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Where Sight Meets Sound The Poetics of Late Medieval Music Writing - AMS Studies in Music

$50.25

Publisher: Hachette Book Group USA

Author: Emily Zazulia

The main function of western musical notation is incidental: it prescribes and records sound. But during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, notation began to take on an aesthetic life all its own. In the early fifteenth century, a musician might be asked to sing a line slower, faster, or starting on a different pitch than what is written. By the end of the century composers had begun tasking singers with solving elaborate puzzles to produce sounds whose relationship to the written notes is anything but obvious. These instructions, which appear by turns unnecessary and confounding, challenge traditional conceptions of music writing that understand notation as an incidental consequence of the desire to record sound. This book explores innovations in late-medieval music writing as well as how modern scholarship on notation has informed-sometimes erroneously-ideas about the premodern era. Drawing on both musical and music-theoretical evidence, this book reframes our understanding of late-medieval musical notation as a system that was innovative, cutting-edge, and dynamic-one that could be used to generate music, not just preserve it.
ISBN: 9780197551912
Publisher: OUP USA
Imprint: Oxford University Press
Published date:
DEWEY: 780.1480902
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 344
Weight: 728g
Height: 162mm
Width: 243mm
Spine width: 23mm

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