Medieval Music
Medieval Music
Medieval Music
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Medieval music
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
c. 5001400
Renaissance
c. 14001600
Common practice
Baroque
c. 16001750
Classical
c. 17301820
Romantic
c. 17801910
Impressionist
c. 18751925
c. 18901975
(19002000)
Contents
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1 Overview
1.1 Instruments
1.2 Genres
1.3 Theory and notation
1.3.1 Notation
1.3.2 Music theory
1.3.2.1 Rhythm
1.3.2.2 Polyphony
2 Early medieval music (before 1150)
2.1 Early chant traditions
2.2 Early polyphony: organum
2.3 Liturgical drama
2.4 Goliards
3 High medieval music (11501300)
3.1 Ars antiqua
3.2 Cantigas de Santa Maria
3.3 Troubadours and trouvres
3.4 Trovadorismo
4 Late medieval music (13001400)
4.1 France: Ars nova
4.2 Italy: Trecento
4.3 Germany: Geisslerlieder
4.4 Mannerism and Ars subtilior
4.5 Transitioning to the Renaissance
5 Study and vocational training
6 Influence in contemporary music
7 See also
8 References
9 Further reading
10 External links
Overview
Instruments
Many instruments used to perform medieval music still exist in the 2010s, but in different and
typically more technologically developed forms. The flute was once made of wood rather than
silver or other metal, and could be made as a side-blown or end-blown instrument. While modern
orchestral flutes are usually made of metal and have complex key mechanisms, medieval flutes had
holes that the performer had to cover with the fingers (as with the recorder). The recorder was made
of wood during the Medieval era, and despite the fact that in the 2000s, it may be made of synthetic
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materials, it has more or less retained its past form. The gemshorn is
similar to the recorder as it has finger holes on its front, though it is
actually a member of the ocarina family. One of the flute's predecessors,
the pan flute, was popular in medieval times, and is possibly of Hellenic
origin. This instrument's pipes were made of wood, and were graduated
in length to produce different pitches.
Medieval music used many plucked string instruments like the lute,
mandore, gittern and psaltery. The dulcimers, similar in structure to the
psaltery and zither, were originally plucked, but musicians began to
strike the dulcimer with hammers in the 14th century after the arrival of
new metal technology that made metal strings possible.
The bowed lyra of the Byzantine Empire was the first recorded European
bowed string instrument. The Persian geographer Ibn Khurradadhbih of
the 9th century (d. 911) cited the Byzantine lyra, in his lexicographical
discussion of instruments as a bowed instrument equivalent to the Arab
rabb and typical instrument of the Byzantines along with the urghun (organ), shilyani (probably a
type of harp or lyre) and the salandj (probably a bagpipe).[1] The hurdy-gurdy was (and still is) a
mechanical violin using a rosined wooden wheel attached to a crank to "bow" its strings.
Instruments without sound boxes like the jaw harp were also popular in the time. Early versions of
the organ, fiddle (or vielle), and a precursor to the modern trombone (called the sackbut) existed.
Genres
Medieval music for both sacred (church use) and secular (non-religious use) was composed.[2]
During the earlier medieval period, the liturgical genre, predominantly Gregorian chant, was
monophonic ("monophonic" means a single melodic line, without a harmony part or instrumental
accompaniment).[3] Polyphonic genres, in which multiple independent melodic lines are performed
simultaneously, began to develop during the high medieval era, becoming prevalent by the later
13th and early 14th century. The development of such forms is often associated with the Ars nova
style.
The earliest innovations upon monophonic plainchant were heterophonic. "Heterophony" is the
performance of the same melody by two different performers at the same time, in which each
performer slightly alters the ornaments she is using. The Organum, for example, expanded upon
plainchant melody using an accompanying line, sung at a fixed interval (often a perfect fifth or
perfect fourth), with a resulting alternation between a simple form of polyphony and monophony.[4]
The principles of the organum date back to an anonymous 9th century tract, the Musica enchiriadis,
which established the tradition of duplicating a preexisting plainchant in parallel motion at the
interval of an octave, a fifth or a fourth.[5]
Of greater sophistication was the motet, which developed from the clausula genre of medieval
plainchant. The motet would become the most popular form of medieval polyphony.[6] While early
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motets were liturgical or sacred (designed for use in a church service), by the end of the thirteenth
century the genre had expanded to include secular topics, such as courtly love. Courtly love was the
respectful veneration of a lady from afar by an amorous suitor.
