This article investigates Niccolò Zingarelli's method of text-setting, as documented in Giovanni Battista De Vecchis's Compendio of Neapolitan teachings (1850). It contextualizes De Vecchis's instructions by tracing the genealogy of the concept of 'accent' as understood by early nineteenth-century composers through successive reinterpretations of an Italian theory of qualitative rhythmopoeia established in the sixteenth century, which accounted for rhythm, metre, and pitch through a threefold division of accent. The article explores its origins, its treatment by Zarlino, its significance in writings by nineteenth-century Italian musicians, and the confusing alternative terminology circulated by Rousseau (1768). The Neapolitan doctrine of te...
This article analyses the Italian popular song between the 30s and the 90s of the past century, with...
This paper deals with the tuning question as it is discussed in Gioseffo Zarlino’s principal musical...
The Convito Musicale, perhaps more than any other of Orazio Vecchi's works, expresses the fullness o...
Two important studies have approached these same issues through empirical examination of the ottocen...
Music in the early seventeenth century is marked by important stylistic changes. The co-existence o...
It has acquired the status of a myth: how Italy, land of song, in a process beginning sometime in th...
When dealing with the difficult issue of determining when and where partimenti came into use, I conj...
The article is the result of some researches about the ideas on the operatic reform appeared in Ital...
The article deals with the text-music relationship in the Italian Trecento focusing on the case of t...
The article deals with the text-music relationship in the Italian Trecento focusing on the case of t...
Considers Conforti\u27s treatise Breve et facile maniera d\u27essercitarsi... (1593) and his Salmi p...
This article offers some remarks concerning the Roman musical milieu – with special attention to the...
Points out the novelty and relevance of the so-called "schemata" theory and of its several branches ...
Nicola Vicentino’s treatise L’antica musica ridotta alla moderna prattica (1555), from here on L’ant...
The partimento was a hand-written leaflet that taught eighteenth-century Italian musicians how to co...
This article analyses the Italian popular song between the 30s and the 90s of the past century, with...
This paper deals with the tuning question as it is discussed in Gioseffo Zarlino’s principal musical...
The Convito Musicale, perhaps more than any other of Orazio Vecchi's works, expresses the fullness o...
Two important studies have approached these same issues through empirical examination of the ottocen...
Music in the early seventeenth century is marked by important stylistic changes. The co-existence o...
It has acquired the status of a myth: how Italy, land of song, in a process beginning sometime in th...
When dealing with the difficult issue of determining when and where partimenti came into use, I conj...
The article is the result of some researches about the ideas on the operatic reform appeared in Ital...
The article deals with the text-music relationship in the Italian Trecento focusing on the case of t...
The article deals with the text-music relationship in the Italian Trecento focusing on the case of t...
Considers Conforti\u27s treatise Breve et facile maniera d\u27essercitarsi... (1593) and his Salmi p...
This article offers some remarks concerning the Roman musical milieu – with special attention to the...
Points out the novelty and relevance of the so-called "schemata" theory and of its several branches ...
Nicola Vicentino’s treatise L’antica musica ridotta alla moderna prattica (1555), from here on L’ant...
The partimento was a hand-written leaflet that taught eighteenth-century Italian musicians how to co...
This article analyses the Italian popular song between the 30s and the 90s of the past century, with...
This paper deals with the tuning question as it is discussed in Gioseffo Zarlino’s principal musical...
The Convito Musicale, perhaps more than any other of Orazio Vecchi's works, expresses the fullness o...