Souterliedekens: Difference between revisions

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==Scores on CPDL==
==Scores on CPDL==
*[[Souterliedekens - Psalm 4 (Jacobus Clemens non Papa)|<i>Souterliedekens - Psalm 4 </i>]]
*[[Souterliedekens - Psalm 4 (Jacobus Clemens non Papa)|<i>Souterliedekens - Psalm 4 </i>]]
*[[Souterliedekens - Psalm 5 (Jacobus Clemens non Papa)|<i>Souterliedekens - Psalm 5 </i>]]
*[[Souterliedekens - Psalm 60 (Jacobus Clemens non Papa)|<i>Souterliedekens - Psalm 60 </i>]]
*[[Souterliedekens - Psalm 60 (Jacobus Clemens non Papa)|<i>Souterliedekens - Psalm 60 </i>]]
*[[Souterliedekens - Psalm 128 (Jacobus Clemens non papa)|<i>Souterliedekens - Psalm 128</i>]]
*[[Souterliedekens - Psalm 128 (Jacobus Clemens non papa)|<i>Souterliedekens - Psalm 128</i>]]

Revision as of 22:16, 1 January 2006

General Information

The Souterliedekens (litteral: Psalter-songs) is the title of a book with Dutch psalms, published 1540 in Antwerp and which remained very popular throughout the century. The metrical rhyming psalms were arranged by a Utrecht nobleman, - probably - Willem van Zuylen van Nijevelt (d. 1543). For the melodies he used popular folksongs from the Low Countries (though some have German or French origin). This publication has great value, because the publisher (Symon Cock) not only added the phrase sung to the tune of... but he also provided the actual music (melody) with the texts. Nowadays many of the folksongs can be reconsructed only bacause of the survival of the Souterliedekens.
Composers like Jacobus Clemens non Papa, Gerardus Mes and Cornelis Boscoop made polyphonic settings based on the melody of the monophonic 'Souterliedekens'. The melody often functions as cantus firmus.
The Antwerp printer Tielman Susato dedicatged 4 volumes of his music-books (Musyck Boexkens) to Clemens Souterliedekens (volumes IV, V, VI and VII).

Scores on CPDL