Bologna Q15: The Making and Remaking of a Musical Manuscript.
Cuthbert, Michael Scott
Bologna Q15: The Making and Remaking of a Musical Manuscript.
Introductory Study and Facsimile Edition by Margaret Bent. (Ars nova.
Nuova serie, 2.) Lucca: LIM Editrice, 2008. 2 vols. [Vol. 1: Pref. &
acknowledgements, p. iii-iv; table of contents, p. v-vi; list of illus.
and tables, p. vii; table of numberings and foliations, p. viii-xviii;
abbrevs., p. xix-xxi; introductory study, p. 1-292; appendix A: plates,
p. 293-312; appendix B: editions, p. 313-35; list of ms. sources, p.
337-41; bibliog., p. 343-56; index of composers, p. 357-67; index of
texts, p. 369-83. Vol. 2: Facsimile, 342 fols. ISBN 978-88-7096-513-1
(set). [euro]1.000,00]
The manuscript Bologna Q15 (Bologna, Museo Internazionale e
Biblioteca della Musica, olim Civico museo bibliografico musicale, ms.
Q15) is one of the most important and often-discussed manuscripts of
Medieval and Renaissance music. Yet in the same way that in the context
of the larger musical world we can still call Haydn an underappreciated
composer, within the larger musicological community, Bologna Q15 remains
an undervalued source. Its pages chronicle nearly all the important
developments in sacred (and occasionally secular) music of the early
Renaissance, from the decline of Ars Nova styles to the rise of the
integrated Mass cycle, from the emergence of English composers to the
revitalization of the motet and hymn. It is the unique source for
numerous works, including many early-fifteenth-century Italian motets
and Mass movements. Clearly, this is a source that deserves and rewards
close study. Yet while many less important sources have appeared in
facsimile, access to Q15 up to now has remained limited.
The size of the manuscript certainly must have daunted would-be
publishers. At almost seven hundred pages, Q15 towers over most
polyphonic manuscripts of its time. Its close temporal cousin, Oxford,
Bodleian Library, Canon. Misc. 213 (published in facsimile by University
of Chicago Press as volume 1 of its Late Medieval and Early Renaissance
Music in Facsimile series, 1995), is less than half its size. Most of
the other manuscripts in LIM's Ars nova series run from about
thirty-five to one hundred pages. Even the majestic Squarcialupi Codex
has fewer leaves. However, it was not Q15's length as measured in
folios alone that could doom such a project. Its complexities--such as
four different numbering systems, repertorial layers that blur into each
other, and initial letters recycled front earlier stages of the
manuscript--demand an introduction far more accurate, detailed, and
convincing than just about any heretofore made.
Margaret Bent's study of Bologna Q15 more than meets this
challenge. It sets an extremely high bar for any Renaissance manuscript
study. If it seemed impossible to attend a Medieval or Renaissance music
conference last year that did not include a special ceremony in praise
of Bent's achievement, there is good reason. There may be other
introductions to facsimiles that approach the level of detail that Bent
brings to her thirty-year-long study of Q15, but none have retained such
a focus on making every watermark and every reused initial letter tell a
story about the manuscript and its owners.
Bologna Q15 is one of three sources (with Oxford 213 and Bologna,
Biblioteca universitaria, ms. 2216) that document a shift in the center
of Italian music making and manuscript production away from central
Italy and toward the Veneto. It is among the later sources copied using
the system of black mensural notation descended from the ideas of Franco
of Cologne, a system that over the course of the fifteenth century gave
way to the "white notes" more closely related to modern
notation. Bent's research places the early stage of Q15 in Padua
ca. 1420-25, with later sections compiled by the same scribe in Vicenza
in the early 1430s. Unfortunately, the "smoking gun" of her
dating--an erased name, later copied over, that only would have been
written after 1433--is not visible even on these photographs, but has
been verified by at least one other musicologist.
The modern history, restorations, and information about the
structure of the manuscript are given in dazzling detail. The sense of
being there querying the source for everything it could say about its
chronology and purpose is so clear that reading it feels like being with
the disbound manuscript itself. The most unexpected source of joy comes
from the discussion and identification of initial letters in Q15.
