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引用次数: 1
摘要
纪尧姆·杜·费伊(Guillaume Du Fay)的《玫瑰花环》(Nuper rosarum flores)(1436年)自从查尔斯·沃伦(Charles Warren)提出圣坛的结构反映了佛罗伦萨大教堂的建筑比例以来,就一直受到象征性的解释。最近的分析已经接受了一个前提,即圣歌的形式具有音乐之外的意义,特别是,测量和建筑比例可以直接类比。这些诱人的联系让学者们把这首圣歌奉为圣典,现在已经成为音乐史教科书的主要内容。在15世纪,迷迭花所享受的音乐外联想的广度和特殊性——一个场合,一个地方,一个安全的归属——是罕见的。单凭这一事实,就足以使圣歌显得与众不同。但是,如果将《玫瑰花束》与流派和符号的规范结合起来,并与该作品的现代史学脉络相违背,那么阅读它就会发现,它并没有那么特别——至少它并不比杜费的其他仪式性颂歌更特别。对玫瑰花的历史解释例证了我所说的“假例外论”,它与音乐研究中的一个更普遍的问题有关——音乐形式和社会意义之间诱人但往往难以捉摸的关系。
Guillaume Du Fay’s Nuper rosarum flores (1436) has been subject to symbolic interpretation ever since Charles Warren suggested that the structure of the motet reflects the architectural proportions of the cathedral of Florence. More recent analyses have accepted the premise that the motet’s form has extramusical meaning, in particular, that mensural and architectural proportions can be directly analogized. These tantalizing connections have led scholars to canonize this motet, now a mainstay of music history textbooks. The extent and specificity of the extramusical associations Nuper rosarum flores enjoys—an occasion, a place, and a secure attribution—are rare in the fifteenth century. This fact alone makes the motet appear to be exceptional. But reading Nuper rosarum flores alongside the norms of genre and notation and against the grain of the work’s modern historiography suggests that it isn’t all that special—or at least that it is no more special than Du Fay’s other ceremonial motets. The interpretive history of Nuper rosarum flores exemplifies what I call “false exceptionalism,” which relates to a more general problem in music studies—the alluring but often elusive relationship between musical form and social meaning.
期刊介绍:
The widely-respected Journal of Musicology enters its third decade as one of few comprehensive peer-reviewed journals in the discipline, offering articles in every period, field and methodology of musicological scholarship. Its contributors range from senior scholars to new voices in the field. Its reach is international, with recent articles by authors from North America, Europe and Australia, and circulation to individuals and libraries throughout the world.