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Western Music History/Medieval Music


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1 Introduction

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2 Gregorian Chant (plainsong)

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3 Development of Polyphony

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4 Secular Music
5 Ars Nova (new art)
6 Hildegard von Bingen (1098 - 1179)
7 Leoninus (died c. 1201)
8 Perotin (fl. c. 1200)
9 Guillaume de Machaut (1300 - 1377)
10 Francesco Landini (c. 1325 - 1397)

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Introduction

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The Medieval period dates approximately from 476 A.D. to 1400 A.D.
During this time European society was rigidly divided into three social classes: the nobility,
consisting of kings, queens, barons, princes and lords; serfs and peasants; and thirdly, the clergy
of the Roman Catholic Church. All segments of society felt the power of the Roman Catholic
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Church because Christianity had risen in western Europe to fill the power vacuum left by the

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demise of the Roman empire around the fourth century. Rome still exerted a powerful influence

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over western Europe especially after the Roman Emperor, Constantine, converted to Christianity.

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Rome at the beginning of the Medieval period was still a distributive base of regional information

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and a central hub of European learning. It was also the cumulative center of Christian liturgical

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musical life. Many musicians were priests or members (predominantly of minor orders) of the
clergy, and as such liturgical singing played an important role in worship. It is thought that the
church discouraged the use of musical instruments although we can infer from period paintings
and literary descriptions that instruments were played. It is thought that instruments were used
when good singers were not available. The instruments would then either replace the vocal part or

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help the voice stay in tune. The church discouraged instruments because it was the desire of the

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church leaders to keep the congregation's focus on the words that were being sung. Anything that

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would detract from that was considered at odds with the holy purpose of the music.

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Gregorian Chant (plainsong)

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For over 1000 years, the official music of the Roman

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For over 1000 years, the official music of the Roman


Catholic Church was the Gregorian Chant, which was

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named after Pope Gregory I. He began the task of

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organizing and codifying the chants in the 6th century used

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by the church. By the era of Charlemagne in the early 9th


century, Gregorian Chant was a mostly unified body of
music throughout western Europe.
With Gregorian Chant, there is no definite sense of rhythm,
the timing is very flexible and there is no sense of beat.
This creates a floating, improvisational quality to the music.
The chant essentially consists of a Melody, set to a sacred
Latin text, sung unaccompanied which moves by stepwise
motion within a narrow range of pitches. It may be either
Syllabic - one note for each syllable - or Melismatic - many
notes to one syllable. The composers of the chants were
anonymous, and the chants were based on church modes
(Ionian, Dorian etc...).

Development of Polyphony

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Polyphony was developed during the period of 700 A.D. to


900 A.D. where the chant melody was duplicated at an

Pope Gregory by Francisco de


Zurbarn - painted 1626-1627. Though
there are no contempoary images
existing, the life of Gregory has inspired
generations of artists to put brush to
canvas.

interval of a 4th or a 5th. The voices moved in parallel


motion with the actual chant being sung by the bottom voice. Medieval music consisting of
Gregorian chant and one or more melodic lines moving in parallel motion is called Organum.
From 900 A.D. to 1200 A.D Organum became truly polyphonic, with the melodic lines becoming
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independent and each line had its own rhythm and own melody. Generally, the chant in the bottom
voice was sung in very long, drawnout notes, while the added melody on top moved in shorter note
values. Early polyphony was still quite rhythmically free.
Then during the period of 1170 A.D. to 1200 A.D. the Notre Dame School of Composers
developed rhythmic innovations. The leading composers at the school were Leonin and Perotin,
who used measured rhythm with definite time values and a clearly defined meter. The newly
developed notation indicated precise rhythms and pitches. However, the beat could only be
subdivided into threes, which was symbolic of the Trinity. Few triads were used, resulting in
Medieval polyphony sounding very hollow, thin and stark to the modern ear. The interval of a 3rd
was hardly ever used as it was considered to sound dissonant...