Ninety-two of the capital letters in Q15 were cut from a previous
source, most likely an earlier version of Q15, and pasted in appropriate
places in the later version. During restoration, many of the letters
were lifted, and had their backs photographed before being reattached
(those that could not be lifted were photographed on a light box, then
digitally enhanced). On the back side of the cutout letters are found
the last few notes of the first line of whatever piece was on the
reverse. From this scant evidence, Bent has been able to identify
twenty-six of the pieces, reconstructing an early stage for the
manuscript that no longer exists; a stage where Italian songs and
Magnificats were present. Remarkably, all but one of these identified
pieces are found elsewhere in the manuscript, and were recopied to
change the text underlay. the order of works, or for other reasons still
unknown to us.
Since Bent has published transcriptions of nearly every cutout
letter, 1 am convinced that other scholars will now be able to identify
many other works. Pasted initial No. 46 is probably a setting of Verbum
caro factum est though different from the one by Lymburgia found later
in the manuscript (fols. A307v/8r). Many settings of this text stem from
this time (e.g., Oxford 213; Venice, Biblioteca nazionale marciana,
Italiano cl. IX.145 = ms. 7554; and Avezzano, Archivio diocesano della
Marsica, Busta n. 5, fasc. 25) but none of them use the same music for
the upper voice, so it is not surprising that this setting would not be
recopied into a later stage of Q15. Bent's work on the letters will
inspire searches for years to come.
The larger questions of why someone would make a book such as Q15,
or who would have sung from it, are largely left out of the
introduction. This is not a complete loss, because Bent has already
published much about the cultural context of this manuscript, and indeed
of all music in early-fifteenth-century Italy. Further, she promises
much more information soon in a separate monograph study. Still, even a
short summary of her findings, or inclusion of a reprint of her most
important previous article on the topic would have been of great help in
the meantime. Many users will lack access to the Proceedings of I he
British Academy or Quattrocento vicentino, where her earlier works are
found.
Projects that take decades to gestate are usually identifiable by
their reliance on outdated bibliography and omission of recent
contributions, especially from younger scholars. Thankfully, Bent's
introduction breaks this rule. Recently discovered fragments, such as
Siena, Archivio di Stato, Fondo del Vicariato, Ravi 3 (1568-9), and the
unpublished London, British Library, Add. ms. 82959, are noted in the
catalog. And while it is not surprising that Bent was aware of Michael
Alan Anderson's excellent new dissertation that includes a
reexamination of the Q15 hymns ("Symbols of Saints: Theology,
Ritual, and Kinship in Music for John the Baptist and St. Anne,
1175-1563" [Ph.D. diss., University of Chicago, 2008]), it. is a
delight to see the influence of less well-known recent publications in
nonmusical sources, such as Malgorzata Dabrowska's 2005 discussion
of Du Fay's Vasilissa. ergo gaude (" 'Vasilissa ergo
gaude ...': Cleopa Malatesta's Byzantine CV,"
Byzanlinoslavica 63 [2005]:217-24), or Thomas Izbicki's 2000
biographical sketch of the dedicatee of O felix flos Florencia/Gaude
felix Dominice ("Reform and Obedience in Four Conciliar Sermons by
Leonardo Dati, O.P.," in Reform and Renewal in the Middle Ages and
the Renaissance: Studies in Honor of Louis Pascoe, S.J., ed. Thomas
Izbicki and Christopher M. Bellitto [Leiden: Brill, 2000], 174-92).
In addition to a summary inventory of the manuscript and a catalog
of compositions in manuscript order, Bent also provides extremely useful
indexes of pieces by composer and by incipit. I wish that, in the sea of
numbers in each of these indexes, Bent had chosen to distinguish
graphically the De Van numbers (perhaps in bold), since these are the
numbers by which her main catalog is ordered. A consistent use of either
the Roman or Arabic foliations, obviously only when discussing items not
intimately tied to layout and ordering, would also have helped readers
better get to know this source or its makeup. Nonetheless, her inclusion
of useful scholarly apparatus goes far beyond other facsimiles today.
One of the most important projects that the new facsimile allows is
the scrutiny of Bent's central thesis that Bologna Q15 is the work
of a single scribe whose habits changed over the fifteen or so years
that he labored to produce the three distinct stages of the book. The
arguments in favor of her theory are detailed and nuanced. She marshals
evidence in the form of slight changes of letterforms within a stage to
show the recurrence of these letterforms in later stages. Her argument
also encompasses similarities of musical hand and a chronological gap
between stages that would allow for development of the scribe's
writing.
