A specialist in
music before 1600, Honey Meconi joined the faculty of the University of
Rochester in 2004 as Professor of Music in the College Music Department and
Professor of Musicology at the Eastman School of Music. She became Director of the Susan B.
Anthony Institute for Gender and Women’s Studies in 2007, and was named Susan
B. Anthony Professor of Gender and Women’s Studies in 2009.
She is an expert
on Renaissance music as well as on the music of Hildegard of Bingen (the
twelfth-century polymath, poet, and composer), and is director of The Hildegard
Project, a long-term undertaking to perform all of that composer’s music. Her latest book, Hildegard of Bingen, will be published by the University of
Illinois Press. Other books
include Pierre de la Rue and Musical Life
at the Habsburg-Burgundian Court (Oxford University Press, 2003; reprint
2009) and the commentary volume to the facsimile edition of Brussels, Royal
Library, Ms. IV.90 (Patrimonio Ediciones, 2007) as well as Early Musical Borrowing (editor, Routledge, 2004), Fortuna
desperata: 36 Settings of an Italian Song (editor, A-R Editions, 2001), and
Medieval Music (editor, Ashgate,
2011). She is currently
writing a book on the cultural history of the chansonnier.
Shorter
publications include essays on Hildegard’s Lingua
ignota, the editing history of Hildegard’s music and texts, Margaret of
Austria’s chansonniers, the Segovia manuscript, the cultural history of the
chansonnier, London Royal 8 G. vii, the Munich partbooks, extreme singing,
Petrucci’s mass prints, the Habsburg-Burgundian court manuscripts, Josquin’s
reputation, Fortuna desperata,
motet-chansons, Absalon fili mi,
art-song reworkings, imitatio,
performance practice, the Basevi chansonnier, the Rochester Fascicle, and other
topics. She has been a Fulbright
Fellow in Belgium, Andrew W. Mellon Fellow at the University of Pennsylvania,
and Fellow at the Villa I Tatti in Florence, and has received multiple grants
from the National Endowment for the Humanities and other agencies, including a
2008–2009 Fellowship from the National Endowment of the Humanities to study the
cultural history of the chansonnier.
Recipient of a
2006 Alumna Award from the Pennsylvania State University College of Arts and
Architecture, she has served on the Board of Directors of the American
Musicological Society, both as Director-at-Large and as Vice President. In 2009 she joined the editorial board
of Grove Music Online as Associate Editor, and from 2010 to 2012 served on the
Governing Board of US-RILM. She is
currently on the advisory boards of the Josquin Research Projectm and
previously. served on the boards
of Pegasus Early Music and Houston Early Music. In 1998 she organized the interdisciplinary conference
“Constructing Hildegard: Reception and Identity 1098–1998,” and in 2006–2007
she was an organizer of the panel/lecture/concert/workshop series “Women and
Music: Looking Back, Looking Forward” co-sponsored by the Susan B. Anthony
Institute for Gender and Women’s Studies and the University of Rochester
Humanities Project. 2012–2013
marks another Humanities Project: “The World of Susan B. Anthony.”
A performer as
well as a scholar, she began directing early music groups while a student at
Indiana University. She has since
founded and directed ensembles at Harvard University (where she received her
Ph.D.), Rice University (where she directed the Medieval Studies Program), and
now at the University of Rochester.
As a singer of post-1600 music she has performed with, among others, the
Tanglewood Festival Chorus, the professional Ensemble Vocal de la
Radio-Télévision belge de la communauté française, and the Houston Symphony
Chorus. She is currently a member
of Schola Cantorum. With Vox Early
Music Ensemble she was recipient of the 2006 Noah Greenberg Award given by the
American Musicological Society “for distinguished contribution to the study and
performance of early music.”
Research
interests include Pierre de la Rue and contemporaries; manuscripts, especially
chansonniers; women and music, especially Hildegard of Bingen;
Habsburg-Burgundian court music and manuscripts; borrowing; and extreme
singing. Courses taught include
Hildegard of Bingen, Illuminated Music Manuscripts, Chansonniers, Women and
Music, Colloquium in Women’s Studies, Susan B. Anthony and Her World, Shakespeare
and Music, Opera, Medieval and Renaissance Music, Baroque Music, and numerous
other subjects.
Contact the Director:
Phone: (585) 275-8318
Email: honey.meconi@rochester.edu
BOOKS AND
EDITED VOLUMES
Medieval Music
(editor). Farnham and Burlington:
Ashgate, 2011.
