Performing Ornaments in English Virginal and Harpsichord Music (Based on the Study of Original Interpretation Instructions)
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The focus of the article is centered on the problems of performing ornaments in English virginal
music of the Elizabethan and several first decades of Post-Elizabethan time. The paper
presents a comparative analysis of information from historical sources, representing the views
of early British virginalists regarding the methods and rules which deal with the interpretation
of the unique, for that period, ornament signs. Special attention is given to the MS Res. 1186
located in the Bibliothèque nationale de France. Historically, the situation was such that except
for information from the MS materials by Edward Bevin (c1630), science did not have
any information directly related to the execution of virginal ornamentation. A critical review
is undertaken of the scientific literature of the 19th–21st centuries, devoted to the interpretation
of early English virginal music, as well as the review of information from reference
and encyclopedic literature. Numerous inaccuracies, discrepancies and even serious errors
in the interpretation and presentation of materials from early sources by modern researchers
are revealed. As a result a generalization is provided in which it is stated that there are many
possibilities for performing virginal ornaments marked by double oblique strokes, but not
playing them from the above auxiliary note except in the cadential (semi- and quasi-cadential)
contexts. The article also examines the possible correlations between performing principles of
English virginalists and the practical recommendations from the well known Spanish, Italian,
German and French treatises from the analyzed period.
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Panov, Alexei, and Ivan Rosanoff. “Performing Ornaments in English Virginal and Harpsichord Music (Based on the Study of Original Interpretation Instructions)”. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Arts 10, no. 1 (2020): 41–67.