Source title | Fantasia facil |
---|---|
Title in contents | Otra fantasia facil |
Text incipit |
Category abstract
Genre fantasia
Fantasia type ImP
Mode 6
Voices 3
Length (compases) 73
Tuning G
Courses 6
Final IV/0
Highest I/5
Lowest VI/0
Difficulty easy
Tempo medium
Language
Vocal notation
A work of easy execution from a clearly vocal inspiration although the second half is worked out in a more instrumental manner. There is a high level of pure inventive fantasy therefore sectional division by cadences seems more appropriate than by the themes which act as a springboard for invention. Cohesion & unity in overall terms comes from the descending melodic direction of all principal themes and many secondary ones.
The existing modern editions have serious voice-leading problems. Pujol sees the work as a4 – but there is no place where four voices are operative. He attempts to abstract the work into more of a vocal mould than Mudarra conceived it. The Mönkemeyer edition has no real logic behind it – just expediency and neatness of notation.
The main structural sections (bar numbers = compas) are as follows:
I 1-24
Section I enters as 3 part imitation and actually concludes at 12 but momentum doesn’t allow a pause. Free polyphony [Semi] with long descending melody beginning on C in T & S [14ff & 18ff] with repeated cadential fig. in bass [16-19] & [21-24] --> no actual imitation but free imitation based on downward movement of previous theme. With the beginning of 2nd section comes a shift in mode from the 6th to 1st mode.
II 24-39
Section II works with a short descending motive exposed: STBT (cadence) STB. The harmonic expectation of the final cadence is avoided by keeping the bass descending to Bb from C instead of up to F.
III 39-53
Section III seems to be an interlude rather than a forward – looking section. Seems to begin in triple time (within the duple notation) with slight suggestion of imitative canon then breaking into S dominated redouble then into free counterpoint over a bass melody 45-50.
Thereafter-cadence preparation.
IV 53-73.
A short motive in last section enters regularly every 2 compases until 64. It is then extended by addition to its head and receives 2 entries before the final close of the work. The technique of bridging section 3&4 is clever by introducing in the Bass the skeleton of the motive across the cadence & successively interlocking it with itself in the bass.