Cancionero de
Juana la Loca: La música en la corte de Felipe el Hermoso y Juana I de Castilla. Commentary volume to facsimile
edition. Valencia, Spain:
Patrimonio Ediciones, 2007.
N.B. Title supplied by publisher. For a list of errata and explanation of
the compilation of the volume, contact honey.meconi@rochester.edu.
Early Musical
Borrowing (editor). Criticism
and Analysis of Early Music 5. New
York and London: Routledge, 2004.
Pierre de la
Rue and Musical Life at the Habsburg-Burgundian Court. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003;
reprint edition 2009.
Fortuna
desperata: Thirty-Six Settings of an Italian Song. Recent Researches in the Music of the
Middle Ages and Early Renaissance 37.
Middleton, Wisconsin: A-R Editions, 2001.
Basevi Codex:
Florence, Biblioteca del Conservatorio, MS 2439. Facsimile edition with introduction. Peer, Belgium: Alamire, 1990.
Style and
Authenticity in the Secular Music of Pierre de la Rue. Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard University,
1986. UM 86-20508.
ESSAYS
“The Unknown Hildegard: Editing, Performance, and
Reception.” In Music in Print and Beyond: Hildegard von
Bingen to The Beatles. Edited
by Craig A. Monson and Roberta Montemorra Marvin. Rochester: University of Rochester Press, in press.
“Alamire, Pierre de la Rue, and Manuscript Production
in the Time of Charles V.” In “Qui musicam in se habet”: Essays in Honor
of Alejandro Planchart. Edited
by Stanley Boorman and Anna Zayaruznaya.
Münster and Middleton: American Institute of Musicology, in press.
“The Segovia Manuscript as Chansonnier.” In Segovia
C Revisited: A Spanish Manuscript in Transition. Edited by Wolfgang Fuhrmann and Cristina Urchueguía. Turnhout: Brepols, in press.
“Hildegard of Bingen.” In Oxford
Bibliographies in Music.
Edited by Bruce Gustafson.
New York: Oxford University Press, in press.
“Recordings of Fifteenth-Century Music.” In The
Cambridge History of Fifteenth-Century Music. Edited by Anna-Maria Busse Berger and Jesse Rodin. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
in press.
“London Royal 8 G. vii and the Motets of Pierre de la
Rue.” Die Tonkunst: Magazin für klassische Musik und Musikwissenschaft 5
(2011): 5–15.
“Shedding New Light (Literally) on the Rochester
Fascicle: A Preliminary Report.”
In Essays on Renaissance Music in
Honour of David Fallows: Bon jour, bon mois, et bonne estrenne, 52–59. Edited by Fabrice Fitch and Jacobijn
Kiel. Studies in Medieval and
Renaissance Music 11. Woodbridge:
Boydell and Brewer, 2011.
“Hildegard’s Lingua
ignota and Music.” In Musik des Mittelalters und der Renaissance: Festschrift
Klaus-Jürgen Sachs zum 80. Geburtstag, 59–79. Edited by Rainer Kleinertz, Christoph Flamm, and Wolf Frobenius. Veröffentlichungen des Staatlichen Instituts
für Musikforschung 18. Studien zur
Geschichte der Musiktheorie 8.
Hildesheim, Zürich, and New York: Georg Olms Verlag, 2010.
“Margaret of Austria, Visual Representation, and Brussels,
Royal Library, Ms. 228.” Journal of the Alamire Foundation 2
(2010): 11–36, 129–130.
“A Cultural Theory of the Chansonnier.” In “Uno
gentile et subtile ingenio”: Studies in Renaissance Music in Honour of Bonnie
Blackburn, 649–657. Edited by
M. Jennifer Bloxam, Gioia Filocamo, and Leofranc Holford-Strevens. Turnhout: Brepols, 2009.
“The Ghost of Perfection: The Munich Partbooks and
Some Thoughts on Renaissance Manuscripts.” In The Sounds and
Sights of Performance in Early Music: Essays in Honour of Timothy J. McGee,
85–101 and Plate 1. Edited by
Maureen Epp and Brian E. Power.
Aldershot: Ashgate, 2009.
“The Range of Mourning: Nine Questions and Some
Answers.” In Tod in Musik und Kultur: Zum 500. Todestag Philipps des Schönen,
141–156. Wiener Forum für ältere
Musikgeschichte 2. Edited by
Stefan Gasch and Birgit Lodes.
Tutzing: Hans Schneider, 2007.
