A Morley Canzonet in abc

I've put a fair amount of work into typesetting some of Thomas Morley's "Canzonets for Three voices" so that the group I sing and play recorders with can perform from unbarred parts without having to deal with the facsimile. Here's what the cantus part looks like (size 194773) as Morley published it. [facsimile of cantus part]

There are a number of differences between the way Thomas Morley published his canzonets and the way they are presented in even a very good modern edition.

Other than these differences, most of the notation by the late sixteenth century when Thomas Morley was writing was quite similar to what is in use now, and a musician trained in modern notation can fairly easily read a line from a facsimile. However, for a group of amateur players and singers to actually play from the facsimile presents a number of problems:

This page presents the results of transcribing the facsimile in abc.

I've been thinking about trying to do this for years, and have been concentrating on the TeX-based music publishing because it seems to not be as completely dependant on the measure as the unit it deals with as most of the other music printing programs I know about. In Renaissance music, there was no such thing as a measure, and the unit people thought in was the beat, which was usually either a half note or a whole note. If you try to write this music with barlines the way most modern editions do, you end up needing to have a lot of ties across bars. This is a problem for the performers because it is hard to realize that this note that's a quarter note tied to a half note is really the same kind of note as the dotted half note.

People play better from parts than from scores, partly because they have to concentrate harder, and partly because the score implies that the performer is responsible for hitting the first beat of the measure at the same time as everybody else, which is true for most music later than about 1700, but not for renaissance music. In the Renaissance, the performer's responsibility was to feel the same beat as everybody else, and within this beat to put the melodic line across as well as possible. Because the harmonic vocabulary is not very large, the music can work quite well even if some parts are doing a ritard when other parts aren't, as long as they all cadence together.

Here's what I do in ABC.


Last modified: 2002-06-29 11:12, 2007
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