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A music collection spanning half a century

Ian Rumbold and Reinhard Strohm

The ‘Leopold’ codex (Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Mus. ms. 3154) offers a fascinating insight into some of the polyphonic music that was performed for civic and princely patrons in Austria, Germany and northern Italy in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. As is typical for this time and region, much of the repertory was not of local origin, but had been composed by musicians from the Low Countries.

Although the codex is modest in format (it is a small folio manuscript measuring about 315 x 220 mm), its volume is considerable: on 472 paper folios it contains 174 musical compositions, counting cyclic Masses as single items and including both versions of four works that were each copied twice. It is clear that a substantial amount of further material has been lost.[1] All this music was written out by more than 40 different scribes between about 1466 and 1511,[2] and it is probable that most of it was copied in Innsbruck itself, with possible insertions coming from other centres in the Holy Roman Empire.  

The manuscript consists of two independent sections, whose folios were originally numbered separately as fols [1]-200 and 1-297 respectively; this numbering system is datable to the period around 1500.[3] The first 19 folios were lost before a single continuous foliation of 1-178 and 179-471 was entered in the nineteenth century. The first section (fols 1–178, using this more recent continuous foliation) is mostly the work of a single scribe, with a few additions by others. Frequently, compositions are copied across the divide between gatherings. The second section (fols 179–471), however, is made up of individual gatherings, or units of 2-3 gatherings, that were evidently brought together from a variety of sources before being combined with the first section as a single book. These units in the second section each contain either a single large-scale work or a series of related works copied usually by a single scribe, often followed by one or more shorter pieces not always copied by the same scribe. Many of the individual gatherings or units seem to have been used separately before being bound together.

The codex was acquired in 1874 by the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich, through its librarian, Julius Joseph Maier, who created the first continuous foliation and numeration of the contents. Scholarly studies of the manuscript, beginning in the 1920s with explorations and editions of individual works, culminate in the complete four-volume edition of the music (with certain works presented only in facsimile) by Thomas L. Noblitt,[4] who also contributed several research essays on the repertory.[5] The codex has been used for the modern critical editions of its major composers - Obrecht, Isaac, Josquin, Compère and others - and its music has been widely recorded.[6] Recordings made for Musikleben are: »Hörbsp. ♫ Anima mea, ♫ Argentum et aurum, ♫ Ave mundi spes Maria, ♫ Es sassen höld, ♫ Gespile, liebe Gespile gút, ♫ Ich sach einsmals,Kyrie Pascale Les haulz et es bas, ♫ Kyrie Pascale Stimmwerck, ♫ O propugnator, ♫ Salve regina Ar. fer. 1, ♫ Salve regina Ar. fer 2, ♫ Salve regina Ar. fer 3, ♫ Salve regina Ar. fer 4, ♫ Salve regina Ar. fer 5, ♫ Salve regina Ar. fer. 6, ♫ So steh ich hie, ♫ Tannhauser.

[1] Colour images of the manuscript are available at https://daten.digitale-sammlungen.de/~db/0005/bsb00059604/images/.

[2] Some 34 hands can be distinguished in the second section of the manuscript alone; one of these (hand ‘Y’, fols 370r– 379v) also occurs in the manuscript D-B Mus. Ms. 40021 (fols 253r–254v).

[3] Noblitt 1987-96, I, viii; synopsis of foliations in IV, 313-14.

[4] Noblitt 1987-96.

[5] Noblitt 1968197419871997 (etc.). For other recent research, see Strohm 1993, 516-23; Rifkin 2003Rumbold 2018.

[6] See, for example, Josquin Desprez, Missa Fortuna desperata (fols 172r-178r), recorded in 2001 by the Clerks’ Group, dir. Edward Wickham (ASV label, catalogue no. GAU 220); in 2009 by the Tallis Scholars, dir. Peter Phillips (Gimell label, catalogue no. 42); and in 2018 by Biscantor! Métamorphoses (Ar-Re-Se label, catalogue no. AR 20181). The second Agnus Dei of Isaac’s Missa Wol auff gesell/Comment peult avoir joye (fols 179r-196r and 456v-463v) was recorded by Capella Alamire and the Alamire Consort, dir. Peter Urqhuart, CD Music of Pierrequin de Thérache (Centaur label, catalogue no. CRC3282), track 10. Kyrie of the anonymous Missa O Österreich (fols 205v-213r): Ensemble Rosarum Flores, CD Global Player Maximilian: Musikalisches Networking um 1500 (Musikmuseum label, catalogue no. 13042), track 1. Obrecht’s Missa Si dedero (fols 449v-456r): ANS Chorus, dir. János Bali (Hungaroton label, catalogue no. HCD 31946). The anonymous motets Ave mundi spes/Gottes namen (fols 29v-30r) and O propugnator miserorum (fols 148v-150r): Stimmwerck, SACD Flos virginum: Motets of the 15th Century (CPO label, catalogue no. 7779372), tracks 8 and 6, respectively. Isaac’s motet Argentum et aurum (fols 72v-73r) and the German songs So stee ich hie auff diser erdIch sachs ains mals, Gespile, liebe gespile gutEs sassen höld in ainer stuben (fols 51v-53r): Ensemble Leones, CD Argentum et aurum: Musical Treasures from the Early Habsburg Renaissance (Naxos label, catalogue no. 8.573346), tracks 1, 16, 22, 20 and 21, respectively.