Renaissance Dance Sources Home
Dance
Primary Dance Sources. Primary sources of information on dance in Europe in the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries, and a few helpful secondary works.
PnD - Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, f. Ital. 972: Two Suggestions on the Transcription. By Joseph Casazza.
Practise for Dauncinge: Some Almans and a Pavan England 1570-1650, A Manual for Dance Instruction, In which is explained the performance of a number of dances popular in the London Inns of Court in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, together with music in four parts, by Patri J. Pugliese & Joseph Casazza
Music
Jean d'Estree's Books of Dance Music. Transcribed by Joseph Casazza.
Music for the Dances in Arbeau's Orchesographie. Transcribed, set, or composed by Joseph Casazza.
Music for the Old Measures. Transcribed, set, or composed by Joseph Casazza.
Adrian Le Roy and Robert Ballard's first cittern book of 1565. Edited by Joseph Casazza and Christopher Stetson.
References to and Reviews of My Work by Other Authors
Practice for Dauncinge reference in Greta Mary Hair, Robyn E. Smith, eds., Songs of the Dove and the Nightingale: Sacred and Secular Music c.900-c.1600
Practice for Dauncinge reference in Jeffery T. Kite-Powell, A Performer's Guide to Renaissance Music
Practice for Dauncinge reference in Arthur F Kinney, Thomas W Copeland, eds., Tudor England: An Encyclopedia
Practice for Dauncinge reference in Barbara Ravelhofer, The Early Stuart Masque: Dance, Costume, and Music
Practice for Dauncinge reference in John Ward, "Apropos 'The olde Measures'" in REED Newsletter,Vol 18, No 1 (1993)
Adrian Le Roy and Robert Ballard's first cittern book if 1565 reference in "Modern Editions and Facsimiles of Music for Cittern"
See Joseph Casazza's Author Page on Amazon.com.
Last Update: February 11, 2023