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Printed Songbooks

Nicole Schwindt

From the perspective of musical communication networks and source typology, the principal driver behind the dissemination of the German polyphonic song around 1500 was the new medium of music printing. In the final decade of Maximilian’s life, this gave the song a brief but brilliant moment of public prominence through printed partbooks and song pamphlets. In these sources, the media interests of Maximilian and his entourage converged with an accumulated song repertoire and the receptiveness of a widely dispersed audience. A representative example is the printed songbook » Aus sonderer künstlicher Art, issued in 1512 by the imperial printer Erhart Öglin in Augsburg (cf. » Fig. Hofhaimer, Ach lieb mit leid). Further sets of partbooks were published elsewhere between 1510 and 1517 by the presses of Johann Froschauer (?), Peter Schöffer the Younger, and Arnt von Aich.[19] These publications predominantly reflect the song repertoire available at the imperial court and the (at times allied, at times rival) Württemberg court – that is, works by Habsburg and Stuttgart composers. However, they also include pieces by figures such as the respected Saxon composer Adam von Fulda, whose songs are also found in the musical “travel dossier” of the Augsburg Choirbook and in Swiss sources. The overlap between polyphonic settings and the mostly monophonic melodies found in song pamphlets – usually limited to texts or melodic cues (“to be sung to the tune of …”) – remains small before 1520. We can only imagine how those songs sounded that were sung across the German lands without elaborate polyphonic arrangements and in everyday contexts.

Specialised printers interpreted the demand for song publications as indicative of a growing market. While this commercial calculation proved successful in the case of song pamphlets, the production of complex songbooks during the era of multi-phase printing evidently proved too labour-intensive to be economically viable. It was probably due to this financial consideration that the last surviving edition containing polyphonic German songs printed with multi-phase technology dates from 1517. The advent of an optimised technology, single impression music printing, in 1534, ushered in a new era of large-scale song publication.[20]