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MUS 373 Unit 1 Notes

The document provides an overview of medieval music from 476-1420 AD. Some key developments include the rise of Gregorian chant in the Catholic church, the earliest forms of musical notation using neumes, and the emergence of polyphony with organum. Early polyphonic styles included parallel organum with a drone fifth below the main melody. Major figures that advanced medieval music included Guido d'Arezzo who developed solfège syllables and Leonin and Perotin who composed organum at Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. The ars nova style in the 14th century introduced new rhythmic complexity with the possibility of dividing notes into two equal values.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
48 views

MUS 373 Unit 1 Notes

The document provides an overview of medieval music from 476-1420 AD. Some key developments include the rise of Gregorian chant in the Catholic church, the earliest forms of musical notation using neumes, and the emergence of polyphony with organum. Early polyphonic styles included parallel organum with a drone fifth below the main melody. Major figures that advanced medieval music included Guido d'Arezzo who developed solfège syllables and Leonin and Perotin who composed organum at Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. The ars nova style in the 14th century introduced new rhythmic complexity with the possibility of dividing notes into two equal values.

Uploaded by

David Raposo
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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GMUS 373 - Unit 1

Medieval Era (c476 A.D. – c1420 AD)


476: Fall of the Western Roman Empire
Chant/Gregorian chant/Plainchant – Monophonic Music of the Medieval Christian Church
● “Pope Gregory I” (reigned 590-604)
● Legend: While Pope Gregory did not first create Gregorian chant, he was reading biblical
text, a dove (the Holy Spirit) sang melodies to him, and he sings them aloud and the tunes
are transcribed. Thus, Gregorian chant is credited to Pope Gregory

Square Notation
Neume: in early musical notation, a symbol representing one or more notes

C clef (can be on any line) ß

F clef (can be on any line) ß

Ligature – a neume representing a sequence of two or more pitches (Look up images later) (Not
chords)
Study music of this time because:
-Uses completely different kind of music theory (easy methods)
-major/minor keys conceived in 1722
Modes
To determine a chant’s mode, look for:
1: Range of chant
2: Final (note)
3: Reciting tone
-​ ​Authentic or Plagal?
o​ ​Authentic: Chant’s range dips no more than one pitch below the final (ends on one
of the lower notes of the piece)
o​ ​Plagal: the chant’s range rises well above and falls well below the final (add ​hypo
before mode name such as ​hypodorian

All chants only end on D, E, F or G (finals)


Every mode has a name (aka, D Authentic), a number, and another name
- Numbers 1-8. Bracket notes indicate final (xx)
- Odd numbered notes are authentic, even numbers are plagal (follow western modal system [D
authentic is #1 or dorian])
Modes
● We think of pieces having one tonal center; medieval pieces normally have 2

Pay attention in reading to:


- Hildegard of Bingen and the ​Ordo virtutum
- Medieval instruments
- Minnesinger / Walther von der Vogelweide
- the Mass (pp. 47-50)
- Review modes - make sure you can identify the mode of a printed chant

When listening to a piece:


1. Just listen and don’t think
2. Listen with score
3. Listen again comfortably if possible
Guido d’Arezzo (c. 991 - after 1033)
● Solmization syllables: ​ut - re - mi - fa - sol - la
Hexachords
● Hexachord is the six note scale
● The gamut - combines three different hexachords to form a bigger scale
● Lowest note in gamut is low G (in bass clef)
● First hexachord is on G, second on C, then F (which requires a B flat), G again, etc.


“Guidonian Hand”
● Goes in a spiral starting at tip of thumb, across palm, to tip of pinky, to first knuckle of
middle finger, and then tip


