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Music in Ancient Greece

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... C-C, C-G, C-F in place first and filled remaining notes with 9:8 interval. ... Greeks had either musical staff, nor note heads, nor clefs; they only spoke in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Music in Ancient Greece


1
CHAPTER 1
  • Music in Ancient Greece

2
Landmarks In Greek History And Culture
  • MAP OF ANCIENT GREECE

3
  • Homer Iliad and Odyssey (c750 B.C.E.) two great
    epics of early Greece
  • Sappho ancient Greeces greatest female lyric
    poet (7th century B.C.E.)
  • Pericles dominated the politics of a city-state
    of more than 300,000 individuals (Athens) between
    469 an d429 B.C.E.
  • Acropolis a hill overlooking Athens, site of
    temples construction began c450 B.C.E.
  • Parthenon temple to Athena Nike Bringer of
    victory patron goddess of Athens

4
Music in Greek Society
  • THE PARTHENON

5
Poetry and Drama Music in the Greek Theater
  • Aeschylus (c580-480 B.C.E.), Sophocles (490-407
    B.C.E.), and Euripides (485-406 B.C.E.).
  • Music survives from Euripides, Orestes (see
    Anthology No. 1)

6
EURIPIDES, ORESTES, STASIMON CHORUS
0
7
SEIKILOS, EPITAPH
0
8
Greek Musical Instruments
0
  • Lyre a medium-sized instrument usually fitted
    with seven strings of sheep gut and plucked by a
    plectrum of metal or bone.
  • Kirthara a very large lyre, also with seven
    strings, but with a resonator at the bottom made
    of of wood rather than a tortoise shell.
  • Aulos a wind instrument fitted with a round
    single reed or a flat double reed.

9
Music in Greek Philosophy The Ethical Power of
Music
  • Pythagoras (c580-480 B.C.E.) believed that the
    essence of the universe could be found in music
    and number. Review the legend of Pythagoras
    passing by the smithys shop and hearing anvils
    (or hammers) of different sizes produce the
    intervals of the octave, fifth, and fourth.
  • Plato (429-347) Timeus presents the idea that
    reality exists only in vaguely perceived
    background forms number is the reality that
    lurks behind the scale and the intervals and
    indeed all music the starting point of the
    Platonic theory of Music of the Spheres
  • Aristotle (384-322) Platos Republic and
    Aristotles Politics present the concept of the
    ethical quality of music that music affected the
    way we behave and that certain kinds of music
    were uplifting and morally instructive, and other
    kinds led to deviant behavior.

10
Point for Discussion
  • Were the attempts of Plato and Aristotle to
    restrict the kinds of music young people listen
    to today similar to our own parental advisor
    labels on CDs, or the Talabans total ban of
    secular music?

11
Greek Music Theory
  • Greeks generated notes of scale by using basic
    ratios of 21, 32, 43 and 98 (32-4398)
  • Put largest intervals C-C, C-G, C-F in place
    first and filled remaining notes with 98
    interval. Intervals E-F and B-C were left over
    half steps.
  • The result a diatonic scale with five whole
    tones and two (approximately) half tones within
    each octave.
  • Tetrachord Four-note units, the outer notes of
    which were fixed, the inner notes moveable.
  • Could be strung out in succession to for Greater
    Perfect System (two octave scale)

12
Greater Perfect System
  • Greeks had either musical staff, nor note heads,
    nor clefs they only spoke in terms of
    intervallic relationshipsof intervals as they
    were visualized on the Greater Perfect System

13
Greek Tonoi
  • Greek tonoi placed conceptually on the Greater
    Perfect System.
  • Greek genera diatonic genus, chromatic genus and
    enharmonic genus
  • Chromatic genus allow for chromatic inflections
    enharmonic genus for microtonal inflection

14
Review Of Greek Music
  • A system of consonance and dissonance (octaves,
    fifths, fourths, and multiples were consonances)
    that would remain unchanged until the fourteenth
    century
  • A system recognizing octave duplication and
    dividing each octave into seven pitches (five
    whole tones and two semitones)
  • The concept of scale patterns, each with its own
    name, incorporating different intervallic
    sequences
  • A system of tuning, called Pythagorean, that
    involved mathematically exact octaves, fifths,
    and fourths it remained the only system of
    tuning discussed by music theorists until the
    late fifteenth century
  • Important musical terms such as tetrachord,
    diatonic, chromatic, enharmonic.
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