Secular Music

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The first large body of decipherable, secular songs that have survived, comes from the 12th and
13th centuries. It was written by French noblemen Troubadours (coming from Southern France)
and the Trauvres (coming from Northern France). Most of the songs deal with the subject of love.
There were also dance and spinning songs (spinning songs come from when the maidens would
spin cloth and sing songs to pass the time). Their songs were played mainly by court minstrels.
Many of the songs have been preserved because the nobility had clerics to write down the songs.
Secular songs also appear in Italy, Spain, England and Germany. They use a regular beat, unlike
the Gregorian Chant. Instruments used included : Harps; Fiddles, Recorders; Lutes; Flutes;
Shawms; and Bagpipes.

Ars Nova (new art)

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Ars Nova began in the 14th century as a result of a conscious effort to write music in a new style.
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An essay entitled Ars Nova, by Phillipe de Vitry (a musical theorist), was published describing the
new characteristics of style in music.
A significant development in rhythm which occurred during this period was that the beat could now
be subdivided into two equal parts. Syncopation was introduced and polyphonic compositions
became increasingly complex and sophisticated. One important form of music was the Mass,
consisting of the PROPER and the ORDINARY. Composers set the ordinary to music which
contained five sung prayers : Kyrie; Gloria; Credo; Sanctus; Agnus Dei.

Hildegard von Bingen (1098 - 1179)

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Hildegard was a female German composer, born the last of ten children. She was given to the
church as a tithe, as it was custom to give the Roman Catholic Church one tenth of a family's
possessions. She became known for having diverse occupations, such as composer, musician,
playwright, and poet, among others. She was a master of the Gregorian chant, a craft that began
as early as the 5th century.

Leoninus (died c. 1201)

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Leonin, a French composer, was the first-known significant one to write in polyphonic organum. He
most likely worked at the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, and heralded the Notre Dame school of
polyphony. His widely known moniker is the French form of his Latin name, Leoninus. He wrote a
book called Magnus liber organi, which was a great book of religious music. Later it was revised by
Perotinus.

Perotin (fl. c. 1200)

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Perotin is arguably the most well-known figure in the Notre Dame school of polyphony. Like Leonin,
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he is assumed to be French, and the name Perotin is derived from his Latin name, Perotinus. He is
often paired with Leonin as they both pioneered choral polyphony. He expanded on the
developments of Leonin, and helped create three and four-part polyphony. Viderunt omnes is an
example of a Gregorian chant, written centuries before, in which Perotin inserted an organum.

Guillaume de Machaut (1300 - 1377)

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Guillaume de Machaut was arguably one of the most important composers of Medieval Music. He
was a poet and musician born in France who wrote in the Ars Nova style. He mainly composed
secular music and worked for various royal families. He travelled extensively and his output
consisted mainly of love songs for two voices and instrumental accompaniment. He is most famous
for his Missa Notra Dame (Notre Dame Mass), which is one of the finest compositions of the 14th
century. It was the first polyphonic setting of the Mass Ordinary and was written for four voices
possibly doubled by instruments.
Agnus Dei movement Arranged for four voices one soprano, two altos and one tenor. It made
use of triple meter symbol of the Trinity - and consisted of complex rhythms and syncopation.
The two upper parts are rhythmically active while the two lower parts move in longer note values
and play a supportive role. The movement includes dissonances and triads which sounds fuller
than previous Organum.

Francesco Landini (c. 1325 - 1397)

[edit]

The Italian Landini, like Hildegard, fits the characteristics of a Renaissance man. He was a
composer, singer, organist, instrument maker, and poet. He was a master of the trecento. Though
considered a Medieval composer by most musicologists, his music paved the way for the musical
quattrocento and the early Renaissance, both of which began around 1400.
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Category: Western Music History

This page w as last modified on 1 February 2015, at 15:44.


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