These findings deserve close analysis if only because they change
the way we view scribal hands throughout all manuscripts in the period.
Now no one can say that two similar but slightly different hands are
definitely the work of two different scribes without confronting the
possibility that one hand could be an evolution of the first. But is the
argument for a single scribe in Q15 airtight? At one point we read,
"when the scribe resumed work on stage II after a hiatus of about
five years, his script has undergone some changes. ... He must meanwhile
have been writing elsewhere." Based on the same evidence could not
another scholar write, "a new scribe was brought in to continue
work on the manuscript, choosing a similar hand to the original scribe,
but with some obvious changes"? The dating of the work and its
number of scribes are intertwined. Bent notes that the first stage of
the manuscript could not have been completed before 1423-24 and that the
second stage could not have been begun much before 1433 (both on the
basis of references to people mentioned in motets). She then reasons
that, "since the stage-I manuscript was bound, and the
scribe's handwriting" was evolving elsewhere during the years
when QI5 was presumably in use ... it makes sense to set the end of
stage I a little later than the date of its last composition,"
i.e., 1424-25 (p. 20). The need for a gap of several years to allow the
scribe's hand to change affects the perception of stylistic
chronology ("the presence of a piece in the stage-I manuscript
[permits] an earlier dating than might otherwise have been suspected. Du
Fay's paired Gloria and Credo ##107-8 and his Vergene bella are
among the most striking cases," p. 113) and the interpretation of
other manuscripts ("The later-added date 1426 in [Oxford 213] for
Guillaume Legrant's Credo #51 cannot be a date of composition; it
was copied in Q15 early in stage I, probably about four years earlier
than this date," p. 20). Raising these doubts does not mean I
consider the single-scribe explanation wrong. In fact, it remains the
most compelling and well-developed theory available. But if this new
facsimile encourages others to look carefully at the evidence and to
advance (and perhaps then abandon) alternate conclusions, musicology as
a whole can only stand to gain.
The use of new technologies in making the facsimile and commentary
are exceptional, and their importance cannot be overstated. It would be
easy to call the digital photographer, database manager, and
computerized image restorer Julia Craig-McFeely the "unsung
hero" of the volume, except that Bent draws liberal attention to
her and praises her indispensable role. The quality of the photographs
(and LIM's high printing standards) is evident in Ciconia's
motet Venecie mundi splendor (no. 257). In the first line, the scribe
began with flagged, solid notes, and then notated the same rhythm in
unflagged, void notes. The scraped-off flags and hollowing of the note
heads are clearly visible. The motet's tenor has a section where
notes are erased and then renotated identically except for the use of
ligatures. This too is clearly visible. The clarity of the images does
not fully explain why scribes choose the notation that they do, but we
now have the data to begin an answer.
The collaboration between Craig-McFeely and Bent reaches its apex
in the digital editions they prepare of previously unperformable works.
By selectively deleting show-through and digitally filling in notes
where the ink has eaten away at the paper, they have been able to
transcribe five new works. Their methods are documented and their
digital editions are included in the commentary. (The use of color is
generous even in the introduction.) Unfortunately, this process can only
be repeated with access to the digital images, which are not included.
It is interesting that these difficult works have been included while
there are still perfectly legible pieces that have never been included
in a modern edition. The majority of such pieces are anonymous French
songs. Finding untranscribed works is made more difficult because of an
inconsistency in the catalog. Some pieces without editions are
identified explicitly as such; others simply omit the line marked
"editions."
Naturally in an undertaking of this magnitude, some errors have
crept in. None are large enough to affect the overall conclusions of the
author, but some of the more significant ones should be mentioned.
