The Rise of European Music: 1380-1500.
Caldwell, John
Reinhard Strohm, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993). xv +
720 pp ISBN 0-521-41745-7. 60.00[pounds].
This is a formidable book, a reflection of its author's colossal
expertise in fifteenth-century music, and a challenge to the
perseverance of the reader. When I confessed to a pupil that I was
reading it but slowly, the answer was that I would eventually hear it
all in essays and discussions. I doubt if I shall, but its value to
undergraduates and other serious persons could hardly be overstated.
Most of all, however, it should appeal to readers who want a deeper
understanding of the interaction between music and late medieval life.
There is plenty of technical detail, but there is also a full
appreciation of how music functioned in society (including, of course,
ecclesiastical society).
From this point of view the most rewarding part of the book is the
third, entitled `The common traditions'. The first of its two
chapters, `Music in the life of the institutions', covers not only
the Church, making an important distinction between `choir music'
and `chapel music', but also schools, universities, monasteries,
and secular usage both public and private. In the second chapter we read
of those aspects that are so often overlooked in `straight-line'
histories: plainchant, the Latin cantio and simple polyphony, vernacular
song, solo and ensemble instrumental music. Not that these general
issues are neglected in the remaining parts, which are chronologically
focused: `The age of the great Schism', `The age of Dufay and
Dunstable' and `Europe after 1450': in them we can learn
variously of the significance of the Council of Constance to music and
musicians, the collecting of music, the patronage of the Habsburgs, and
the geographical links exemplified by the travels of musicians and the
distribution of their compositions. Perhaps the only valid topic not
treated in its own right is the history of musical theory in the period,
though quotations from theorists are frequently used to illuminate the
practice of the time.
The book is also strong in musical analysis. The author's
method is to take a relatively small number of representative works and
to analyse them in depth with the aid of extensive quotations. Only very
rarely are these to be found in the usual anthologies; often they are
obscure or virtually unknown pieces, while in other cases new light is
thrown on more familiar compositions. The effect in the former case is
to deepen one's understanding of the normal, where so often
historians of music have tended to draw attention to the exceptional.
It would be hard, in any case, to emerge from a reading of this
book without an enhanced understanding of and admiration for the musical
heritage of the fifteenth century. Its scope is so very wide, and by
good fortune there is enough of the more humdrum side of it left to us
to enable us to reconstruct it as a convincing whole. Reinhard Strohm is
exceptionally well equipped to convey this wholeness through his command
of geographical, linguistic and institutional diversity, even if his
book is here and there a little provocative or cursory. The title itself
is a minor provocation (in what sense can music be said to
`rise'?), and the repertory enshrined in the Eton College choirbook
(copied c. 1500) is given rather short shrift in the chapter on Briush
music in the final part of the book. But it has to be added that the
integration of British musical history within a survey of European
dimensions is in itself one of the most attractive features of a volume
that is bound to be regarded as uniquely authoritative.