“Petrucci's Mass Prints and the Naming of
Things.” In Venezia 1501: Petrucci e la stampa musicale (Atti del Convegno
internazionale, Venezia, Palazzo Giustinian Lolin, 10–13 ottobre 2001),
397–414. Edited by Giulio Cattin
and Patrizia Dalla Vecchia. Series
III, Studi musicologici B, Atti di Convegni 6. Venice: Edizioni Fondazione Levi, 2005.
“Habsburg-Burgundian Manuscripts, Borrowed Material,
and the Practice of Naming.” In Early Musical Borrowing, 111-124 (see
above under BOOKS AND EDITED WORKS).
"The Function of the Habsburg-Burgundian Court
Manuscripts." In The
Burgundian-Habsburg Court Complex of Music Manuscripts (1500-1535) and the
Workshop of Petrus Alamire, 117-124.
Edited by Bruno Bouckaert and Eugeen Schreurs. Yearbook of the Alamire Foundation 5. Leuven and Neerpelt: Alamire
Foundation, 2003.
"Josquin and Musical Reputation." In Essays
on Music and Culture in Honor of Herbert Kellman, 280-297. Edited by Barbara Haggh. Paris and Tours: Minerve, 2001.
“Poliziano, Primavera,
and Perugia 431: New Light on Fortuna
desperata.” In Antoine Busnoys: Method, Meaning, and
Context in Late Medieval Music, 465-503. Edited by Paula Higgins. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1999.
"Foundation for an Empire: The Musical
Inheritance of Charles V." In
The Empire Resounds: Music in the Days of
Charles V, 18-34. Edited by
Francis Maes. Leuven: Leuven
University Press, 1999.
Published simultaneously in Dutch as
"Grondslag voor een wereldrijk: De muzikale
erfenis van Karel V."
In De Klanken van de Keizer: Karel
V en de Polyfonie, 18-35.
Edited by Francis Maes.
Leuven: Leuven University Press, 1999.
“Ockeghem and the Motet-Chanson in Fifteenth-Century
France.” In Johannes Ockeghem: Actes du XLe Colloque international d'études
humanistes, Tours, 3-8 février 1997, 381-402. Edited by Philippe Vendrix. Paris: Klincksieck, 1998. To be reprinted in Secular
Renaissance Music, edited by Sean Gallagher (Farnham and Burlington:
Ashgate).
“Another Look at Absalon.” Tijdschrift
van de Koninklijke Vereniging voor Nederlandse Muziekgeschiedenis 48
(1998): 3-29.
“French Print Chansons and Pierre de la Rue: A Case
Study in Authenticity.” In Music in Renaissance Cities and Courts:
Studies in Honor of Lewis Lockwood, 187-214. Edited by Jessie Ann Owens and Anthony Cummings. Warren, Michigan: Harmonie Park Press,
1997.
“Art-Song Reworkings: An Overview.” Journal
of the Royal Musical Association 119 (1994): 1-42.
“Does Imitatio
Exist?” Journal of Musicology 12 (1994): 152-178.
“Free from the Crime of Venus: The Biography of Pierre
de la Rue.” Revista de Musicología 16 (1993): 2673-2683 (Actas del XV congreso de la Sociedad
Internacional de Musicología: Culturas musicales del Mediterráneo y sus
ramificaciones, Madrid, 3-10 abril 1992, Vol. 5, 121-131).
“Is Underlay Necessary?” In Companion to Medieval and Renaissance Music, 284-291. Edited by Tess Knighton and David
Fallows. London: J.M. Dent,
1992. Paperback edition, Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1997.
“Sacred Tricinia and Basevi 2439.” I
Tatti Studies: Essays in the Renaissance 4 (1991): 151-199.
“The Manuscript Basevi 2439 and Chanson Transmission
in Italy.” In Atti del XIV congresso della Società Internazionale di Musicologia
(Bologna 1987), Vol. III, 163-174.
Edited by Angelo Pompilio, Donatella Restani, Lorenzo Bianconi, and F.
Alberto Gallo. Turin: EDT,
1990.
“Pierre de la Rue and Secular Music at the Court of
Marguerite of Austria.” Jaarboek van het Vlaamse Centrum voor Oude
Muziek 3 (1987): 49-58.
SHORTER WORKS
Commentary for Extreme
Singing: La Rue Requiem and Other Low Masterpieces of the Renaissance
(CD). Vox Early Music Ensemble,
Christopher Wolverton, Artistic Director; 2011.
Part of the research project receiving the American
Musicological Society 2006 Noah Greenberg Award.
