From Improvisation To Composition Three PDF
From Improvisation To Composition Three PDF
From Improvisation To Composition Three PDF
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This eleventh publication in the series
“Collected Writings of the Orpheus Institute”
is edited by Dirk Moelants
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TOWARDS
IMPROVISING
TONALITY
EARLY MUSIC
Aspects
The History of Baroque
of Musical Improvisation
Music
from the LateTheory
Middle Ages
to the Early Baroque
Thomas Christensen
Penelope Gouk
Gérard Geay
Rob C. McClary
Susan Wegman
Johannes
Markus Menke
Jans
JoelSchubert
Peter Lester
Marc Vanscheeuwijck
ORPHEUS
INSTITUTE
L e u ve n U n ive r s i t y P r e s s
2014
2007
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CONTENTS
preface / p. 7
— Rob C. Wegman
What is counterpoint? / p. 9
— Johannes Menke
“Ex centro” improvisation - Sketches for a theory of sound
progressions in the early baroque / p. 69
— Peter Schubert
From improvisation to composition: three 16th century
case studies / p. 93
personalia / p. 131
colophon / p. 135
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From Improvisation to Composition
Peter Schubert
Having learned these types [of interval] and the method, here is how
we ought to use them: The boy provides himself with a slate on which
one may write and erase; he takes a Tenor from plainchant and at first
writes note against note, using these types. Whenever he has gotten
used to making note against note by improvisation and has become
practiced in it, then he can go on to florid counterpoint. In this, when
he has become trained, he will put aside the slate and learn to sing in
improvising on a plainchant or on figured music printed in a book or
copied on a sheet of paper.2
1. A version of this paper was presented at the Orpheus Institute in Ghent on April 7
& 9, 2009, including demonstrations of improvised counterpoint using contraponto
fugato, three parts with two in parallel tenths, two parts invertible at the twelfth, and
three parts in stretto fuga. The author wishes to thank his co-improvisers Catherine
Motuz and Steven Vande Moortele, as well as Julie Cumming, Rodolfo Moreno,
Jane Hatter, Marta Albala, Jacob Sagrans, Duncan Schouten, and Alison Laywine
for their advice and assistance.
2. Adrianus Petit Coclico, Compendium musices (Nuremberg: Montanus and Neuber,
1552; facs. Kassel: Bärenreiter, 1954), trans. Albert Seay as Musical Compendium
(Colorado Springs: Colorado College Music Press, 1973), 22-23. Another author who
proposes writing as a means of learning improvisation is Hothby. See Benjamin Brand,
“A Medieval Scholasticus and Renaissance Choirmaster: A Portrait of John Hothby at
Lucca,” Renaissance Quarterly lxii/3 (2010): 754-806. Hothby says “…by composing you
will learn how to sing discant, which is what you want to know at present…” p. 783.
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3. Among more recent studies, see Anna Maria Busse Berger and Massimiliano Rossi,
ed., Memory and Invention: Medieval and Renaissance Literature, Art and Music (Florence:
Leo S. Olschki, 2009); Anna Maria Busse Berger, “The Problem of Diminished
Counterpoint,” in Uno gentile et subtile ingenio: Studies in Renaissance Music in Honour
of Bonnie J. Blackburn, ed. Gioa Filocamo and M. Jennifer Bloxam (Turnhout:
Brepols, 2009), 13-27; Ross Duffin, “Contrapunctus Simplex et Diminutus: Polyphonic
Improvisation for Voices in the Fifteenth Century,” Basler Jahrbuch für historische
Musikpraxis (2007): 73-94; Tim Carter, “‘Improvised’ Counterpoint in Monteverdi’s
1610 Vespers,” in Uno gentile et subtile ingenio: Studies in Renaissance Music in Honour of
Bonnie J. Blackburn Blackburn, ed. Gioa Filocamo and M. Jennifer Bloxam (Turnhout:
Brepols, 2009), 29-35; Jane Flynn, “The education of choristers in England during the
sixteenth century,” in English choral practice c.1400–c.1650: A memorial volume to Peter
Le Huray, John Morehen, ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), 180-199;
Timothy McGee, “Cantare all’improvviso: Improvising to poetry in late Medieval Italy,”
in Improvisation in the arts of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, Timothy McGee, ed.
(Kalamazoo: Western Michigan University, 2003), 31-70; Klaus-Jürgen Sachs, “Arten
improvisierter Mehrstimmigkeit nach Lehrtexten des 14. bis 16. Jahrhunderts,” Basler
Jahrbuch für historische Musikpraxis 7 (1983): 166-183; Richard Sherr, “The Singers of
the Papal Chapel and Liturgical Ceremonies in the Early Sixteenth Century: Some
Documentary Evidence,” in Rome in the Renaissance, the City and Myth, ed. P.A. Ramsey,
Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies 18 (Binghamton, NY: 1982), 249-264.
4. See P. Canguilhem, Chanter sur le livre à la Renaissance: Les traités de contrepoint
de Vicente Lusitano (Turnhout: Brepols, 2013).
5. Folker Froebe, “Satzmodelle des Contrapunto alla mente und ihre Bedeutung für
den Stilwandel um 1600,” Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft für Musiktheorie 4 (2007): 13-55.
http://www.gmth.de/zeitschrift/artikel/244.aspx
6. Barnabé Janin, Chanter sur le livre, Manuel pratique d’improvisation polyphonique
de la Renaissance, (Langres: Dominique Guéniot, 2012).
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From Improvisation to Composition
bird’s-eye view of these techniques and shown that the very term
“counterpoint” referred to improvisation.7
In Part I of this essay, I will attempt a comprehensive list of
what could be improvised and look closely at four techniques
that show up often in repertoire; in Part II, I will elaborate the
distinction between improvisation and composition as it appears
in three treatises.
I will show that singers could improvise more sophisticated
structures than we expect (even Zarlino is amazed at the ex tem-
pore skills he describes), and contrast these skills with what seems
to be implied by the word “composition.” Drawing primarily on
the writings of Coclico, Pontio, and Morley, I will demonstrate
how Renaissance musicians in the second half of the sixteenth
century may have improvised, how they conceived the difference
between improvisation and composition, and how our knowl-
edge of improvised practices can affect our conception of compo-
sitional process. One of the most interesting by-products of this
study is that melodic material, the theme, both determines and
is determined by the use to which it will be put—i.e., how the
melody influences a contrapuntal inventio before it is deployed
formally (in the phase of dispositio).8
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1.
WHAT COULD BE IMPROVISED?
Two-Part Improvisation
1. Adding a single line to a CF in even note values or in mixed
note values
a. in note-against-note texture (includes gymel)
b. in mixed values or in species
c. with a fresh repeating motive (contraponto fugato) or
with a repeating motive derived from the chant (ad imi-
tatione), or with the motive inverted
d. any of the above that makes an invertible combination
(includes “mirror” inversion)
2. Singing or playing in two-part stretto fuga
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C ontrapunto F ugato
9. This list may profitably be compared to the “Twenty Tests for Applicants for the
Post of Choirmaster at Toledo Cathedral in 1604,” reprinted in Philippe Canguilhem
“Singing upon the book according to Vicente Lusitano,” Early Music History 30
(2011): 102-103. See discussions of fauxbourdon, gymel and parallel sixths and par-
allel tenths by Johannes Menke in this volume. See also Markus Jans “Alle gegen
Eine: Satzmodelle in Note-gegen-Note-Sätzen des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts,” Basler
Jahrbuch für historische Musikpraxis 10 (1986): 101-120 and Peter Schubert, Modal
Counterpoint, Renaissance Style, 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2008),
192-194. Adding a line to a duo has not been discussed in recent research, and it is
difficult to imagine how this was done: was the piece scored up, or did the impro-
viser look at two separate parts?
10. The Ortiz ricercars are excellent examples of the technique (see Peter Schubert,
Modal Counterpoint, Renaissance Style, 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press,
2008), ex. 9-15), with long segments repeated in the added voice. Lusitano recom-
mends a kind of ABA form using the repeating motive. See Henri Collet, ed., Un
tratado de canto de organo (siglo XV): Manuscrito en la Biblioteca Nacional de Paris
(Ph.D. diss., Université de Paris, 1913), p. 76 and ex. 50. For more on Lusitano,
see Philippe Canguilhem, “Singing upon the Book According to Vicente Lusitano,”
Early Music History 30 (2011): 55-103.
11. Peter Schubert, “Counterpoint pedagogy in the Renaissance,” in The Cambridge
history of Western music theory, ed. Thomas Christensen (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2002), 510-514.
12. Peter Schubert, Modal Counterpoint, Renaissance Style, 2nd ed. (New York:
Oxford University Press, 2008), chs. 8 and 9, and appendix 4.
