Forging Repertories: Cathedral Music in New Spain and Its Performance
Much engagement with the cathedral music of New Spain has been through lens of exoticism. This book challenges this view by uncovering how colonial repertories mixed European aesthetics with locally composed pieces to create canons both tailored to local liturgies and shaped by European tradition.

Building upon material from the archives of Mexico City, Durango, and Puebla cathedrals, author Drew Edward Davies examines how composers, some of them priests, communicated theological doctrine through music genres. The book also offers a new understanding of cultural encounter, both by assessing how music was used for indoctrination and by rethinking stereotypes in villancicos through the lens of topic theory. Illuminating the unique mix of devotional subjects stressed in New Spain, Davies argues that topicality rather than style differentiated New Spanish musical repertory from that of Europe.

Concluding with a history of the early music movement's revival of New Spanish music beginning in the 1960s, Davies suggests that exoticism and the imagination continue to shape performances in ways that may not be plausible historically, but nonetheless resonate with audiences in the contemporary world. In so doing, he invites performers and scholars alike to engage with broader repertories of New Spanish music moving forward.
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Forging Repertories: Cathedral Music in New Spain and Its Performance
Much engagement with the cathedral music of New Spain has been through lens of exoticism. This book challenges this view by uncovering how colonial repertories mixed European aesthetics with locally composed pieces to create canons both tailored to local liturgies and shaped by European tradition.

Building upon material from the archives of Mexico City, Durango, and Puebla cathedrals, author Drew Edward Davies examines how composers, some of them priests, communicated theological doctrine through music genres. The book also offers a new understanding of cultural encounter, both by assessing how music was used for indoctrination and by rethinking stereotypes in villancicos through the lens of topic theory. Illuminating the unique mix of devotional subjects stressed in New Spain, Davies argues that topicality rather than style differentiated New Spanish musical repertory from that of Europe.

Concluding with a history of the early music movement's revival of New Spanish music beginning in the 1960s, Davies suggests that exoticism and the imagination continue to shape performances in ways that may not be plausible historically, but nonetheless resonate with audiences in the contemporary world. In so doing, he invites performers and scholars alike to engage with broader repertories of New Spanish music moving forward.
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Forging Repertories: Cathedral Music in New Spain and Its Performance

Forging Repertories: Cathedral Music in New Spain and Its Performance

by Drew Edward Davies
Forging Repertories: Cathedral Music in New Spain and Its Performance

Forging Repertories: Cathedral Music in New Spain and Its Performance

by Drew Edward Davies

Hardcover

$99.00 
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Overview

Much engagement with the cathedral music of New Spain has been through lens of exoticism. This book challenges this view by uncovering how colonial repertories mixed European aesthetics with locally composed pieces to create canons both tailored to local liturgies and shaped by European tradition.

Building upon material from the archives of Mexico City, Durango, and Puebla cathedrals, author Drew Edward Davies examines how composers, some of them priests, communicated theological doctrine through music genres. The book also offers a new understanding of cultural encounter, both by assessing how music was used for indoctrination and by rethinking stereotypes in villancicos through the lens of topic theory. Illuminating the unique mix of devotional subjects stressed in New Spain, Davies argues that topicality rather than style differentiated New Spanish musical repertory from that of Europe.

Concluding with a history of the early music movement's revival of New Spanish music beginning in the 1960s, Davies suggests that exoticism and the imagination continue to shape performances in ways that may not be plausible historically, but nonetheless resonate with audiences in the contemporary world. In so doing, he invites performers and scholars alike to engage with broader repertories of New Spanish music moving forward.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199729906
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 01/29/2025
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 9.52(h) x 0.96(d)

About the Author

Drew Edward Davies, Professor of Musicology at Northwestern University, specializes in early modern church music from New Spain and Mediterranean Europe. He serves as Academic Coordinator of the Seminario de música en la Nueva España y el México Independiente in Mexico City and President of the Society for Eighteenth-Century Music (2021-2025). Among his publications are critical editions of Manuel de Sumaya, Santiago Billoni, and Ignacio Jerusalem.

Table of Contents

List of Figures
List of Examples
List of Tables
Preface


Chapter 1. Approaching Cathedral Music from New Spain
Chapter 2. The Black Reveler in Christmas Villancicos
Chapter 3. Making and Composing Cathedral Music
Chapter 4. The Miraculous School of St. Peter
Chapter 5. Mary, Our Lady of Guadalupe, from the Empyrion to Mexico
Chapter 6. Imagining Latin America through Performance

Postface
References
Index
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