Definitions
● Liturgy - a collection of specific rituals associated with a particular religion
● Divine Office - a daily sequence of eight religious services, each of which includes the
singing of psalms
○ Matins - 2 or 3 am
○ Lauds - dawn
○ Prime - 6 am
○ Terce - 9 am
○ Sext - noon
○ None - 3 pm
○ Vespers - sunset
○ Compline - just before bedtime
● Mass - the central service of the traditional Christian liturgy
○ Ordinary - parts with texts that are the same for every Mass
○ Proper - parts with texts that change depending on the day of the year
○ (chart in pg. 49 - pay attention to blue parts - memorize blue Ordinary)
● Texts of the Mass Ordinary:
○ Kyrie
○ Gloria
○ Credo
○ Sanctus
○ Agnus Dei
Secular Medieval Music
● Most secular music was lost; religious music was preserved in churches and monasteries
● Troubadours - Southern France; texts in Occitan
● Trouveres - Northern France; texts in Medieval French (Beatriz de Dia - ​A chantar)​
● More well known for poetry; but many were nobility but also servants
● Servants rise in rank after learning music from noble people and become Troubadours
and Trouveres
● This kind of music had to be interpreted by the performer
● Minnesinger - “Minnelieder” (Walther von der Vogelweide)
Medieval Instruments
● Rebec - very early medieval bowed instrument from Western Europe
● Rebab - Middle Eastern instrument that influenced the Rebec

FOR READING:
● The Rhythmic Modes (understand concept not memorizations)
● Conductus
● Magnus liber organi​ and “Anonymous IV”
Musica enchiriadis​ (“Musical Handbook”)
● 9th century; first written polyphony
● Organum - a polyphonic work consisting of a preexisting chant in one voice and at least
one additional voice above or below
Six Developments in Organum
c. 850-890
1. Parallel Organum
● principal voice (vox principalis) + organal voice (vox organalis)
● organal 5th below principal
2. Four-Part parallel Organum
● principal and organal voices doubles
● 5th and octave doublings
● Problem with this: 5ths will eventually become tritones
3. Mixed Parallel and Oblique Organum
● Different intervals; notation not necessarily required
c. 1100
4. Note-Against-Note Organum (or “Free” Organum)
● Any interval; notation needed
5. Florid Organum (popular in Aquitanian Polyphony)
● Top voice sings many notes per note in the bottom voice (somewhat of a drone)
● Longer note lengths is the actual chant
● Around Spain, France
- 1163: Notre Dame begins construction
6. Notre Dame Organum
● Leonin (1150s - c. 1201) - Perotin (late 12 and early 13th centuries)
● Leonin taught Perotin
● “tenor” and “duplum” are the new terms for the voices
● Tenor sings the chant (lower part)
● Later more voices were added: “triplum” and “quadruplum”
● Perotin was the one who added the two new voices (also 3 and 2 voice)
● Two styles of music:
○ Florid Organum - upper voice sings varying note lengths above each note of the
lower voice
○ Discant - one to three notes in upper part for each lower note
● Clausula - a section of an organum in discant style; highlights important text
Rhythmic Modes
● ligatures - combinations of note groups
● longs - long notes
● breves - short notes
Six Rhythmic Modes
1. L B
2. B L
3. L B B
4. B B L
5. L L
6. B B B
● tempus (plural is tempora) - basic time unit; usually an eighth note
● Longs in modes 3, 4, and 5 are lengthened to 3 tempora
● Breves in modes 3 and 4 are doubled
● Modes 1 and 5 are the oldest
● Most mode 1 melodies had repetitions with phrases ending with rests
Magnus Liber Organi
● Anonymous IV wrote a treatise in 1285 designating Leoninus and Perotinus as the
creators of Notre Dame polyphony
● Anonymous IV credits Leoninus with compiling a ​Magnus liber organi​ (“great book of
polyphony”), but probably not alone
○ Contained two-voice chants for the major feasts of the church year
● Chant melody appears in the tenor as drones; expansive melismas sung by the ​duplum
(the upper voice)
Substitute Clausulae
● clausula - phrase or clause in a sentence; in organum, set word or syllable from chant and
closed with cadence
● substitute clausulae - new clausulae that replaced the original setting of chants (usually
different in rhythm)
Perotinus organum
● Perotinus used two, three, or four voices (organum duplum/triplum/quadruplum)
● Voices above tenor were named duplum, triplum, and quadruplum in ascending order;
and they ​all used rhythmic modes​ to allow for coordination
Polyphonic conductus
● conductus - settings for two to four voices of the same type of rhymed, rhythmical Latin
poems about a sacred or serious topic
● Tenor is drawn from existing monophonic conductus
● All voices sing the text together in essentially the same rhythm
● The words are set syllabically
● Most conductus features melismatic passages called ​caudae​ at the beginning and end and
before important cadences
Motet
● motet - new Latin words written for upper voices of discant clausulae (one to three note
phrases for each lower note)
● Motets changed in 4 ways
○ changing the text of the duplum
○ adding third or fourth voices
○ giving additional voices ​new and different​ texts; ​Double motets ​with two above
the tenor and ​Triple motets​ with three above the tenor
○ deleting the original duplum and writing new voices with new texts
■ the voice above the tenor is then called a Motetus (replacing duplum)
● People started using secular texts (mainly French)
● Tenor became known as the ​cantus firmus​ around 1270
● Franconian notation​ - 1280 by Franco of Cologne; note shapes indicated length
○ tempus was now normally a quarter note
○ Three tempora makes a perfection (measure of three beats)
● Petrus de Cruce​ extended the Franconian motet further through its rhythmic variety
● People could write voice parts that had no relation to a chant, but they are still called
motets
English Polyphony
● Voice exchange between parts (taken from the Notre Dame style)
● rondellus - two or three phrases are first heard simultaneously and then rotate in turn
● rota - perpetual canon or round

