Tarazona 5: A Reassessment

Authors

Keywords:

Tarazona; Peñalosa; Basurto; Requiem; Motet.

Abstract

The manuscript Tarazona 5 has had, for a number of reasons, only a minor role in our understanding of Spanish church music in the Renaissance. It deserves a reassessment. The source consists of three sections. Two are in the same hand and share some paper; these have traditionally been dated to 1517–21, when Juan García de Basurto, who contributed a Requiem, was serving at Tarazona cathedral. A look at the rest of the music, however, suggests a later date, almost certainly the 1530s or 1540s. The third part is later still, from the 1550s or 1560s. With these datings and an updated inventory as a basis, the article goes on to consider the original purpose and character of the three sections; the light they shed on two sixteenth-century inventories of the Tarazona cathedral library; the possibility of lost manuscripts that were part of the same project; the source’s attributions to Peñalosa, only one of which proves to be at all plausible; and the significance of sacred polyphony that was more useful then than it may be imposing today.

Author Biography

Kenneth Kreitner, University of Memphis

Kenneth Kreitner is Benjamin W. Rawlins Professor of Musicology, Emeritus, at the University of Memphis, where he also directed the Collegium Musicum. His book The Church Music of Fifteenth-Century Spain (Boydell, 2004) won the Robert M. Stevenson Award from the American Musicological Society, and he has written extensively on Spanish church music around 1500, Renaissance instrumental music and performance practice, and American amateur bands. Since retirement, he has returned to his hometown of Honesdale, Pennsylvania.

Downloads

Published

2025-10-28

How to Cite

Kreitner, K. (2025). Tarazona 5: A Reassessment. Portuguese Journal of Musicology, 10(2), 207–232. Retrieved from https://rpm-ns.pt/index.php/rpm/article/view/499

Issue

Section

Articles (peer-reviewed)