Music in golden-age Florence, 1250-1750 : from the priorate of the guilds to the end of the Medici grand duchy / Anthony M. Cummings.

Author
Cummings, Anthony M. [Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Published/​Created
Chicago : The University of Chicago Press, 2024.
Description
1 online resource (512 pages)

Details

Subject(s)
Series
Chicago scholarship online. [More in this series]
Summary note
A comprehensive account of music in Florence from the late Middle Ages until the end of the Medici dynasty in the mid-eighteenth century.
Notes
Previously issued in print: 2023.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Target audience
Specialized.
Source of description
Description based on print version record.
Contents
  • Intro
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Book the First | Music in Late-Medieval Florence: The Duecento and Trecento | Music and the Ecclesiastical and Political Organization of the Late-Medieval City
  • The Duecento
  • 1. Church and State in Florence circa 1300
  • Santa Reparata/Santa Maria del Fiore
  • Palazzo della Signoria
  • Music at Santa Reparata/Santa Maria del Fiore
  • The Duecento Lauda
  • Instrumentalists of the Signoria
  • The Trecento
  • 2. Secular Polyphony: The Beginnings ofthe Florentine Tradition
  • The Social Context of Performance
  • Johannes de Florentia (fl. ca. 1351)
  • 3. Secular Polyphony Francesco Landino and the Central Florentine Tradition
  • Donatus de Florentia and Laurentius Masii de Florentia (†1372)
  • Francesco Landino (†1397)
  • 4. Secular Polyphony: The Gallicization of Florentine Musical Culture
  • Some Florentine Kleinmeistern: Magister frater Egidius, Magister Guglielmus frater, and Corradus
  • Andreas de Florentia (Andrea di Giovanni) (†1415
  • Some Florentine Kleinmeistern Redux: Bonaiutus Corsini and Andrea Stefani
  • Paulus de Florentia (†1436)
  • 5. Music in Communal Worship and Civic Life
  • Liturgical Polyphony
  • The Trecento Lauda
  • The Herald of the Signoria
  • Book the Second | Music in Renaissance Florence I: The Quattrocento | Aristocracy Emulated:The De Facto Medici Regime
  • 6. The Medici Regime and the Public Ecclesiastical Institutions
  • Nicolaus Zacharie and the Professionalization of Composing and Performing
  • The Consecration of the Cathedral of Florence
  • The Musical Establishments Stabilized
  • Heinrich Isaac
  • 7. Tradition and Innovation in Sacred Music
  • Tradition: Music for the Liturgy
  • Tradition and Innovation: The Quattrocento Lauda
  • Innovation: The Sacra Rappresentatione
  • 8. Heralds, Knights, and Carnival Revelers
  • Tellers of Tales
  • Medieval Chivalric Tradition Reimagined.
  • Florentine Carnival and the Canto Carnascialesco
  • 9. Music and Domestic LifeThe House of Medici
  • Occasions for Music-Making
  • The Patrons, Their Musicians, and Their Music
  • The Musical Sources
  • Varieties of Music-Making
  • 10. Girolamo Savonarola and the Medici in Exile
  • Theocratic Censure
  • The Medici in Exile, 1494-1512
  • Book the Third | Music in Renaissance Florence II: The Cinquecento | Aristocracy Achieved: The De Jure Medici Regime, Family as Country, and "Florentinism"
  • 11. The Medici Restoration: The Florentine-Papal Tandem
  • Music in Private Medici Settings: Instrumental Music
  • Composers in Medici Service
  • 12. A New Institution, a New Technology, a New Genre: The Madrigal
  • Wellsprings of the Madrigal: The Chanson
  • Wellsprings of the Madrigal: The Canto Carnascialescoand Trionfo, the Lauda, and Solo Song
  • The Earliest Madrigals
  • Florentine Academies and Madrigals for the Theater at Midcentury
  • Intimate Settings: Isabella de' Medici, Solo Song, and the Polyphonic Madrigal
  • 13. The Church
  • The Reconstitution of the Polyphonic Chapels
  • The Reformation and Counter-Reformation
  • The Cinquecento Lauda and Sacra Rappresentatione
  • Intermedi Sacri e Morali and Music in Religious Communities for Women
  • 14. Medici Pageantry, 1539-1589: "L'état, c'est moi"
  • Book the Fourth | Music in Florence in the Baroque Era | Cross-Genre Influences: Monody, the Stile Recitativo, and the Stile Concertato in Florentine Music of the Seicento and Early Settecento
  • 15. Opera in Florence, Act 1The Florentine Aristocratic Phase
  • Academic Theories Applied
  • The Beginnings of Opera
  • Widening Applications of the Innovations
  • The Meaning of Baroque
  • 16. Intermedio IMusic in Religious and Dynastic Ritual
  • Religious Ritual: Music for Organ.
  • Dynastic Ritual ("L'état, c'est moi"): The Equestrian Ballet
  • 17. Opera in Florence, Act 2: The Pan-Italian Phase
  • A New Institution: The Opera House
  • Beginnings of the Pan-Italian Phase: La finta pazza
  • A Native Attempt at a Venetian-Style Opera: Celio
  • Venetian Imports: Ipermestra
  • A Distinctively Florentine Tradition of Comic Opera: Il potestà di Colognole
  • Venetian Imports: Ipermestra, Redux
  • The Baroque Aesthetic on Full Display: Ercole in Tebe, L'Orontea, La Dori
  • 18: Intermedio II Devotional and Convivial Uses of Music
  • Devotional: The Oratorio
  • Convivial: Ballet Entertainments
  • Convivial: The Seicento Madrigal
  • Convivial: The Seicento Cantata
  • Convivial: Instrumental Genres
  • Convivial: The Invention of the Piano
  • 19. Opera in Florence, Act 3: The Pan-European Phase
  • Opera in Arcadia? The Halting Adoptionof Reform Principles-Griselda
  • Grand Prince Ferdinando and a Restitution of Aristocratic Opera
  • The Reopening of Teatro della Pergola
  • Vincer se stesso è la maggior vittoria, or Rodrigo
  • Opera in Arcadia: The Fuller Adoption ofReform Principles-Catonein Utica
  • The Settecento Cantata
  • Conclusion
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index.
ISBN
9780226822792 ((electronic bk.))
OCLC
  • 1376195446
  • 1417147390
Doi
  • 10.7208/chicago/9780226822792.001.0001
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