Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-04T10:01:18.313Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

North Italian Falsobordone and its Relevance to the early Stile Recitativo

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 1976

Get access

Extract

In 1585 a set of Vesper psalms for four voices by Paolo Isnardi, a choirmaster at the cathedral and court of Ferrara, was brought out by the printer Giacomo Vincenzi. In the dedication to the abbot of Santa Maria della Charità in Venice, Vincenzi states that the psalms are composed ‘con nova maniera di consonanza, over come dicono falsobordone’ (‘in a new style of consonance, or, as it is called, falsobordone’). Falsibordoni had been published before, for in Isnardi's Vesper psalms for five voices, printed in 1579, wordless falsibordoni in all eight tones were appended at the end of the partbooks, obviously designed as easier alternatives to the conventional contrapuntal settings; but with the 1585 volume, a publication, for the first time, was devoted exclusively to examples of the style, with specific verbal underlay for each voice (ex. 1). The dedication to the abbot probably indicates an intended market of non-professional choirs made up of resident clerics or musically less-proficient monks and juvenile novices, who preferred some variation to the unison plainsong recitation of the Office: it is significant that the falsibordoni are scored for four voices, as opposed to the ubiquitous five-voiced psalm settings of the late Renaissance.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1978 The Royal Musical Association and the Authors

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 See the article entitled ‘Faburdon/fauxbourdon/felsobordone’ by Dagmar Hoffmann-Axthelm in Das-Handw örterbuch der Musikalischen Terminologie, ed. Fritz Reckow (1972).Google Scholar

2 Op. cit., p. 4.Google Scholar

3 Op. cit., p. 5.Google Scholar

4 F: Pedrell, Hispaniae schola musica sacra (1894–98), vi.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

5 Reprinted 1972.Google Scholar

6 Progressions of 6/3 chords are still common in motets and madrigals at the end of the 16th century.Google Scholar

7 Manfred Bukofzer, ‘Fauxbourdon revisited’, Musical Quarterly, xxxvii (1952), 36–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

8 Vide Psalm cxiii (Verse ‘Super misericordia tua …’) and a two-part verse from a Te Deum (‘Pleni sunt coeli…’) in J. Marix, Les musiciens de la cour de Bourgogne au xve siècle (1937).Google Scholar

9 Vide Manfred Bukofzer, Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Music (1950), 183.Google Scholar

10 See Strunk, Oliver, Source Readings in Music History (New York, 1950), 269.Google Scholar

11 Robert Stevenson, Spanish Cathedral Music in the Golden Age (University of California, 1961), 29.Google Scholar

12 Robert Stevenson, Spanish Musu in the Age of Columbus (The Hague, 1960), 191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

13 Pedrell, op. cit.Google Scholar

14 Pedrell, op. cit.Google Scholar

15 Cabezon's Vesper Psalms: in Pedrell, op. cit.Google Scholar

16 Coelho, 5 Tentos extraidos das Flores de musica paro o instrumento (1620), ed. S. Kastner (1936). See Preface, p. xiii.Google Scholar

17 Fellerer, K. G., ‘Church Music and the Council of Trent’, Musical Quarterly, xxxix (1953), 576, 592.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

18 Pedrell, op. cut.Google Scholar

19 Nigd Fortune, ‘Solo Song and Cantata’, New Oxford History of Music, iv (London, 1968), 155.Google Scholar

20 Strunk, op. cit., 420.Google Scholar

21 Ghisi, F., ‘La tradition musicale des fetes florentines et les origines de l'opéra’, Musique des Intermèdes de La Pellegrina, ed. D. P. Walker (Paris, 1963).Google Scholar

22 Strunk, op. cit., 379–80.Google Scholar

23 Claude Palisca, ‘Vincenzo Galilei and some links between “Pseudo-Monody” and Monody’, Musical Quarterly, xlvi (1960), 344.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

24 Alfred Einstein, The Italian Madrigal, i (1949), 101–3.Google Scholar

25 Solerti, A., Gli albori del melodramma, i (1905, reprinted 1969), 12.Google Scholar

26 Salazar, A., ‘Music in the Primitive Spanish Theatre before Lope de Vega’, Papers of the American Musicological Society (1938), 94108.Google Scholar

27 See Morphy, G., Les luthistes espagnols dx xvi esiècle (1902).Google Scholar

28 Strunk, op. cit., 374.Google Scholar

29 Walker, D. P., ‘Musical Humanism in the 16th and early 17th centuries’, The Music Review, ii (1941), 1, 111, 220, 288; iii (1942), 55.Google Scholar

30 See example in Palisca, op. cit.Google Scholar

31 Strunk, op. cit., 375.Google Scholar

32 Strunk, op. cit., 391.Google Scholar

33 Referred to in Einstein, op. cit., 103. The music and texts of the sonnets under discussion are contained in Madrigaletti, Book V (1635), Christ Church Library, Oxford.Google Scholar

34 Howard Mayer Brown, ‘How Opera began: an introduction to Jacopo Peri's Euridice’, in The Late Italian Renaissance, ed. E. Cochrane (London, 1970), 418.Google Scholar

35 Bovicelli, G. B., Regole, Passaggi di Musica (1594; facsimile edition ed. N. Bridgman, 1957), chapter 2.Google Scholar

36 Strunk, op. cit., 382.Google Scholar