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Organisation by genres and gatherings

Ian Rumbold and Reinhard Strohm

The compilers occasionally attempted to group compositions of the same genre together.[19]  German songs are clustered in gathering 6, Marian antiphons in gatherings 9-11, Magnificat in 12-13, hymns in 16, Mass Proper items in 36. Elsewhere, however, genres are mixed indiscriminately. The work of scribe ‘A’ (fols 1-171) was a sustained and systematic effort to produce a substantial collection of music; no other scribe made such a large contribution. In this phase of the compilation, the music seems to have been drawn from a larger body of exemplars rather than entered piecemeal as and when new pieces arrived. In the first section there are eight instances of a work being begun towards the end of a gathering and completed at the beginning of the next gathering: usually a sign that a longer sequence of pieces was envisaged. Where this happens in the second section, it is to accommodate extended Mass cycles which in any case required more than one gathering. Gatherings linked in this way were generally preserved, foliated and bound in the correct order, but the fact that gatherings 1 and 3 begin with incomplete compositions, and gathering 7 ends with one, suggests that not all of the music that was copied ended up in the manuscript – some gatherings are missing.

In the second section, each gathering or group of gatherings contains one or more lengthy works (usually Mass cycles); the remaining space is then often filled up with shorter works. Empty or even unruled pages, however, are frequently seen at the beginnings and ends of gatherings. Gatherings 24-25 (fols 236-253) are used for three Mass cycles by Obrecht: the Osanna and Agnus dei of the Missa [Rose playsante] on fols 236r-237r, the complete Missa [Plurimorum carminum II] on fols 237v-245v and the complete Missa Beata viscera on fols 246r-253r, all copied by a single scribe. One may surmise that this scribe was preparing a collection of Obrecht’s Masses, and that the gathering containing the beginning of the Rose playsante cycle and any that may originally have preceded it must then have been lost or discarded for unknown reasons.

[19] For the distribution of the music in the manuscript see Rumbold 2018, with a full inventory.