The St Gall Passion Play: Music and Performance

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Rodopi, 2007 - 460 pages
The early-fourteenth-century St Gall Passion Play comes from the Central Rhineland. Unfortunately its music (over one hundred Latin and German chants) is given in the manuscript only as brief incipits, without any musical notation. This interdisciplinary study reconstructs the musical stratum of the play. It is the first full-scale musical reconstruction of a large German Passion play in recent times, using the latest available scholarly data in drama, liturgy and music. It draws conclusions about performance practice and forces, and offers a sound basis for an authentic performance of the play. The study applies musical and liturgical data to the problem of localizing the play (the first time this has been systematically attempted), and assesses how applicable this might be to other plays. It presents a detailed study of the distinctive medieval liturgical uses of three German dioceses, Mainz, Speyer and Worms. The comparative approach suggests how the music of other plays might be reconstructed and understood, and shows that a better understanding of the music of medieval drama has much to teach us about other aspects of the genre. The book should be of interest to literary scholars, theatre historians, musicologists, liturgical scholars, and those involved in the performance of early drama.
 

Selected pages

Contents

The St Gall Passion Play
3
Table of contents
5
Acknowledgements
7
Introduction
11
The Text and the Problem
21
Liturgy and Localization
45
Approaches
79
Cantat 151 dicat 151 respondeat Directions and Performers
93
Localizing the Play
123
Before the Passion
165
The Passion 1
227
The Passion 2
281
The Resurrection and the Harrowing of Hell
321
The Empty Tomb
357
Conclusions
391
Bibliography
397

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About the author (2007)

Peter Macardle lectures in German in the School of Modern Languages and Cultures, Durham University, England. He is the author of a number of studies of German and Latin culture of the late-medieval and early modern period.

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