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Overview"This study of partsongs and soloistic music is concerned with the musical settings of classical verse. The work, the first of its kind, is a result of a collaboration between a classicist and a musicologist. This book studies, for the first time, the whole genre of the secular motet to Latin text in the Renaissance. Musicologists and classicists with medieval and Renaissance knowledge, as well as expertise in each other's disciplines, bring together ancient, early Christian, medieval and Renaissance materials in an interdisciplinary exploration of the texts, their settings and the social, political and cultural context of the genre. The book takes as its starting-point Renaissance settings of classical verse, most importantly Virgil's lines from the ""Aeneid"" that begin 'Dulces exuviae', the lament of Dido, Queen of Carthage, after being abandoned by Aeneas. This text examines metre and the relationship between the classical materials and the Renaissance works derived from them, and many other matters. The result is to open up of a corner of musical history that has previously been given little recognition, and a new understanding of a much-neglected genre." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Richard RastallPublisher: The Edwin Mellen Press Ltd Imprint: Edwin Mellen Press Ltd ISBN: 9780773414044ISBN 10: 0773414045 Pages: 272 Publication Date: October 2010 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews... offers new insights and will be warmly welcomed by all those interested in the impact of classical learning on the Renaissance and its music. (Prof. Bonnie Blackburn University of Oxford) ... opens all sorts of doors to further thought and research, while the scholarship is up-to-date, of high calibre, and makes some striking contributions to the field. (Prof. Peter M. Lefferts University of Nebraska-Lincoln) """... offers new insights and will be warmly welcomed by all those interested in the impact of classical learning on the Renaissance and its music."" (Prof. Bonnie Blackburn University of Oxford) ""... opens all sorts of doors to further thought and research, while the scholarship is up-to-date, of high calibre, and makes some striking contributions to the field."" (Prof. Peter M. Lefferts University of Nebraska-Lincoln)""" Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |