41894 - History of Ancient, Medieval and Renaissance Music

Academic Year 2018/2019

  • Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
  • Campus: Ravenna
  • Corso: First cycle degree programme (L) in Cultural Heritage (cod. 8849)

Learning outcomes

The course provides an overview of the main events and problems of music history from antiquity to Renaissance, supplemented by commented readings and guided listening. Once acquired the bibliographic reference tools, at the end of the course the student is able to understand the historical dynamics and the main genres and musical contexts.

Course contents

The course will be organized in two sections.

A. Events and questions of Ancient, Medieval and Renaissance history of music.

The first part of the course will include some general framing lessons introducting to the main events, authors and contexts of musical production and execution from Antiquity to the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.

2. Musical images, sounds and representations in the Italian Courts during the Renaissance.

The second part of the course will be devoted to the varied musical production promoted by the Italian courts which, since the mid-fifteenth century, are structured on the model of the court of Burgundy. The affirmation of new professional figures, the progressive definition of 'Nordic' and humanistic repertoires, the affirmation of new ideas and musical figures, the retrieval of the ancient myths and the diffusion of the courtly dance, will be exemplified through examples of musical and theatrical performances relating to the Courts of Pesaro, Urbino, Ferrara and Mantua.

Both the general and the specialist part will be complemented by text reading, image projection and guided listening of medieval and Renaissance music.

The course will be held in the first semester, starting on Wednesday October  3, 2018

Readings/Bibliography

M. CARROZZO-C. CIMAGALLI, Storia della musica occidentale, vol.1, Roma, Armando editore, 1998, cap. 11 (pp.191-206), 14 (pp. 243-256), 15 (pp. 257-271);

F.A. GALLO, Music of the Middle Ages II, Cambridge - London- New York &C, Cambridge University Press, 1985, pp. 29-51;53-76;77-107.

B

N. GUIDOBALDI, La musica di Federico. Immagini e suoni alla corte di Urbino, Firenze, Olschki, 1995, pp.75-98;

B. SPARTI, Dancing in Fifteenth-century Italian Society, in Guglielmo Ebreo da Pesaro. De Pratica seu arte tripudi. On the practice or art of dancing, Barbara Sparti ed., Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1993, pp. 47-63.

 

SUGGESTED READINGS

G. COMOTTI, La musica nella cultura greca e romana, Corriere della Sera, EDT, 2018;

F.A. GALLO, Music in the castle : troubadours, books and orators in Italian Courts of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries, Chicago & London, Chicago University Press1995;

F. A. GALLO, Dal Duecento al Quattrocento (§ 3 : I letterati e l' immaginario musicale : idee e suoni), in Teatro, Musica, Tradizione dei Classici, Torino, Einaudi, 1986, pp. 245-263 (Letteratura italiana, VI);

F. A. GALLO, Musica e storia tra Medioevo e età moderna, Bologna, Il Mulino, 1986;

N. PIRROTTA, Music and Cultural Tendencies in 15th-Century Italy, in 'Journal of the American Musicological Society', XIX (1966), pp. 127-161; 

Lewis LOCKWWOD, Music in Renaissance Ferrara 1400-1505, Oxford University Press, 1984;

I. FENLON, Music and Patronage in Sixteenth-century Mantua, Cambridge University Press, 1982

Further bibliographic and material references for specific aspects will be provided during the lessons.

Non-attending students are required to read the texts listed in section A of the bibliography and are invited to contact the teacher to agree a personalized work program for the examination.

 

Teaching methods

Readings and seminars; the course will also include guided listening to medieval and Renaissance music.

Assessment methods

The exam consists of an oral interview aimed at assessing the critical and methodological skills and knowledge acquired by the student, who will be invited to confront the texts, the themes and the methodological issues faced during the course and during the seminars.

The students will be required to elaborate an individual job, to be agreed with the teacher and presented in seminar form during the last lessons of the course.

The assessment of the exam will take into account, in particular, the student's ability to use readings, sources, and exam bibliography to illustrate contents and issues, and to establish links between them .

The examinator will therefore assess the mastery of the content and the ability to synthesize and analyze the concepts, and the ability to express themselves in a language appropriated to the subject matter.

The student’s achievement of an organic vision of the themes dealt with in the lesson together with their critical use, good expressive mastery and specific language will be evaluated with excellence marks; formative gaps and / or inappropriate language, will lead to votes that will not exceed the sufficiency.

Teaching tools

PC, video projector, CD player.

Reproductions of texts, modern music transcriptions, and sound samples will be made available to students at the end of the lessons.

Office hours

See the website of Nicoletta Guidobaldi