Aquila Altera - Paradigma Medioevo: Music from 14h-century Italy (2023) [Hi-Res]
Artist: Aquila Altera
Title: Paradigma Medioevo: Music from 14h-century Italy
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Brilliant Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 96.0kHz +Booklet
Total Time: 00:52:07
Total Size: 299 / 941 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Paradigma Medioevo: Music from 14h-century Italy
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Brilliant Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 96.0kHz +Booklet
Total Time: 00:52:07
Total Size: 299 / 941 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Landini Ecco la primavera
02. Teramo Dicovi per certanca
03. Firenze Dolce speranza d'amoroso foco
04. Anonymous Chominciamento di gioia instrumental
05. Landini I' priego amor e la vostra biltate
06. Landini Ochi dolenti miei che pur piangete
07. Landini Questa fanciull'Amor, fallami pia
08. Teramo Non voler, donna
09. Anonymous Aquila altera
10. Landini Adiu, adiu dous dame
11. Anonymous Amor mi fa cantar
12. Landini Non creder donna
13. Anonymous Tre fontane
14. Teramo Cacciando per gustarAy cinci, ay toppi
Polyphonic 14th-century Italian secular music seems to emerge out of nowhere in the history of music. Nevertheless, this tradition – which often goes by the name Ars Nova – fits seamlessly into the history of Italian culture. Our knowledge of it has been pieced together from relatively few sources, which nevertheless reveal three distinct phases. In its first phase, Italian Ars Nova spread out from universities, including those of Padua and Bologna, which had strong links with the dominant and contemporaneous French Ars Nova. In the second phase, the centre of 14th-century Italian polyphony seems to shift markedly to Florence. The final phase, which bridged the late 1300s and early 1400s, shows the influence of intense cultural exchange brought about by an international circulation of musicians and poets caused by the political instability of the papacy’s return from Avignon to Rome and the consequent heightened mobility among the various courts and their entourages.
This phase is reflected in such sources as the renowned Squarcialupi Codex. Compiled in Florence around 1415, it contains over 350 compositions (madrigals, ballate and cacce) and is the source of the majority of the tracks on this album. Francesco Landini (c.1325/35–1397) is represented by five of his 141 ballate and the virelai ‘Adiu, adiu dous dame’. Also from the Codex are one ballata by Andrea da Firenze (c.1350–1415) and two ballate and a caccia by Antonio ‘Zacara’ da Teramo (1355–1416). Three instrumental tracks complete the album, two of them from the ‘London’ Manuscript (British Library) compiled in Florence, probably in Medici circles. In addition to mostly polyphonic music by Landini and other Florentine composers, this tome features several anonymous instrumental works including the lively dances ‘Chominciamento di gioia’ and ‘Tre fontane’. The madrigal ‘Aquila altera’ has a different background entirely: the version presented here is the instrumental arrangement found in the Codex Faenza, a unique volume assembled in the early 15th century containing around 50 Italian and French polyphonic compositions for organ.