
Dover Publications - 486
Jeppesen Counterpoint: The Polyphonic Vocal Style of the Sixteenth Century
Author: Knud Jeppesen
Publisher: Dover Publications
Binding: Paperback
Dimensions: 6.13 in x 9.25 in
Pages: 320
Jeppesen Counterpoint: The Polyphonic Vocal Style of the Sixteenth Century
Juilliard Store
144 West 66th Street
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Jeppesen Counterpoint: The Polyphonic Vocal Style of the Sixteenth Century
Juilliard Store
144 West 66th Street
New York NY 10023
United States
Jeppesen Counterpoint: The Polyphonic Vocal Style of the Sixteenth Century
Juilliard Store
144 West 66th Street
New York NY 10023
United States
In Part One, Knud Jeppesen (1892–1974), the world-renowned musicologist and leading authority on Palestrina, offers a superb outline history of contrapuntal theory. He begins by exploring the beginnings of contrapuntal theory from the ninth to the fourteenth centuries. This is followed by separate discussions of each succeeding century, the styles of Palestrina and Bach, the "Palestrina Movement" after Fux, and more. The section ends with illuminating coverage of notation, the ecclesiastical modes, melody, and harmony.
The second part of the book contains an extended treatment of "species" counterpoint in two, three, and four parts, as well as counterpoint in more than four parts, and specific discussions of the canon, the motet, and the Mass. Throughout, the text is generously supplied with musical examples―exercises, solutions, and illustrations, including many by the great composers. For this edition, the distinguished scholar Alfred Mann has contributed a new foreword to Jeppesen's classic study. Now available in paperback for the first time, it will be welcomed by musicians, composers, theorists, musicologists―any student of counterpoint and the Western musical tradition.
