Music in Welsh Culture Before 1650



Music in Welsh Culture Before 1650
The author provides a detailed overview of Welsh music before 1650, highlighting the importance of the sources used. She argues that there is a far wider range of sources than is generally realised, and that these sources demonstrate a flourishing and unique musical tradition of considerable cultural significance. more details
Key Features:
  • Provides a detailed overview of Welsh music before 1650
  • Argues that there is a far wider range of sources than is generally realised
  • Demonstrates a flourishing and unique musical tradition of considerable cultural significance


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Features
Author Sally Harper
ISBN 9780754652632
Publisher Ashgate Pub Co
Manufacturer Ashgate Pub Co
Description
The author provides a detailed overview of Welsh music before 1650, highlighting the importance of the sources used. She argues that there is a far wider range of sources than is generally realised, and that these sources demonstrate a flourishing and unique musical tradition of considerable cultural significance.

Music in Wales has long been a neglected area. Scholars have been deterred both by the need for a knowledge of the Welsh language, and by the fact that an oral tradition in Wales persisted far later than in other parts of Britain, resulting in a limited number of sources with conventional notation. Sally Harper provides the first serious study of Welsh music before 1650 and draws on a wide range of sources in Welsh, Latin and English to illuminate early musical practice. The book challenges two prevailing assumptions, both of them false: namely that music in Wales before 1650 is impoverished and elusive; and that the extant sources are too obscure to warrant serious study. Harper demonstrates that there is a far wider body of source material than is generally realised, comprising liturgical manuscripts, archival materials, chronicles and retrospective histories, inventories of pieces and players, vernacular poetry, and treatises. The book is structured around three distinct musical categories: the uniquely Welsh practice of cerdd dant ('the music of the string', for harp and crwth); the Latin liturgy in Wales and its embellishment, and 'Anglicised' sacred and secular materials from c. 1580, which show Welsh music mirroring English practice. Taken together, the primary material presented in this book bears witness to a flourishing and unique musical tradition of considerable cultural significance, aspects of which have an important bearing on wider musical practice beyond Wales.

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