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On the Transmission Profile of Obrecht’s Missa Salve diva parens

Birgit Lodes

Jacob Obrecht’s Missa Salve diva parens, perhaps composed in the context of Archduke Maximilian’s coronation as King of the Romans at Aachen in the spring of 1486 (» Obrecht’s Missa Salve Diva Parens) survives in numerous sources from the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Barton Hudson lists a total of sixteen sources in his critical edition of the Mass; eight of these contain only an excerpt of the Mass.[1] As is usual at this time, there is no autograph manuscript. (For an exception in the case of Heinrich Isaac, see » I. Ch. “Ysaac de manu sua”). Music of this time is transmitted predominantly in handwritten copies, and from 1501 increasingly also in printed editions, which were distributed on the open market and reached a variety of recipients.[2] Some late medieval compositions (though not the Missa Salve diva parens) are also known from tablatures – essentially idiomatic arrangements – for lute or keyboard instruments (» C. Ch. Fragmente einer (Wiener?) Organistenwerkstatt). Finally, compositionally interesting sections often found their way into the music-theoretical treatises of the time (cf. Ch. Theoretical Writings and Music-Making Books) or were separately notated for didactic and instrumental practice. We may regard the transmission of a composition in multiple extant sources – even though we must always reckon with a significant loss of sources – as an indicator that it was disseminated widely or popular at the time.

Obrecht’s Missa Salve diva parens provides a good example for illustrating the technological basis for the notation and dissemination of polyphonic vocal music around the year 1500.[3] Four sources for this Mass have been transmitted from the Austrian region.

[1] Hudson 1990, XIXXXIV.

[2] See Lodes 2008.

[3] A generally accessible introduction is provided by Lindmayr-Brandl 2014b; concise introductions to mensural notation (Lindmayr-Brandl 2014c), tablature scripts (Aringer 2014) and dance notation (Malkiewicz 2014) can also be found in Lindmayr-Brandl 2014a.