Yet the overall impression  is  one not of  sections    succeeding  sections    but rather  the ultimate    “leisurely
flow    of  melody”—so  leisurely   as  to  attract a   great   deal    of  censure over    the years   from    modern  writers
who have    found   it  dull.   Listened    to  the way modern  listeners   are encouraged  to  listen  to  “classical” music
—that   is, as  object  of  one’s   full    attention,  with    no  other   purpose than    to  repay   that    attention—Buus’s
ricercare   can indeed  seem    dull.   Given   its technical   rigor   and its uneventfulness, it  is  easy    to  write   it  off as
music   that    only    a   composer    could   love;   and that    is  actually    not too bad a   characterization    of  much
academic    composition.
But while   academic,   Buus’s  ricercare   is  not “absolute   music”  in  the our modern  sense   of  the term;
such    a   thing   did not yet exist,  even    if  a   certain amount  of  sixteenth-century   music   is  now listened    to  in  that
way.    Rather, Buus’s  ricercare,  like    virtually   all the music   of  its time,   had a   definite    role    to  play    within  a
social  occasion.   Its primary purpose was to  fill    time    otherwise   empty   of  sound   in  church. Viewed  as
accompaniment   to  action—yes, as  background  music—the   piece   seems   quite   apt to  its purpose.    That
purpose,    in  fact,   explains    the curious fermatas    that    appear  about   two-thirds  of  the way through the piece.
They    denote  not a   “hold   till    ready,” but an  alternative ending—to   be  used,   we  may assume, on  days    when
there   was a   light   turnout for Mass    and the communion   ritual  could   be  correspondingly curtailed.
