Musicology lecture: Megan Long

  • Megan Long

 

Please join us the next guest in our musicology lecture series Megan Long, for her talk

Mapping the Gamut: Solmization Pedagogy, Tonal Compass, and 16th Century Counterpoint

Renaissance musicians learned to sing using hexachordal solmization, a precursor to our modern solfège systems. Solmization instruction books often describe their goal as building “musical understanding” in their students—something deeper and richer than merely training singers to sight-read effectively. This talk explores what musical understanding might have looked like in 16th-century polyphony, arguing that solmization represents implicit knowledge about tonal space and how to navigate it. Using examples drawn from Palestrina’s masses and motets, we will see how attention to solmization makes Palestrina’s tonal strategies transparent, and how solmization shaped the tonal system of 16th-century music more broadly.

Megan Long is Associate Professor of Music Theory at Oberlin College. Her research focuses on the vocal music of the 16th and 17th centuries, and the theoretical and pedagogical discourses that surrounded music-making in this period. Her book, Hearing Homophony: Tonal Expectation at the Turn of the Seventeenth Century, was published by Oxford University Press in 2020 and won the Society for Music Theory's Wallace Berry Award. She was also recently awarded Oberlin's Excellence in Teaching Award.

Thursday, April 18 in the first floor CAC conference Room. This talk is free and open to the public.

Dates: 
April 18, 2024 - 4:00pm