Compositional Artifice in the Music of Henry Purcell (Musical Performance and Reception)
Cambridge University Press, 10/17/2019
EAN 9781107006669, ISBN10: 110700666X
Hardcover, 312 pages, 25.4 x 19 x 1.9 cm
Language: English
Fugal invention has proved a successful line of analytical inquiry in recent studies of repertoires from Josquin to J. S. Bach. Alan Howard brings similar insights to the music of Henry Purcell, and proposes the first analytical approach to his music to examine compositional methods alongside historically contemporary theory, focusing particularly on Purcell's 'artificial' approach to imitative counterpoint. Through this methodology Howard challenges previous responses to Purcell's music that portrayed him as fundamentally conservative. This study offers fresh insights into the musical world in which Purcell lived and worked and situates Purcell's compositional concerns in the broader context of notions of artifice in Restoration culture. Howard thereby offers both a fresh analytical approach - to Purcell's early instrumental works and to his later concerted vocal music - and a critique of the reception history surrounding the fantazias and sonatas in particular.
Introduction
Part I. Purcell's 'Art of Descant'
1. In counterpoint
sources and analysis
2. Artifice, Fugeing and fantazia
3. 'The chiefest instrumental musick now in request'
canzonas and other sonata fugues
4. 'The power of the Italian notes'
Purcell's sonatas as and in reception
Part II. 'Thou Didst Thy Former Skill Improve'
5. 'Celestial art[ifice]' in Hail, bright Cecilia
6. Artifice and musical modelling
7. Augmentation as artifice, artifice as augmentation
8. 'Italian sonatas in orchestral garb'.