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The Medieval Era 500-1400 Music and The Church • All early western music was created because of and for the catholic church. • The church cultivated, supported, and directed music as it did art, architecture, poetry, and learning. • All musicians began their training as church choir members. • All composers were a part of holy orders (positions including bishop, priest, and deacon) Music and The Church • Music cultivated by the church was the singing or chanting of sacred words in services. • Used to set apart texts from ordinary speech. (Emphasized the important stuff) • Music gives the text special emphasis and meaning. • The main goal of chant was to bring humans into contact with unseen spirits, with deities, or with a single god. Music and Church Services • Sacred texts sung at church services in large scale monasteries and cathedrals, not simple churches. • Services conducted by monks, nuns, and cathedral clergy. • These people were in prayer most of the day. 8 services were dedicated to worship. Know as the divine offices. • Many of these services were sung. Music and Church Services • Throughout the liturgical seasons, text would change. All of these texts needed music. • To provide music for all of these texts, there only slight adjustments to a traditional format and prototype. Plainchant • The official music of the catholic church in the middle ages. Also known as Gregorian chant. • Pope Gregory (540-604) is known to have assembled and standardized all basic chants of his time. • Unaccompanied, monophonic (one voice part) music for voices. • Did not include rhythm or meter. • Example: A 13th century plainchant. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dlr90NLDp0 Characteristics of Plainchant • There were different types of plainchant, depending on function. • Some were a recitation on a monotone (single tone). Used to get through text quickly. • Some were lengthy with many different notes. Used for melodic exploration. Characteristics of Plainchant • Non-metrical – Had no meter. Series of notes strung together. Free rhythm. • There is no beat to non-metrical chant as well as rhythms changing from one performance to another. • Constructed using medieval modes. Not a major or minor system. • Pitches oriented around C and A. C is said to be Major, A is said to be minor…not in Plainchant Modes • • • • • • Scales were organized around D, E, F, and G. D – Dorian E – Phrygian F – Lydian G – Mixolydian Because Plainchant was built without harmony or definite rhythm, composers were available to focus on creating a modal tonality. Gregorian Recitation • Chant that recited text on a single pitch. Pitch was called reciting tone; the pitch on which the text was sung. • Reciting tone is held except for variations at the beginning and ends. • This type of chant punctuates the text and makes it understand. Gregorian Recitation • Here there are sentences split into phrases. Listen for the reciting tone and the variations at the end of each phrase. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e7Eik2_pBY The Antiphon • A responsorial by a choir or congregation. • Two choirs call and response. • Example: “In Paradisum” – Liturgy for the dead. Sung in procession on the way from the final blessing of the body in church to the graveyard where burial takes place. • Listen for the play between cantor and choir. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eZ5k81SX hN4 Hildegard von Bingen 1098-1179 • Famous for her book on her religious visions, as well as her works on natural history and medicine. • https://www.google.com/search?q=hildegard+von+bingen&biw=1067&bi h=516&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAcQ_AUoAmoVChMIyJSZ5 o3UyAIVlEuICh1Qfwo4 • Composed plainchant melodies in her own style to be paired with poems she wrote for special services. • “Columba Aspexit” belongs to a plainchant genre called the sequence. • Sequence is more elaborate than an antiphon in that it consists of short tunes sung twice with some variation. Soloist sings, then a choir. A A’ B B’ C C’… • Mixolydian – Beginning and ending on G. • Listen for the slight variation between soloist and choir. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdVcKfAZJMU Hildegard von Bingen • Dramatical work: “Ordo Virtutum” (ca. 1151) • Hildegard’s most extended work. 82 songs of which she wrote the melodies and poetic verses. • Morality play with allegorical characters (find hidden meaning, often a moral). • All sing in plainchant, except for the devil who can only speak. His absence from musical symbols represents his absence from God. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBGgRSPyU FQ 46:00 Oral Transmission • Initially, chant melodies were learned by hearing others sing them. • This left no written trace allowing melodies to be lost. • Allowed melodies to change and to have variation from being passed from one group to another. Notation • Oral Transmission was no longer acceptable with the rule of Frankish kings. They required that music be consistent. • Late 8th and 9th centuries, rudimentary systems for notation came to be. • Decided by these Kings to promote a uniform liturgy and music order to increase their influence across the land. • Missionaries in Italy traveled between Rome and the North to bring consistency among chant. http://www.worldatlas.com/webimage/countrys/europe/lg color/itregions.gif • Notation made to strive for uniformity and to perpetuate that uniformity. Neumes • The basic element of Western musical notation prior to the invention of