Missa Tournai

From Conservapedia

The Missa Tournai or the Tournai Mass is the earliest surviving complete mass set to music. It comprises six movements, each of which are for three voices. There are wide disparities in style and notation between the movements, and there does not appear to be a systematic underlying musical structure such as a common cantus firmus. For this reason, the Mass is believed to have been composed independently by several musicians over a period of fifty or more years, only later being compiled by a scribe to be performed as a whole. The name derives from the fact that the manuscript is located at Tournai cathedral in today's Belgium.

The first known mass to have been conceived of and composed as a single unified work is the Messe de Nostre Dame by Guillaume de Machaut, and it is likely that he used the Missa Tournai as a model.[1]

The Mass Structure[edit]


References[edit]

  1. Taruskin, Richard. The Oxford History of Western Music. Oxford, 2005, I, p. 316.

Categories: [Sacred Music]


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