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13. Adriano Banchieri, Cartella musicale (Venice: G. Vincenti, 1614; facs. Bologna:
Forni, 1983), 67.
14. Peter Schubert, Modal Counterpoint, Renaissance Style, 2nd ed. (New York:
Oxford University Press, 2008), 115-116.
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From Improvisation to Composition
15. Peter Schubert, “Composing Without a Score ca. 1600” (paper presented at the
annual meeting of the Society for Music Theory, Atlanta, GA, November 13, 1999).
In a recent workshop on improvisation, students were taught only one motive at first,
and encouraged to place it only against stepwise motions of the CF. However, they
had to know what note they were singing and what interval above the CF was sound-
ing in order to know if the motive could be placed over a given step, both of which are
challenging to present-day singers. From these humble beginnings quite respectable
counterpoints grew (www.mentemani.org/Connection/Phase_Two.html).
16. The example, from Li introiti fondati sopra il canto fermo del basso by Hippolito
Chamaterò di Negri (Venice: l’herede di Girolamo Scotto, 1574) is transcribed by
Rob C. Wegman in “What is Counterpoint?,” this volume.
17. Motives #1 and #2 both begin “fa-mi” as the CF does, and so are both examples
of contraponto ad imitatione.
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° 4
2 1
j
CANTVS &4 ∑ ˙ œ œ œ œ œ œ™ œœœ œ ˙ œ œ ˙ œ ˙ Ó Œ œ œ œ
œ œœ œœ˙
2
4 ˙ œ œœœœœ
&4 ∑ ∑ ∑ ∑ œ
‹
ALTVS
QVINTVS & 4
4 ∑ Œ ˙ œ œ œ œ œ œ œ œ œ™ œJ œ œ ˙ Œ œ œ œ ˙ Œ ˙ œ
‹ 1 1
4 ˙ œ œ™ j
TENOR & 4 Œ œœœ œ ˙ œ œ™ œj œ œ œ
œ œœœ œœœœ œ œ ˙
‹ œ œ ˙
?4 ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙
¢ 4
BASSVS
˙
Et ad - huc te - cum sum. Al -
° œbœ
8
œ œ œ œ œ œ œbœ ˙ œ™
& œ œœ˙ œ ˙ ˙ ˙ œ œ œœ œœœ
˙ œ œœ œœœ œ œ œ œ
3
& ˙ Œ œ œ œœœœ œ ˙ ˙ œ œœ
‹ 3
° œ œ œ ™ œj œ ˙
14 4
œ œ ˙ œ Œ œ œ œ œ b˙
& œ ˙ œ œ ˙ ˙ ˙ œ
œœ˙ œ™ œ œ ˙
4
œ ˙ œ ˙ œ™ œ œ œ ˙ œ œ œ œœœœ ˙
& J Ó Œ J
‹
œ œ œ œœ˙ #œ œ™ œ œ œ œ œ œ œ ™ œ œ™
4 4
& œ ˙ œ œ J œ ˙ Ó œ œ
J œ
‹
J
4
˙ œ œ œœœ œ œ œ ˙
& Œ ˙ œœ œ œ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ œ œ™
‹ G
? ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙
¢
˙
- su - - i - sti su - per - - me
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From Improvisation to Composition
18. Pietro Pontio, Ragionamento di musica (Parma: E. Viotto, 1588; facs. Kassel:
Bärenreiter, 1959), III, 89, has a list of features of counterpoint that doesn’t mention rests
(cf. infra). He allows rests in a counterpoint when satisfying an obligation like canon
(III, 91-92), and explicitly allows rests in a duo as distinct from a counterpoint (III, 93).
19. Morley, annotations “Upon the Second part,” quoted in Ross Duffin,
“Contrapunctus Simplex et Diminutus: Polyphonic Improvisation for Voices in the
Fifteenth Century,” Basler Jahrbuch für historische Musikpraxis (2007): 76-77.
20. “En la extremada capilla del reverendiβimo arçobispo de Toledo, Fonseca de
buena memoria vi tan diestros cantores echar contrapunto, que si se puntara: se
vendiera por buena composición.” Juan Bermudo, Comiença el libro llamado declara-
ción de instrumentos musicales (Seville: J. de Leòn, 1555; facs. Kassel: Bärenreiter,
1957), ch. 16, fol. cxxviij.
