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Chapter 14 – Renaissance Composers, Events, and Representative Compositions SOME IMPORTANT RENAISSANCE COMPOSERS Giovanni Perluigi da Palestrina (1525? - 1594) Like many people from this era, Palestrina's last name comes from his birthplace (Palestrina), a town southeast of Rome. He began performing as a musician in his early teens. By his mid-20s, he was choirmaster at Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome. Illustration 1: Angelico/Lippi, "The Adoration of the Magi" ca 1460

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Page 1: Chapter 14 – Renaissance Composers, Events, and ...claver.gprep.org/fac/gldaum/_music_/new_history_text/...Palestrina composed over 100 masses and hundreds of other compositions,

Chapter 14 – Renaissance Composers,Events, and Representative Compositions

SOME IMPORTANT RENAISSANCE COMPOSERS

Giovanni Perluigi da Palestrina (1525? - 1594)

Like many people from this era, Palestrina's last name comes from his birthplace (Palestrina), a town southeast of Rome. He began performing as a musician in his early teens. By his mid-20s, he was choirmaster at Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome.

Illustration 1: Angelico/Lippi, "The Adoration of the Magi" ca1460

Page 2: Chapter 14 – Renaissance Composers, Events, and ...claver.gprep.org/fac/gldaum/_music_/new_history_text/...Palestrina composed over 100 masses and hundreds of other compositions,

Palestrina composed over 100 masses and hundreds of other compositions, becoming quite famous during his lifetime. While Palestrina is not purely an example of "tonal harmony", he was very clearly conscious of the power of consonance and dissonance in music and created his own stylized set of rules in his compositions. His distinctive use ofpolyphony was studied (and is still used as the most perfect example of Renaissance counterpoint in compositional studies).

During the era of the Counter Reformation, polyphony had become so complex and showy that the Pope considered banning music from church. For many years it was believed that his Missa Papae Marcelli (Pope Marcellus Mass) persuaded the Pope fromsuch a ban, but historians have discounted this. Nevertheless, it is a beautiful enough composition to probably have accomplished this.

In spite of being an acclaimed composer, Palestrina nearly stopped composing because his music position didn’t pay enough for him to live on. Fortunately for posterity, he married a wealthy widow and was able to continue composing.

Palestrina's music heavily influenced later musicians including J. S. Bach.

Giovanni Gabrieli (1551? - 1612)

Gabrieli was probably born in Venice, Italy. By his mid 30s, he became organist at Saint Mark's Basilica in his home city, a prestigious post he held for the rest of his life.

Gabrieli became quite well known in Venice and as composers from other parts of Europe visited Venice, they took some of his practices back with them.

He was known for a very elaborate polychoral style--probably owing in part to the fact that Saint Mark had multiple choir lofts. Gabrieli can almost be considered to be the firstperson to compose in stereo (or even quadraphonic!) because of the interaction of the musical parts written for the musicians in different parts of the church.

Gabrieli composed much choral music and a great deal of instrumental music, including the Sonata Pian e Forte, which was long believed to be the first piece of music to use dynamics (at the moment, it is believed to be the second).

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Josquin DesPres (ca. 1450 -- 1521)

Josquin (as he is often known) wrote many works, both sacred and secular and highly admired by his contemporaries and later musicians. He was born near the border of Belgium and France and spent much of his creative career in France. He composed in allof the common forms of the time, both instrumental and vocal music. He had command of a wide variety of compositional styles and his music contains many different types of compositional devices. His reputation was so great that publishers sometimes put his name on someone else's music to generate more sales. Because of this, modern scholars have difficulty sorting through the music attributed to him

Josquin also composed what are known as parody masses--a setting of a mass that was based on another piece of music, often a secular one. To someone living today, when we hear the word parody we tend to think of satire and ridicule. That was far from the case in the 15th century--using another piece of music was considered a high tribute and was done with seriousness and respect. Some of the tunes he used as part of his masses were even somewhat off-color, but it certainly didn't seem to bother the musicians of the era.

Josquin is considered the first great composer of the Renaissance. Like Palestrina, his music was highly praised and studied after his death. It is believed that he is one of the many people who carved graffiti (specifically his name) into the walls of the Sistene chapel--a tradition for musicians who performed there.

Thomas Morley (ca 1557 - 1602)

Morley was one of the most famous English composers of the Renaissace. His madrigalsare considered by many to be the best of the genre. He composed a great deal of sacred music, but he is best known for his secular music, both vocal and instrumental, includingkeyboard music.

Some of the madrigals were printed with the separate parts on a page facing different directions to allow one copy of the music to work for four people sitting around a table.

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While historians have not proven connections, he may well have had associations with William Shakespeare, being one of the few contemporaries of Shakespeare to set his music.

Morley also functioned as an editor in the collection of madrigals entitled "The Triumphs of Oriana". Oriana was a nickname for Queen Elizabeth and each of the madrigals in the collection include the phrase "Long live fair Oriana."

You might want to note that we have seen some major changes from the composers and music of the Medieval Era. Several of the above biographies note that the composers became quite famous during their lifetimes. Yet--if we were to dig a little deeper into biographies we find that fame and wealth don't yet go together. Palestrina, a very revered musician during his lifetime could barely afford to live on his salary working forthe most important church figures of the era. Only the fact that he married a wealthy widow allowed him to compose later in his life.

There were no copyright laws, no lawsuits over intellectual property. In general, posterity was not yet an important factor in the lives of musicians. Surely some of them

Illustration 2: Table of Contents and first page of "April is in myMistress' Face" by Thomas Morley

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were probably becoming aware of the fact that their music might be studied by musicians after they had died (Giovani Gabrieli spent a lot of time editing manuscripts of his deceased uncle Andrea, another famous composer of the time) as they likely had studied the works of older masters in their education. Music was still mostly composed for specific occasions and the composer was expected to dutifully crank out more music for the next occasion.

While we are inching toward it, the potential of music (even printed music) as a marketable commodity was still far off in the distance. When the ability to mass producesounds of individual performances was developed, things would change very rapidly anddrastically for musicians.

SOME IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE RENAISSANCE

Invention of movable type Reformation Counter-Reformation Founding of Jesuit Order Vesalius' studies on anatomy Copernican view of the solar system Shakespeare's dramas Exploration of the "New World" Magellan Circumnavigates Globe "Utopia" by More Astronomical discoveries of Galileo

REPRESENTATIVE MUSIC OF THE RENAISSANCE

English Madrigals -- Morley, Gibbons, Weelkes, etc.Polychoral and Brass music -- Gabrieli, Schutz, etc.Missa Brevis -- PalestrinaMissa de Beata Virgine -- Josquin des PresMotets -- Dufay

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Italian Madrigals -- Gesualdo, Marenzio, Monteverdi

Material copyright 2016 by Gary Daum, all rights reserved. All photos and illustrations by Gary Daum unless otherwise

noted. Unlimited use granted to current members of the Georgetown Prep community.

Illustration 3: What a difference a century makes! Note the difference in handling the sense of depthbetween the Veneziano painting (on the left) from 1340 and the Pesselino painting (on the right) from

1450