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Con lagreme bagnandome el viso: mourning and music in late medieval Padua
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 April 2015
Abstract
In the years before his death, Johannes Ciconia (1370?–1412) set to music several poems penned by the young Venetian humanist Leonardo Giustinian. One of the earliest of these settings is Con lagreme bagnandome el viso. This article proposes that both the poem and its setting by Ciconia operate within the emotional community of early humanists active at Padua in the decades around the year 1400. The public funeral oratory of one of the high-profile humanists active in this community in Padua, Pier Paolo Vergerio, reveals a renewed interest in ancient rhetoric that was instrumental in the development of new modes of self-expression within this emotional community. Different types of musical repetition in Ciconia's setting of Con lagreme serve as musical analogues to rhetorical figures of pathos witnessed in the orations of Vergerio.
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References
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38 In the translation, I have attempted to recast several passive constructions, since a literal translation of the Latin produces awkward English constructions.
39 Pier Paolo Vergerio, Oratio in funere Francisci Senioris de Carraria, in Rerum Italicarum scriptores, xvi, ed. Muratori, cols. 194–8 at cols. 195–6, with minor corrections from the unique source Modena, Biblioteca Estense Universitaria, ms. Lat. 186, fols. 52v–53r (old fol. 42v–43r). I wish to especially thank Dr Annalisa Battini and Ms Elisa Pederzoli for their kind assistance at the Biblioteca Estense.
40 Compare Cicero's prosopopoeia of Appius Claudius Caecus in his Pro Caelio 14.33. On the Ciceronian trope of mortuos ab inferis excitare of see Dufallo, Basil, The Ghosts of the Past: Latin Literature, the Dead, and Rome's Transition to a Principate (Columbus, 2007)Google Scholar.
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51 On the textually related anonymous Trecento ballata Con lagreme sospiro (Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale de France, n.a.f. 6771, fol. 27r), see Kreutziger-Herr, Annette, ‘Rethinking Con lagreme: Johannes Ciconia, Leonardo Giustinian and the Musical Text’, in Johannes Ciconia, Musicien de la transition, ed. Vendrix, Philippe (Turnhout, 2003)Google Scholar, 215–32, at 227. Also see the detailed analysis of Con lagreme in Annette Kreutziger-Herr, Johannes Ciconia (ca. 1370–1412): Komponieren in einer Kultur des Wortes, Hamburger Beiträge zur Musikwissenschaft 39 (Hamburg, 1991), 175–90. Kreutziger-Herr argues that Con lagreme was conceptualised in a ‘“heraldic”, almost visual way’, with the rhetorical/poetic figure of chiasm governing its use of motifs and cadences. Chiasm was widely used in ancient literature, and the presence of this figure again signals the influence of rhetorical modes of expression.
52 Il Fiore survives only in Montpellier, Bibliothèque universitaire, École de Médecine, H 438. Some scholars attribute this work to Dante Alighieri. The earlier preference for reading translations of the classics in Florence contrasts with the Paduan movement's cultivation of the Latin originals.
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61 Fallows makes the point that the ballata was not a ‘very public statement’ and that its addressee is not named in the text; Fallows, ‘Leonardo Giustinian’, 252.
62 Brief critical notes for edition based upon music in Pit, fols. 52v–53r but with text from Codex Lucca: b.14 Tenor: three semibreves plus two minims Lucca Codex; b. 34 Tenor: b–a in Pit, d–c in Lucca Codex; b.43 Tenor: F Lucca Codex, G Pit; b. 62 Cantus: semibreve rest in Pit emended to breve rest as in Tenor; NB. Lucca Codex has an imperfect long rest in Tenor.
63 That these rhetorical analogues could be transferred is suggested by the Lauda cantasi come on Col lagreme, Colla ment’ e col cor, peccator, fiso. See Debenedetti, Il ‘Sollazzo’, 77; Blake Wilson, Singing Poetry in Renaissance Florence: The cantasi come tradition (1375–1550) with CD-ROM, Italian Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 9 (Florence, 2009), 51.
64 Lausberg, Handbook of Literary Rhetoric, trans. Bliss et al., 297–8.
65 For more on the influence of classical periodicity on early humanists, see Baxandall, Giotto and the Orators, 20–31.
66 Luko, Alexis, ‘Tinctoris on Varietas’, Early Music History, 27 (2008), 99–136CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
67 Kohl, Benjamin G., ‘Mourners of Petrarch’, in Francis Petrarch: Six Centuries Later, ed. Scaglione, Aldo (Chapel Hill, NC, 1975), 340–52Google Scholar, at 351–2; reprinted in Kohl, Culture and Politics in Early Renaissance Padua.
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