“A newly discovered keyboard source (Gonzalo de Baena’s Arte nouamente inuentada pera aprender a tanger, Lisboa 1540): a preliminary report”. Plainsong and Medieval Music 5 (1996): 81-112.
Previous NextPublication type | Year | ISBN/ISSN | Bibliog code |
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Article: journal | 1996 | knighton1996 |
The discovery of a musical source is always something of an event. This volume of keyboard music dated 1540 and printed in Lisbon was discovered – appropriately for an Iberian source – in 1992 by Alejandro Iglesias who announced his find at a conference held at the Institution ‘Fernando el Católico’ in Zaragoza in the autumn of that year. It was heralded in the Castilian rhetorical style as the ‘discovery of the century’, and it provided a moment of high drama, especially when it became clear from Iglesias's brief description of the source that it included works by Franco-Netherlandish composers such as Josquin, Ockeghem, Compère, Agricola, Caron and Obrecht. The volume is indeed of considerable interest, not only because it offers keyboard intabulations of previously unknown works by both Franco-Netherlandish and Spanish composers, but also because it is the earliest surviving source of keyboard music from the Iberian peninsula and a rare example of printed instrumental music from the first half of the sixteenth century. Manuel Carlos de Brito, making an assessment of Renaissance Portuguese music in 1989, was perfectly justified in thinking that new music sources were unlikely to appear, and that lack of musical texts to confirm or refute the historical context suggested by documents would limit the history of Portuguese music to the realms of speculation. This discovery, surprising though it is, rescues something from that shadowy kingdom.
Composer
Instrument VIHUELA, KEYBOARD
Century 15CENT, 16CENT
Region PORTUGAL
Medium
Music genre
Research field MUSIC, SOURCE STUDIES
Baena, Alonso de |