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Invertible Counterpoint
21. Ross Duffin posits that when one singer goes below the CF, it is that singer who
“controls the direction of the overall counterpoint…” (Ross Duffin, “Contrapunctus
Simplex et Diminutus: Polyphonic Improvisation for Voices in the Fifteenth
Century,” Basler Jahrbuch für historische Musikpraxis (2007): 90.), although he does
not mention hand gestures as a way of showing the exact interval below the tenor to
which the bass singer is about to move, which is crucial to the other singers.
22. See Peter Schubert, “Counterpoint pedagogy in the Renaissance,” in The
Cambridge history of Western music theory, ed. Thomas Christensen (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2002), 514-517 for citations and a discussion.
23. Julie Cumming has suggested, in conversation with the author, the pairs of
strophes in hymns. A keyboard example is shown in Peter Schubert, Modal
Counterpoint, Renaissance Style, 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2008),
ex. 13-8a, where each half versicle is sounded twice, once with the counterpoint
above the CF, once below.
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From Improvisation to Composition
notes will each singer start, how far will each part be transposed?
This problem might have been addressed historically by the ten-
orist, who might have functioned as the traffic cop for whoever
was improvising.24 At the Orpheus Academy the problem was
solved by a discussion beforehand, in which it was agreed that
the singer of the CF in the original would sing the improvised
line an octave higher in the replica, while the singer of the low
part would sing the CF a fifth below its original position, i.e., a
fourth above his last note. (The CF is a soggetto cavato based on
the vowels of an Italian dish suggested by a member of the audi-
ence: “rigatoni” = mi fa sol mi, plus a cadence, fa mi).
24. Rob C. Wegman has investigated the reasons for the importance of the tenorist
in “From Maker to Composer: Improvisation and Musical Authorship in the Low
Countries, 1450-1500,” Journal of the American Musicological Society 49/3 (1996): 444-449.
25. The author is grateful to Joeri Buysse for supplying the recording of the demon-
stration from which several examples are transcribed.
26. See Petrus de la Rue, Motetti libro quarto (Venice: Petrucci, 1505 [=RISM 15052]),
item 4, four partbooks (Discantus: ff. 45r-4v; Tenor: ff. 35v-36r; Contratenor: ff. 68r-
68v; Bassus: ff. 100r-100v) and Pierre de La Rue, The Complete Magnificats, Three Salve
Reginas, VivaVoce, dir. Peter Schubert, Naxos 8.557896-97, 2 compact discs (2007).
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Example 5a. Pierre de la Rue, Salve II, mm. 1-5 (note values halved)
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From Improvisation to Composition
27. Peter Schubert, “Composing Without a Score ca. 1600” (paper presented at the
annual meeting of the Society for Music Theory, Atlanta, GA, November 13, 1999).
28. Vincente [Vincentio, Vencenzo] Lusitano, Introduttione facilissima, et novis-
sima, di canto fermo, figurato, contraponto semplice, et in concerto (Venice: A. Baldo,
1553, and F. Rampazetto, 1561; facs. of 1561 ed. Rome: Libreria musicale italiana
editrice, 1989). The chart, based on Lusitano, is taken from Peter Schubert, Modal
Counterpoint, Renaissance Style, 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2008),
319-320. Julian Grimshaw, in “Morley’s rule for first-species canon,” Early Music 34/4
(2006): 661-668, erroneously states that Lusitano “does not set his canonic voices
against a tenor” (p. 664).
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Example 6a. Lusitano’s possibilities, labeled a-m (= three pitch-class sonority)
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From Improvisation to Composition
29. Gioseffo Zarlino, Le institutioni harmoniche (Venice: Franceschi, 1558; facs. New
York: Broude Bros., 1965), 256-258.
30. Gioseffo Zarlino, Le institutioni harmoniche (Venice: Franceschi Senese, 1573;
facs. Ridgewood, NJ: Gregg Press, 1966), 302-317.
31. Denis Collins, “Zarlino and Berardi as Teachers of Canon,” Theoria 7 (1993): 103-23.
107
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hear; he sings a single part, pulling out from it (so to speak) one or
more parts after in consequence. ...The reason I wanted to discuss this
matter at length is so that the gentle, virtuous and noble spirits not be
deprived of these secrets, not only if they wish to do it mentally, but
also (knowing it), that they be able to use it in their compositions, and
to find in it by these means endless other inventions.32
S tretto F uga
32. “Delle varie sorti de Contrapunti a Tre voci, che si fanno a mente in Consequenza
sopra un Soggetto: & di alcune Consequenze, che si fanno di fantasia, & quello che
in ciascheduna si hà de osservare. Capitolo. 63.
