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Tenores ad longum and rhythmic cues in the early fifteenth-century motet

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2003

Abstract

This article deals primarily with a small repertory of early fifteenth-century motets that survive with tenores ad longum - substitute parts for notationally difficult tenors: works by Dunstaple, Binchois, Ciconia, Brassart, Velut, Carmen and Antonius de Civitate. The eight cases, together with Du Fay's O Sancte Sebastiane and the fourteenth-century motet Inter densas, are discussed individually, with consideration of the reason for inclusion of a tenor ad longum or other rhythmic cues, and who might have been responsible for the part.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2003 Cambridge University Press

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