Commentary for Pierre
de la Rue: Portrait musical (3-CD set). Capilla Flamenca, Dirk Snellings, Director. Musique en Wallonie, 2011.
“Pipelare, Matthaeus.” Revision of original article by Ronald Cross. Grove
Music Online, 2011.
“Au feu d’amour
and the Tapestry of Renaissance Music.”
In Golden Muse: The Loeb Music
Library at 50. Edited by Sarah
Adams, Virginia Danielson, and Robert J. Dennis. Harvard Library
Bulletin 18 (2007): 71–74.
Commentary for Missa
L’homme armé: Sacred Music of Ludwig Senfl (world premiere CD
recording). The Suspicious Cheese
Lords, 2004.
The Choral
Singer’s Companion. Rotating
series of essays on choral literature for choral singers. Created 2002. <http://www.thechoralsingerscompanion.com>
“La Rue, Pierre de,” “Rigo de Bergis,
Cornelius," and "La Rue, Robert de." In The New Grove
Dictionary of Music and Musicians.
2nd edition. Edited by
Stanley Sadie. London: Macmillan,
2001. Revised version of “La Rue,
Pierre de,” 2009.
“Interdisciplinary Objects: The Case of Hildegard of
Bingen.” In Proceedings of the 16th International Congress of the International
Musicological Society, 646.
Edited by David Greer.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.
"Hildegard von Bingen, 1098-1179." In Reader's
Guide to Music: History, Theory, and Criticism, 304-305. Edited by Murray Steib. Chicago and London: Fitzroy Dearborn
Publishers, 1999.
“Pierre de la Rue (ca. 1452-1518)” and “Florence,
Biblioteca del Conservatorio di Musica Luigi Cherubini, MS Basevi 2439 (‘Basevi
Codex’).” In The Treasury of Petrus Alamire: Music and Art in Flemish Court
Manuscripts, 1500-1535, 35-37 and 78-79. Edited by Herbert Kellman. Ghent and Amsterdam: Ludion, 1999. Distributed by The University of Chicago Press.
"Listening to Sacred Polyphony." Early
Music 26 (1998): 374-379; 539.
“Se cuer d’amant par soy humilier” (Baude Cordier)
and “Voulez ouyr les cris de Paris?” (Clément Janequin). Translations for Anthology of Renaissance Music, 488 and 494. Edited by Allan W. Atlas. New York and London: W.W. Norton,
1998.
REVIEWS AND
CONFERENCE REPORTS
Review of Canons
and Canonic Techniques, 14th–16th Centuries: Theory, Practice, and Reception
History, edited by Katelijne Schiltz and Bonnie J. Blackburn, Analysis in
Context: Leuven Studies in Musicology 1 (Leuven: Peeters, 2007). Renaissance
Quarterly 61 (2008): 984–986.
“After the Party: Hildegard since 1998.” Review of Barbara Stühlmeyer, Die Gesänge der Hildegard von Bingen: Eine
musikalische, theologische und kulturhistorische Untersuchung (Hildesheim,
Zürich, and New York: Georg Olms, 2003).
Early Music 33 (2005):
693–695.
“What Do Musicologists Want? Reflections on IMS 1997.” Current
Musicology 63 (1997): 166-168.
Review of Pierre de la Rue, Opera omnia, Vols. 1-3, edited by Nigel St. John Davison, J. Evan
Kreider, and T. Herman Keahey, Corpus Mensurabilis Musicae 97
(Neuhausen-Stuttgart: Hänssler for American Institute of Musicology,
1989-1992). Journal of the American Musicological Society 48 (1995): 283-293.
“Report from Madrid. Fifteenth Congress of the International Musicological
Society—Mediterranean Musical Cultures and Their Ramifications, 3-10 April
1992: The Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth Centuries.” Current
Musicology 54 (1993): 100-101.
Review of Josquin: L’homme armé Masses (The Tallis Scholars), Pierre de la Rue: Messe L’homme armé/Requiem (Ensemble Clément
Janequin), and Ockeghem: Missa
Prolationum/Marian Motets (The Hilliard Ensemble). Early
Music 18 (1990): 315-316.
Review of A
Practical Guide to Historical Performance: The Renaissance, ed. Jeffery T.
Kite-Powell (Early Music America, 1989).
Early Music 18 (1990):
137-138.
Review of In
mynen zin, ed. Richard Taruskin; and Myn
morken gaf, ed. Richard Wexler (Ogni Sorte Editions, Renaissance Standards,
Vols. 8-9). Early Music 15 (1987): 109-110.
*updated January 2013