Discusses the Capriccio stravagante by the Italian violin virtuoso Carlo Farina, as court Konzertmeister at the court of Saxony in Dresden. Suggests that the model for the Capriccio may be found in the many collections at the Dresden court and in the early modern strategies of learning, knowing and experiencing the world through the act of collecting. Shows that the Capriccio was not without precedent; other works of music and music theory may also be related to the practices of courtly collecting, and so offer a context for understanding Farina's work. (Quotes from original text
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Italian manuscripts of polyphony copied before 1450 primarily contain texted pieces, while those cop...
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Sebastian Virdung\u27s Musica getutscht (Basel, 1511), the earliest printed treatise to deal exclusi...
Review of Aurelio Bianco, ‘Nach englischer und frantzösischer Art’: Vie et oeuvre de Carlo Farina (a...
Carlo Farina's 1627 Capriccio Stravagante uses four violin-family instruments (violin, two violas, a...
WHAT WAS MUSICAL LIFE at German courts really like during the first six decades of the eighteenth ce...
The paper focuses on the relationship between the Viennese music collector Franz Sales Kandler (1792...
This book gives a survey of the career of the Renaissance antiquary Jacopo Strada (Mantua 1515- Vie...
This project attempts to describe and elucidate the compositional and instrumental character of the ...
In this dissertation, I study the development of the violinist's idiom through the solo violin sonat...
In the Baroque era, the violino piccolo was the highest and smallest member of the violin family. Cl...
In 1817, at the height of his career, Paganini was invited to play in Vienna. This invitation was co...
The Berlin Hofkomponist Johann Friedrich Agricola (1720–1774) is today still perhaps best known as a...
In this article I study the origins and diffusion of the musical chapels in fifteenth and sixeenth-c...
Adam von Fulda, German musician, composer and teacher, completed his important treatise on music in...
Italian manuscripts of polyphony copied before 1450 primarily contain texted pieces, while those cop...
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Sebastian Virdung\u27s Musica getutscht (Basel, 1511), the earliest printed treatise to deal exclusi...