
Cristobal de Morales
Sources, Influences, Reception
Boydell Press
Published on 19. July 2007
Book
Hardback
478 pages
978-1-84383-311-6 (ISBN)
Description
A comprehensive survey of the music of Cristobal de Morales, the leading Spanish composer of his time.
Cristobal 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
Cristobal 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
Reviews / Votes
Exceptionally thought-provoking and comprehensive...providing new information and insights, while demonstrating genuine love and respect for their subject...This collection of essays marks something of a watershed in Morales scholarship. * EARLY MUSIC * A welcome assessment of Morales scholarship today. This is a collection that deserves a place on the bookshelf of every scholar of Renaissance music and it is indispensable for specialists in the music of Spain and the Spanish Americas.[...]It is the best starting point for the much-needed work that remains to be done on this important Spanish composer. * RENAISSANCE QUARTERLY * This excellent new volume...is a wide-ranging anthology...it includes all the leading scholars in the field. -- Peter Phillips * MUSICAL TIMES * A significant achievement [providing] a much needed impetus for the revision of this figure and his music...a required purchase for all serious libraries. * MUSIC & LETTERS *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Woodbridge
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
8 b/w, 60 line illus.
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
1106 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-84383-311-6 (9781843833116)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
TESS KNIGHTON is an ICREA Research Professor affiliated to the Institucio Mila i Fontanals-CSIC in Barcelona and an Emeritus Fellow of Clare College, Cambridge.
Editor
Contributions
Contributor
Contributor
Contributor
Customer
Content
Landmark Contributions to Cristobal de Morales Scholarship - Robert Stevenson
The Nuevo rezado, Music Scribes, and the Restoration of Morales's Toledo Lamentation - Michael Noone
The Nuevo rezado, Music Scribes, and the Restoration of Morales's Toledo Lamentation - Graeme Skinner
Two Early Morales Magnificat Settings - Kenneth Kreitner
Morales, Spanish Traditions, Liturgical Works, and the Problem of Style - Grayson Wagstaff
Morales' Contribution to the Pange lingua Tradition and an Anonymous Tantum ergo - Bernadette Nelson
Another Look at Polyphonic Borrowing: Morales, the Missa Quem dicunt homines, and the Missa Vulnerasti cor meum - Alison McFarland
Multi-layered Models: Compositional Approaches in the 1540s to Si bona suscepimus - Cristle Collins Judd
Multiple Layers of Borrowing in Sancta Maria Motets by Morales and his Contemporaries - Stephen Rice
Morales in Print: Distribution and Ownership in Renaissance Spain - Tess Knighton
Morales at the Periphery: Dissemination of Motets in France, Germany, and the Low Countries - Martin Ham
Morales's Voice in the Viceroyalties - Robert Stevenson
Cristobal de Morales: A Problem of Musical Mysticism and National Identity in the Historiography of the Renaissance - Emilio Ros Fabregas
Editing Cristobal de Morales's Masses Today - Cristina Urchueguia
Morales: The Canon - Martin Ham
The Nuevo rezado, Music Scribes, and the Restoration of Morales's Toledo Lamentation - Michael Noone
The Nuevo rezado, Music Scribes, and the Restoration of Morales's Toledo Lamentation - Graeme Skinner
Two Early Morales Magnificat Settings - Kenneth Kreitner
Morales, Spanish Traditions, Liturgical Works, and the Problem of Style - Grayson Wagstaff
Morales' Contribution to the Pange lingua Tradition and an Anonymous Tantum ergo - Bernadette Nelson
Another Look at Polyphonic Borrowing: Morales, the Missa Quem dicunt homines, and the Missa Vulnerasti cor meum - Alison McFarland
Multi-layered Models: Compositional Approaches in the 1540s to Si bona suscepimus - Cristle Collins Judd
Multiple Layers of Borrowing in Sancta Maria Motets by Morales and his Contemporaries - Stephen Rice
Morales in Print: Distribution and Ownership in Renaissance Spain - Tess Knighton
Morales at the Periphery: Dissemination of Motets in France, Germany, and the Low Countries - Martin Ham
Morales's Voice in the Viceroyalties - Robert Stevenson
Cristobal de Morales: A Problem of Musical Mysticism and National Identity in the Historiography of the Renaissance - Emilio Ros Fabregas
Editing Cristobal de Morales's Masses Today - Cristina Urchueguia
Morales: The Canon - Martin Ham