Ars Nova and the Renaissance, 1300-1540
Description:... This book is an entirely new work, and replaces the Oxford History of Music, which first appeared over fifty years ago. It has been planned as a complete survey of music from the earliest times down to the present day, including not only the achievements of the Western world but also the contributions made by Eastern civilizations and primitive societies. The subject matter in Volume Three stretches from the introduction of the Ars Nova at the beginning of the fourteenth century to the full flood of renaissance music in the mid-sixteenth century. For the first time there emerge named composers with an undisputed corpus of surviving works: Machaut, Landini, Dunstable, Dufay, Ockeghem, Josquin, and many others of lesser fame. Polyphony grows steadily more mature and organic, and keyboard music begins to appear in recognizably distinct forms. Many of the works composed during this period are still regularly performed, and apart from its value to specialists the volume should provide interesting and illuminating reading for all who take pleasure in the music of an age remarkable not only for promise but also for achievement.
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