E cosa di non poca maraviglia il veder nascere alcune cose nella Musica da i Numeri
harmonici; quando dal Musico, il qual sappia conoscere la natura loro, sono posti in
atto: che se non udissero & anco vedessero impossibile sarebbe quasi di poterle cre-
dere... come si debbere rappresentare al senso dell’Udito tante e tante harmonie, con
nuove foggie et varietate; che sarà un stupore di udirle; cantando lui una sola parte,
tirandosene (dirò cosi) dietro una, o più in Consequenza. ...Il perche volendo io al
presente di queste cose copiosamente ragionare; accioche li Spiriti gentili, virtuosi &
nobili non siano privi di queste Secreti, non solamente volendoli fare a mente; ma
acciò che (sapendoli) accommodar etiando li possono nelle loro Compositioni; &
ritrovare in esse col loro mezo infinite altre belle inventioni.” Zarlino, Le institutioni
harmoniche (1573), III, ch. 63, 302-303.
33. Busse Berger cites Zacconi on the culture of secrecy (Anna Maria Busse Berger,
“The Problem of Diminished Counterpoint,” in Uno gentile et subtile ingenio: Studies
in Renaissance Music in Honour of Bonnie J. Blackburn, ed. Gioa Filocamo and M.
Jennifer Bloxam (Turnhout: Brepols, 2009), 24).
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and music in more parts.42 Elsewhere, Zarlino says “But the too
continual [use of ] such closeness [of imitation] causes it to have
fallen into a certain common way of composing, such that nowa-
days a fuga is not to be found that has not been used thousands
and thousands of times by various composers.”43 I used to think
this was rhetorical exaggeration, but if he is talking about stretto
fuga at the fifth, it’s almost an understatement: since from any
note we have only five possible notes to go to next, we can calcu-
late that there are only 625 different five-note melodies possible!
Three-voice stretto fuga is discussed by Sancta Maria and
Zarlino. Sancta Maria illustrates only one way, in which the
second voice follows an octave below the first after one compas
(semibreve) and the third enters a fourth below the first after 2
compases.44 The list of prohibited intervals is the same as for two-
part stretto fuga at the fifth above (because the third voice follows
the second a fifth above), with the additional proscription of the
melodic descending step. This is because the combination made
by the first and second voices is inverted at the twelfth when it
recurs between the second and third voices, and a melodic step
produces a vertical sixth, which will invert to a seventh. This is
shown in Example 7a, where the melodic motion of a second
in the alto produces a vertical sixth, which inverts to a seventh
between the soprano and bass. The beginning of Sancta Maria’s
fully embellished example is shown in Example 7b.45
42. These are exx. 11, 15, 53, 70, 73, 74, and 76 in Seay’s translation (see note 1). Ex. 53
breaks off the canon after eight notes; in ex. 70 the use of stretto fuga is intermittent;
ex. 73 is a “stacked” 3-vv. canon; ex. 74 is a 3-vv. invertible canon; and ex. 76 is a
pair of imitative duos. For more on these types, see Peter Schubert, “Hidden Forms
in Palestrina’s First Book of Four-Voice Motets,” Journal of the American Musicological
Society 60/3 (2007): 500-504.
43. “Ma il troppo continouare cotal vicinità fece, che si cascò in un certo modo
commune di comporre, che al presente non si ritrova quasi Fuga, che non sia stata
usata mille migliata di volte da diversi Compositori.” Zarlino, Institutioni harmoni-
che (1558), III, ch. 51, 213.
44. Tomás de Santa María [Thomas de Sancta Maria], Libro llamado arte de tañer
fantasia (Valladolid: F. Fernandez, 1565; facs. Geneva: Minkoff, 1973), II, ch. 33, f. 68r.
45. The fact that it contains so many sequences may be a sign that sequences are
more appropriate to instrumental music; I have mentioned the possibility that
sequence is more appropriate to instrumental music in Peter Schubert, “A Lesson
from Lassus: Form in the Duos of 1577,” Music Theory Spectrum 17/1 (1995): 1-26.
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Example 7a. Melodic seconds work in two voices but not in three.
