Owen Rees; Bernadette Nelson; Alison Mcfarland; Cristina Urchueguía; Cristle Collins Judd Boydell Press (2007) Kovakantinen kirja 134,00 € |
|
Cristóbal de Morales - Sources, Influences, Reception Boydell PressSivumäärä: 478 sivuaAsu: Kovakantinen kirjaJulkaisuvuosi: 2007, 19.07.2007 (lisätietoa)Kieli: Englanti A comprehensive survey of the music of Cristóbal de Morales, the leading Spanish composer of his time.
Cristóbal de Morales was the most famous Spanish composer of the mid sixteenth century. His music was known internationally during his lifetime. He was eulogized by contemporary writers, and his fame and influence remained significant in the seventeenth century: sixty years after his death, he was still regarded as one of the finest composers of sacred polyphony. His repertory includes over twenty Masses and a very large number of motets and works in othersacred genres.
This wide-ranging volume examines numerous aspects of the composer's works, and the Spanish and other contexts within which they were composed and received. Topics covered include sources, newly uncoveredworks and issues of authorship, musical traditions in Spain and elsewhere, the transmission and reception of Morales's music in Spain, Northern Europe and the New World, patterns of influence and emulation involving Morales and other composers, and modern perceptions of Morales and his music. The book also provides the first comprehensive published list of the composer's works and their sources.
OWEN REES is Reader in the Faculty of Music at the University of Oxford; BERNADETTE NELSON is affiliated to Wolfson College at the University of Oxford.
Contributors: CRISTLE COLLINS JUDD, MARTIN HAM, TESS KNIGHTON, KENNETH KREITNER, ALISON SANDERS MCFARLAND, MICHAEL NOONE, BERNADETTE NELSON, OWEN REES, STEPHEN RICE, EMILIO ROS-FABREGAS, GRAEME SKINNER, ROBERT STEVENSON, CRISTINA URCHEGUIA, GRAYSON WAGSTAFF
Contributions by: Alison McFarland, Bernadette Nelson, Cristina Urchueguía, Cristle Collins Judd, Emilio Ros Fábregas, Graeme Skinner, Grayson Wagstaff, Kenneth Kreitner, Martin Ham, Michael Noone, Robert Stevenson, Stephen Rice, Tess Knighton
|