A Blend of Traditions: The Lute’s Influence on Seventeenth-Century Harpsichord Repertoire

The close relationship between the harpsichord and lute traditions is commonly claimed but rarely elaborated upon, and many experts disagree on the manner in and extent to which the two are related. Often, texts covering the early harpsichord literature will limit discussion of the lute’s influence...

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Main Author: Audrey S. Rutt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Music and Worship 2017-03-01
Series:Musical Offerings
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/musicalofferings/vol8/iss1/3/
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spelling doaj-f35c1ba222094482b63ed3a5398613a62020-11-24T23:03:25ZengDepartment of Music and WorshipMusical Offerings2330-82062167-37992017-03-0181234010.15385/jmo.2017.8.1.3A Blend of Traditions: The Lute’s Influence on Seventeenth-Century Harpsichord RepertoireAudrey S. Rutt0Cedarville UniversityThe close relationship between the harpsichord and lute traditions is commonly claimed but rarely elaborated upon, and many experts disagree on the manner in and extent to which the two are related. Often, texts covering the early harpsichord literature will limit discussion of the lute’s influence to a brief mention of the style brisé, if the important connection between the two traditions is even mentioned all. The lute’s impact on the harpsichordists of the seventeenth century is not a facet that can be ignored; rather, an understanding of the lute tradition is essential to an understanding of the harpsichord tradition. Neither can the relationship be isolated to the style brisé, as the influence extends also to other textures, rhythms, harmonic devices, sonorous effects, and genres found within the solo literatures of both the lute and harpsichord. This connection is especially evident in the solo harpsichord works of Francois Couperin, D’Anglebert, Froberger, and Chambonnieres. Ornamentation and broken textures, elements that were evocative of the lute, were incorporated into the already existing keyboard tradition represented by the organ. However, although composers for the harpsichord imitated the style of lutenists such as Gaultier and Pinel, they also transformed it; they developed these lute-like elements in a manner that became distinctly idiomatic to the harpsichord. In this way, the harpsichord idiom that emerged in the seventeenth century was formed by a unique blend of the organ and lute styles.http://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/musicalofferings/vol8/iss1/3/HarpsichordluteBaroqueFrench Baroquemusic compositionmusic Idiomsstyle brisélautenwerkhumanismD'AnglebertCouperinFrobergerPerrineGaultier
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Audrey S. Rutt
spellingShingle Audrey S. Rutt
A Blend of Traditions: The Lute’s Influence on Seventeenth-Century Harpsichord Repertoire
Musical Offerings
Harpsichord
lute
Baroque
French Baroque
music composition
music Idioms
style brisé
lautenwerk
humanism
D'Anglebert
Couperin
Froberger
Perrine
Gaultier
author_facet Audrey S. Rutt
author_sort Audrey S. Rutt
title A Blend of Traditions: The Lute’s Influence on Seventeenth-Century Harpsichord Repertoire
title_short A Blend of Traditions: The Lute’s Influence on Seventeenth-Century Harpsichord Repertoire
title_full A Blend of Traditions: The Lute’s Influence on Seventeenth-Century Harpsichord Repertoire
title_fullStr A Blend of Traditions: The Lute’s Influence on Seventeenth-Century Harpsichord Repertoire
title_full_unstemmed A Blend of Traditions: The Lute’s Influence on Seventeenth-Century Harpsichord Repertoire
title_sort blend of traditions: the lute’s influence on seventeenth-century harpsichord repertoire
publisher Department of Music and Worship
series Musical Offerings
issn 2330-8206
2167-3799
publishDate 2017-03-01
description The close relationship between the harpsichord and lute traditions is commonly claimed but rarely elaborated upon, and many experts disagree on the manner in and extent to which the two are related. Often, texts covering the early harpsichord literature will limit discussion of the lute’s influence to a brief mention of the style brisé, if the important connection between the two traditions is even mentioned all. The lute’s impact on the harpsichordists of the seventeenth century is not a facet that can be ignored; rather, an understanding of the lute tradition is essential to an understanding of the harpsichord tradition. Neither can the relationship be isolated to the style brisé, as the influence extends also to other textures, rhythms, harmonic devices, sonorous effects, and genres found within the solo literatures of both the lute and harpsichord. This connection is especially evident in the solo harpsichord works of Francois Couperin, D’Anglebert, Froberger, and Chambonnieres. Ornamentation and broken textures, elements that were evocative of the lute, were incorporated into the already existing keyboard tradition represented by the organ. However, although composers for the harpsichord imitated the style of lutenists such as Gaultier and Pinel, they also transformed it; they developed these lute-like elements in a manner that became distinctly idiomatic to the harpsichord. In this way, the harpsichord idiom that emerged in the seventeenth century was formed by a unique blend of the organ and lute styles.
topic Harpsichord
lute
Baroque
French Baroque
music composition
music Idioms
style brisé
lautenwerk
humanism
D'Anglebert
Couperin
Froberger
Perrine
Gaultier
url http://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/musicalofferings/vol8/iss1/3/
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