Music for Richard III

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  • ardcarp
    Late member
    • Nov 2010
    • 11102

    #16
    I'm chipping in to this thread from the totally irrelevant standpoint of having just (literally) returned from Leicester, having seen the Richard III exhibition in The Guildhall (no real bones on show, alas!) and having seen the now re-tarmac-ed car park. The adjacent St Martin's (very close to Greyfriars) was only elevated to cathedral-hood in 1927. Whilst it has medieval beginnings, its interior is a Victorian restoration of a 15th century building and its aura is firmly Anglican. How a Catholic interment ceremony would go down with the burghers of Leicester I am not quite sure...nor indeed 15th century polyphony with Leicester cathedral choir. There is, however, already a dignified grey memorial tablet to RIII laid in the choir. This will presumably be the site of his final resting place?

    Comment

    • Nick Armstrong
      Host
      • Nov 2010
      • 26572

      #17
      Originally posted by Catherine Bott View Post
      I like this idea for an Early Music Show - I'll mention it to my masters tomorrow!
      Now that's interactive!!

      "...the isle is full of noises,
      Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
      Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
      Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."

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      • Miles Coverdale
        Late Member
        • Dec 2010
        • 639

        #18
        Originally posted by Roehre View Post
        Missa Caput is either French or Burgundian (as I implied in #3), or a mix.
        Assuming we're talking about the same piece, I think it's much more probable (if not indeed certain) that it is English in origin. One of its sources is the Lucca Choirbook, which (according to Reinhard Strohm) ‘was created, in c. 1463, for the chapel of the English Merchant Adventurers, a leading trade company based in Bruges. The chapel, in the Carmelite friary of the town, was then sponsored by King Edward IV and by the new governor of the company, William Caxton'. It is rather more likely that such an institution would choose music by English composers than Continental ones. Parts of it are also found in two fragmentary English manuscripts which had been used in book bindings.

        Moreover, the Kyrie is troped. It was this that first alerted scholars to the fact that the Mass could not be by Dufay (as was once thought), but was rather by an English composer. The setting of troped Kyries was, in the 15th century, a peculiarly English habit. This, together with the fact that the chant used as the cantus firmus of the Mass is from the Use of Salisbury, identifies it as being of English origin.
        My boxes are positively disintegrating under the sheer weight of ticks. Ed Reardon

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        • jean
          Late member
          • Nov 2010
          • 7100

          #19
          Originally posted by Miles Coverdale View Post
          ...The setting of troped Kyries was, in the 15th century, a peculiarly English habit.
          I didn't know there were any settings of troped Kyries - the three Western wind masses don't set the Kyrie at all, allowing for whatever troped Kyrie was deemed appropriate for any particular occasion.
          This, together with the fact that the chant used as the cantus firmus of the Mass is from the Use of Salisbury, identifies it as being of English origin.
          I'd love to hear it.

          But if this fantasy-mass for Richard is to be a Requiem, there won't be much of the music that can be used.

          Comment

          • Roehre

            #20
            Originally posted by Catherine Bott View Post
            I like this idea for an Early Music Show - I'll mention it to my masters tomorrow!
            That really would be great

            Comment

            • Roehre

              #21
              Originally posted by Miles Coverdale View Post
              Assuming we're talking about the same piece, I think it's much more probable (if not indeed certain) that it is English in origin. One of its sources is the Lucca Choirbook, which (according to Reinhard Strohm) ‘was created, in c. 1463, for the chapel of the English Merchant Adventurers, a leading trade company based in Bruges. The chapel, in the Carmelite friary of the town, was then sponsored by King Edward IV and by the new governor of the company, William Caxton'. It is rather more likely that such an institution would choose music by English composers than Continental ones. Parts of it are also found in two fragmentary English manuscripts which had been used in book bindings.

