RT info:eu-repo/semantics/other T1 Can Heteroclito Giancarli change the world? A1 Griffiths, John A2 Universidad de Valladolid. Facultad de Filosofía y Letras K1 Música K1 Vihuela K1 Ópera K1 Renacimiento K1 Heteroclito Giancarli K1 Canción K1 Musicología AB Less familiar to contemporary musicologists than Benjamin Button, Heteroclito Giancarli might be poised to do more for music than Benjamin Button did for the science of ageing. A Venetian patrician, amateur singer and author of a collection of Compositione musicali published in 1602,  Heteroclito Giancarli might be just the man to unsettle one of the pivotal foundation stones of Western musical culture concerning the genesis of opera. He is the tip of an iceberg that offers an alternate history to the modern myth starring Florentine nobleman Giovanni Bardi and his Camerata of monody co-conspirators, Girolamo Mei, Vincenzo Galilei and Jacopo Peri. Instead, the Giancarli story tells of a hundred years of singing to the lute, of a much more realistic and subtle development and reshaping of existing practices, and of Baroque styles that grew from renaissance traditions rather than as reaction against them. It therefore questions whether it was really the Bardi Laboratories that killed off polyphony in order to reinvent monody, and that acted to enable the Ancient World to triumph over Modernity. My research suggests a less theatrical scenario that recognises the presence of singer-songwriters throughout the sixteenth century, musicians usually omitted from general histories of sixteenth-century music, and suggests a series of continuities that link Giulio Caccini and other early baroque monodists to the lutenist songsters who flourished throughout the sixteenth century.  YR 2016 FD 2016 LK http://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/25939 UL http://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/25939 LA eng NO Departamento de Musicología DS UVaDOC RD 25-abr-2024