In one portrait of a Renaissance man, the aristocrat's musical instruments are placed alongside his various scientific instruments, books, and weapons (Arkenberg 2002). Eventually, in spite of "some of the obscure, antiquarian concerns of humanist engagement with the music of the classical past…music came to be thought of not as a branch of mathematics" but as an art ("The Renaissance," Free Encyclopedia, 2009). Humanism shifted the analytical understanding of music fully into the realm of the expressive, fine arts. There was renewed interest in the relationship between music and words and music's ability to express human emotion, versus analyzing the mathematician Pythagoras' notion of the 'music of the planetary spheres' ("The Renaissance," Free Encyclopedia, 2009).
At the beginning of the century, polyphonic music still dominated the Latin masses and motets of sacred music. Because these styles of music contained several simultaneous melodies polyphony tended to deemphasize individual voices, words, and meaning. However, greater innovation was shown in these sacred genres by Josquin des Prez who began use words with melodies so that the meaning of the text was still intelligible. He also introduced secular melodies into sacred works. Later, "the insistence on textual intelligibility in both Catholic and Protestant thinking, the vivid imagery used by madrigalists like Wert and Marenzio, the attempts of the Pleiade in France to unite music and poetry, the activities of Bardi's camereta in Florence" showed even greater influence of humanistic philosophy in their equal attention to music and verse ("The Renaissance," Free Encyclopedia, 2009).
The Protestant Reformation transformed sacred music by enabling...
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