Ars subtilior

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A chanson about love, Belle, bonne, sage, by Baude Cordier, is in a heart shape, with red notes indicating rhythmic alterations.

Ars subtilior (

musical style characterized by rhythmic and notational complexity, centered on Paris, Avignon in southern France, and also in northern Spain at the end of the fourteenth century.[1] The style also is found in the French Cypriot repertory. Often the term is used in contrast with ars nova, which applies to the musical style of the preceding period from about 1310 to about 1370; though some scholars prefer to consider ars subtilior a subcategory of the earlier style. Primary sources for ars subtilior are the Chantilly Codex, the Modena Codex
(Mod A M 5.24), and the Turin Manuscript (Torino J.II.9).

Overview and history

Musically, the productions of the ars subtilior are highly refined, complex, and difficult to sing, and probably were produced, sung, and enjoyed by a small audience of specialists and connoisseurs. Musicologist

perpetual canon
Tout par compas (All by compass am I composed), notated on a circular staff.

Albright contrasts this motivation with "expressive urgency" and "obedience to rules of craft" and, indeed, "ars subtilior" was coined by musicologist Ursula Günther in 1960 to avoid the negative connotations of the terms manneristic style and mannered notation.[3][failed verification] (Günther's coinage was based on references in Tractatus de diversis figuris, attributed to Philippus de Caserta, to composers moving to a style "post modum subtiliorem comparantes" and developing an "artem magis subtiliter".)[4][failed verification]

One of the centers of activity of the style was Avignon at the end of the

Rhône had developed into an active cultural center, and produced the most significant surviving body of secular song of the late fourteenth century.[5]

The style spread into northern Spain and as far as Cyprus (which was a French cultural outpost at the time).[6] French, Flemish, Spanish and Italian composers used the style.[citation needed]

Notational characteristics

Manuscripts of works in the ars subtilior occasionally were themselves in unusual and expressive shapes, as a form of

La Harpe de melodie
is written in the shape of a harp.

List of composers

The main composers of the ars subtilior (those from whom at least three compositions in this style are known) are

Other composers associated with the style include:

Examples

References

  1. ^ a b Hoppin 1978, 472–73.
  2. ^ Albright 2004, 10.
  3. ^ Günther 1960.
  4. ^ Günther 1960, summarized in Josephson 2001.
  5. .
  6. ^ Josephson 2001.
  7. ^ Apel 1973, 55.
  8. ^ "Ars Magis Subtiliter". www.medieval.org.
  9. ^ "Fumeux fume par fumee (Solage) - ChoralWiki". www0.cpdl.org.

Sources

Further reading