Table of Contents
Illustrations
 Music examples
 Abbreviations
 Introduction
 Contributors
 I The music of the past and the modem ear
 I Daniel Leech-Wilkinson The good, the bad and the boring
 2 James Haar Value judgments in music of the Renaissance
 3 Christopher Page The English a cappella heresy
 4 Tess Knighton  Going down on record  
 5 Thomas Binkley The work is not the performance
 6 Peter Phillips Beyond authenticity
 7 Philip Pickett Hard-sell, scholarship and silly titles  
 II Aspects of music and society
 8 Reinhard Strohm Centre and periphery: mainstream and provincial
 music
 9 Barbara Haggh The meeting of sacred ritual and secular piety:
 endowments for music
 IO Keith Falconer Ritual reflections
 II Christopher Page Musicus and cantor
 I2 Tess Knighton A day in the life ofFrancisco de Penalosa
 I3 Anthony Rooley A portrait of Sir Henry Unton
 I4 Laura W. Macy Women's history and early music
 III Questions of form and style
 GENRES: VOCAL
 I5 Katherine Bergeron Chant,or the politics of inscription
 I6 Ardis Butterfield  Monophonic song: questions of category
 I7 Hendrik van der Werf Early Western polyphony
 I8 Margaret Bent The late-medieval motet
 I9 Philip T. Jackson Mass polyphony
 20 David Fallows Polyphonic song
 2I Margaret Mabbett Genre and function: some thoughts on Italian
 secular vocal music in the sixteenth
 century
 GENRES: INSTRUMENTAL
 22 Lewis Jones Fourteenth- and fifteenth-century keyboard
 music
 23 Hopkinson Smith Plucked instruments: silver tones of a golden
 age
 24 Randall Cook The medieval fiddle: reflections of a performer
 25 Crawford Young On the trail of ensemble music in the fifteenth
 century
 26 Lorenz Welker Wind ensembles in the Renaissance
 TECHNIQUES OF COMPOSITION
 27 Gareth Curtis Musical design and the rise of the cyclic
 Mass
 28 Irena Cholij Borrowed music: 'Allez regrets' and the use of
 pre-existentmaterial
 IV Using the evidence
 29 Elizabeth C. Teviotdale Music and pictures in the Middle Ages
 30 lain Fenlon Music in Italian Renaissance painting
 3I Stevie Wishart Echoes of the past in the present
 32 Lewis Jones Surviving instruments
 33 Reinhard Strohm Unwritten and written music
 34 Frederick Hammond Researching the past: archival studies
 35 Michael Noone A manuscript case-study
 V Pre-performance decisions
 36 Bruno Turner The editor: diplomat or dictator?
 37 Liane Curtis Mode
 38 Rob C. Wegman Musica ficta
 39 Kenneth Kreitner Renaissance pitch
 40 Honey Meconi Is underlay necessary?
 4I Alison Wray Restored pronunciation
 42 Jan Nuchelmans Finding the right context: where to perform
 early music
 VI Performance techniques
 43 Paul Hillier Framing the life of the words
 44 John Potter Reconstructing lost voices
 45 Rogers Covey-Crump Pythagoras at the forge: tuning in early music
 46 Richard Sherr Tempo to I500
 47 Ephraim Segerman Tempo and tactus after I500
 48 Bernard Thomas Divisions in Renaissance music
 49 Andrew Lawrence-King 'Perfect' instruments
 T.K. Chronology
 T.K. Glossary
 D. F. Index