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The Performance of Ensemble Music in Elizabethan England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 1970

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Extract

This well-known passage by Francis Bacon might be regarded as an appeal for common sense in the instrumentation of Elizabethan and Jacobean music. The principle of avoiding combinations which do not blend may still be applied today, but, as Bacon goes on to say, ‘for the Melioration of Musicke, there is yet much left (in this Point of Exquisite Consorts) to try and enquire’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1971 The Royal Musical Association and the Authors

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References

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8 Exceptionally, British Museum, Add. MS 30513, containing keyboard arrangements of some In nomines, may be earlier. See Ward, J., ‘Les Sources de la musique pour le clavier en Angleterre’, La Musique instrumentale de la Renaissance, ed. J. Jacquot, Pans, 1955, pp. 227–30, 234–6.Google Scholar

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