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From Improvisation to Composition
a)
46. Gioseffo Zarlino, Le institutioni harmoniche (Venice: Franceschi, 1558; facs. New
York: Broude Bros., 1965), III, ch. 63, 314. The beginnings of two stretto fugas are
transcribed in Denis Collins, “Zarlino and Berardi as Teachers of Canon,” Theoria
7 (1993): 118-119. They demonstrate the guide voice skipping on the weak half note
(the “double option”).
47. The four possibilities, albeit with longer time intervals of imitation, are discussed
and schematized in Peter Schubert, Modal Counterpoint, Renaissance Style, 2nd ed.
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2008), ch. 16.
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b)
c)
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49. Gregory G. Butler, “The Fantasia as Musical Image,” Musical Quarterly 60/4
(1974): pp. 602-615; William Porter, “Reconstructing 17th-century North German
improvisational practice,” GOArt Research Reports 2 (2000): 25-39.
50. Michael R. Dodds, “Columbus’s Egg: Andreas Werckmeister’s Teachings on
Contrapuntal Improvisation in Harmonologia musica (1702),” Journal of Seventeenth-
Century Music 12/1 (2006), http://www.sscm-jscm.org/v12/no1/dodds.html.
51. Robert Gauldin, “The Composition of Late Renaissance Stretto Canons,” Theory
and Practice 21 (1996): 29-54.
52. Jessie Ann Owens, Composers at Work: The Craft of Musical Composition 1450-1600
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1997), 268-269.
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Peter Schubert
Example 9. Isaac, phrase 1 (after Owens; the first breve in the discantus has
been broken into two semibreves to show the stretto fuga between the two
upper parts; the dotted line connects the guide in the alto with the consequent
in the discantus)
Phrases 3 and 7 likewise work this way, also in canon at the fourth
above. We can easily imagine that Isaac inspected the chant and
saw immediately that its motions would accommodate a canon at
the fourth above. The melodic motions of up a step, down a step,
and down a third govern the line for the first nine semibreves.
However, one cannot go down more than one step at a time in
canon at the fourth above (parallel fifths would result), so Isaac
speeds up the seventh and ninth notes as passing semiminims,
making a chain of descending thirds on principal metric posi-
tions. In fact, any chant can be made into stretto fuga if properly
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2.
COMPOSITION
When he had seen his students firmly grounded in singing, able to
pronounce neatly, to sing ornately and to put the text in the correct
place, he taught them the perfect and imperfect types (of consonances)
and the way of singing counterpoint on plainchant with these types.
Those whom he noticed to be of high ability and happy soul he taught
in a few words the rule of composing for three voices, afterwards for
four, five, six, etc., always providing examples for them to imitate.54 …
The first requirement of a good composer is that he should know how
to sing counterpoint by improvisation. Without this he will be nothing
(Coclico).55
You should know (as I have said) that from this florid, or diminished,
counterpoint come a variety of compositions, like masses, motets,
psalms, ricercars, lamentations, and madrigals (Pontio).56
… singing extempore upon a plainsong is indeede a peece of cunning,
and very necessarie to be perfectly practiced of him who meaneth to
be a composer for bringing of a quick sight, yet is it a great absurditie
so to seek for a sight, as to make it the end of our studie… (Morley).57
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58. Nicola Vicentino, L’antica música ridotta alla moderna prattica (Rome, A. Barre,
1555; facs. Kassel: Bärenreiter, 1959), Book IV, ch. 23 is titled “Modo di comporre
alla mente sopra i canti fermi.” See Ernst Ferand, Die Improvisation in der Musik
(Zurich: Rhein-Verlag, 1938), 204.
59. “Ay arte de contrapunto, y de composicion. Diffieren estos dos nombres en alguna
manera, que a la composicion llaman colección, o ayuntamiento de muchas partes dis-
cretas, y distintas de harmonia, con particulares concordancias, y especiales primores.
El contrapunto es una ordenación improvisa sobre canto llano, con diversas melo-
días” (Juan Bermudo, Comiença el libro llamado declaración de instrumentos musicales
(Seville: J. de Leòn, 1555; facs. Kassel: Bärenreiter, 1957), ch. 16, fol. cxxviij r.).
