Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Fugue in the Sixteenth Century
View through CrossRef
This book explores the roots of the classic fugue and the early history of non-canonic fugal writing through the three principal fugal genres of the sixteenth century: motet, ricercar, and canzona. The book begins with the pivot in Western composition from an emphasis on variety to one on repetition, first developed by such Franco-Flemish composers as Loyset Compère and Josquin des Prez toward the end of the fifteenth century. By around 1520 Jean Mouton and his contemporaries had established the classic Franco-Flemish motet with its well-known point-of-imitation structure. Nicolas Gombert proved to be the real pioneer in the further development of this idea in the 1530s when he explored the return of thematic material after its initial presentation, an approach that proved central not only to the motet writing of Thomas Crecquillon and Jacobus Clemens non Papa, but also to the earliest experiments in serious abstract instrumental composition (the ricercar) undertaken by a series of organists active in Venice, most notably Claudio Merulo and Andrea Gabrieli. The most important innovation of the last decades of the century was the creation at the hands of Brescian organists of the fugal canzona alla francese, an instrumental genre inspired not by the sophisticated compositional style of the motet, but by the contrapuntally looser approach of such imitative chansons as Passereau’s Il est bel et bon. By century’s end, composers such as Giovanni de Macque had given the canzona a contrapuntal integrity commensurate with that of the ricercar.
Title: Fugue in the Sixteenth Century
Description:
This book explores the roots of the classic fugue and the early history of non-canonic fugal writing through the three principal fugal genres of the sixteenth century: motet, ricercar, and canzona.
The book begins with the pivot in Western composition from an emphasis on variety to one on repetition, first developed by such Franco-Flemish composers as Loyset Compère and Josquin des Prez toward the end of the fifteenth century.
By around 1520 Jean Mouton and his contemporaries had established the classic Franco-Flemish motet with its well-known point-of-imitation structure.
Nicolas Gombert proved to be the real pioneer in the further development of this idea in the 1530s when he explored the return of thematic material after its initial presentation, an approach that proved central not only to the motet writing of Thomas Crecquillon and Jacobus Clemens non Papa, but also to the earliest experiments in serious abstract instrumental composition (the ricercar) undertaken by a series of organists active in Venice, most notably Claudio Merulo and Andrea Gabrieli.
The most important innovation of the last decades of the century was the creation at the hands of Brescian organists of the fugal canzona alla francese, an instrumental genre inspired not by the sophisticated compositional style of the motet, but by the contrapuntally looser approach of such imitative chansons as Passereau’s Il est bel et bon.
By century’s end, composers such as Giovanni de Macque had given the canzona a contrapuntal integrity commensurate with that of the ricercar.
Related Results
Suicide attempt during a dissociative fugue: additional challenges in assessing self-harm risk
Suicide attempt during a dissociative fugue: additional challenges in assessing self-harm risk
IntroductionSuicide attempts during dissociative fugue states pose distinct challenges in assessing self-harm risk. Dissociative fugue is characterized by sudden, unplanned travel ...
Fugue and Mode in the Sixteenth Century
Fugue and Mode in the Sixteenth Century
This chapter begins with a consideration of the vocabulary for fugal writing used by sixteenth-century authors, compares and contrasts this with the standard vocabulary used for th...
Ricercar and Fantasia in the Sixteenth Century
Ricercar and Fantasia in the Sixteenth Century
It is on the ricercar that most treatments of pre-Bach fugue have focused. The genre’s focus on serious fugal counterpoint can be traced to the year 1540, at the point when Gombert...
Johann Sebastian Bach
Johann Sebastian Bach
The fugue is the crowning glory of Baroque form, with Bach its indisputable master. He had already written a G minor fugue with Basso Continuo while working in Weimar: his influenc...
Passcode: Viajeras. Género, fuga y frontera en la literatura argentina
Passcode: Viajeras. Género, fuga y frontera en la literatura argentina
The travel narrative written by women is offered as a rich corpus because it allows us to observe the processes of legitimation that underlie Argentina’s literary modernity without...
Introduction
Introduction
Johann Sebastian Bach is widely acknowledged as the single greatest master of fugue of all time, to the extent that his contributions have come for a great many to define the genre...
John Stow and Tudor Rebellions, 1549–1569
John Stow and Tudor Rebellions, 1549–1569
In recent years, historians have brought into sharper focus the role of rebellion in the political, social, and religious life of sixteenth-century England. Indeed, the Tudor dynas...
Debating Tumen Valley Jurchens during the Late Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries
Debating Tumen Valley Jurchens during the Late Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries
This article discusses developments among Jurchen tribes on Chosŏn Korea’s northeast frontier during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. By the sixteenth century, i...

