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Crossing Confessional Boundaries - The Patronage of Italian Sacred Music in Seventeenth-Century Dresden (Hardcover)
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Crossing Confessional Boundaries - The Patronage of Italian Sacred Music in Seventeenth-Century Dresden (Hardcover)
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Shortly after assuming the Saxon throne in 1656, Lutheran Elector
Johann Georg II (r. 1656-80) replaced the elder Kapellmeister
Heinrich Schutz with younger Italian Catholic composers. Seemingly
overnight, sacred music in the most modern Italian style, first by
Vincenzo Albrici (1631-90/96) and later by Giuseppe Peranda (ca.
1625-75) supplanted the more traditional Schutzian sacred concerto
and Spruchmotette, effecting a change in musical and spiritual life
both within the walls of the Dresden court and beyond.
Drawing on extensive research in primary source materials,
Frandsen explores the elector's "Italianization" of the Hofkapelle
with castrati and other Italian virtuosi, and examines the larger
confessional conflict that gripped the city of Dresden and its
implications for the Catholic-leaning elector's musical agenda. She
then examines the Latin texts set by Albrici and Peranda, a body of
works dominated by expressions of mystical devotion typical of the
repertoire then heard in Italy. However, drawing upon recent
studies of the phenomenon of "new piety" in seventeenth-century
Lutheranism, Frandsen locates these texts squarely within the realm
of contemporary Lutheran spirituality, and demonstrates their
congruity with devotional materials used by Lutherans since the
mid-sixteenth century. In her discussion of the sacred concertos of
Albrici and Peranda, she takes the concept of musica pathetica as a
point of departure, and also explores the formal and stylistic
relationships between the Roman motet and the new sacred concerto
in Dresden. Finally, with the help of liturgies recorded in court
diaries, she reintegrates this music into its original performance
environment, anddemonstrates how tightly the works of these
Italians were woven into the Gospel-determined thematic fabric of
the services celebrated during the church year.
A fascinating account of the uneasy alliance of two confessions at
the prominent seventeenth-century court of Dresden, this book
provides fresh insights into a neglected but influential
repertoire. Frandsen's research will be of interest to scholars and
students interested in Baroque music, the intellectual and cultural
history of European courts, the history of liturgy and church
history, and the Early Modern era in general.
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