A network for historic guitars and vihuelas
Hi everyone,
I am currently carrying out research into alfabeto chord charts and was wondering if anyone had ever come across tagliate chords in a song accompaniment. They're certainly rare in this context, but I have found them in one or two sources. Just thought I'd ask, but I won't get my hopes up.
Thanks
Tags:
And speaking about those books... Is there any source where you can get the melody to those tunes? I suppose most of them were known at the time and no one needed the notation, so it's likely I'm out of luck,
However, there is one that keeps me wondering. There is a Litanie dei Sancti that shows up in one of those books, I was wondering if there is any plainchant book where one can get the melody.
I've not looked into this at all, Natasha, but I'm wondering if there are connections or correspondences between these tagliate chords and the dissonances found in such 'chromatic fantasias' by Sanz and others. There is a wonderful 'Fantasi de falsas' in the (I think) Coimbra mss, which I recorded in video here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LXqBwKGAWEo
Since the Litany is the kind of thing that is played only in Church -Who would play that to amuse herself?- Is this evidence for the use of the guitar in a liturgical context?
The Litany of the Saints is used in few occasions... for example, the Paschal Vigil (in Mass), the taking of perpetual vows, and the ordination of priests.
Before the emergence of the so-called "guitar masses", in the 60s, there are very few mentions of guitars being used inside a church.
Could this piece be the granddaddy of all guitar masses?
It seems that the surviving copy of Pico's book belonged to a convent in Tuscany - there is a note somewhere on it on it saying "Pertinet ad Con.tum S.Anthimi." There was such a Convent in Tuscany and Pico was Florentine. So it seems likely that the nuns and other people performed the Litany as part of their devotions quite possibly with guitar accompaniment. I suppose they may have done so on the occasions when it does form part of the liturgy but I expect there were other occasions when it was performed too. I trawled various sites on line trying to find the music without success. I expect everyone is familiar with Monteverdi's Vespers and with the Sonata sopra "Sancta Maria ora pro nobis". The same very simple chant could perhaps be used with this Litany too. The guitar was used in Spain and the New World but in the accompaniment of villancicos in the vernacular rather than the Latin parts of the Mass.
© 2024 Created by Jelma van Amersfoort. Powered by