Silent Music: Medieval Song and the Construction of History in Eighteenth-Century Spain.
Peters, Mark A.
Silent Music: Medieval Song and the Construction of History in
Eighteenth-Century Spain. By Susan Boynton. (Currents in Latin American
and Iberian Music.) Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011. [xxii, 208 P.
ISBN 9780199754595. $39.95.] Illustrations, facsimiles, bibliography,
index.
In Silent Music: Medieval Song and the Construction of History in,
Eighteenth-Century Spain. Susan Boynton combines the crudities of expert
musicologist with those of master storyteller in her engaging treatment
of the history of the Mozarabic liturgy in Toledo from the twelfth to
the eighteenth century. Silent Music will be of interest not only to
scholars of the medieval period or the eighteenth century, but also to
those interested in the history of Spain (particularly the ways in which
its cultural and intellectual history intersected with political
developments). the history of chant. or 'he history of liturgy.
Of additional interest is the way in which Mozarabic chant was
appropriated at various points and multiple ways as a distinctive
feature of national identity in Spain and as one of the unique glories
of Spanish achievement (especially against cultural elements from France
and Italy--most no-tably the Roman rite--that were brought to Spain and
came to predominate over Spanish cultural elements). In light of this
recurring theme in the monograph, Boynton 's Silent Alosie should
be read by every musicologist, for it in concerns issues not only ol
national identity but also of the ways in which history is told.
In fact, Silent Music focuses on two men Willi Were, in
eighteenth-century Spain, carrying out what can be Seen ill WaN'S
as modern musicological research: the Jesuit scholar Andres Marcos
Burriel (1719-62) and the calligrapher Francisco Xavier de Santiago v
Palomares (1728-96). Boynton explains: "The methods employed by
Burriel and Palomares--paleographic analysis, historical criticism,
textual criticism, and exact copying--had never before been applied to
the Old Hispanic liturgical hooks in Toledo Cathedral and remained
unusual for the study of Iberian liturgical sources until the twentieth
century" (p. xx). Although neither was a musician, both Burriel and
Polomares devoted significant all to musical notation and scholarly
research in music.
Burriel and palomares conducted this work within broader projects
in which they sought to promote the national identity and cultural
glories of Spain. For them, the investigation or Mozarabic chant in
Spain, and the recounting of its history, were inextricably linked to
the promotion of the nation. Burriel clearly saw the Mozarabic rite as
preserved in medieval manuscripts, as well as its re-creation in the
sixteenth century (what Boynton labels the "nen-Mozarabic
rite"), as distinctive features of a Spanish national identity. He
was thus concerned both with the rite as a historical artifact and as a
present practice, even after he discovered that these two were very
ferent traditions; the medieval manuscripts clearly did not contain the
chants of the neo-Mozarabic rite as it had been constructcd and
published tinder Cardinal Francisco Ximenet de Cisneros in the early
sixteenth century and subsequently practiced by the Mozarabs of Toledo.
Although the Toledan manuscripts were retained in the archives, they
contained only "silent music"--the Visigothic neumes could not
be realized in actual performance and were not the basis of the
neo-Mozarabic rite. which originated instead from adaptations of the
Roman rite and from new compositions,
But Burriel and Palomares considered the medieval Mozarabic chant
books and their notation important enough not only to transcribe
manuscripts and copy samples of their text and notation, but even to
produce a full-size, full-color parchment facsimile of Toledo. BC 35.7,
a book of masses mid offices for Marian feasts and for the
Chrisimas-Epiphany cycle that Burriel considered to be die earliest
extant Toledan chant book (p. 87). Silent Music originated from, and
focuses primarily on, Boynton's discovery of a manuscript (now
B2916 in the library of the Hispanic Society of America in New York)
that had been missing since the late nineteenth century. a medieval
manuscript from Toledo that had served as model for Palomares's
copy. The discovery led Boynton to a detailed study of the copy, as well
as of the broader context that had led to its copying. particularly
Burriers role in the transcription of the manuscript and the place of
the copy within Burriel's and Palomares's broader activities
with the Commission on the Archives of Toledo Cathedral beginning in
October 1750.
Palomares's copy is remarkable for its nearly exact
representation of both the text and the neumes of the medieval model at
a time when few were studying liturgical books in Spain, much less their
musical notation. Boynton notes: "This was an extremely unusual
instance of a thorough and painstaking effort to reproduce medieval
neumes by hand" (p. xiv). The precision of the manuscript was noted
in its own time, as attested to by both Palomares and Burriel. In fact,
Burriel reported: "One of [the liturgical books] ... not only has
been copied, but also reproduced in Visigothic script with its colors
and with the same Visigothic notation and rough parchment, so similar to
the original that I was told it would be necessary to put a
certification as to which is the original, and which the copy, so that
later on there will be no doubt when the parchment of the copy becomes
tarnished by time and handling" (quoted by Boynton, p. 94). Burriel
went on to state, with due pride: "It is a gem worthy of the King
[Ferdinand VI] for whom it was made" (quoted by Boynton, p. 94),
and Boynton's insights into Burriel's motivations for
dedicating such a volume to Ferdinand (pp. 98-107) from just one pant of
this Fascinating story.
While much of Slient Music is dedicated to Burriels work with the
Commission and Palomares's copying and transcription of Mozarabic
chant manuscripts, Boynton explores a number of closely related topics
with a similar keenness for both scholarly detail and historical
significance. These include Palomares's copy of the "Toledo
codex," a thirteenth-century collection of vernacular sacred songs
attributed to King Alfonso X of Leon and Castile (chap. 4) and
Palomares's later contributions to paleography, particularly his
continued work with Visigothic neumes (chap. 5).
My criticisms of the volume are minimal and concern matters that
may not have been under the author's control. First, the decision
to use only short citations it) the endnotes makes the notes somewhat
unwieldy, for it necessitates constant cross-referencing with the
bibliography. Second, the volume would have benefited from additional
color plates (which, on the other Ii and, would have increased its
expense). Slient Music contains ample facsimile pages and illustrations,
and readers would benefit from having more than two of these appear in
color. Finally, the volume would be improved by a more complete index;
for example, Cardinal Cisneros, a key figure who appears throughout the
book, receives only one page reference in the index and no
cross-reference with the liturgical volumes published under his
direction (usually referred to as "Cisneros cantorales" in the
text, but listed as "cantorales, Mozarabic" in the index).
Such minor criticisms aside, Silent Music is a masterful work of
scholarship and well worth reading. In addition to those who may find
interest in Slient Musicon the basis of some element of its subject
matter, I commend Slient Music as a model text for graduate students in
musicology (perhaps for use in an introduction to Musicology or Research
Methods seminar). It provides an example of excellent research and
writing while also demonstrating ways in which manuscript study and
archival research can interact with contextual study and with questions
of meaning and significance. Although the chants recorded in Visigothic
notation must remain "silent music," Boynton has brilliantly
recovered their story and its importance both for subsequent centuries
of Spanish history and for us today.
MARK A. PETERS
Trinity Christian College