Sacred Music at the "Incurabili" in Venice at the Time of J. A. Hasse, I

1970 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 282-301
Author(s):  
Sven Hostrup Hansell
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2(13) (2019) ◽  
pp. 7-12
Author(s):  
Larysa Ihnatova ◽  
◽  
Oleksandr Marach ◽  
Anatolii Levchenko ◽  
Liliia Stets ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Daniel R. Melamed

If there is a fundamental musical subject of Johann Sebastian Bach’s Mass in B Minor, a compositional problem the work explores, it is the tension between two styles cultivated in church music of Bach’s time. One style was modern and drew on up-to-date music such as the instrumental concerto and the opera aria. The other was old-fashioned and fundamentally vocal, borrowing and adapting the style of Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, his sixteenth-century contemporaries, and his seventeenth-century imitators. The movements that make up Bach’s Mass can be read as exploring the entire spectrum of possibilities offered by these two styles (the modern and the antique), ranging from movements purely in one or the other to a dazzling variety of ways of combining the two. The work illustrates a fundamental opposition in early-eighteenth-century sacred music that Bach confronts and explores in the Mass.


Early Music ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 699-702
Author(s):  
E. Honisch
Keyword(s):  

1988 ◽  
Vol 113 (2) ◽  
pp. 274-305
Author(s):  
Jerome Roche

It is perhaps still true that research into sacred types of music in early seventeenth-century Italy lags behind that into madrigal, monody and opera; it is certainly the case that the textual aspects of sacred music, themselves closely bound up with liturgical questions, have not so far received the kind of study that has been taken for granted with regard to the literary texts of opera and of secular vocal music. This is hardly to be wondered at: unlike great madrigal poetry or the work of the best librettists, sacred texts do not include much that can be valued as art in its own right. Nevertheless, if we are to understand better the context of the motet – as distinct from the musical setting of liturgical entities such as Mass, Vespers or Compline – we need a clearer view of the types of text that were set, the way in which composers exercised their choice, and the way such taste was itself changing in relation to the development of musical styles. For the motet was the one form of sacred music in which an Italian composer of the early decades of the seventeenth century could combine a certain freedom of textual choice with an adventurousness of musical idiom.


1979 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 48-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca Grier
Keyword(s):  

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