124: Massimiliano Guido
HMA Podcast29 Apr 2021

124: Massimiliano Guido

I'm delighted to introduce my guest today, Professor Massimiliano Guido, he is an expert in the fields of historical performance practice and improvisation. He is the editor of the book "Studies in Historical Improvisation: From Cantare Super Librum to Partimento" and he is going to talk to me today about a wide range of topics including counterpoint, partimento, music theory, music history, and much more!

0:43 What is your background?
2:46 Did you improvise at the beginning?
6:06 Did you learn any theory on the way to being a performer?
7:36 When did you switch to more historically informed methods?
9:01 What was the theoretical basis to Professor Bellotti's approach?
10:51 Girolamo Diruta
15:04 Claudio Merulo
18:46 How did think about keys, modes and tonality back then?
23:17 Is it fixed that certain modes fit to certain points in the Catholic Mass?
28:20 The massive amount of melodies in the Liber Usualis
29:46 What is a vesper?
30:48 What do you mean by Seicento?
33:17 How have these older, historical methods of counterpoint instructed affected your students?
38:20 How difficult did the counterpoint go in terms of singing?
39:40 What skills do you get out of learning these older methods that can be applied to today?
41:48 H.A.B. Crawford's trenchant quote
44:23 How would free composition been taught historically?
48:26 What are steps someone should take toward learning to improvise canons and fugues?
52:34 Do I have to know the terms like Tenorizans and Cantizans?
53:24 Bernardo Pasquini
54:22 What do you mean by Frescobaldi pushing the system to it's limits
57:41 William Porter
1:00:34 Giorgio Sanguinetti and Partimento
1:02:17 Do these traditional methods stem out of the Catholic Church rather than Nationalism?
1:04:26 How did the Reformation and Counter-reformation affect the music of the period?
1:08:23 Who are your favorite composers for keyboard and organ from the late Renaissance?
1:12:25 Are there any composers that have been unjustly ignored but should be really known better?
1:16:41 Who are some historically informed performers that you like?
1:19:36 What tuning and temperaments do you feel are appropriate for the late Renaissance?
1:22:17 What do you make of Tonal Harmony, Chordal invertibility, Roman Numerals and function theory?
1:26:10 Future Projects
1:27:59 Wrapping Up

Episoder(84)

201: Counterpoint Panel: Why "Harmony" Classes Fail, Fux Myths, Bach Traps & Better Methods

201: Counterpoint Panel: Why "Harmony" Classes Fail, Fux Myths, Bach Traps & Better Methods

Counterpoint is the "huge topic" that crowns the Neapolitan method and the Paris Conservatoire tradition—and yet it's often taught today in ways that leave students confused, discouraged, and musicall...

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182: Giovanna Barbati (Partimento and Improvisation on the Cello)

182: Giovanna Barbati (Partimento and Improvisation on the Cello)

Today I speak to cellist and viola da gamba player Giovanna Barbati, whose repertoire extends from early to contemporary music and who has a special interest in improvisation. She appears frequently a...

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144: Sietze de Vries (Classical Improviser, Organist)

144: Sietze de Vries (Classical Improviser, Organist)

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158: Nicholas Baragwanath (Hexachordal Italian Solfeggio)

158: Nicholas Baragwanath (Hexachordal Italian Solfeggio)

Professor Nicholas Baragwanath, author of the groundbreaking "Solfeggio Tradition" (published by Oxford University Press), returns to the show to talk about Hexachordal Italian Solfeggio. This was the...

17 Mai 20241h 9min

157: Ewald Demeyere (Fedele Fenaroli's Partimenti and Pedagogy)

157: Ewald Demeyere (Fedele Fenaroli's Partimenti and Pedagogy)

Professor Ewald Demeyere returns on the show to discuss his critical edition of Fenaroli's partimenti collection and discusses Fenaroli's approach to pedagogy and partimento realization.

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154: Partimento Panel (Gjerdingen, Sanguinetti, van Tour, Cafiero)

154: Partimento Panel (Gjerdingen, Sanguinetti, van Tour, Cafiero)

In this episode, I am joined by eminent professors Robert O. Gjerdingen, Giorgio Sanguinetti, Peter van Tour, and Rosa Cafiero, in a special panel session about the subject of partimento. We discuss t...

1 Mar 20241h 32min

174: Niels Berentsen (1300-1500 Polyphony | Improvising Vocal Counterpoint)

174: Niels Berentsen (1300-1500 Polyphony | Improvising Vocal Counterpoint)

I talk to Professor Niels Berentsen about the beginnings of improvised counterpoint, the reconstruction of incomplete music by Johannes Ciconia, computational analysis of counterpoint, teaching 15th/1...

1 Feb 20241h 19min

167: Solfeggio Panel (Baragwanath, Gjerdingen, IJzerman, van Tour)

167: Solfeggio Panel (Baragwanath, Gjerdingen, IJzerman, van Tour)

Today we have a special episode dedicated to Solfeggio, featuring Professors Nicholas Baragwanath, Job IJzerman, Robert O. Gjerdingen, and Peter van Tour. The famed students of the 18th-century Neapol...

1 Feb 20241h 23min

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