Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £26.56 GBP
Regular price £25.99 GBP Sale price £26.56 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

Women and Music in Sixteenth-Century Ferrara

Rethinks and retells the history of music in sixteenth-century Ferrara, putting women, of the court and convent, at the narrative centre.

Laurie Stras (Author)

9781108815482, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 14 May 2020

415 pages, 5 b/w illus. 2 tables 88 music examples
24.5 x 17 x 2.5 cm, 0.73 kg

'In Women and Music in Sixteenth-Century Ferrara, Laurie Stras has produced a highly accessible and important volume - thoroughly researched and elegantly written - that throws open the clouded window that has, until now, obscured our understanding of this chapter in music history … Stras offers a second life to the musical women of sixteenth-century Ferrara.' Rebecca Cypess, Music and Letters

The musica secreta or concerto delle dame of Duke Alfonso II d'Este, an ensemble of virtuoso female musicians that performed behind closed doors at the castello in Ferrara, is well-known to music history. Their story is often told by focussing on the Duke's obsessive patronage and the exclusivity of their music. This book examines the music-making of four generations of princesses, noblewomen and nuns in Ferrara, as performers, creators, and patrons from a new perspective. It rethinks the relationships between polyphony and song, sacred and secular, performer and composer, patron and musician, court and convent. With new archival evidence and analysis of music, people, and events over the course of the century, from the role of the princess nun musician, Leonora d'Este, to the fate of the musica secreta's jealously guarded repertoire, this radical approach will appeal to musicians and scholars alike.

Introduction: Musica secreta
1. Ferrarese convents and the Este in the first half of the sixteenth century
2. Courtly women and secular music in Ferrara in the first half of the sixteenth century
3. Princesses and politics: the Este women and music in the 1550s
4. Actresses and Ariosto: spectacle and song in the 1560s
5. 'Un modo di cantare molto diverso': Ferrara and the new singing of the 1570s
6. Margherita's arrival and the convents in the first half of the 1580s
7. Musical practices of the 1580s concerto
8. Ferrara's final chapter: court and convents in the 1590s
9. Afterlife in Mantua.

Subject Areas: Gender studies: women [JFSJ1], Society & culture: general [JF], Sacred & religious music [AVGD], Medieval & Renaissance music [c 1000 to c 1600 AVGC2], Theory of music & musicology [AVA]

View full details