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Musical Style/Middle Ages

Musical Style/Middle Ages. An Introduction. Musical Style. Style: specific way of treating musical elements (melody, rhythm, tone color, dynamics, harmony, texture, form) Styles changes from one historical period to another (some transition music, sometimes sudden). Style Periods.

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Musical Style/Middle Ages

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  1. Musical Style/Middle Ages An Introduction

  2. Musical Style • Style: specific way of treating musical elements (melody, rhythm, tone color, dynamics, harmony, texture, form) • Styles changes from one historical period to another (some transition music, sometimes sudden)

  3. Style Periods • Middle Ages (450-1450) • Renaissance (1450-1600) • Baroque (1600-1750) • Classical (1750-1820) • Romantic (1820-1900) • 20th Century (1900-1999) • Current (2000-present)

  4. Points to remember moving forward • Music is not created in a vacuum; it has a function • Entertainment for aristocracy or peasants? • Concert music? • Is it designed to accompany singing, dancing, religious ceremonies, drama? • Musical Style is shaped by political, economic, social and intellectual developments.

  5. Middle Ages (450-1450) • Began with the destruction of the Roman Empire • AKA “Dark Ages” , a time of migrations and war • Later middle ages (1050-1450) time of cultural growth (construction of Romanesque churches and monasteries and cathedrals were built) • Towns grew and universities were founded • The Crusades (1096-1291): Christian attempts to reclaim Jerusalem from the Muslims

  6. Middle Ages (450-1450) • 3 Social Classes (Nobility, peasantry, and clergy) • Nobles in the castles: spent time fighting other nobles; the women ran the estates, the households and cared for the sick • Peacetime activities included, hunting, tournaments and eating • Peasants: poor, bound to the land and lived in huts and subject to the landowners • Made up the majority of the European population • Clergy: Most powerful class • Heresy was the greatest crime • Clergy (monks in monasteries) controlled the learning and knowledge dissemination. Most people were illiterate • Heresy is proposing some unorthodox change to an established system of belief, especially a religion, that conflicts with the previously established opinion of scholars of that belief

  7. Middle Ages (450-1450)(14th Century) • Hundred years war(1337-1453) • Bubonic Plague (1350ish): Killed ¼ of European population, AKA “Black Death” • Weakened feudal system and religious control: Rival Popes (1378-1417),rumors of a third pope • Literature (Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, Boccaccio’s Decameron) stressed realism and sensuality more than virtue and heavenly rewards

  8. Middle Ages (450-1450)(Music) • Catholic Church – center of musical life • Priest were the important musicians; important job in the monasteries was singing. • Boys received musical education in schools associated with church. Women were not allowed to sing in church but sung in the covenant. • Some nuns wrote music for choir (Hildegard of Bingen-1098-1179) • Only secular music was notated.

  9. Middle Ages Music • Medieval music primarily vocal • Few manuscripts indicated specific instruments. • We know from medieval paintings that instruments were used. • Church did not like instruments because of their role in pagan rites/rituals. • 1100 A.D. instruments used more in the church • Organ (initially primitive instrument played with fist) but developed into a instrument that can play polyphonic music • Clergy members complained (instrument could be heard for miles around

  10. Middle Ages Music • Common people would just stand and listen to the instrument. • Later Middle Ages: instruments source of conflict. • Composers wanted more elaborate music, clergy wanted discreet accompaniment to religious services

  11. Gregorian Chant • Official music of Roman Catholic Church for 1000 years • Melody set to sacred Latin texts and sung without accompaniment • Monophonic in texture • Melodies meant to enhance specific parts of religious services. • Background for prayers and ritual actions

  12. Gegorian Chant • Composers based original compositions on chant melodies. (since 2nd Vatican Council 1962-1965, services are in native language in each country) • Chant now no longer common • Represents the voice of the church, not an individual

  13. Gregorian Chant • Rhythm flexible without meter and has little sense of beat • Exact rhythm is uncertain: time values were never notated • Free flowing rhythm gives chant a floating character, almost improvised music • Melodies were step wise with a narrow range of notes or pitches

  14. Gregorian Chant • Depending on text, chants were recitations on one pitch or had complex melodic curves • Chants had an “other world” sound. • Gregorian Chant named after Pope Gregory I (the Great) who re-organized Catholic liturgy • Chant developed over centuries; originally passed down orally. Once chants were in the 1000s, they were notated to ensure musical uniformity throughout the church. • Earliest surviving manuscripts date from the 9th century. The composers of chant remain unknown

  15. Church Modes • Other world sounds came from unfamiliar scales. • Scales are called church modes or modes • Ionian, Dorian, Phrygian, Mixolydian, Domiant, Aeolian, Locrian (See diagram)

  16. Sample of Manuscript • Manuscipt

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