Medieval Music (400 ACE-1400 ACE)
Medieval Music (400 ACE-1400 ACE)
Transverse Flute
Shawm
Pipe and Tabor
Music
Instrumental
1. Mostly monophonic, some polyphony accompanied by keyboard
2. Steady beat, clear meter, repeated sections, predictable phrasing
Rondo Form: ABACABA: comes back to the same point
Societal Movement:
o Intellectual movement of Scholasticism:
1. Reconcile classical Greek philosophy with Christianity
Music leading into the 1400s:
o Polyphony
1. People who sang polyphony valued it as a concept central to medieval
art: an improvisation
2. Decorated and heightened the grandeur of the chant and liturgy
3. More possible to more complex things with development of Polyphonic
music
How Polyphony Changed Music:
o The rise of written polyphony is of particular interest because it inaugurated
four precepts that have distinguished Western music ever since:
1. Counterpoint, the combination of independent lines;
2. Harmony, the regulation of simultaneous sounds;
3. The centrality of notation; and
4. The idea of composition as distinct from performance.
Organum:
o Origins in performance:
1. Drone
Singing or playing a melody against a sustained pitch
2. Doubling parallel consonant intervals was probably common before it
was explained in anonymous ninth century treatises
3. Other kinds of motion:
Parallel voices move together
Oblique- one voice stays the same, other one moves
Contrary- both voices move in opposite directions
Similar- similar to contrary, less of a space
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o
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Dance
o
Free Organum:
o Duplum
o Triplum
o Quadruplum
Discant Organum vs Florid Organum:
o Discant:
1. Both parts move at same rate
o Florid:
1. Lower voice moves slower than upper voice
2. Lower voice is called Tenor
Notre Dame
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o
Leonin:
1. More basic, but still Florid Organum
Perotin
1. Began to add Triplum and Quadruplum
Motet:
Polyphonic work with one or more texted voice added to a pre existing tenor,
which is set in a modal rhythm
1. Basically, multiple texts.
2. Later motet texts were written in French on secular topics:
Latin -> Vernacular
Franconian Music
o Made it possible to signify more rhythms
1. Noteshapes signified relative duration
Double long, long, breve, semibreve
2. Layout of the parts could be separated
English Polyphony:
o Sung in the English language
1. Imperfect consonances were more prominent
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