Five pieces from Formschneyder Trium Vocum Carmina

for 3 instruments.

Hieronymus Formschneyder´s Trium Vocum Carmina, published in Nürnberg in 1538, is a large anthology of three-part pieces by Franco-Flemish and German musicians. Many pieces go back to the fifteenth century - there are works by Jacob Obrecht, for instance, who died in 1505. Most of the major figures from the Low Countries appear: Josquin, Agricola, Isaac, Compère, as well as somewhat younger German musicians such as SenfI and Sixtus Dietrich. Many of the Franco-Flemish pieces are very well-known numbers that occur in a multitude of sources, but several of the German works have survived only in Formschneyder. The collection was printed without titles or composers, though in the copy used for this edition, preserved at Jena, many incipits and composer´s names were added by hand. Given this lack of texts, it would seem that the collection was designed largely for instrumental use, and in fact a relatively large number of purely instrumental pieces were included.
In this edition the original note values have been halved throughout, with certain exceptions, given below. Editorial accidentals are shown in the usual way, printed small above the stave, applying to the one note only; for the sake of simplicity, the original accidentals, printed on the stave, are taken as applying to the whole bar.

Produkt-ID: LPM-EML275

Lieferbar in 3-5 Werktagen

6,50 EUR

inkl. 7% MwSt.
St

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