-
Partitions
- Accordeon
- Alto
- Banjo
- Basson
- Carillon
- Chansons pour les enfants
- Chant classique
- Choeur
- Choeur et orchestre
- Clarinette
- Clavecin
- Contrebasse
- Cor
- Directiepartituren
- Ensemble
- Ethnic instruments
- Etnische tokkelinstr.
- Flûte à bec
- Flûte et piccolo
- Guitare
- Guitare basse
- Guitare électrique
- Hafabra
- Harmonica
- Harmonium
- Hautbois et cor anglais
- Herpe
- Jazz et improvisation
- Kamermuziek gemengd
- Keyboard
- Luth
- Mandoline et mandole
-
Musique de chambre
- Fluit en gitaar
- Historical instruments with strings
- Instruments historiques à vent
- Kamermuziek blazers
- Kamermuziek blazers (diverse zonder piano)
- Kamermuziek blazers met piano
- Kamermuziek houtblaaskwintet
- Kamermuziek koopjes
- Kamermuziek koperkwintet
- Kamermuziek strijkers (zonder piano)
- Kamermuziek strijkers met piano
- Kamermuziek strijkkwartet
- Various ensembles without piano
- Various ensembles with piano
- Musique du monde
- Musique pop
- Opéra
- Orchestre
- Orgue
- Orgue electronique
- Percussion
- Piano
- Real books
- Saxophone
- Shows et films
- Songbooks
- Trombone et trombone basse
- Trompette
- Tuba et euphonium
- Ukulélé
- Violon
- Violoncelle
- Solfège et théorie de la musique
-
Livres sur la musique
- Compositeurs
- Esthétique musicale, philosophie
- Facsimilés
- Histoire de la musique
- Instruments
- Koopjes
- Literature- livres audio
- Littérature – fiction
- Littérature – non-ficton
- Livres pour enfants
- Musiciens
- Musicologie
- Musicothérapie
- Musique et culture
- Notation musicale
- Pédagogie
- Pratique de la performance
- Styles de musique
- Technique musicale et électronique
-
Accessoires
- Accessoires alto
- Accessoires basson
- Accessoires clarinette
- Accessoires contrebasse
- Accessoires cor
- Accessoires flûte
- Accessoires flûte à bec
- Accessoires guitare
- Accessoires hautbois
- Accessoires mandoline
- Accessoires piano
- Accessoires saxophone
- Accessoires trombone
- Accessoires trompette
- Accessoires violon
- Accessoires violoncelle
- Anches pour clarinette
- Anches pour saxophone
- Baguettes de direction
- Cordes pour alto
- Cordes pour banjo
- Cordes pour contrebasse
- Cordes pour guitare
- Cordes pour guitare basse
- Cordes pour guitare electrique
- Cordes pour mandoline
- Cordes pour ukelélé
- Cordes pour violon
- Cordes pour violoncelle
- Eclairage
- Métronomes et accordeurs
- Protection auditive
- Pupitres
- Software
- Cadeaux et papeterie
Heinrich Isaac and Polyphony for the proper mass
- Auteur/Compositeur
- David J. Burn
Stefan Gasch - Éditeur
- BREPOLS PUBLISHERS
- Article
- Livre
The important contribution of Heinrich Isaac (ca. 1455–1517) to polyphonic settings of the proper of the mass has long been recognised. The monumental posthumously published collection of his work in the genre, the Choralis Constantinus, was considered as a landmark even in the sixteenth century. Isaac’s striking cultivation of polyphonic mass proper settings has its roots in his task, as Hofcomponist to Emperor Maximilian I, of building a musical repertoire for the Imperial court chapel. The repertoire he created awakened a demand for analogous music at other European courts and institutions and led, in 1508, to the commissioning of an extraordinary series of proper cycles from him by the authorities of Constance cathedral. The 500th anniversary, in 2009, of Isaac’s delivery of these mass proper settings was the immediate stimulus for an international conference devoted to mass propers—the first of its kind, to the best of our knowledge. Earlier versions of most of the papers gathered in the present volume were first presented in that context.
Although Isaac’s mass propers have long been the object of various kinds of research, many aspects of the Choralis collection remain enigmatic. One major aim of the conference, and of the present book, was thus to present new research on at least some of these Isaac-related issues. It has been clear since Gerhard-Rudolf Pätzig’s groundbreaking dissertation of 1956 that the printed Choralis contains settings for both Constance and the court of Emperor Maximilian I. However, exactly which works within it were composed for which recipients is still the subject of debate, and, as David Rothenberg shows, open to new hypotheses. Equally perplexing is the way by which this vast amount of music, of diverse origin, was collected and sent to the printing press. As Royston Gustavson shows, the production process behind the Choralis was anything but smooth. Indeed, the fact that it was produced despite the many hurdles that stood in its way is indicative in itself of the importance (and the marketability) of Isaac’s settings long after the composer’s death.