MUS 373 Unit 1 Notes
MUS 373 Unit 1 Notes
Square Notation
Neume: in early musical notation, a symbol representing one or more notes
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
●
“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
******These note values and notations were only present in Ars nova