Template:EVE Critical Editions
Editions listed here cite curated scores, usually with a critical apparatus (a description of the musical sources and a log of differences between the present score and the original one). Some offer performing parts or downloadable files from which parts can be created. Data files with which you can make your own edition of a score are included as appropriate. Some sites are under development. All are intended for expansion. Please note that EVE is limited to open-access materials.
Contents
- 1 ASCIMA: Archive of Seventeenth-Century Italian Madrigals and Arias
- 2 C.P.E. Bach: The Complete Works
- 3 Du Fay: Opera Omnia
- 4 Gesualdo Online
- 5 MARGOT
- 6 Measuring Polyphony
- 7 MODE: The Marenzio Online Digital Edition
- 8 Parzival (Digital Critical Edition)
- 9 Tasso in Music Project (TMP)
- 10 Web Library of Seventeenth-Century Music (WLSCM)
ASCIMA: Archive of Seventeenth-Century Italian Madrigals and Arias
Website: ASCIMA Website: ASCIMA
The ASCIMA website, directed by John Whenham at Birmingham University (UK), provides full critical editions of entire volumes of secular vocal music which has been edited from printed part-books. Current holdings include madrigal collections by Tarquinio Merula, Claudio Monteverdi, Martino Pesenti, Giovanni Rovetta, Barbara Strozzi, and Giuseppe Valentini. Both single works and entire opuses can be downloaded as single files. Sound files are provided for each work.
C.P.E. Bach: The Complete Works
Website: C.P.E. Bach: The Complete Works
This digital analogue of the printed set allows users to download complete scores. Critical notes are viewable online. All scores can be downloaded as PDFs by going to the "Contents of Series and Volumes" tab and selecting the work. Users seeking a work by catalogue number can consult the "Search" tab. Non-transferable performing parts can be ordered at the Performing Materials tab without cost on request.
Du Fay: Opera Omnia
Website: Du Fay: Opera Omnia
Alejandro Planchart's critical edition of all the works of Guillaume Du Fay is subdivided into eleven section by musical/liturgical genre. DIAMM intends to provide other editions at its website.
Gesualdo Online
Website: Gesualdo Online
Gesualdo Online is a collaborative project designed to enable dynamic editing of the of the composer's works, which are noted for their intensely chromatic development. The project is based at the University of Tours. The organizers intend to show the editorial history of individual works by managing variants with MEI (the Music Encoding Initiative) and similar protocols.
MARGOT
Website: MARGOT
MARGOT is focused on a range of interdisciplinary, intertextual, and intermedia projects including German adaptations of French chanson de geste, the Roman de la rose in text and image, and women writers in the ancien régime. Apart from being the home of the new CANTUS search engine (see DRM, 4.1.2), MARGOT is peripheral to most music study but complementary to certain musical topics of the medieval and early modern periods. The site is being developed at the University of Waterloo in both French and English versions.
Measuring Polyphony
Website: Measuring Polyphony
'Measuring Polyphony’ presents, for the first time, digitizations of polyphonic compositions written during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries in mensural notation. In most cases these are linked to high-resolution images of the original manuscript sources. It offers new possibilities for mediating the scholarly and public experience of this music within its original context. It leverages the potential of the digital image repositories of music manuscripts and the community-based standards for encoding music notation of the Music Encoding Initiative (MEI).
‘Measuring Polyphony’ has three goals:
- It makes transcriptions and audio freely available online to performers, scholars, and the general public, presented alongside images of the original music manuscripts;
- It encodes the medieval notation in a standardised machine-readable format so that the music data can potentially be be searched or analysed using current tools, and through this interoperability make the data available to other websites and applications; and
- It makes the processes and tools for digitally encoding mensural polyphony in mensural notation freely available so that other stakeholders can easily and rapidly enlarge the dataset.
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This project began at the Schulich School of Music, McGill University, and now continues at Brandeis University.
MODE: The Marenzio Online Digital Edition
Website: The Marenzio Online Digital Edition (MODE)
This online digital edition of Luca Marenzio's secular music has been under development for several years. Mauro Calcagno and Lorent Pugin are the principal investigators. The musical sources are sixteenth-century partbooks that have been scanned (and "recognized') by Pugin's Aruspix software. Scores are assembled from the recognized parts.
Parzival (Digital Critical Edition)
Website: Parzival (Digital Critical Edition)
Owing to its long textual tradition (1210-1833) Wolfram von Eschenbach's medieval romance of the Arthurian knight Parzival and his search for the Holy Grail has an exceptionally complex history. Its sources include 16 intact manuscripts, 77 fragments, and a print from 1477. The narrative weaves together fragments of several textual traditions. The value of a new digital edition incorporating principal sources will enable the study of intertextual relationships to other epics circulated in manuscript. Elements of the new project include the creation of a catalog of manuscripts and verse-by-verse annotations. Richard Wagner read a version of the work in 1845 and began to think about composing an opera on the subject in 1857, but his opera Parsifal did not have its premiere until 1882.
Tasso in Music Project (TMP)
Website: Tasso in Music Project (TMP)
This digital edition of the musical settings of Torquato Tasso's poetry (c. 1570-1640), which is still under development, will eventually provide all known musical settings up to 1640 of the poet's rime and celebrated epics, including Gerusalemme liberata, and other works. The site is intended to present analytical views of the music and the poetry, for which there will also be textual concordances. A "play" button enables synthetic performance, which is highlighted in the on-screen score.
Web Library of Seventeenth-Century Music (WLSCM)
Website: Web Library of Seventeenth-Century Music (WLSCM)
The Web Library of Seventeenth-Century Music (ISSN 2330-2429), which operates under the auspices of the Society for Seventeenth-Century Music, is a curated collection of music that is not available otherwise. Most items in its catalogue features a "full volume" of works with critical notes. Most publications come from French and Italian composers. Each edition contains a complete opus or longer work. Current holdings include cantatas (including Lucrezia Romana, Alessandro Scarlatti), canzonas (multiple composers), keyboard works and arrangements (R. Ayleward, 67 short pieces, with audio samples; J.-B. Lully, 250 pieces newly edited from scattered manuscripts), Lament for the Queen of England (A. Bertali), madrigals (Biagio Marini), motets (M.-A. Charpentier), and spiritual monodies (G. G. Kapsberger). Collectively these free, downloadable editions constitute the series Monuments of Seventeenteenth-Century Music.