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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Giulio OngaroPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Greenwood Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9780313322631ISBN 10: 0313322635 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 30 November 2003 Recommended Age: From 7 to 17 years Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsOngaro provides nonmusicians with a thoughtful perspective on Renaissance music as it developed not only within its own domain but as a greater part of European society and cultural life in its entirety. The author presents the regional stylistic developments with clarity and highlights pivotal composers' place in history for readers to subsequently explore....Ongaro's language is appropriate for the uninitiated becoming acquainted with this vast body of music, which is too-often neglected in the mainstream outlets of art music and within the popular media. Indeed, this would be a great place for a budding young musicologist to start in order to observe how the broader scope of history is made whole with the discipline. Highly recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers. -Choice [O]ffers a survey of many aspects of music spanning the flourishing of the Dunstable and Dufay generation to the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A susbstantial introduction is followed by chapters covering genre and form, sixteenth-century dance and dance music, organology and music publishing, in that order. This organization makes for easy reference and is happily complemented by a section comprising microbiographies of many of the individuals discusses within the main chapters....The discussion of the daily lives of Renaissance musicians employed at courtly and ecclesiastical institutions reveals a clear insight into the social barriers between gentlemen and different categories of professional musicians. -The Sixteenth Century Journal O ffers a survey of many aspects of music spanning the flourishing of the Dunstable and Dufay generation to the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A susbstantial introduction is followed by chapters covering genre and form, sixteenth-century dance and dance music, organology and music publishing, in that order. This organization makes for easy reference and is happily complemented by a section comprising microbiographies of many of the individuals discusses within the main chapters....The discussion of the daily lives of Renaissance musicians employed at courtly and ecclesiastical institutions reveals a clear insight into the social barriers between gentlemen and different categories of professional musicians. -The Sixteenth Century Journal ?[O]ffers a survey of many aspects of music spanning the flourishing of the Dunstable and Dufay generation to the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A susbstantial introduction is followed by chapters covering genre and form, sixteenth-century dance and dance music, organology and music publishing, in that order. This organization makes for easy reference and is happily complemented by a section comprising microbiographies of many of the individuals discusses within the main chapters....The discussion of the daily lives of Renaissance musicians employed at courtly and ecclesiastical institutions reveals a clear insight into the social barriers between gentlemen and different categories of professional musicians.?-The Sixteenth Century Journal ?Ongaro provides nonmusicians with a thoughtful perspective on Renaissance music as it developed not only within its own domain but as a greater part of European society and cultural life in its entirety. The author presents the regional stylistic developments with clarity and highlights pivotal composers' place in history for readers to subsequently explore....Ongaro's language is appropriate for the uninitiated becoming acquainted with this vast body of music, which is too-often neglected in the mainstream outlets of art music and within the popular media. Indeed, this would be a great place for a budding young musicologist to start in order to observe how the broader scope of history is made whole with the discipline. Highly recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers.?-Choice Ongaro provides nonmusicians with a thoughtful perspective on Renaissance music as it developed not only within its own domain but as a greater part of European society and cultural life in its entirety. The author presents the regional stylistic developments with clarity and highlights pivotal composers' place in history for readers to subsequently explore....Ongaro's language is appropriate for the uninitiated becoming acquainted with this vast body of music, which is too-often neglected in the mainstream outlets of art music and within the popular media. Indeed, this would be a great place for a budding young musicologist to start in order to observe how the broader scope of history is made whole with the discipline. Highly recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers. -Choice [O]ffers a survey of many aspects of music spanning the flourishing of the Dunstable and Dufay generation to the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A susbstantial introduction is followed by chapters covering genre and form, sixteenth-century dance and dance music, organology and music publishing, in that order. This organization makes for easy reference and is happily complemented by a section comprising microbiographies of many of the individuals discusses within the main chapters....The discussion of the daily lives of Renaissance musicians employed at courtly and ecclesiastical institutions reveals a clear insight into the social barriers between gentlemen and different categories of professional musicians. -The Sixteenth Century Journal YOffers a survey of many aspects of music spanning the flourishing of the Dunstable and Dufay generation to the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A susbstantial introduction is followed by chapters covering genre and form, sixteenth-century dance and dance music, organology and music publishing, in that order. This organization makes for easy reference and is happily complemented by a section comprising microbiographies of many of the individuals discusses within the main chapters....The discussion of the daily lives of Renaissance musicians employed at courtly and ecclesiastical institutions reveals a clear insight into the social barriers between gentlemen and different categories of professional musicians. -The Sixteenth Century Journal ?