In the second half of the sixteenth century, the European market for printed music had largely consolidated. Printing music had become a business with calculable risks, and in cities like Venice, Antwerp, Paris, or Nuremberg, printers produced music books for regional and international markets alike. For composers, publishing their works in print was not only a matter of prestige but also a source of additional income. A direct consequence of the success of music printing was the control of music publishing by the political authorities, for example through printing privileges or by restricting the publication of certain works (musica reservata). The musicians at Rudolf II's imperial court participated extensively in the European music busi...
During Purcell's lifetime the music-publishing business in England flourished, thanks mainly to John...
Georg Rhau, one of key figures of music printing and publishing in Wittenberg and Reformation German...
This chapter focusses on the relationship between London’s composers and publishers from c.1770 to 1...
The reign of Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II traversed a critical time in musical history, the transiti...
The first century of music printing in Germany had its own internal dynamics, affected by political ...
Printing was first established in Mainz, the seat of the archbishop who was the most important of th...
The culturological project officially titled as Die Österreichisch-Ungarische Monarchie in Wort und ...
This paper attempts to prove that Venice was the main geographical center of music printing and publ...
In this article I study the origins and diffusion of the musical chapels in fifteenth and sixeenth-c...
of the Dissertation The Musical Entourage of Rudolf II (1576-1612) reconstructed from the Imperial A...
Ottaviano Petrucci published his first book of music, the Odhecaton A, sometime in the summer of 150...
Music printing in the Iberian Peninsula has been little studied and rarely has this specialized aspe...
The history of music printing and publishing has generally formed a self-contained area of research ...
In June 1695, Maria Elisabeth Kusser offered the Duke of Württemberg her late husband's music collec...
Presenting the most comprehensive account of official print in the Holy Roman Empire during the sixt...
During Purcell's lifetime the music-publishing business in England flourished, thanks mainly to John...
Georg Rhau, one of key figures of music printing and publishing in Wittenberg and Reformation German...
This chapter focusses on the relationship between London’s composers and publishers from c.1770 to 1...
The reign of Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II traversed a critical time in musical history, the transiti...
The first century of music printing in Germany had its own internal dynamics, affected by political ...
Printing was first established in Mainz, the seat of the archbishop who was the most important of th...
The culturological project officially titled as Die Österreichisch-Ungarische Monarchie in Wort und ...
This paper attempts to prove that Venice was the main geographical center of music printing and publ...
In this article I study the origins and diffusion of the musical chapels in fifteenth and sixeenth-c...
of the Dissertation The Musical Entourage of Rudolf II (1576-1612) reconstructed from the Imperial A...
Ottaviano Petrucci published his first book of music, the Odhecaton A, sometime in the summer of 150...
Music printing in the Iberian Peninsula has been little studied and rarely has this specialized aspe...
The history of music printing and publishing has generally formed a self-contained area of research ...
In June 1695, Maria Elisabeth Kusser offered the Duke of Württemberg her late husband's music collec...
Presenting the most comprehensive account of official print in the Holy Roman Empire during the sixt...
During Purcell's lifetime the music-publishing business in England flourished, thanks mainly to John...
Georg Rhau, one of key figures of music printing and publishing in Wittenberg and Reformation German...
This chapter focusses on the relationship between London’s composers and publishers from c.1770 to 1...