Page:A Dictionary of Music and Musicians vol 2.djvu/139

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L'HOMME ARMÉ
127

The Melody—an interesting example of the use of the Seventh Mode—usually appears, either in Perfect Time, or the Greater Prolation. Though simple, it lacks neither grace, nor spirit. As might have been predicted, slight differences are observed in the Canti fermi of the various Masses founded upon it; but, they so far correspond, that the reading adopted by Palestrina may be safely accepted as the normal form. We therefore subjoin its several clauses, reduced to modern notation, and transposed into the treble clef.

{ \override Staff.TimeSignature #'style = #'single-digit \time 3/2 \relative g' { \set suggestAccidentals = ##t g1 g2 | c1 c2 | b a1 | g1. | d'1 d2 | g,1 r2 | d' d d | c b a | g1. |\repeat unfold 2 { g'1 g2 | fis1 fis2 | g1 g2 | d1. | } g1 g2 | a1 g2 | f2 e1 | d1. | \repeat unfold 2 { c1 c2 | b1 b2 | c1 c2 | g1. | } c1 c2 | d1 c2 | b2 a1 | g1. \bar "||" } }

Upon this unpretending theme, or on fragments of it, Masses were written, by Guglielmo du Fay, Antonio Busnoys, Regis, François Caron, Joannes Tinctor, Philippon di Bruges, La Fage, (or Faugues,) De Orto, Vacqueras, Monsieur mon Compère, at least three anonymous composers who flourished between the years 1484 and 1513, Antonio Brumel, Josquin des Prés, Pierre de la Rue, (Petrus Platensis,) Pipelare, Mathurin Forestyn, Cristofano Morales, Palestrina, and even Carissimi—a host of talented Composers, who all seem to have considered it a point of honour to exceed, as far as in them lay, the fertility of invention displayed by their most learned predecessors, and whose works, therefore, not only embody greater marvels of contrapuntal skill than any other series preserved to us, but also serve as a most useful record of the gradual advancement of Art.

The Masses of Du Fay, and Busnoys, and their successors, Regis, and Caron, are written in the hard and laboured style peculiar to the earlier Polyphonic Schools, with no attempt at expression, but, with an amount of earnest sobriety which was not imitated by some of their followers, who launched into every extravagance that could possibly be substituted for the promptings of natural genius. Josquin, however, while infinitely surpassing his predecessors in ingenuity, brought true genius also into the field; and, in his two Masses on the favourite subject—one for four Voices, and the other for five—has shewn that freedom of style is not altogether inconsistent with science. The Fugues, Canons, Proportions, and other clever devices with which these works are filled, exceed in complexity any thing previously attempted; and many of them are strikingly effective and beautiful—none more so, perhaps, than the third Agnus Dei of the Mass in four parts; a very celebrated movement known as 'Clama ne cesses,' from the 'Inscription' appended to the Superius, (or upper part), for the purpose of indicating that the notes are to be sung continuously, without any rests between them. In this movement, the Superius sings the Canto fermo entirely in Longs and Breves, while the other three Voices are woven together, in Canon, and Close Fugue, with inexhaustible contrivance, and excellent effect. In the second movement of the Sanctus—the 'Pleni sunt'—for three voices, the subject is equally distributed between the several parts, and treated with a melodious freedom more characteristic of the Master than of the age in which he lived. It was printed by Burney in his History, ii. 495.

It might well have been supposed that these triumphs of ingenuity would have terrified the successors of Josquin into silence: but this was by no means the case. Even his contemporaries, Pierre de la Rue, Brumel, Pipelare, and Forestyn, ventured to enter the lists with him; and, at a later period, two very fine Masses, for four and five Voices, were founded on the old Tune by Morales, who laudably made ingenuity give place to euphony, whenever the interest of his composition seemed to demand the sacrifice. It was, however, reserved for Palestrina to prove the possibility, not of sacrificing the one quality for the sake of the other, but of using his immense learning solely as a means of producing the purest and most beautiful effects. His Missa 'L'Homme Armé,' for five voices, first printed in 1570, abounds in such abstruse combinations of Mode, Time, and Prolation, and other rhythmic and constructional complexities, that Zacconi—writing in 1592, two years before the great Composer's death—devotes many pages of his Prattica di Musica to an elaborate analysis of its most difficult 'Proportions,' accompanied by a reprint of the Kyrie, the Christe, the second Kyrie, the first movement of the Gloria, the Osanna, and the Agnus Dei, with minute directions for scoring these, and other movements, from the separate parts. The necessity for some such directions will be understood, when we explain, that, apart from its more easily intelligible complications, the Mass is so constructed that it may be sung either in triple or in common time; and, that the original edition of 1570 is actually printed in the former, and that published at Venice, in 1599, in the latter. Dr. Burney scored all the movements we have mentioned, in accordance with Zacconi's precepts; and his MS. copy (Brit. Mus. Add. MSS. 11,581) bears ample traces of the trouble the process cost him: for Zacconi's reprint is not free from clerical errors, which our learned historian has always carefully corrected. The first Kyrie, in which the opening clause of the Canto fermo is given to the Tenor in notes three times as long as those employed in the other parts, is a conception of infinite beauty, and shows traces of the Composer of the 'Missa Papae Marcelli' in every bar.