60. Morley: “…although it be unpossible for them to compose without it [coun-
terpoint], but they rather employ their time in making of songes, which remain for
the posterity then to sing descant which is no longer known then the singers mouth
is open expressing it, and for the most part cannot be twise repeated in one manner”
(Plaine and Easie, 121). Bermudo offers those who don’t know counterpoint an aid
in the form of writing in score with barlines through the system of three staves. This
suggests that knowing counterpoint entailed reading parts printed separately on one
or more pages. “Algunos que no saben contrapunto, y quieren començar a componer
con sola cuenta de consonancias suelen virgular el papel pantado por no perderse en
la cuenta. Y aunque este modo sea barbaro: porne exemplo del para los que tuvieren
neceβidad, y quisieren seguirlo” (Declaración, ch. 27, fol. cxxxiiij r.).
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61. This inference, based on my three treatises, is flatly contradicted by Lusitano (see
Philippe Canguilhem, “Singing upon the book according to Vicente Lusitano,” Early
Music History 30 (2011): 55-103. 81). Lusitano’s views on the difference between coun-
terpoint and composition are summarized in Canguilhem “Singing upon the book,”
95-97. Another exception to my inference might include Ramis’s discussion of mode in a
note-against-note context. See Bartolomeus Ramis de Pareia, Musica practica (Bologna:
B. de Hiriberia, 1482; facs. Bologna: Forni, 1969), ed. Johannes Wolf as Musica practica
Bartolomei Rami de Pareja Bononiae (Leipzig: Breitkopf und Härtel, 1901), part II, tract
1, ch. 2, 72. This passage is discussed in Peter Schubert, “Counterpoint pedagogy in the
Renaissance,” in The Cambridge history of Western music theory, ed. Thomas Christensen
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), 508-9.
62. That is, the outer voices are an octave apart, and the middle part is a fifth from
one of them. Zarlino writes that if one part is in the authentic, the adjacent part(s)
should be in the plagal mode (Le istitutioni harmoniche 1558, IV, ch. 31, 338). In
Banchieri’s Ex. 2 the voices are unusually far apart, as they are in some of Lusitano’s
examples (see n. 7).
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C oclico
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Regarding the first two, we have seen the quotes in the epigraph
to this part. The third goes beyond the use of vertical intervals in
improvisation, which only applied in two parts; here Coclico is
dealing with three and more parts, so he shows the legal use of
the fourth and offers comments and examples of chord voicing
and vocal ranges. Regarding the fourth requirement, awareness
of mode, he mentions regular and irregular, and warns against a
line exceeding its limits and wandering about. He uses the term
“tone,” which must be contrasted with the psalm tones described
in the first part of his book: a chorister improvising would need
to know how antiphons connect to the Doxology, but would not
need to know the ranges of the modes and the species of fourth
and fifth. The fifth and sixth requirements speak for themselves.
In connection with the seventh and last requirement, the use of
imitation (which he regards as a recent invention), he gives exam-
ples in two to seven voices. There he suggests emulating the most
learned musicians in various countries (“….in Italia Gallia, &
Flandria eruditissimi Musici”).65
P ontio
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Example 11b. (Jachet, Missa Quarti toni sine nomine, Credo mm. 41-42,
note values halved)69
69. Jachet of Mantua, Missa Quarti toni sine nomine (Venice, 1561), ed. Philip T.
Jackson in Opera Omnia, vol. 3 (American Institute of Musicology, 1976), 87.
70. Pontio, Ragionamento, III, 89-93.
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5. that there always be a third and a fifth when four voices are
singing.
M orley
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81. Mirror inversion involves melodic inversion and switching the positions of
parts so that the vertical interval sucession is maintained. See Peter Schubert,
Modal Counterpoint, Renaissance Style, 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University
Press, 2008), 297-98.
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3.
CONCLUSION
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83. Our three authors do not talk about duos and trios as building-blocks, but it is
covered fairly thoroughly by Montanos, Sancta Maria, and Cerone, whose contribu-
tions are discussed in Peter Schubert, “Musical Commonplaces in the Renaissance,”
in Music Education in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, ed. Russell E. Murray, Susan
Forscher Weiss, and Cynthia J. Cyrus (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2010),
161-192; and in Peter Schubert, “Counterpoint pedagogy in the Renaissance,” in
The Cambridge history of Western music theory, ed. Thomas Christensen (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2002), 519-525.
84. Cumming, Julie E. “Renaissance Improvisation and Musicology,” Music Theory
Online 19/2 (2013), www.mtosmt.org/issues/mto.13.19.2/mto.13.19.2. cumming.php.
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