[O]ffers a survey of many aspects of music spanning the flourishing of the Dunstable and Dufay generation to the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A susbstantial introduction is followed by chapters covering genre and form, sixteenth-century dance and dance music, organology and music publishing, in that order. This organization makes for easy reference and is happily complemented by a section comprising microbiographies of many of the individuals discusses within the main chapters....The discussion of the daily lives of Renaissance musicians employed at courtly and ecclesiastical institutions reveals a clear insight into the social barriers between gentlemen and different categories of professional musicians.?-The Sixteenth Century Journal ?Ongaro provides nonmusicians with a thoughtful perspective on Renaissance music as it developed not only within its own domain but as a greater part of European society and cultural life in its entirety. The author presents the regional stylistic developments with clarity and highlights pivotal composers' place in history for readers to subsequently explore....Ongaro's language is appropriate for the uninitiated becoming acquainted with this vast body of music, which is too-often neglected in the mainstream outlets of art music and within the popular media. Indeed, this would be a great place for a budding young musicologist to start in order to observe how the broader scope of history is made whole with the discipline. Highly recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers.?-Choice ?Ongaro provides nonmusicians with a thoughtful perspective on Renaissance music as it developed not only within its own domain but as a greater part of European society and cultural life in its entirety. The author presents the regional stylistic developments with clarity and highlights pivotal composers' place in history for readers to subsequently explore....Ongaro's language is appropriate for the uninitiated becoming acquainted with this vast body of music, which is too-often neglected in the mainstream outlets of art music and within the popular media. Indeed, this would be a great place for a budding young musicologist to start in order to observe how the broader scope of history is made whole with the discipline. Highly recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers.?-Choice ?[O]ffers a survey of many aspects of music spanning the flourishing of the Dunstable and Dufay generation to the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A susbstantial introduction is followed by chapters covering genre and form, sixteenth-century dance and dance music, organology and music publishing, in that order. This organization makes for easy reference and is happily complemented by a section comprising microbiographies of many of the individuals discusses within the main chapters....The discussion of the daily lives of Renaissance musicians employed at courtly and ecclesiastical institutions reveals a clear insight into the social barriers between gentlemen and different categories of professional musicians.?-The Sixteenth Century Journal ?Ongaro provides nonmusicians with a thoughtful perspective on Renaissance music as it developed not only within its own domain but as a greater part of European society and cultural life in its entirety. The author presents the regional stylistic developments with clarity and highlights pivotal composers' place in history for readers to subsequently explore....Ongaro's language is appropriate for the uninitiated becoming acquainted with this vast body of music, which is too-often neglected in the mainstream outlets of art music and within the popular media. Indeed, this would be a great place for a budding young musicologist to start in order to observe how the broader scope of history is made whole with the discipline. Highly recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers.?-Choice ""ÝO¨ffers a survey of many aspects of music spanning the flourishing of the Dunstable and Dufay generation to the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A susbstantial introduction is followed by chapters covering genre and form, sixteenth-century dance and dance music, organology and music publishing, in that order. This organization makes for easy reference and is happily complemented by a section comprising microbiographies of many of the individuals discusses within the main chapters....The discussion of the daily lives of Renaissance musicians employed at courtly and ecclesiastical institutions reveals a clear insight into the social barriers between gentlemen and different categories of professional musicians.""-The Sixteenth Century Journal ""[O]ffers a survey of many aspects of music spanning the flourishing of the Dunstable and Dufay generation to the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A susbstantial introduction is followed by chapters covering genre and form, sixteenth-century dance and dance music, organology and music publishing, in that order. This organization makes for easy reference and is happily complemented by a section comprising microbiographies of many of the individuals discusses within the main chapters....The discussion of the daily lives of Renaissance musicians employed at courtly and ecclesiastical institutions reveals a clear insight into the social barriers between gentlemen and different categories of professional musicians.""-The Sixteenth Century Journal ""Ongaro provides nonmusicians with a thoughtful perspective on Renaissance music as it developed not only within its own domain but as a greater part of European society and cultural life in its entirety. The author presents the regional stylistic developments with clarity and highlights pivotal composers' place in history for readers to subsequently explore....Ongaro's language is appropriate for the uninitiated becoming acquainted with this vast body of music, which is too-often neglected in the mainstream outlets of art music and within the popular media. Indeed, this would be a great place for a budding young musicologist to start in order to observe how the broader scope of history is made whole with the discipline. Highly recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers.""-Choice Author InformationGIULIO ONGARO is Associate Professor of Music History and Literature at the Thornton School of Music, University of Southern California. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |