Synopses & Reviews
An exceptional text for undergraduate and graduate music students,
Modal Counterpoint, Renaissance Style uses a wide variety of carefully graded exercises to present guidelines for writing and analyzing 16th-century music. The only species counterpoint text that draws directly on Renaissance treatises, it provides a conceptual framework to guide students through composition and analysis as it teaches them general structural principles. With stylistically diverse examples including not only motets and mass movements but also French chansons, German chorale settings, English canzonets, Italian madrigals, and Spanish organ hymns, villancicos, and ricercars, the book gives students a "real-life" feel for the subject. It distinguishes between technical requirements ("hard" rules) and stylistic guidelines ("soft" rules), and includes coordinated exercises that allow students to develop their skills systematically. The concluding chapters provide the formal and conceptual building blocks for longer pieces and encourage students to understand analysis and composition as complementary activities. By the end of the book, they are writing real compositions, not just drill exercises.
Modal Counterpoint, Renaissance Style features carefully chosen contemporaneous musical examples, progressively graded exercises, historical asides that explain important topics and issues of the period, and a set of notes to the instructor. Combining the historical accuracy of "style-oriented" texts with the more systematic species counterpoint approach, this book offers a unique alternative to other methods.
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Note to the Student
Note to the Instructor
Introduction: Renaissance Musical Style and Notation
1. Mode
2. Introduction to Two-Part Species Counterpoint
3. First Species
4. Second Species
5. Third Species
6. Fourth Species
7. Mixed Values
8. Counterpoint with Repetition of a Motive
9. Motivic Variation
10. Cadence Formulas in Two Voices
11. Two Parts in Mixed Values
12. The Imitative Duo
13. Invertible Counterpoint
14. Three Parts
15. Three Parts in Mixed Values
16. The Three-Voice Invertible Canon
17. Four-Part Writing
18. Adding Three Parts in Mixed Values to a CF
19. Four Parts in Mixed Values
20. Composing a Whole Piece
Appendices
1. Text Setting
2. Improvisation and Ornamentation
3. Solmization
4. Sample Motive Placements
5. The Invertible Duo
Bibliography
Index