              Moreover, the Kyrie is troped. It was this that first alerted scholars to the fact that the Mass could not be by Dufay (as was once thought), but was rather by an English composer. The setting of troped Kyries was, in the 15th century, a peculiarly English habit. This, together with the fact that the chant used as the cantus firmus of the Mass is from the Use of Salisbury, identifies it as being of English origin.
              MC: Sorry for the misunderstanding: you quoted me correctly, but it is not what I meant to write (see #3):
              It should have been "Missa Caput" is either English or Burgundian...or a mix". My mistake.

              It is the troped Kyrie which points more than anything else to the possibly/likely English origin of (at least parts of) the Missa Caput.

              Flanders -as county of the Netherlands which for the best part were ruled by the Burgundian dukes- was (therefore) quite firmly at the English side during the 100 years war. Brugge being Burgundy's main port -and part of the Hanseatic League- means that it was a place which was -generally speaking- more than any other of the greater cities within the Burgundy-governed counties under its court's social and cultural influence.

              As long as it hasn't been established beyond doubt that the work is by one composer, and not a pastiche, we unfortunately cannot define the Missa Caput as English, though obviously there are strong reasons to accept that at least parts of it are.

              My personal view FWIW is, that it actually is a pastiche put together from mass-movements from England as well as from Burgundy (Dufay e.g.).

              Whatever, it is one of the most influential pieces in the 15th century anyway, and as such already a worthy work to be performed at Richard III's funeral/burial.
              Last edited by Guest; 19-02-13, 09:27.

              Comment

              • doversoul1
                Ex Member
                • Dec 2010
                • 7132

                #22
                Originally posted by Catherine Bott View Post
                I like this idea for an Early Music Show - I'll mention it to my masters tomorrow!
                Looking forward very much to hearing the result.

                Comment

                • Roehre

                  #23
                  Originally posted by jean View Post
                  ....But if this fantasy-mass for Richard is to be a Requiem, there won't be much of the music that can be used.
                  AFAIK Apart from Ockeghem's Missa pro Defunctis there exists only one (fragment of) an anonymous contemporary polyphonic Requiem mass .

                  Comment

                  • jean
                    Late member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 7100

                    #24
                    Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
                    ...The adjacent St Martin's (very close to Greyfriars) was only elevated to cathedral-hood in 1927. Whilst it has medieval beginnings, its interior is a Victorian restoration of a 15th century building and its aura is firmly Anglican...
                    I'm not quite sure what an Anglican aura is, especially as there are Anglicans who firmly believe their Church is the true continuation of the pre-Reformation church...there was some discussion of this on the other thread (starting at #293).

                    But as the possibility of a reconstruction of an appropriate commemorative rite for Richard may take place somewhere, whether in Leicester or on Radio 3 (which I'm looking forward to as eagerly as everyone else here!) I'll repost here a few relevant posts from the other thread:


                    ...In 1984 a proper funeral service according to the Use of Sarum was given to the bodies
                    of the crew of several hundred sailors from the English Tudor warship Mary
                    Rose, which had sunk in the Solent...back in 1545, after the point when King
                    Henry VIII had broken with the Pope but before the appearance of new
                    burial rites in the first English Prayer Book of 1549. There was much
                    discussion of what to do after the sailors were raised from the deep in 1982,
                    and they were finally given solemn burial in 1984 with both Anglican and
                    Roman Catholic clergy participating in the service at Portsmouth Cathedral
                    according to the old Sarum rites of Requiem that they would have expected
                    in 1545. The ordinary of the Mass was in Latin with the lessons, bidding
                    prayer, Lord’s Prayer, and committal in English, and the music was of that
                    era, by John Taverner, Christopher Tye, and Thomas Tallis.


                    The polyphony mentioned there is far too late, of course.

                    .
                    Last edited by jean; 19-02-13, 09:35.

                    Comment

                    • jean
                      Late member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 7100

                      #25
                      Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
                      ...How a Catholic interment ceremony would go down with the burghers of Leicester I am not quite sure...
                      I think they could cope. I'm told tickets for the Sixteen's Choral Pilgrimage to Leicester are selling well.

