The 16th century was a time of intense and ambitious activity in the
arts, religion, science, exploration, and politics. Explorers came to
America seeking new lands and, for the first time, sailed around the entire
world. It was the age that saw great artistic works by Michelangelo and
Leonardo da Vinci. And it was the era when Martin Luther nailed his 95
Theses to the church door in Wittenberg, Germany, beginning a Reformation
that would turn the world upside down.
The Lutheran Church was born during a time of great activity in politics,
the arts, and religion. Luther's protest, which sought only to reform
the Roman Catholic Church, ultimately resulted in separation. And Luther
affirmed continuity with the Church's pastexcept where its theology
and practice were contrary to his understanding of the Gospel. The polyphonic
music by an earlier generation of composers, such as Dufay and Binchois,
continued in 16th Century composers such as Heinrich Isaac and Josquin
Des Prez.
The music of the early Reformation developed in the context of the broad
secular musical culture of the Renaissance. Luther and his contemporaries
were acquainted with and made use of the best the secular musical culture
had to offer.
Various vocal and instrumental formsfrom the chanson and madrigal
to compositions for lute, clavichord, and organprovided a rich variety
of secular music. It served as backdrop and, in part, an inspiration,
for the music that developed in early Lutheranism.
Luther provided new opportunities for the congregation to participate
in the liturgy through music that praised God and proclaimed the Gospel.
He encouraged and implemented the use of the vernacular language. He reshaped
traditional Gregorian melodies, making them more suitable for congregational
singing. He encouraged poets to write new hymns.
And he encouraged the use of the chorale as the chief musical vehicle
for congregational singing. He provided both a liturgical place and a
liturgical significance for the chorale in the liturgy.
Setting the course for Lutheran music was Johann Walter, the first Lutheran
cantor and composer, and Georg Rhau, the printer who prepared significant
collections of music for the young church. Influential composers of the
first half of the 16th Century who contributed to the music of early Lutheranism
include Arnold von Bruck, Balthasar Resinarius, and Sixtus Dietrich.
The second half of the century include such composers as Leonhard Schroeter,
Leonard Lechner, Johann Eccard, Bartholomaeus Gesius, and Seth Calvisius.
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