ABSTRACT

Mapping the Motet in the Post-Tridentine Era provides new dimensions to the discussion of the immense corpus of polyphonic motets produced and performed in the decades following the end of the Council of Trent in 1563. Beyond the genre’s rich connections with contemporary spiritual life and religious experience, the motet is understood here as having a multifaceted life in transmission, performance and reception. By analysing the repertoire itself, but also by studying its material life in books and accounts, in physical places and concrete sonic environments, and by investigating the ways in which the motet was listened to and talked about by contemporaries, the eleven chapters in this book redefine the cultural role of the genre. The motet, thanks to its own protean nature, not bound to any given textual, functional or compositional constraint, was able to convey cultural meanings powerfully, give voice to individual and collective identities, cross linguistic and confessional divides, and incarnate a model of learned and highly expressive musical composition. Case studies include considerations of composers (Palestrina, Victoria, Lasso), cities (Seville and Granada, Milan), books (calendrically ordered collections, non-liturgical music books) and special portions of the repertoire (motets pro defunctis, instrumental intabulations).

chapter 1|20 pages

Proper to the day

Calendrical ordering in post-Tridentine motet books

chapter 3|28 pages

Motets and the liturgy for the Dead in Italy

Text typologies and contexts of performance

chapter 4|17 pages

Motets pro defunctis in the Iberian world

Texts and performance contexts

chapter 5|21 pages

Palestrina’s mid-life compositional summary

The three motet books of 1569–75

chapter 6|31 pages

Modality as orthodoxy and exegesis

Strategies of tonal organisation in Victoria’s motets *

chapter 7|39 pages

Beyond the denominational paradigm

The motet as confessional(ising) practice in the later sixteenth century 1

chapter 8|13 pages

In search of the English motet

chapter 9|22 pages

Songs without words

The motet as solo instrumental music after Trent

chapter 11|21 pages

Mapping the motet in post-Tridentine Seville and Granada

Repertoire, meanings and functions