The elevated status of Monteverdi’s 1610 Vespers over the last century provides the starting point for an enquiry into which factors render it so durable. In going against the grain of recent attempts to discern the possible liturgical context for its original performance, this study claims that the collection as a whole (components of which undoubtedly had liturgical origins) can only be exemplary. Moreover, Monteverdi, in his intense engagement with the impersonation of liturgical chanting, has effectively rendered it the analogue of an actual service. Several features suggest that he is capturing something of the listening experience of a liturgy, complete with its distortions and memories. As a collection that is ‘about’ Vespers and whi...
After a long gap in their reception history, Claudio Monteverdi’s operas have since the early twent...
This article focuses on Aquilino Coppini’s contrafacta of Monteverdi madrigals from the Fifth Book,...
This study is based on the premise that modern day performances of late Renaissance sacred music are...
The elevated status of Monteverdi’s 1610 Vespers over the last century provides the starting point f...
The article describes the methods used in synthesizing a performance of the first movement of Montev...
This edition brings together the three earliest printed collections of music in Claudio Monteverdi’s...
Between 1607 and 1609, the Milanese professor of rhetoric, Aquilino Coppini (d. 1629), published thr...
The early decades of the seventeenth century saw an important aesthetic shift in Italian secular mus...
In efforts to prove the transition from modality to tonality in the late Renaissance era, this paper...
Scholars have long acknowledged that Claudio Monteverdi owed more than a passing debt of gratitude t...
The focus of the current study is the use of form in the collection of Vespers music by Chiara Marga...
Monteverdi’s “Amor, dicea” (Lamento della ninfa), appearing in his Eighth Book of Madrigals publishe...
The sonic grandeur of Monteverdi’s spectacular masterpiece is expertly realized in this recording by...
In my dissertation I'm working at the work of art made by Claudio Monteverdi (1567 - 1643) and also ...
Late Renaissance composer Claudio Monteverdi is known by scholars as the father of opera. While Mont...
After a long gap in their reception history, Claudio Monteverdi’s operas have since the early twent...
This article focuses on Aquilino Coppini’s contrafacta of Monteverdi madrigals from the Fifth Book,...
This study is based on the premise that modern day performances of late Renaissance sacred music are...
The elevated status of Monteverdi’s 1610 Vespers over the last century provides the starting point f...
The article describes the methods used in synthesizing a performance of the first movement of Montev...
This edition brings together the three earliest printed collections of music in Claudio Monteverdi’s...
Between 1607 and 1609, the Milanese professor of rhetoric, Aquilino Coppini (d. 1629), published thr...
The early decades of the seventeenth century saw an important aesthetic shift in Italian secular mus...
In efforts to prove the transition from modality to tonality in the late Renaissance era, this paper...
Scholars have long acknowledged that Claudio Monteverdi owed more than a passing debt of gratitude t...
The focus of the current study is the use of form in the collection of Vespers music by Chiara Marga...
Monteverdi’s “Amor, dicea” (Lamento della ninfa), appearing in his Eighth Book of Madrigals publishe...
The sonic grandeur of Monteverdi’s spectacular masterpiece is expertly realized in this recording by...
In my dissertation I'm working at the work of art made by Claudio Monteverdi (1567 - 1643) and also ...
Late Renaissance composer Claudio Monteverdi is known by scholars as the father of opera. While Mont...
After a long gap in their reception history, Claudio Monteverdi’s operas have since the early twent...
This article focuses on Aquilino Coppini’s contrafacta of Monteverdi madrigals from the Fifth Book,...
This study is based on the premise that modern day performances of late Renaissance sacred music are...