From Pain to Pleasure: The Troping of Elegy in the Renaissance Italian Madrigal

Authors

Keywords:

renaissance, melancholia, madrigal, elegy, transcendence of death, troping

Abstract

In the Renaissance period, melancholia emerged as a dramatic cultural phenomenon among the intellectual and artistic elites, with a locus in elegy it gave form to the Renaissance poetics of loss, pain and shedding of tears, expressing essentially the fantasy about death as a prerequisite for revival. The possibilities of confronting the threats of death were being found in its very nature whose inherent ambiguity was determined by the principles of Thanatos and Eros. The creative act of the troping of elegy proved to be an effective literary and musical strategy for the transcendence of death including the procedures of homeopathization, pastoralization, heroization and erotization of elegy. The elegiac tropic transcendence of death found its most complex expression in the madrigal which in turn added to its basic polyphonic procedure the opposing stylistic elements of the pastoral genres (canzonettas and villanellas) or heroic solo or choral recitations and it consequently acquired a hybrid form in the last decades of the 16th century, and thereby proved to be a cultural trope itself. The aim of this article is to examine the musical implications of the tropic strategies of facing death within Francesco Petrarch’s, Torquato Tasso’s, and Battista Gurini’s poetic models of the art of loving death, using the remarkable examples of the Italian madrigal practice of the late Renaissance.

References

Agamben, Giorgio (1993) Stanzas: Word and Phantasm in Western Culture, Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press.

Boccadoro, Brenno (2000) “Marsilio Ficino: The Soul and the Body of Counterpoint.” In Paolo Gozzi (ed.), Number to Sound: The Musical Way to the Scientific Revolution. Western Ontario: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 99–134.

Boccadoro, Brenno (2004) “Éléments de grammaire mélancolique.” Acta Musicologica 76 (1): 25–65.

Céster, Carlos (2005) CD booklet: Gesualdo. Quarto libro di Madrigali 1596. S. l.: La Venexiana, Glossa Music.

Enterline, Lynn (1995) The Tears of Narcissus: Melancholia and Masculinity in Early Modern Writing. Stanford: Stanford University Press.

Farndell, Arthur (2010) All things natural: Ficino on Plato’s Timaeus (Marsilio Ficino’s Compendium on Plato’s Timaeus). Translated by Arthur Farndell, notes and additional material by Peter Blumsom. London: Shepheard-Walwyn Publishers LTD.

Ficino, Marsilio (1944) Commentary on Plato’s Symposium De Amore. The Text and a Translation, with an Introduction by Sears Reynolds Jayne. Columbia: University of Missouri.

Ficino, Marsilio (1980) The Book on Life. Edited and translated by Charles Boer, Dallas, Texas: Spring Publications.

Ficino, Marsilio (1998) Three books on life. A critical edition and translation with Introduction and Notes by Carol V. Kaske and John R. Clark. Tempe, Arisona: Arisona State University.

Gerbino, Giuseppe (2009) Music and the Myth of Arcadia in Renaissance Italy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Greene, Thomas M. (1982) The Light in Troy: Imitation and Discovery in Renaissance Poetry. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Guarini, Giovanni Battista (1603) “Compendio della poesia tragicomica tratto dai duo Verati.” In Il pastor fido e il Compendio della poesia tragicomic. Venice: Giovanni Battista Ciotti.

Haar, James (1998) The Science and Art of Renaissance Music. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Kimmel, William (1980) “The Phrygian Inflection and the Appearances of Death.” Music College Music Symposium 20(2), 42–76.

Longhini, Marco (2005) CD booklet: Claudio Monteverdi, Madrigals Book 4. Naxos Rights International Ltd.

Medić, Milena (2013) “Mia benigna fortuna: Scattered Rhymes and Scattered Renaissance Discourses on (Musical) Melancholy.” In Miloš Zatkalik, Milena Medić, and Denis Collins (eds.), Histories and Narratives on Music Analysis. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 137–159.

Palisca, Claude (1994) Studies in the History of Italian Music and Music Theory. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Radden, Jеnnifer (ed.) (2000) The Nature of Melancholy from Aristotle to Kristeva. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Schiesari, Juliana (1992) The Gendering of Melancholia. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.

Smith, Anne (2011) The Performance of 16th-Century Music: Learning from the Theorists. New York: Oxford University Press.

Steele, John (1996) Luca Marenzio. The Complete Five voice madrigals (vol. I-V) with translations (poetry) by Kathryn Bosi and Elisabeth Lee Giansiracusa. New York: Gaudia, Music and Arts, Inc.

Strocchia, Sharon T. (1991) “Funerals and the Politics of Gender in Early Renaissance Florence.” In Marilyn Migiel and Juliana Schiesari (eds.), Refiguring Woman: Perspectives on Gender and the Italian Renaissance. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 155–168.

Downloads

Published

06.11.2024

How to Cite

“From Pain to Pleasure: The Troping of Elegy in the Renaissance Italian Madrigal”. 2024. MUZIKOLOGIJA-MUSICOLOGY, no. 22 (November): 151-75. https://muzikologija-musicology.com/index.php/MM/article/view/256.

Similar Articles

1-10 of 25

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.