Music and Musicians at the Collegiate Church of St Omer

Crucible of Song, 1350–1550

Andrew Kirkman author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:17th Sep '20

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Music and Musicians at the Collegiate Church of St Omer cover

Offers unparalleled insight into the function of music in worship, ritual and society in late medieval Europe.

Northern France and the Low Countries formed the crucible of Europe's most sophisticated music in the later Middle Ages. That music and its makers were sought from France to Italy and Bohemia. Focusing on the rich musical institution of one wealthy medieval church, this book reveals the values and social structures that shaped its cultivation.Music played an exceptionally important role in the late Middle Ages - articulating people's social, psychological and eschatological needs. The process began with the training of choirboys whose skill was key to institutional identity. That skill was closely cultivated and directly sought by kings and emperors, who intervened directly in recruitment of choirboys and older singers in order to build and articulate their self-image and perceived status. Using the documentation of an exceptionally well preserved archive, this book focuses on music's functioning in an important church in late Medieval Northern France. It explores a period when musicians from this region set the agenda across Europe, developing what is still some of the most sophisticated music in the Western musical tradition. The book allows a close focus not on the great achievements of those who cultivated this music, but on the personal motivations that shaped their life and work.

ISBN: 9781108839723

Dimensions: 250mm x 176mm x 30mm

Weight: 740g

320 pages