Pavanello, Agnese

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Pavanello, Agnese

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Publikation

Motet Cycles Database

2018, Pavanello, Agnese, Filippi, Daniele, Cassia, Cristina

The database aims at mapping the repertory of polyphonic motet cycles of the period c.1470-c.1510, based on the characteristics of the repertory itself and on the specific modalities of its transmission. See the Welcome Page of http://www.motetcycles.ch/

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Introduction to "Motet cycles (c. 1470-c. 1510): Compositional design, performance, and cultural context guest

2017, Pavanello, Agnese

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The development of a model: Rome as a resonance space for Corelli's work

2015, Pavanello, Agnese, Pavanello, Agnese

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Was hat Corelli in der None gefunden?

2015, Menke, Johannes, Pavanello, Agnese

What did Corelli Find in the Ninth? For Johann Mattheson, Corelli, whose works he „wants to have praised as a splendid model, irrespective of their age” (Vollkommener Capellmeister, Hamburg 1739, 91) was still a paragon in 1739. When Mattheson discussed the ninth in the chapter on dissonances, he again came to speak about Corelli, writing that Corelli had sought and found something in the ninth that neither before nor after him „anybody had done; whoever he might be“ (326). Unfortunately, Mattheson did not explain exactly what was so unique and at the same time exemplary in Corelli’s handling of the ninth. The present text attempts to explore this question both in view of Corelli’s works and in consideration of the contemporary practice and teaching of composition. Although it is focused only on a detail – the ninth – this perspective can nevertheless yield insights regarding Corelli’s personal style: it can show, on the one hand, in what way certain emphatic moments of his music are based on a specific use of the ninth and, on the other hand, how it serves as a characteristic component and syntactical element of his idiom.

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Giuseppe Tartini

2018, Pavanello, Agnese, Cappelletto, Sandro

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Gaspar van Weerbeke. Opera Omnia, vol. 1: Masses

2016, Pavanello, Agnese

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Corelli als Modell. Studien zum 300. Todestag von Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713)

2015, Pavanello, Agnese

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Fortuna on the dolphin. Notes on an iconographic motif in Capella Sistina 14 and 51

2017, Pavanello, Agnese

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Elevation as Liturgical Climax in Gesture and Sound: Milanese Elevation Motets in Context

2015-07-06, Pavanello, Agnese

In this paper I will focus on fifteenth-century century Elevation motets in order to contextualize the Milanese motet cycles in a wider liturgical and musical practice. After discussing the liturgical significance and function of the Elevation, with its rich gestural symbolism, I will explore the extant repertoire with particular regard to the texts and their circulation. The presence of settings of the same texts in different environments will raise the question about the possible existence of narrower ties between the Milanese corpus and other local traditions.

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Publikation

Corelli ‘inedito’: composizioni dubbie o senza numero d’opera. Percorsi tra fonti, attribuzioni e fortuna della trasmissione

2015, Pavanello, Agnese

The study of Corelli’s compositions not included in his six printed collections is still at its beginnings. Fifty years after cataloguing Corelli’s works for the new critical edition, an examination of some of his sonatas considered to be doubtful reveals that there is an urgent need for rethinking both the classification criteria and the boundaries that have been established between the dubious compositions and the ones without opus number, at least as far as the oldest, most authentic sources are concerned. In this study, I present arguments to confirm authorship of some of Corelli’s unpublished works (e.g., Anh. 19 and Anh. 33), based in the first place on data gathered from the material transmission of the compositions under consideration. In addition, I propose a few basic premises to tackle the study of the large body of English sources, including some of the earliest manuscripts that contain unpublished Corelli sonatas that can be dated with some precision. These English sources offer, in addition to trio sonatas (including Corelli’s WoO 5), several ‘sonate a violino solo e basso’ not found on the continent: their attribution to Corelli seems in many cases to be correct, or at least plausible; in any case, it should be pondered seriously in light of the extensive musical exchanges between Rome and England.