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Автор Wright, Peter
Дата выпуска 1994
dc.description A badly trimmed ascription can be more a matter for relish than regret: if enough of the composer's name survives to permit informed speculation, the musicologist's sense of pleasure is likely to outweigh his sense of loss. Most musical manuscripts from the late Middle Ages have visibly suffered at the hands of the binder's knife, but perhaps none more so than the famous ‘Aosta Manuscript’ (I-AO15), one of the central sources of early fifteenth-century sacred polyphony. In his inventory of the manuscript Guillaume de Van reported no fewer than twenty names as surviving in varying states of incompleteness. In fifteen instances he was able to decipher the composer's name or supply it from the manuscript's index or a concordant source, while the other five apparently defeated him. Two of the names have since been deciphered, and a third has been identified from another source, but the remaining two have attracted no further comment.
Формат application.pdf
Издатель Cambridge University Press
Копирайт Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994
Название A new attribution to Brassart?*
Тип research-article
DOI 10.1017/S0961137100000619
Electronic ISSN 1474-0087
Print ISSN 0961-1371
Журнал Plainsong and Medieval Music
Том 3
Первая страница 23
Последняя страница 43
Аффилиация Wright Peter; University of Nottingham
Выпуск 1

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