A quick question
This is for some research I'm doing for an education project which isn't about musicology but I wanted a bit more understanding.
I was talking with a friend who is a musicologist about the idea of "repertoire" and when (in "Western Art Music", for want of a better label!) it became the dominant concept. He was talking about how no-one played Bach much until his music was "rediscovered" by Mendelssohn.
So what do you folks think?
What I'm interested in is how the idea of music having a set of pieces that are considered to be a "repertoire" came about and when this was.
When was most music "new music" (writing a Cantata every week being an obvious example) and was this "new music" regarded as somehow fundamentally different from the music that was already in existence.
I'm more familiar with this in relation to other musics (the Honkyoku repertoire of Shakuhachi pieces etc) but not clear enough about this in relation to Western Musics.
This is for some research I'm doing for an education project which isn't about musicology but I wanted a bit more understanding.
I was talking with a friend who is a musicologist about the idea of "repertoire" and when (in "Western Art Music", for want of a better label!) it became the dominant concept. He was talking about how no-one played Bach much until his music was "rediscovered" by Mendelssohn.
So what do you folks think?
What I'm interested in is how the idea of music having a set of pieces that are considered to be a "repertoire" came about and when this was.
When was most music "new music" (writing a Cantata every week being an obvious example) and was this "new music" regarded as somehow fundamentally different from the music that was already in existence.
I'm more familiar with this in relation to other musics (the Honkyoku repertoire of Shakuhachi pieces etc) but not clear enough about this in relation to Western Musics.
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