This is a scholarly critical edition of one of the most important and representative documents of the medieval music in Slovenia, published in the elite international series.
COBISS.SI-ID: 27546669
The chapter on Baroque music in Slovenia that was written upon invitation and was included in an internationally referential monograph by one of the foremost American musicologists G. Buellow, is an important recognition of Slovenian musicology and consequently its international success. The inclusion of a chapter in such a relevant work is also not only a recognition but also means that the information on Slovenian national Baroque heritage is now available to a widest possible circle of readers.
COBISS.SI-ID: 23154989
This scholarly article is the first ever discussion on one of the foremost Slovenian state symbols its national anthem. Although “Zdravljica” was accepted as a national anthem only about 15 years ago the song has already had a rather long and interesting history. The comparison of the Slovenian anthem with other national anthems showed some particular aspects that originate in its textual and musical constructions and their linkage. The research showed the anthem in its political, musical and literary context and as a symbol of national awareness through the history of its reception.
COBISS.SI-ID: 512700953
The article, published in a foremost Slovenian musicological journal, is a focused discussion and analysis of a little known collection of madrigals dedicated in 1586 by a Flemish composer Filippo de Duc to members of a wealthy family of Khisl from Carniola and to a number of other noblemen from Carniola and Styria. Separate compositions are also important for their musical and textual contents as they proved to be the so called dedicatory works intended and addressed to the dedicatees.
COBISS.SI-ID: 27398957
The discussion brings the first review of the contents of seven medieval music codices used in the Cathedral in Koper. On the basis of musical contents and paleographical elements (including definition of separate copyists and scriptoria) the codices were contextualised within a wider circuit of muic literacy in the 14th and 15th centuries.
COBISS.SI-ID: 26424621