‘The spirit moves me to speak of forms changed into new bodies’: Anton Webern, Philippe de Vitry, and the Reception of the Ars Nova Motet 271
- 11 La belle se siet: Where Dufay and Josquin Meet 305
-
Music as Cultural Practice
- 12 In Search of Medieval Music in Non-Western Countries 325
- 13 Where Did Our Musical Instruments Come From? 345
- 14 Instrumentalists and Changing Performance Contexts, c. 1500 361
- 15 Non-Mensural Polyphony: Performing Plainsong 373
- 16 ‘Übersingen’ and ‘Quintieren’: Non-Mensural Polyphony in Secular Repertories: Oswald von Wolkenstein and the Monk of Salzburg 385
- 17 From Page to Sound: Performing the Masses of Walter Frye 405
- Works Cited 435
- Works by Christopher Page 461
- Index 473
- Tabula Gratulatoria 481
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- List of Music Examples ix
- List of Tables xv
- List of Contributors xvii
- Acknowledgements xix
- List of Music Manuscript Sigla xxi
- Introduction 1
-
Songsters and Their Repertories
- 1 The Progeny of Bernart de Ventadorn’s Can vei la lauzeta mover 11
- 2 Medieval Iberian Song in its Mediterranean Context: From Andalusian Muwashshahat to the Cantigas de Santa Maria 61
- 3 The Estampies of Douce 308 77
-
Close Readings
- 4 Anonymous IV and the Antiqui 121
- 5 The Development of the Latin Liturgical Psalter in England 153
- 6 Forgotten Levers of Harmony: Where Are the Grammarians’ Claviculi? 173
-
Creating Polyphony
- 7 The Variable-Voice Conductus 195
- 8 Making Sense of Omnis / Habenti: An Ars Nova Motet in England 221
- 9 Super omnes speciosa: Machaut Reading Vitry 247
- 10 ‘The spirit moves me to speak of forms changed into new bodies’: Anton Webern, Philippe de Vitry, and the Reception of the Ars Nova Motet 271
- 11 La belle se siet: Where Dufay and Josquin Meet 305
-
Music as Cultural Practice
- 12 In Search of Medieval Music in Non-Western Countries 325
- 13 Where Did Our Musical Instruments Come From? 345
- 14 Instrumentalists and Changing Performance Contexts, c. 1500 361
- 15 Non-Mensural Polyphony: Performing Plainsong 373
- 16 ‘Übersingen’ and ‘Quintieren’: Non-Mensural Polyphony in Secular Repertories: Oswald von Wolkenstein and the Monk of Salzburg 385
- 17 From Page to Sound: Performing the Masses of Walter Frye 405
- Works Cited 435
- Works by Christopher Page 461
- Index 473
- Tabula Gratulatoria 481