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Song Collections of the Fifteenth Century

Nicole Schwindt

Three surviving musical manuscripts from the second half of the fifteenth century transmit polyphonic songs in German. In each, this genre is represented in considerable quantity and either dominates, significantly shapes, or at least heavily permeates the accumulated repertoire. Earlier scholars referred to this group of sources, not always entirely appropriately, as “songbooks”: the Lochamer Songbook (c. 1450–1460, » D-B Mus. ms. 40613), the Schedel Songbook (1459–1463, » D-Mbs Cgm 810), and the Glogau Songbook (or Sagan Partbooks, c. 1480, » PL-Kj Berol. Mus. ms. 40098.[5] The first two are closely associated with their Nuremberg owners, so that one may, in a certain sense, speak of a South German provenance, especially since the humanist physician Hartmann Schedel was also frequently in Augsburg. As a young man, he recorded songs that circulated widely, embedding them within a broader collection that also included Franco-Flemish chansons, insofar as these were accessible in the area north of the Alps. The remarkable number of concordances between the Buxheim Organ Book and the Schedel manuscript – and to a lesser extent also with the Lochamer Songbook – highlights the importance of the Free Imperial City of Nuremberg as a centre for the cultivation and documentation of song during this period.

The songs from the extensive three-part Głogów/Glogau partbooks, which originated in the Augustinian Canons’ monastery at Żagań/Sagan in Lower Silesia and, in keeping with its place of origin, are slanted towards sacred material. They include several settings that were also in circulation in the South German region, though it is difficult to determine where they originally came from, and in which direction they spread. The pool of songs transmitted in multiple sources represent a transregional phenomenon. As important and noteworthy as these three relatively self-contained compilations are, they probably do not convey a representative impression of the song culture of the time.

[5] On all three manuscripts, see Strohm 1993, 492–503.