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Aspects of counterpoint and modality in the Monk’s polyphonic songs

Marc Lewon

Though the polyphonic songs in the Monk’s main manuscript are clearly notated mensurally—even including the occasional mensural sign, a feature absent from the Wolkenstein codices—their use of mensural notation betrays elements of a non-mensural or semi-mensural practice: W 1 and W 2 appear to employ the above quoted structural use of mensural notes with minimas reserved for upbeats, semibreves for almost the entire melody, and dotted semibreves and breves for cadence notes.[40] W 4 and W 5, on the other hand, both make abundant use of the semi-mensural practice of the reference rhythm.

In contrast to Oswald, who introduces elements from discantus practices to his non-mensural polyphony, the Monk uses almost entirely consonant note-against-note techniques, and whereas contrary motion and fifthing make up most of his counterpoint, he has hardly any cadences in contrary stepwise motion. Particularly the horn- and trumpet-like melodies W 1, W 2, W 3 and W 5, which largely consist of melodic leaps (including cadences), prevent such progressions. Even the anonymous motet Veni rerum conditor in the St Emmeram Codex (» D-Mbs Clm 14274), a later composition using the melody of W 2 as tenor, appears to be little more than a written-down piece of non-mensural polyphony, though with fewer parallels.[41]

Modal ambiguity, a typical sign of monophonic music, is also present in the transmission of the Monk’s non-mensural polyphony, though not to the same degree as in Oswald’s repertory. The only melody with a clear modal shift is the D-mode song W 1, which in the Kolmarer Liederhandschrift (K) appears monophonically and in an F mode. The unclear modality of W 2 (normally in a C- or F-mode) in the Sterzing manuscript (St) could be attributed to its confusion with W 5, which is in D. Whether the result of a confusion or a conscious quotation, the degree of intertextuality in these two narrow repertories of the Monk and Oswald with monophonic genres strengthens the link between monophonic and polyphonic œuvres and opens up the monophonic repertories to an almost unlimited application of the practices of non-mensural polyphony.

 

[40] A stylised semiminima is used as the custos throughout the section with polyphonic songs and monophonic ‘tenores’.

[41] See Welker 1984/1985.

Empfohlene Zitierweise:

Marc Lewon: „Non-mensural polyphony in secular repertories: Oswald von Wolkenstein and the Monk of Salzburg“, in: Musikleben des Spätmittelalters in der Region Österreich, <https://musical-life.net/essays/non-mensural-polyphony-secular-repertories-oswald-von-wolkenstein-and-monk-salzburg> (2020).