Wonderful! The eclecticism across the piece is quite modern- everything old was once quite new, everything old is new again! Avant-garde jazz and Prog fans should find these sounds quite familiar and enjoyable.
I love this piece so much!! I remember a year and a half ago, I had been learning the recorder for 3-4 months at the moment and my teacher put me in a trio with two girls who played for 3 and 4 years (i was kind of a fast learner i guess. i played telemann's f major sonata right after that). we played this and I was the second tenor. I had a major crush on the girl who played the first. my little heart would melt at the moment where we would play on our own without the alto. yeah it was so cute. this is off topic but whatever. you played it beautifly 🎶 i love this series it's cool to hear you play a little more
I love Ciconia’s Doctorum Principem- it also has odd cadences out of nowhere, and lots of changes in the music along the way. It is for 4 parts. Sounds incredible on renaissance instruments at 6-foot pitch!!!
Most people think of medieval music as simple and boring because of Gregorian chant (which is not that simple itself, if you listen carefully), but popular music was often festive / dancing music, so it's quite lively. By the way, when you pronounced the Italian city name, you actually pronounced my name. :D The correct pronunciation has a stronger, longer "c". ;D
The voice at the time was the perfect instrument because it had the privilege of expressing the word, so much effort in the composition of the lyrics that accommodates the music to make an instrumental version. They don't even bother to quote the corresponding text. There are many licenses for silences that are taken when they do not even exist in the original script. Its interpretation, despite having period instruments, is very modern. Romanticism has left us a bad vision of music in its early days.
Wonderful! The eclecticism across the piece is quite modern- everything old was once quite new, everything old is new again! Avant-garde jazz and Prog fans should find these sounds quite familiar and enjoyable.
I love this piece so much!! I remember a year and a half ago, I had been learning the recorder for 3-4 months at the moment and my teacher put me in a trio with two girls who played for 3 and 4 years (i was kind of a fast learner i guess. i played telemann's f major sonata right after that). we played this and I was the second tenor. I had a major crush on the girl who played the first. my little heart would melt at the moment where we would play on our own without the alto. yeah it was so cute. this is off topic but whatever. you played it beautifly 🎶 i love this series it's cool to hear you play a little more
Aww that's so lovely!
I love Ciconia’s Doctorum Principem- it also has odd cadences out of nowhere, and lots of changes in the music along the way. It is for 4 parts. Sounds incredible on renaissance instruments at 6-foot pitch!!!
Juliette, where can one find music for this in modern notation? I've looked but haven't had any success.
love the way you guys ZEN out with your movements
Most people think of medieval music as simple and boring because of Gregorian chant (which is not that simple itself, if you listen carefully), but popular music was often festive / dancing music, so it's quite lively.
By the way, when you pronounced the Italian city name, you actually pronounced my name. :D The correct pronunciation has a stronger, longer "c". ;D
Ah! I'm better at Dutch than Italian alas..
2 tenors and an alto? Just curious. I love the sound! This is really nice. Thanks for sharing.
Yes!
Didn't Sarah talk about this piece in her "Introduction to Medieval music"?
I diiiiiiid :)
so sweet ^.^
Thank you very much Sarah ! :))
The consonances sound very pure. Are they tuned to 12TET, and do you bend the notes slightly to perfect the consonance?
I thought it said Pantera and I got excited
Played without the sheet music sounds amazing.
This is awesome~💕
I'mma first comment
The voice at the time was the perfect instrument because it had the privilege of expressing the word, so much effort in the composition of the lyrics that accommodates the music to make an instrumental version. They don't even bother to quote the corresponding text.
There are many licenses for silences that are taken when they do not even exist in the original script. Its interpretation, despite having period instruments, is very modern. Romanticism has left us a bad vision of music in its early days.