and (2) his subsequent question:If I wanted to know what Sacred Polyphony IS exactly, what books would help me understand?
asks a contrasting question that pits (the sound of) 16th century sacred polyphony against "what we are used to in choral writing" (which I take to mean in other genres of choral composition). It seemed to me somewhat disingenuous or mistaken to co-opt the term Sacred Polyphony in the first question as referring only to the 16th century, ignoring the spectrum of sacred polyphony that flourished from the 14th century on through the 16th century and, with some peaks and valleys, on into the 21st century where it still flourishes today.I mean, why do the 16th Century choral pieces sound so DIFFERENT from what we are used to in choral writing?
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