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<title>Making Musical Works in Renaissance Spain</title>
<creator>Aguirre Rincón, María Soterraña</creator>
<creator>Griffiths, John</creator>
<creator>Gutiérrez Cajaraville, Carlos</creator>
<creator>López Suero, Ana</creator>
<creator>Fiorentino, Giuseppe</creator>
<creator>Ramos López, Pilar</creator>
<creator>Gómez del Sol, Manuel</creator>
<creator>García Pérez, Amaya Sara</creator>
<creator>Andrés Fernández, David</creator>
<creator>Cruz Rodríguez, Javier</creator>
<creator>Ruiz Albi, Irene</creator>
<contributor>Aguirre Rincón, María Soterraña</contributor>
<contributor>Griffiths, John</contributor>
<subject>Musicología</subject>
<description>Producción Científica</description>
<description>Why is it that Renaissance musicians (in Spain in this case) could identify&#xd;
as the same work compositions that today might be seen as different?&#xd;
Wherein was the commonality? Current ontologies of music, deeply&#xd;
rooted in modern theories and aesthetics revolve around the notion of&#xd;
musical masterpieces that exist as static monuments of musical art. Not&#xd;
only inadequate from a historical point of view, such a conceptualisation&#xd;
impacts heavily on the way we perform music, how we study it and how&#xd;
we think about it today.&#xd;
Scholars such as Treitler and Strohm have proposed substituting composition&#xd;
over practice to highlight the act of performance over prior creation&#xd;
as a way of shifting the focus in the development of contemporary historiography.&#xd;
In parallel with recent studies on contrapuntal improvisation&#xd;
they have stressed the need to incorporate oral traditions within music&#xd;
history and to stimulate reconsideration conceptualisation of “making&#xd;
musical works” in the Renaissance, and the very nature of the works themselves.&#xd;
Starting with the notion of the Renaissance “musical work” as a group of&#xd;
fluid, dynamic multiplicities, this book explores varied approaches to the&#xd;
“musical work.” It includes lexicological analyses of Renaissance musical&#xd;
terminology, source studies that identify the changing practices and identities&#xd;
of specific works, and broader questions such as interrelationships&#xd;
between music, architecture and rhetoric, o between space and work. The&#xd;
book is further enriched by a study of the 15,000 musical works that resided&#xd;
in the library of Ferdinand Columbus, that survive as indices, never&#xd;
studied or published.</description>
<date>2020-03-08</date>
<date>2020-03-08</date>
<date>2020</date>
<type>info:eu-repo/semantics/book</type>
<identifier>http://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/40582</identifier>
<language>spa</language>
<rights>info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess</rights>
<rights>http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/</rights>
<rights>CC0 1.0 Universal</rights>
</thesis></metadata></record></GetRecord></OAI-PMH>