                      Also from the other thread, here's the reply I got from Leicester Cathedral when I put some of these suggestions to them:

                      Dear Sir/Madam

                      Thank you for being in touch with us following the announcement that the human remains found on
                      the site of the former Greyfriars within the parish of St Martin Leicester are those of King Richard III.
                      The City Mayor and the Vice Chancellor as the relevant legal parties have requested that Leicester
                      Cathedral now take steps to inter these remains in order to enact the requirements of the licence
                      issued by the Ministry of Justice which permitted the exhumation of these remains. Burying King
                      Richard III in Leicester Cathedral conforms to the best archaeological practice and conforms to the
                      precedence set elsewhere within our national Church and State story.

                      The Bishop of Leicester with the Cathedral Chapter have carefully considered this request and are
                      beginning to plan how this might happen. We will begin to plan an appropriate location and design
                      for a permanent memorial to King Richard which will provide honour and dignity, and allow for the
                      wider use of the Cathedral as a place of daily prayer and the place which gathers the diocese and
                      wider community on major occasions. We will also begin to plan the liturgy which will take a Church
                      of England character but which will draw on our rich Christian heritage.
                      It will not technically be a
                      funeral but an interment and memorial. We will plan to involve ecumenical guests and to invite
                      representatives from all the faiths in Leicester.

                      We have had a large volume of correspondence and are sorry that we are unable to reply
                      individually to the letters and emails received. We would however, like to confirm that all
                      correspondence has been read and considered. Details will be posted on both our Cathedral and
                      Diocesan websites as the plans emerge.

                      Yours sincerely,

                      Rt Revd Tim Stevens, Bishop of Leicester & Canon Barry Naylor, Acting Dean



                      along with a covering email, which said


                      Dear Jean,

                      Thank you for your email which provides very interesting reading. Please see the
                      attached letter from the Bishop of Leicester and Acting Dean of the Cathedral
                      and be assured that your email will be passed on for consultation and
                      consideration.

                      Once again with grateful thanks for taking the time to write to the cathedral
                      with such detailed information.

                      Kind regards

                      Julia

                      Comment

                      • Flosshilde
                        Full Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 7988

                        #26
                        Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
                        I'm chipping in to this thread from the totally irrelevant standpoint of having just (literally) returned from Leicester, ... There is, however, already a dignified grey memorial tablet to RIII laid in the choir. This will presumably be the site of his final resting place?
                        Possibly the one referred to in this letter to the Guardian last week -

                        In 1980 my late husband David Kindersley and I were on our knees in Leicester Cathedral carving the gravestone for Richard III – the only king not to have had a memorial until then. I do hope he will now be laid to rest under it.
                        Lida Kindersley
                        Cambridge

                        Letters: The story of roof rabbits reminds me of my father and uncle debating whether it was worth 'investing' breadcrumbs to try to catch sparrows

                        Comment

                        • french frank
                          Administrator/Moderator
                          • Feb 2007
                          • 30455

                          #27
                          Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post
                          Possibly the one referred to in this letter to the Guardian last week -

                          In 1980 my late husband David Kindersley and I were on our knees in Leicester Cathedral carving the gravestone for Richard III – the only king not to have had a memorial until then. I do hope he will now be laid to rest under it.
                          Lida Kindersley
                          Cambridge

                          http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardia...ens-duffy-pope
                          This one?

                          It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

                          Comment

                          • ardcarp
                            Late member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 11102

                            #28
                            That's the one.

                            Comment

                            • french frank
                              Administrator/Moderator
                              • Feb 2007
                              • 30455

                              #29
                              Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
                              That's the one.


                              I have to say I'm somewhat revisionist as regards suitable music, form/place of service &c. He is being reinterred in 2013, not 1485 ...

                              But research is always fun
                              It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

                              Comment

                              • Roehre

                                #30
                                Originally posted by french frank View Post


                                I have to say I'm somewhat revisionist as regards suitable music, form/place of service &c. He is being reinterred in 2013, not 1485 ...

                                But research is always fun
                                FF, the discussion was triggered not so much as to determine music which might be performed during the 2013 re-burial, as by the question which music actually might have been heard by Richard III (see BBM # 2).
                                But whatever, I always find a bit of research fun indeed

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