@NikhilHoganShow
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Nikhil Hogan Show | The majority of 15th and 16th-century composers were writing without a score #renaissance @NikhilHoganShow | Uploaded 8 months ago | Updated 1 minute ago
Tim Braithwaite shares the compositional process that the majority of historical sources seem to indicate how Renaissance composers and earlier would use.

From Episode 181: Tim Braithwaite (historical solmisation, improvised vocal counterpoint)
The majority of 15th and 16th-century composers were writing without a score #renaissanceDid Bach know Hexachordal Solfeggio?The Rule of the Octave is the paradigm of tonality in Partimento #classicalmusic #musictheory185: Michael R. Dodds (From Modes to Keys in Early Modern Music Theory)The real virtuoso could improvise on the spot #classicalmusic #history #improvisationEven the best modern solfège students would have trouble with 18th-century solfeggio manuscriptsDid Bach specify his vocal works to have 12 or 4 singers? (Joshua Rifkin)Nikhil Hogan: Fedele Fenarolis Partimento Book 1 No. 9What is Italian Solfeggio? #classicalmusic #musiceducation #singingThe Science of Musical Harmony was Aspirational, not Actual (Robert O. Gjerdingen)Nikhil Hogan: Fedele Fenarolis Partimento Book 1 No. 4Probably the most effective music education system ever devised (Baragwanath)

The majority of 15th and 16th-century composers were writing without a score #renaissance @NikhilHoganShow

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