Title: Enjoyment of Music
1Norton Media Library
Enjoyment of Music Essential Listening
Edition Chapter 13 Medieval Music
by Kristine Forney Joseph Machlis
213. Medieval Music
- Sacred Music in the Middle Ages
- Liturgy set order of services and structure of
each service in the church - Characteristics of Gregorian chant (plainchant)
- Monophonic texture
- Nonmetric
- Latin text
- Chant is classified by the way the notes are set
to the text - Syllabic one note per syllable of text
- Melismatic many notes per syllable of text
- Early chants were handed down orally
- Early chant notation used neumes
- Neumes suggested contours of the melody but not
rhythm - Scale patterns used are the church modes
313. Medieval Music (contd)
- The Mass
- One of two categories of services in the Roman
Catholic Church, the other being the Offices - The prayers that make up the Mass fall into two
categories - Proper texts change according to the day
- Ordinary texts are the same for every Mass
- Life in the Medieval Cloister
- Cloister a place for religious seclusion
- Monastery men
- Convent women
- Cloisters were places of prayer, scholarship,
preaching, charity, healing
413. Medieval Music (contd)
- The Music of Hildegard of Bingen
- Hildegard of Bingen (10981179)
- 1150 founded convent in Rupertsberg, Germany
- Known for miracles and prophecies
- Recorded collections of visions and prophecies in
manuscript - Composed religious poetry with music
- Characteristics of Hildegards poetry
- Brilliant imagery
- Visionary language
- Collected in volume Symphony of the Harmony of
Celestial - Revelations, for liturgical church year
513. Medieval Music (contd)
- Hildegard of Bingen Alleluia, O virga mediatrix
(Listening Guide 2) - From the Mass Proper
- For feasts of the Virgin Mary
- Ternary form (A-B-A)
- Responsorial form (soloist alternates with
chorus) - Monophonic texture
- Conjunct melody with few leaps
- Free, nonmetric rhythm
- Text setting falls between syllabic and
melismatic (neumatic)
613. Medieval Music (contd)
- The Rise of Polyphony
- Polyphony evolved toward the end of the
Romanesque period (c. 8501150) - Organum earliest polyphonic music
- Second melody added above or below the older
Gregorian melody - Evolved at Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris
- Polyphony necessitated the use of notated rhythm
and pitch - Rhythm was chosen from a group of patterns called
rhythmic modes - A new genre emerged near the end of the
thirteenth century - Composers wrote texts to second melody in organum
713. Medieval Music (contd)
- The Rise of Polyphony (contd)
- New genre called motet (mot is French for word)
- Sometimes the languages were mixed in one piece
- French and Latin
- Motets can be sacred or secular
- A Gregorian chant is the basis for a motet
813. Medieval Music (contd)
- Secular Music in the Middle Ages
- Secular music grew in a separate tradition from
sacred polyphony - Different classes of secular musicians emerged
- Troubadours were southern French high-class
musicians - Trouvères were northern French high-class
musicians - The poems of the troubadours and trouvères had
diverse subjects - Poetry of secular song often focused on idealized
love and chivalry - Secular songs sung monophonically, with
improvised accompaniment
913. Medieval Music (contd)
- The French Ars nova and Guillaume de Machaut
- Ars nova (new art) movement beginning in
14th-century France - Greater refinement than music of the Ars antiqua
(old art) - New developments in rhythm, meter, harmony, and
counterpoint - Guillaume de Machaut (c. 13001377) was the
foremost composer - French poet and composer
- Double career as cleric and courtier
- Composed motets, chansons (French for songs),
and a polyphonic Mass Ordinary - Favored fixed text forms rondeau, ballade,
virelai
1013. Medieval Music (contd)
- Machaut chanson Puis quen oubli (Listening
Guide 3) - Three-voice French chanson
- Text rondeau form
- Music reflects pain of unrequited love
- Low melodic range (depths of despair)
- Early Instrumental Music
- Instruments played a supporting role in vocal
music sometimes doubling - Instrumental music mostly improvised (not
notated) for dance - Performed by ensembles of soft (bas) or loud
(haut) instruments - Soft instruments include recorder
- Loud instruments include sackbut (early trombone)
and shawm (medieval oboe) - Instruments were categorized by their use (indoor
or outdoor)
11Exploration 3 Chant as Music for Worship
- Ritual music is evidenced in most cultures
- Western Christian sacred songs take various forms
- Sung or recited to text
- Early Christian music had several influences
- Singing in Judaism
- Music of the Church of Byzantium
- In Islam the Koran is chanted
- Call to prayer is chanted
12Exploration 4 Opening Doors to the East
- Religious wars and exploration opened doors to
the east - Five organized Crusades (10961221)
- An attempt to take the Holy Land of Palestine
from the Muslims - Crusading knights learned military skills and
weaponry from Turkish and Moorish warriors - Advanced medical and scientific knowledge of Arab
world imported to Europe
13- Organize, Learn and Connect at StudySpace
- Download MP3s, Podcasts and Interactive
Listening Guides (ilgs) - Focus your learning with the QuizKnowledge
Matrix - Access the Online eBook
14Norton Media LibraryIndependent and Employee
Owned
- This concludes the Norton Media Library Slide
Set for Chapter 13 - Enjoyment of Music
- Essential Listening Edition
- by
- Kristine Forney
- Joseph Machlis