Several concern the current locations of musical sources: the Atri
source is listed in the Archivio capitolare as frag. 5; one learns from
the Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music Web site
(http://www.diamm.ac.uk/ [accessed 18 November 2009], a project
supervised by Margaret Bent, that it is now Biblioteca del Capitolo
della Cattedrale, Frammento 17. The call number for the Siena fragments
(olim mss. 326-7, then ms, 207) seems to change every decade or so; they
can now be accessed as Archivio di Stato, Krammcnti Musicali busta n. 1.
inserto n. 11. Similarly, Pad 1225 is now found in Padua, Biblioteca
universitaria, as ms. busta 2/2 and not ms. 1225. The correct library
for Grot is Grotta-ferrata, Biblioteca del Monumento nazionale, and its
call number is no longer provisional. Additionally, the connection of
Krakow manuscript. 40582 (listed under its former location in Berlin) to
the Trent fragment (Museo provincial d'Arte, Castello del Buon
Gonsiglio, though owned by the Biblioteca comunale, ms. 1563) is tenuous
at best. The rediscovery of the title "scabioso" (and not
"scabroso") for the Credo by Zacar is attributed to Lucia
Marchi in 2000; even John Nadas was surprised to learn that his 1986
article ("Further Notes on Magister Autonius dictus Zacharias de
Teramo," Studi musicali 15 [1986]: 167-82), was in fact the first
since Padre Martini to correctly transcribe this title. Ciconia's
Aler m'en veus (no. 255) is attributed to 'Johes" and not
"Johannes" in Padua, Biblioteca universitaria, ms. 1115.
Finally, there are some layout errors in the pasted-capitals section
(letters 27-44) that make it easy to miss the last lines of each
discussion.
Margaret Bent has shared with me several other errata that she has
discovered: among the more significant, pieces No. 185 and No. 281 are
not in Oxford 213 but rather in other Oxford manuscripts. Pieces No. 57
and No. 59 are missing from the concordances found in the Bovcrio Codex
(Turin, Biblioteca nazionale universitaria, T.III.2). On p. 162, the
scribe's attribution of Regina celi is to "dunstaple" not
"dunstable." Some alternate composer attributions were left
out oftheindex of composers: No. 192 should have Dunstaple and Binchois
listed in addition to Power; likewise, No. 289 should also list
Dunstaple. Bent informs me that the complete list of errata will soon
appear on the LIM Web site.
The commentary is sometimes more certain of its conclusions than
the evidence allows. On the back of blue initial letter "K,"
we see no notes, but only traces of a red, vertical line. Bent reasons
that the red bar
must have belonged to a sectional Agnus from a mass cycle preceding
the Kyrie. It cannot be the Du Fay Agnus #15 on f. R15 ending the
Du Fay cycle, because the normal recto and verso status of red and
blue capitals is reversed in the first half of gathering II, where
versos are red, rectos blue. It must be from Du Fay's Agnus #21,
whose recto is now recopied on f. R22, ending the Du Fay/Zacara
cycle. (p. 244)
Each of these conclusions is the most-likely option given the
reasoning thus far: red lines do delimit sections; mass cycles are most
likely preceded by other mass cycles; most mass cycles do end with
settings of the Agnus; the capital letters of the Du Fay Agnus No. 15
should be different in color; many letters did contain music that would
appear in the later stages of Q15. But following a long chain of
most-likely options cannot end with a statement of certainty. You can
bet. on the most likely horse in every race of a day, but you are still
lucky to hit the pick 6.
Potential buyers should not be deceived by the beautiful miniatures
on some of the advertising copy--this is not primarily an illuminated
manuscript. The initial letter with the singers is one of the few
illuminations in the source. One is paying for a topnotch introduction
and perfectly reproduced music in a great package, but not an art book.
This austerity begs the question of whether the source could have
instead been reproduced in black and white, as in the lower-priced
Chicago series, with only the illuminated, damaged, and red-notation
pages and portions of the introduction presented in color? This choice
would hamper some directions of scholarly inquiry (especially scribal
identification and development), but at the reduced price it would
surely gain many more users. But maybe this is a false dichotomy in our
age of easy print-on-demand. Perhaps it will someday be possible for LIM
to offer a reduced-cost black-and-white (or digital?) version to a
larger market, for this is a manuscript and a study that deserves a
wider audience. In an era when many important music books are becoming
available in facsimile, this edition stands above the crowd. With a sage
introduction by the world's most-qualified scholar on the source,
high-quality images, and comprehensive indexes and catalogs, the Bologna
Q15 facsimile will bear scholarly fruits for generations to come.
EDITED BY JOHN WAGSTAFF
MICHAEL SCOTT CUTHBERT
Massachusetts Institute of Technology