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ALCUIN AND THE CAROLINGIAN RENAISSANCE A TEACHING RESOURCE MUSIC OF ALCUIN’S TIME FACT SHEET 1 Gregorian Chant It is virtually impossible to tell what the music of Alcuin’s time sounded like, because the earliest surviving copies of notated music date from approximately 900 AD, nearly 100 years after Alcuin’s death. We do know, however, that one of the musical styles that was to play a very important role in cathedrals and monasteries during the Middle Ages and beyond was under development during this time. The musical style is called Gregorian Chant. Gregorian Chant is a type of Plainchant. Plainchant is a single melodic line sung by a solo voice or by several unison voices with no accompaniment. It was used (and is still sung today) to communicate the text of Christian worship (liturgy), perhaps to make it sound more ceremonial. It is not certain where or when Gregorian Chant developed (see Fact Sheet 2 for details) but we do know that the use of Gregorian Chant in Christian worship spread throughout England and the Frankish empire before, during and after Alcuin’s time. Today Gregorian Chant is the official chant of the Roman Catholic Church. Gregorian Chant There are many different kinds of Gregorian Chant, which are designed for different purposes during Christian worship. Some kinds, such as those used for chanting the Psalms, involve reciting most of the text on one note. Psalms are divided into small sections (called verses) and every verse is usually in two halves. The singers begin and end the verses (or half verses) of the Psalm with a pattern of different pitches, according to which ‘formula’ or ‘Psalm tone’ is being used. Monks and priests would sometimes use these formulae to recite all 150 Psalms one after the other (called reciting the Psalter). Psalms were also chanted during services in monasteries, churches or cathedrals. Other kinds of Gregorian Chant are more tuneful. Some contain mostly one note per syllable of text (this is called syllabic) others involve singing many notes to the same syllable (this is called melismatic). Some Gregorian Chant would have been performed by a large group of people (for example, all the monks in a monastery) other kinds would have been performed by specialist singers, either the choir singing together or a cantor singing alone. Some kinds alternate solo and group singing. The learning resources pages of the NCEM website contain examples of chants which may date from Carolingian times. Figure 1 Ivory panel from the 10th century, Showing Archbishop, Priest and Choir (Fitzwilliam Museum) Questions to ask when listening to Plainchant • Is the Plainchant syllabic (one note to each syllable), melismatic (more than one note to each syllable) or a mixture of the two? • Does the text rhyme? • Does the Plainchant have a regular meter? • Is the Plainchant sung by one voice or more than one? • Is the Plainchant sung in unison, or organum? Is the organum parallel or free organum? Page 2 contains information about each piece. Page 1 ALCUIN AND THE CAROLINGIAN RENAISSANCE A TEACHING RESOURCE MUSIC OF ALCUIN’S TIME FACT SHEET 1 salvation of the swan is achieved after its death and Introits are sung as the clergy process to their places the new land is representative of heaven. The melody shares very few similarities with Gregorian Chant, and at the beginning of the service. We know that the its style may be based on secular Carolingian music. chant is very old because it appears in ancient mass books and because it is depicted in a carving from the The melody closely reflects the development of the story. It rises higher and becomes more agitated with 10th century (figure 1). This carving shows an the swan’s anguish and blossoms into a beautiful tune archbishop, priests and a choir singing. The Archbishop is holding a book, which is open to reveal as the poem tells of the song sung by the swan as she safely reaches dry land. the words ‘Ad te levavi’. This piece of Plainchant is quite melismatic. Rex caeli This is an example of sacred music sung in two parts. Alleluia and a troped Alleluia Although Plainchant was usually made up of just one There are many Gregorian ‘Alleluias’ for singing at part sung in unison, singers would make it more different occasions during worship. They are even interesting by using a technique called ‘organum’. more melismatic than the Introit, as the whole chant There are two kinds of organum. ‘Parallel organum’ involves singing just one word (Alleluia) to many involved two groups of singers performing exactly the different notes. During the time of Charlemagne, extra same words were sometimes added to alleluias. This was melodic pattern at the same time, but beginning at called ‘troping’. A Carolingian monk called Notker two different pitches, usually a perfect 4th or 5th Balbulus explained that it was done because singers apart. ‘Rex caeli’ is a beautiful example of ‘free (himself included) had difficulty remembering the organum’, where the intervals between the two parts twists and turns of the melody when it was sung to vary. The two parts often begin, and always end on just one word. Adding more words helped the singers the same pitch. ‘Rex caeli’ comes from a musical remember the melody. The new words treatise of the 9th century called Musica Enchiriadis. cleverly retain the sound of the Alleluia within them. Introit (Ad te levavi) Hymn (Veni Creator Spiritus) Christus vincit This is an ‘Acclamation’ or ‘Laudes Regiae’ from Unlike Antiphons, hymns are usually syllabic. They are Charlemagne’s Psalter. Acclamations were an Ancient also strophic, which means that the same music is Roman tradition; people would shout out particular used for several different verses of text. The poetic words or phrases to acknowledge someone or texts follow a particular meter and rhyme scheme, something (rather like today people might shout making them much easier to remember than some ‘three cheers’ to praise someone, or say ‘hear, hear’ other kinds of Gregorian Chant. when they agree with what a speaker is saying). In Ancient Rome, Acclamations were shouted at the Sequences entrance of an Emperor, and it would seem that the Lament of the Swan tradition continued with the coronation of the Holy Many sequences were composed during the Roman Emperor. These acclamations repeat the words Carolingian period. Like Hymns, they are Plainchant ‘Christus vincit, Christus regnat, Christus settings of poetry. Sequences are made up of two imperat’ (Christ conquers, Christ reigns, Christ sections of text sung to the same music. ‘Lament of commands) and call upon the saints to help the the Swan’ is one of the finest surviving examples. In Emperor. The original acclamation is very long – the the first part of the poem, an exhausted swan cries website contains a shortened version! out in anguish to heaven during a long flight across the oceans. In the second part, the speaker’s voice Secular Music tells of the coming of dawn and the swan’s gathering We know very little about secular music from Alcuin’s strength as she flies towards land. The flight of the time. ‘O admirabile’ probably dates from the 11th swan can be seen to represent a human soul’s journey century, 200 years after Alcuin died. It originated in towards redemption. Tradition maintains that a swan Italy, but was known across Europe and appears in a only sings as it approaches death – perhaps the 12th century manuscript of English songs. Page 2