IN READING​:
● What is the ​Roman de Fauvel?
● Review Rhythmic Notation (pp. 116-117)
● Machaut (p. 120)
● Landini (p. 134)
● “Voices or instruments” (p. 137)
● Musica ficta

Franconian Note Lengths


● Double Long, Long, Breve, Semibreve
● 3 Longs in a Double Long and 3 Breves in a Long
● Ars cantus mensurabilis​ (“The Art of measurable Song” c. 1280)
Ars nova​ (“The New Art”)
● Phillipe de Vitry (1291-1361) - wrote the ​Ars nova
● Ars nova ​vs. ​Ars antiqua​ - popular debate trying to suppress ​Ars nova
● New aspects of ​Ars nova​:
○ Possibility of subdividing notes into two ​equal​ note values (i.e. duple
subdivisions)
■ Duple was called imperfect
○ Minims (shorter note values than semibreves)
○ Hocket - a passage featuring rapid rhythmic exchanges and/or syncopations
between two or more voices
Mensuration signs of the Ars nova
● Predecessor of time signatures
● Full circle is for triple (perfect), half circle is for duple (imperfect)
● Presence of dot signifies prolation - whether a semibreve is equal to two minims (minor)
or equal to three minims (major)

******These note values and notations were only present in ​Ars nova

Isorhythmic Motet - can happen between any two or more voices


● Talea​ (rhythmic repetitions)
● Color​ (melodic repetitions)
Guillaume de Machaut (c. 1300-1377)
● One of the most important composers of the ​Ars nova
● He was so organized and wrote so much that we have record of all his music
● Messe de Nostre Dame​ (c. 1364) - first “Mass Cycle”
○ Mass Cycle - complete setting of the mass ordinary written by one composer
intended to be performed together
■ contratenor - second supporting voice
○ Isorhythmic mass cycle - repeated rhythms
● Chanson - generic name for a French secular “song” of the late medieval era
○ Formes fixes​ (fixed forms):
■ ballade
■ virelai
■ rondeau
Caserta (c. 1370s)
● wrote ballades
● Music became more exclusive and difficult to sing
Ars subtilior ​(Late 14th century - “the subtle/sophisticated/clever art”)
● Music was a challenge
● Main genre for this era is still a chanson
● Baude Cordier (French ​Ars subtilior​ composer, late 14th / early 15th century)
Tout par compas
● It was common for composers to write in unconventional manners (such as in a circle)
Trecento​ (Italian music of the 1300s)
● Francesco Landini (c. 1325-1397)
● Jacopo da Bologna (fl. 1340-1386)
● 3 Popular Forms for Secular works of the Trecento:
○ ballata
○ madrigal
○ caccia
● Landini - sweet harmonies
○ Landini cadence​ - tenor descends by step, upper voice descends to lower
neighbor then skips up a third
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
● Musica ficta - chromatic alterations (raised or lowered) to avoid tritone, augmented 4ths
or diminished 5ths, or sweeter harmonies
● double leading-tone cadence - both upper notes resolve upwards by a half step
● Phrygian cadences - lower voice descends by a semitone; upper voice rises a whole tone

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