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A Renaissance Keyboard Anthology: Volume 2, Grades 4-5

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Price £9.95

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A Renaissance Keyboard A…
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The A Renaissance Anthology series

Beautifully presented, and thoroughly readable 'modern' editions of the best of these pre-Baroque masterpieces. Carefully graded.

It has often struck me as intriguing that The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book (a collection of keyboard music spanning the period c.1562-1612) occupies a virtually non-existent place in the literature considered viable by pianists.

Needless to say, harpsichordists continue to hold the music in the highest esteem, while a number of transcriptions for instruments and ensembles have been made available in more recent times. How can it be that this ancient heritage - which in keyboard music terms might be regarded as the equivalent to the Dead Sea Scrolls - has hitherto seemed a no-go area for pianists? It is as if the first 'proper'
keyboard music tumbled miraculously out of some parallel universe around Bach's time, i.e. the first half of the 18th century. While our modern piano is perhaps as different from a virginal as a washing machine is from a mangle, there are in fact a good many facets of virginal music which read across perfectly well to today's instruments. For this to be possible we need to take the time to look
beyond peculiarities in translation, which to a significant extent comes down to issues resulting from burgeoning notational practices. It also becomes necessary to re-imagine the music in light of what is possible, as well as what is desirable. Problems with accessing the sound-world of pre-Baroque keyboard music can be overcome quite easily, just as it is possible to become better in resonance with
avant garde musical styles, given appropriate immersion. Since the writing of the performance notes to The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book more than a century ago (by J.A. Fuller Maitland and W. Barclay Squire), the momentum generated by the Early Music Revival has brought about immeasurable insights into the intentions of Renaissance and Baroque composers. Performances on period
instruments continue to reacquaint us with a bygone age and stimulate a healthy fascination for the practices that were once fundamental to the craft. On balance however, the potential for a major, rejuvenated interest in the earliest keyboard music perhaps lies in its absorption into the broader piano repertory, and to this end there is an outstanding need to put pianists in touch with the highly
nuanced spirit of the pre-Baroque masters.

Contents

  • Alman
  • Can Shee
  • Coranto
  • Dalling Alman
  • Martin Sayd to his Man
  • Muscadin
  • The King's Morisco
  • Why Aske You
  • A Gigge 'Doctor Bull's my Selfe'
  • Coranto
  • Sr. Jhon Grayes Galliard
  • Fayne would I Wedd
  • The New Sa-Hoo
  • The Old Spagnoletta
  • Alman
  • Galliardo
  • Pavana 'Clement Cotto'

Samples available

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Cat No. SP1172
Price £9.95
Composers Anon.
John Bull
William Byrd
Giles Farnaby
Richard Farnaby
Robert Johnson
Peter Philips
William Tisdale
EditorMark Tanner
CategoryPiano Solo
PublisherSpartan Press
SeriesA Renaissance Anthology
Difficulty level4 - 5
ISMN 979-0-57998-172-5
EAN-13 9790579981725
Weight 150 grams
Published 25th July 2011
Availability In Print

Reviews

With this new edition there is no longer an excuse for students and teachers to neglect this wonderful early English repertoire which certainly deserves a "renaissance" in the world of today's concertising.

Piano Journal

This series is an important addition to any collection of piano music. Mark Tanner is greatly to be congratulated on such a valuable contribution to the repertoire.

EPTA PIANO PROFESSIONAL

With this new edition there is no longer any excuse for students and teachers to neglect this wonderful early English repertoire, which certainly deserves a 'renaissance' in the world of today's concertising. The Editor's splendid background information gives the reader an extremely clear insight into the keyboard instruments of the time, the notational peculiarities of the then performance practice versus today's performing tactics, and his own point of view about the 'Authenticity Conundrum'

EPTA PIANO JOURNAL

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