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Word, Image, and Song, Vol. 1: Essays on Early Modern Italy [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 414 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 756 g, 39 b/w, 79 line illus.
  • Sērija : Eastman Studies in Music
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2013
  • Izdevniecība: University of Rochester Press
  • ISBN-10: 1580464297
  • ISBN-13: 9781580464291
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 414 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 756 g, 39 b/w, 79 line illus.
  • Sērija : Eastman Studies in Music
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2013
  • Izdevniecība: University of Rochester Press
  • ISBN-10: 1580464297
  • ISBN-13: 9781580464291
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
New essays by noted authorities on music and related arts in early modern Italy, giving special attention to musical sources, poetry, performance, and visual arts.

The rich cultural environment of early modern Italy inspired a vast array of musical innovations: this was the first age of the virtuoso performer, the era that witnessed the beginnings of opera, and a moment that saw the intersection and cross-fertilization of madrigals and songs of all sorts. Word, Image, and Song: Essays on Early Modern Italy presents a broad range of approaches to the study of music and related arts in that era. Topics include musical source studies, issues of performance, poetry and linguistics, influences on music from the classical tradition, and the interconnectedness of music and visual art. Their points of departure include well-known musical workssuch as Monteverdi's madrigals, librettos of seventeenth-century operas, the poetry of Giambattista Marino, and the paintings of Titian and his contemporaries.

Contributors: Jennifer Williams Brown, Mauro Calcagno, Alan Curtis, Suzanne G. Cusick, Ruth I. DeFord, Dinko Fabris, Beth L. Glixon, Jonathan E. Glixon, Barbara Russano Hanning, Wendy Heller, Robert R. Holzer, Deborah Howard, Giuseppe Mazzotta, Margaret Murata, David Rosand, Susan ParkerShimp, Gary Tomlinson, Alvaro Torrente, Andrew H. Weaver.

Rebecca Cypess is Assistant Professor of Music at the Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. Beth L. Glixon is Instructor in Musicology at the University of Kentucky School of Music. Nathan Link is NEH Associate Professor of Music at Centre College.

Recenzijas

Almost every essay is rooted in seventeenth-century Venice. Nonetheless, the editors have achieved what amounts to a landmark collection of scholarly commentary on the compositional, spatial, visual, hermeneutic, and socio-political power of musical drama in this period. will appeal to scholars across a wide array of disciplines. Encourages a keen reconsideration of documentary sources and the stratified ways in which they can be read, . . . combining empirical analysis with a keen cultural and humanistic perspective. [ Cusick's chapter] engages the reader in an old musicological topic made fresh by means of a compelling methodological framework. * MUSIC & LETTERS * The excellent scholarship, brilliant insights, and fresh and sometimes unconventional thinking in this impressive collection offer a significant contribution to the study of the relationship of music and verbal text in seventeenth-century Italy. Representing modern approaches to questions that in some cases are more than a century old, these essays reflect a harmonious variety of methods, points of view, and interests. --Hendrik Schulze, University of North Texas * . *

Preface ix
Acknowledgments xv
Part One Source Studies
1 Maria Cavalli, Copyist and Teacher
3(23)
Jennifer Williams Brown
2 Il ritorno di Poppea: A New German Source Provokes Some New Thoughts---and Old Arguments
26(11)
Alan Curtis
3 An Unreported Mantuan Libretto from 1623
37(15)
Gary Tomlinson
4 The Triumph of Inconstancy: The Vicissitudes of a Seventeenth-Century Libretto
52(22)
Beth L. Glixon
Jonathan E. Glixon
5 A Letter on Benedetto Ferrari, "Eccellentissimo sonator di tiorba"
74(15)
Dinko Fabris
Part Two Performance Studies
6 Recordings of Music Written for St. Mark's: An Architectural Historian's View
89(12)
Deborah Howard
7 The Twenty-Two Steps: Clef Anomalies or "Basso alia bastarda" in Mid-Seventeenth-Century Italian Opera
101(16)
Alvaro Torrente
Part Three Eroticisms and Identities
8 "Indarno chiedi": Clorinda and the Interpretation of Monteverdi's Combattimento
117(28)
Suzanne G. Cusick
9 The Veil, the Mask, and the Eunuch: Sight, Sound, and Imperial Erotics in L'Incoronazione di Poppea
145(22)
Wendy Heller
10 Baciami, Claudia Psychological Depth and Carnal Desire in the Marino Settings of Monteverdi's Book Seven
167(26)
Andrew H. Weaver
Part Four Music and Classical Literature
11 Powerless Spirit: Echo on the Musical Stage of the Late Renaissance
193(26)
Barbara Russano Hanning
12 Excavating Virgil in Counter-Reformation Rome: Domenico Mazzocchi's Dialoghi Based on the Aeneid
219(14)
Susan Parker Shimp
Part Five Poetic Considerations
13 Music as a Fonte delta varieta: Sforza Pallavicino on the Aria
233(18)
Robert R. Holzer
14 Giambattista Marino's Operatic Aesthetics
251(14)
Giuseppe Mazzotta
15 Strophic Form in the Canzonettas of Orazio Vecchi, Luca Marenzio, and Claudio Monteverdi
265(22)
Ruth I. DeFord
16 Cantar ottave, cantar storie
287(31)
Margaret Murata
17 Dramatizing Discourse in Seventeenth-Century Opera: Music as Illocutionary Force in Francesco Cavalli's Giasone (1649)
318(29)
Mauro Calcagno
Part Six Music and Painting
18 Incitamentum amoris musica [ picta]
347(28)
David Rosand
Selected Bibliography 375(6)
List of Contributors 381(6)
Index 387
ANDREW H. WEAVER is Professor of Musicology at The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC.