
	COMPANION TO MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE
	MUSIC
	Edited by Tess Knighton and David Fallows
	Oxford University Press, 1997
	428 pages
	0-19-816540-4
	 
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	Over the past forty years, early music has been "rediscovered" by both performers
	and listeners. Enterprising musicians have saved countless major works of
	European music from the abyss of being forgetten, and have attempted to revive
	period instruments and performance practice. While one has to admit that
	the many successes in this area have been accompanied by failure as well,
	one cannot deny that the wealth of music from this period deserves this
	attention.
	
	The problem for listeners is how to make sense of the many different forms,
	styles, instruments and varieties of early music. Without a program, it is
	hard to tell the players. And there are indeed many players - starting with
	the composers themselves, but also many of the performers, who have developed
	cult-like status in the early music world. In some cases, this is justified;
	many performers have attempted to restore old music while remaining faithful
	to the original atmosphere and context. Yet, in others, the performers have
	adapted the music to their own tastes, in the name of "historical practice"
	about which we often know little.
	
	Early music lovers are confronted with wide range of musical styles and forms
	that span several centuries - the scope of this book is the period from the
	beginning of the Christian era to 1600, and it is no mean feat to examine
	such a vast amount of music in such a limited space. The goal of this book
	is not to present a list of composers and their works, but rather to examine
	the many issues that come into play involving early music.
	
	The book's 49 essays, written by renowned musicians and musicologists, examine
	the following major themes:
	
	The music of the past and the modern ear
	Aspects of music and society
	Questions of form and style
	Using the evidence
	Pre-performance decisions
	Performance techniques
	
	(Some of the well-known musicians contributing to this book are Philip Pickett,
	Anthony Rooley, Hopkinson Smith, Paul Hillier and Andrew Lawrence-King.)
	
	Most of the essays provide valuable insight into early music, be it the context,
	performance or form of the music, and help better understand what this music
	has to say to us, and why. The first section is particularly interesting
	- it addresses the many issues of how 21st century listeners hear and appreciate
	music, and examines the thorny issue of whether any performance can be called
	"authentic".
	
	While this book is not written specifically for musicians, some of the essays
	are more complex than others (such as the article on Pythagorean tuning,
	or the one on Modes). But most of them are accessible to the basic music-lover,
	whose knowledge of the workings of music is minimal.
	
	All in all, this book provides no answers to many of the issues it deals
	with - rather it presents the issues in a very subjective manner. It is a
	book that elicits more questions, without necessarily resolving them. It
	is nevertheless highly recommended for anyone interested in early music,
	and curious about what stands behind it. This excellent collection of articles
	is something that lovers of early music will find themselves returning to
	often.
	
	 
	
	Kirk McElhearn