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Ansingen: an introduction

Giulia Gabrielli

The pupils of the church schools were in fact also protagonists of performances which were not religious or liturgical: they were called “Ansingen” (“singing at”; serenading).[15] This practice, disseminated throughout the German-speaking region and in other centres in Europe, consisted of vocal performances of the students in non-liturgical locations such as streets, squares, inns, castles, town halls and hospitals (» E. Kap. Das Bozner Ansingen); these were held periodically during the year, on special feast-days and for visits of high-ranking personalities. As reward for their vocal display, the choristers – who could be pupils only or sometimes include their instructors – received gifts and money. This practice, widespread in the Middle Ages and also known under the name of “Kurrende” (wandering choir), received a strong impulse during the Protestant reforms and survives to this day in some areas of Northern Germany.[16] In Tyrol, the custom is documented and described in some travel diaries of foreign visitors who traversed the region in the late fifteenth century. Venetian ambassadors, heading for Germany in June 1492, stopped over in Klausen/Chiusa, a town north of Bolzano, in the tavern called the “Agnus Dei”, and recorded in their travel diary a vocal performance given in their honour by pupils and masters of the local school (» D. Advenisti. Fürsten und Diplomaten auf Reisen). The ambassadors were surprised by the high musical standards of the small group, which consisted of five children and two masters, performing music “with admirable consonance” – thus presumably in polyphony. The diary specifies the music performed in sufficient detail to allow for a tentative identification of at least one of the pieces: it was “a certain song resembling the trumpets of a battle” (un certo canto simile a trombette di battaglia) – perhaps a composition “ad modum tubae”.  At the end of this little concert the enchanted ambassadors lavishly recompensed the children and their masters for their excellent performance. This detail draws attention to a fundamental aspect of Ansingen: that of the very real need to collect money to fund the masters and poor pupils of the school.[17] In many cases – presumably including the Klausen performance cited here – the schoolmasters accompanying the children also benefitted of this income, whereas in other circumstances the money received was to be divided equally among the pupils. The school regulation of Bolzano, 1424 (see below), stipulates the distribution of the money very precisely. Nevertheless, the rules for this distribution underwent changes as time went on (» Kap. Das Bozner Ansingen). Sources tell us that in some localities in Tyrol, Ansingen remained alive until the later eighteenth century.[18] The documents inform us that the custom was very ancient but, over the centuries, also underwent abuses (it was occasionally transformed into unlawfaul aggressivity) and “irregular” competition; thus, at Innsbruck and Hall i. T. in the seventeenth century, the boys of the parish school who practiced Ansingen every week were rivalled by the students of the local Jesuit College.[19]

 

[15] Strohm 1993, 294-296. For a definition, see Rudolf Flotzinger, Ansingen, in: Oesterreichisches Musiklexikon online, founded by Rudolf Flotzinger, ed. Barbara Boisits, online, https://musiklexikon.ac.at/0xc1aa5576_0x0001f702 (2002).

[17] It is interesting to note that the customs of both the Boy Bishop and the “Ansingen” were analogous to the annual springtime feasts of the Roman schola cantorum of the first Christian centuries, particularly the cornomania (a feast of undoubtedly pagan origins, when the sacristans disguised themselves as bishops) and the laudes puerorum at Easter, sung by the students in the streets on Easter Saturday for eggs and other gifts. On the extra-liturgical songs of the schola cantorum see Dyer 2008, 19-36 at 22-23.

[18] Post 1993, 36-37.

[19] Ibidem.