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Ms Bologna Q15
Museo Internazionale e
Biblioteca della Musica, Bologna
The Making and Remaking of a Musical Manuscript.
Introductory
Study and Facsimile Edition
by Margaret Bent.
Volume I: Introductory Study.
Volume II: Facsimile.
DELUXE LIMITED
EDITION
consisting of introductory study (450 pp) and facsimile (686 pp)
supplied with slipcase. |
edition Lim: Lucca, 2008 (Ars
Nova, 2)
pages 450 + 686 (color facsimile)
size 24,5 x 32.5
weight: 8 kgs.
Scarica un'errata corrige per MS Bologna Q15
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Euro 1000
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This manuscript is the largest international anthology of polyphonic
music of the early 15th century. It was compiled in the Veneto, in
Padua in the early 1420s (stage I) and Vicenza in the early 1430s
(stages II-III), all copied by a single scribe between 1420 and 1435.
The three illuminations are an unusual luxury for a musical manuscript
at this period. It was acquired by Padre Martini in 1757 and is one
of the great treasures of his library in Bologna.
About half of its 323 compositions are unique; some others are shared
with and
complemented by the slightly younger Veneto manuscripts Bologna, Biblioteca
Universitaria 2216 and Oxford, Canon. misc. 213. It is the most important
source
for the works of Zacara and Ciconia and for the early works of Guillaume
Du Fay
(with 78 works, nearly a quarter of the manuscript, many of them unica).
About 50
composers are represented, including native Italians, and composers
from the north
who were sought after and made their careers in Italy.
It is primarily a collection of mass movements (mostly Glorias and
Credos, and a
few cycles) and motets. Du Fay's Missa Sancti Jacobi was assembled
as a cycle
only here, and can now be linked with the circle in which Q15 was
compiled.
The 109 motets include compositions in honour of Gianfrancesco Gonzaga,
the Venetian doges Steno, Mocenigo and Foscari, the prelates Stefano
Carrara, Albano Michiel, Pietro Marcello, Francesco Malipiero, Francesco
Zabarella, Antonio Correr, Giovanni Contarini; the Dominicans and
Leonardo Dati; Pandolfo Malatesta da Pesaro, Cleofe Malatesta; Eugenius
IV, Eugenius and the Emperor Sigismund. 19 French songs were added
at the end of stage I, and 11 laude at stage III. Other late additions
are the cycle of 24 hymns (including the
earliest form of Du Fay's cycle), 9 Magnificats and 3 sequences.
Despite the predominantly sacred contents, the manuscript seems to
have been used at least as much for pious recreation as for liturgical
observance. It can be associated with the humanist circle around the
Venetian patrician bishop Pietro Emiliani of Vicenza, which drew on
a high level of local musical competence that was continued under
his successor, bishop Franceso Malipiero.
For the first time, the complex codicological history of this manuscript
is unravelled and the importance of its many revisions examined.
The first compilation was originally much larger, as can be attested
by earlier foliations and over 90 capital letters cut from it, to
be pasted into the later form of the book that we now have. Fragments
of music on the backs of these letters attest an earlier dating for
compositions only known from later copies, sometimes in different
versions.
About 200 folios were discarded, and replaced by new repertory and
by
pieces recopied from the older book. The manuscript thus now embodies
two overlapping, superimposed anthologies, with a third of their physical
material in common, and perhaps half their repertory. Far-reaching
conclusions can be drawn about the scribe's changing tastes at all
levels, from repertorial to notational. He discarded some motets,
but retained the verbal texts of occasional pieces for dead doges
and bishops, while updating them musically. Inferences about what
he rejected, and what and how he recopied or changed, bear upon future
repertorial study in general, and the evaluation of, for example,
contratenor parts and the pairing of Gloria and Credo movements in
particular. These findings are especially important for Du Fay, to
whose new work the compiler seems to have had prompt access over a
long period.
Margaret Bent tells this story in her extensive introductory study,
which also includes comprehensive indexes and catalogues. She spells
out some of the conclusions to be drawn from the partial destruction
of the manuscript by its own creator, a unique and extraordinary testimony
to changing taste and contemporary reception.
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Rest of the world::
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