A Study of Early Sixteenth-Century English Music Fragments from the DIAMM Database

While the study of complete sources is very valuable, and has contributed greatly to what is understood of music history, the perspective they contribute is limited because they cannot reveal information about how music and music sources were most often used. The study of functional sources, more pr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hamilton, Elizabeth P.K.
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20241
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOU.-en#10393-202412013-01-11T13:33:11ZA Study of Early Sixteenth-Century English Music Fragments from the DIAMM DatabaseHamilton, Elizabeth P.K.DIAMMmusicmanuscriptsixteenth-centurysixteenth centuryenglandfragmentmensuralfunctionalperformance practicescribescribal practiceperiod usemusica fictaDigital Image Archive of Medieval MusicsecularsacredliturgicalsecularcourtconcordancestemmaticsaccidentalsWhile the study of complete sources is very valuable, and has contributed greatly to what is understood of music history, the perspective they contribute is limited because they cannot reveal information about how music and music sources were most often used. The study of functional sources, more probably created for use, allows for more insight into how music was performed and understood, and how such sources were created, used and valued. This study examines twelve fragmentary early sixteenth-century English sources from the Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music (DIAMM) database, constituting a sample of functional music sources in this period. The study of this sampling reveals information about how functional manuscripts were created, used and valued in England during this time period. Some of the fragments contain works with concordances. These concordances are compared using variant comparison, where differences in the versions of the work are considered and weighed. The comparative study of concordances provides insight into the transmission of the versions, scribal and performance culture, as well as into music culture in general. Overall, the study of this sampling of early sixteenth-century functional English sources provides a clearer understanding of the use of accidentals, scribes and scribal culture, performers, performance practice and music culture in England at this time, contributing to the understanding of music history.2011-09-27T19:50:35Z2011-09-27T19:50:35Z20112011-09-27Thèse / Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10393/20241en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic DIAMM
music
manuscript
sixteenth-century
sixteenth century
england
fragment
mensural
functional
performance practice
scribe
scribal practice
period use
musica ficta
Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music
secular
sacred
liturgical
secular
court
concordance
stemmatics
accidentals
spellingShingle DIAMM
music
manuscript
sixteenth-century
sixteenth century
england
fragment
mensural
functional
performance practice
scribe
scribal practice
period use
musica ficta
Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music
secular
sacred
liturgical
secular
court
concordance
stemmatics
accidentals
Hamilton, Elizabeth P.K.
A Study of Early Sixteenth-Century English Music Fragments from the DIAMM Database
description While the study of complete sources is very valuable, and has contributed greatly to what is understood of music history, the perspective they contribute is limited because they cannot reveal information about how music and music sources were most often used. The study of functional sources, more probably created for use, allows for more insight into how music was performed and understood, and how such sources were created, used and valued. This study examines twelve fragmentary early sixteenth-century English sources from the Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music (DIAMM) database, constituting a sample of functional music sources in this period. The study of this sampling reveals information about how functional manuscripts were created, used and valued in England during this time period. Some of the fragments contain works with concordances. These concordances are compared using variant comparison, where differences in the versions of the work are considered and weighed. The comparative study of concordances provides insight into the transmission of the versions, scribal and performance culture, as well as into music culture in general. Overall, the study of this sampling of early sixteenth-century functional English sources provides a clearer understanding of the use of accidentals, scribes and scribal culture, performers, performance practice and music culture in England at this time, contributing to the understanding of music history.
author Hamilton, Elizabeth P.K.
author_facet Hamilton, Elizabeth P.K.
author_sort Hamilton, Elizabeth P.K.
title A Study of Early Sixteenth-Century English Music Fragments from the DIAMM Database
title_short A Study of Early Sixteenth-Century English Music Fragments from the DIAMM Database
title_full A Study of Early Sixteenth-Century English Music Fragments from the DIAMM Database
title_fullStr A Study of Early Sixteenth-Century English Music Fragments from the DIAMM Database
title_full_unstemmed A Study of Early Sixteenth-Century English Music Fragments from the DIAMM Database
title_sort study of early sixteenth-century english music fragments from the diamm database
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20241
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