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The Development of the Passacaglia for Organ through German and South African Composers

Since the 19th century, the passacaglia has been associated with a musical form that includes a set of ground-bass or ostinato variations, however, its beginnings can be traced back to Spain in the early 17th century where it was termed pasacalle. The meaning of the term pasacalle (later passacaglia...

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Main Author: Adams, Mikyle
Other Authors: Sandmeier, Rebekka
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: College of Music 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Adams, Mikyle
author2 Sandmeier, Rebekka
author_browse Adams, Mikyle
Sandmeier, Rebekka
author_facet Sandmeier, Rebekka
Adams, Mikyle
author_sort Adams, Mikyle
collection Thesis
description Since the 19th century, the passacaglia has been associated with a musical form that includes a set of ground-bass or ostinato variations, however, its beginnings can be traced back to Spain in the early 17th century where it was termed pasacalle. The meaning of the term pasacalle (later passacaglia) is a combination of two Spanish words, pasar which translates as ‘to pass' and calle, which translates as ‘street'. When it emerged in France and Italy, the term initially alluded to the ritornellos improvised between songs. It is in Italy that the term passacaglia was established, initially as passacaglio which, at the time, referred to a single statement of a chord scheme and passacagli, the plural of it which referred to a succession or collection of multiple statements. However, these terms, including the feminine term passacaglia, and its other spelling variations, were utilised with minimal distinction throughout the century
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-07-01T04:02:32.380Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher College of Music
publisherStr College of Music
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/43367 The Development of the Passacaglia for Organ through German and South African Composers Adams, Mikyle Sandmeier, Rebekka passacaglia German composers South African composers Since the 19th century, the passacaglia has been associated with a musical form that includes a set of ground-bass or ostinato variations, however, its beginnings can be traced back to Spain in the early 17th century where it was termed pasacalle. The meaning of the term pasacalle (later passacaglia) is a combination of two Spanish words, pasar which translates as ‘to pass' and calle, which translates as ‘street'. When it emerged in France and Italy, the term initially alluded to the ritornellos improvised between songs. It is in Italy that the term passacaglia was established, initially as passacaglio which, at the time, referred to a single statement of a chord scheme and passacagli, the plural of it which referred to a succession or collection of multiple statements. However, these terms, including the feminine term passacaglia, and its other spelling variations, were utilised with minimal distinction throughout the century 2026-06-24T08:33:46Z 2026-06-24T08:33:46Z 2026 2026-06-24T08:26:33Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MMus http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43367 en eng application/pdf College of Music Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle passacaglia
German composers
South African composers
Adams, Mikyle
The Development of the Passacaglia for Organ through German and South African Composers
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The Development of the Passacaglia for Organ through German and South African Composers
title_full The Development of the Passacaglia for Organ through German and South African Composers
title_fullStr The Development of the Passacaglia for Organ through German and South African Composers
title_full_unstemmed The Development of the Passacaglia for Organ through German and South African Composers
title_short The Development of the Passacaglia for Organ through German and South African Composers
title_sort development of the passacaglia for organ through german and south african composers
topic passacaglia
German composers
South African composers
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43367
work_keys_str_mv AT adamsmikyle thedevelopmentofthepassacagliafororganthroughgermanandsouthafricancomposers
AT adamsmikyle developmentofthepassacagliafororganthroughgermanandsouthafricancomposers