five-line staff notation. • The earliest neumes notated the general direction of pitches rather than exact notes. • Italian monk, Guido de Arezzo (991-1033), write “Micrologus,” a treatise (formal document dealing with a subject) on musical notation. • First notation: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thu mb/d/d1/Neume2.jpg/220px-Neume2.jpg • Arezzo 4 line notation: http://home.gna.org/gregorio/illus/complet.png Genres and Forms of Chant • Three ways Chant is classified: • By their texts (biblical, non-biblical) – for the church or secular. • How they are performed – antiphonally (sung by alternating choirs), responsorial (a cantor and choir), or direct (one choir). • Musical style…next slide Musical Style • Syllabic (one note per syllable) • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EXub6v3e 8-Y • Melismatic (many notes per syllable) • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LegAzD9o dFE • Neumatic (between 2 and 7 notes per syllable) • P. 38 Setting the Text • Chant declares the text sometimes straightforwardly, and sometimes ornately (lavishly). • The melodic contour of chant often follows the text it is set to. Higher notes are given to more important words or syllables, as well as melismas. • However, text accents are second to the melodic line. Often you hear melismas on non-accented syllables. Ex. AlleluiA and KyriE • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k6oM1iLJH6k • In this case, often texts are set so that the important words are syllabic (one note for each syllable) • Most often phrases occur over and arch, beginning low, rising high, then descending to land the original pitch. Syllabic Writing • Syllabic text: • In paradisum deducant te Angeli; in tuo adventu suscipiant te martyres, et perducant te in civitatem sanctam Ierusalem. • May the angels escort you into paradise; at your coming, may the martyrs receive you and bring you into the holy city, Jerusalem. Neumatic Writing • Neumatic Text: • Credo in unum Deum, Patrem omnipotentem factorem coeli et terrae. • I believe in one God, Father almighty, maker of heaven and of earth. Melismatic Writing • Melismatic Text • Kyrie Eleison, Christe eleison • Lord Have Mercy, Christ Have Mercy Chants of the Mass • Introit and Communion – Used to process into the cathedral. Many psalm verses sung antiphonally (two choirs back and forth) • Introit:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0et OsoenuY • Gradual and Alleluia – Responsorial chants, choir and soloist in alternation. Only one psalm verse. More elaborate melody than antiphonal chants. • Gradual and Alleluia: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKtBpuLrI2s Tropes • A way to expand an existing chant. • 1. Add new words and music before the chant and often between phrases. • 2. Add melody only by extending melismas or adding new ones. • 3. Add text only, set to existing melismas. • Most common was the first example, especially with introits. • All added a type of solemnity (state of being serious and dignified). • Musicians used tropes as an outlet for their creativity. Think about old Art and how artist were creative by painting not only and object, but embellishing it as well. Medieval song • Music outside the church developed many different types and forms of songs other than plainchant, called Goliard songs. • Much more scurrilous in text; think the interests of the younger generation… • Celebrated 3 topics of interest: Wine, Women, and Satire. • Most of the music that was written down is not in a precise enough notation to accurately perform them today. Medieval Song ca. 1100 • Goliard songs then developed into work songs, dance songs, lullabies, and laments. • Among those are praise songs and love songs. • Praise songs were to celebrate the deeds of past warriors and present rulers. • Love songs became popular in powerful courts of western Europe. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9gzaauL67s • Alas, I thought I knew so much about love, and really I know so little, for I cannot keep myself from loving her from whom I shall have no favor. She has stolen from me my heart, myself, herself, and all the world. When she took herself from me, she left me nothing but desire and a longing heart. Jongleurs • Those that sang these types of songs were called Jongleurs (travelers) or Minstrels (servants). • Minstrels were servants to a particular court. It was their job to entertain. • Eventually organized themselves into guilds of musicians that were able to offer professional training. • Jongleurs traveled alone or in small groups from village to village, earning a living by performing tricks, telling stories, and playing instruments. Gained measly earnings. Troubadours and Trouveres • Troubadors were poet composers during the 12th century in South France. • Trouveres were their equivalent in Northern France. • Both flourished in Castles and courts for entertainment. • Wrote their own text and songs and sang them as they traveled. • Their songs are preserved into a collection called chansonniers (songbooks). • 2,600 Troubador poems survive; only a tenth with music. • 2100 Trouvere poems survive; 2/3 with music. Travelers songs • Poetic and musical structures show great variety and ingenuity. • Some are simple and some dramatic. • That that are dramatic are said to have been often mimed. Most all called for dancing. • The modern idea for a “Chorus” comes from this type of writing. Repeated text with a familiar melody. • Listen for the refrain in this next listening. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-mE5ywaHUkQ