england and france, burgandy in the 15th Flashcards

1
Q

15th century is the

A

age of renaissance,

composers expanded their range of pitches even further

coordinated the separate lines of textures through points of imitation

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2
Q

point of imitation

A
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3
Q

music printing

A

mid 15th, printing of books and treatises

causes revolutionary changes

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4
Q

Training of musicians

A

15th and 16th

composers being hired as choirboys or singers

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5
Q

Henricus, issac and jacques arcadelt (franco flemish)

A

sponsered by the medici, leading family of florence

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6
Q

England carols

A

strophic forms,
3rd and 6th in parallel motion
brights and harmonius sounds

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7
Q

John dunstable (english)

A

wrote:
>isorhytmic motets french, mass ordinary settings,secular, liturgcal three part texts

> three voice sacred pieces, settings of antiphone, hymns, are important works

model for imitation, people looked up to him and his music

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8
Q

music theory in renaissance

A

john dunstable questions why only the fifths and fourth is consonant

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9
Q

johannes tinctoris

A

nothing before 1430s was worth hearing as everything has more dissonances rather con

limiting dissonances to passing or neighbouring tones on unstressed beats

Likes dunstable

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10
Q

burgandian composers

A

du fay: assimilation of national styles, ballad forms of france,
Sacred music, isorgytmic motets,

bins: sacred music, 50 chansons

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11
Q

dufay

A

contribution to sacred music

his office and motets pieces are in three voices

Used his own ballade to write a liturgical composition
(missa se la face)

he used isorhythm so his listeners easily recognize the song

masses based on a single cantus firmus

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12
Q

bins

A

worked at the chapel of dukes from 1420-53

more than 50 chansons

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13
Q

Masses of the 15th

A

> composers wrote polyphonic mass ordinary,

> cyclic massed: use of the same musical theme for all the sections of the ordinary.

> if the chosen melody is palain chant rhytmic pattern is added and repeated,
if it is secular: the rhythm is kept, can be faster or slower.

Unity of the masses was derived from:
> liturgucal association and compositional procedure

> Settings of the mass ordinary was sometimes commissioned for specific occasions.

> based on cantus firmus

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14
Q

motto mass

A

separates the masses from one another, usually in the treble so the listener can know what section belongs to other ordinary settings.

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15
Q

Four textured voices

A

Letting the lowest molody voice carry a preexistent melody limited the composers ability to provide a harmonic foundatiom with it

Solution:
Add voices below the tenor
Called contratenor bassus
But also contra alto

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16
Q

Tenor masses

A

Same cantus firmus used for all ordinary sections

17
Q

Quam pulchra es

A

-Cantus firmus in the tenor or an ornamented chance, Melody in the treble
-Others have fluoride lines

Dundtable (english)
Motet

18
Q

Motets in this era

A

Meant pieces that added text over a discant clausula