During the Renaissance music era, the Italian secular genre of the Madrigal also became popular.
Similar to the polyphonic character of the motet, madrigals featured greater fluidity and motion in
the leading line. The madrigal form also gave rise to polyphonic canons, especially in Italy where
they were composed under the title Caccia. These were three-part secular pieces, which featured
the two higher voices in canon, with an underlying instrumental long-note accompaniment.[7]
Finally, purely instrumental music also developed during this period, both in the context of a
growing theatrical tradition and for court performances for the aristocracy. Dance music, often
improvised around familiar tropes, was the largest purely instrumental genre.[8] The secular Ballata,
which became very popular in Trecento Italy, had its origins, for instance, in medieval instrumental
dance music.[9]
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closest ancestors are the classic Greek and Roman grammatical signs that indicated important
points of declamation by recording the rise and fall of the voice.[11] The two basic signs of the
classical grammarians were the acutus, /, indicating a raising of the voice, and the gravis, \,
indicating a lowering of the voice. A singer reading a chant text with neume markings would be
able to get a general sense of whether the melody line went up in pitch, stayed the same, or went
down in pitch. For a singer who already knew a song, seeing the written neume markings above the
text could help to jog his or her memory about how the melody went. However, a singer reading a
chant text with neume markings would not be able to sight read a song which he or she had never
heard sung before.
These neumes eventually evolved into the basic symbols for neumatic notation, the virga (or "rod")
which indicates a higher note and still looked like the acutus from which it came; and the punctum
(or "dot") which indicates a lower note and, as the name suggests, reduced the gravis symbol to a
point.[11] These the acutus and the gravis could be combined to represent graphical vocal
inflections on the syllable [12] This kind of notation seems to have developed no earlier than the
eighth century, but by the ninth it was firmly established as the primary method of musical
notation.[13] The basic notation of the virga and the punctum remained the symbols for individual
notes, but other neumes soon developed which showed several notes joined together. These new
neumescalled ligaturesare essentially combinations of the two original signs.[14]
The first music notation was the use of dots over the lyrics to a chant, with some dots being higher
or lower, giving the reader a general sense of the direction of the melody. However, this form of
notation only served as a memory aid for a singer who already knew the melody.[15]This basic
neumatic notation could only specify the number of notes and whether they moved up or down.
There was no way to indicate exact pitch, any rhythm, or even the starting note. These limitations
are further indication that the neumes were developed as tools to support the practice of oral
tradition, rather than to supplant it. However, even though it started as a mere memory aid, the
worth of having more specific notation soon became evident.[13]
The next development in musical notation was "heighted neumes", in which neumes were carefully
placed at different heights in relation to each other. This allowed the neumes to give a rough
indication of the size of a given interval as well as the direction. This quickly led to one or two
lines, each representing a particular note, being placed on the music with all of the neumes relating
back to them. At first, these lines had no particular meaning and instead had a letter placed at the
beginning indicating which note was represented. However, the lines indicating middle C and the F
a fifth below slowly became most common. Having been at first merely scratched on the
parchment, the lines now were drawn in two different colored inks: usually red for F, and yellow or
green for C. This was the beginning of the musical staff as we know it today.[16] The completion of
the four-line staff is usually credited to Guido d Arezzo (c. 1000-1050), one of the most important
musical theorists of the Middle Ages. While older sources attribute the development of the staff to
Guido, some modern scholars suggest that he acted more as a codifier of a system that was already
being developed. Either way, this new notation allowed a singer to learn pieces completely
unknown to him in a much shorter amount of time.[10][17] However, even though chant notation had
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progressed in many ways, one fundamental problem remained: rhythm. The neumatic notational
system, even in its fully developed state, did not clearly define any kind of rhythm for the singing
of notes.[18]
Music theory
The music theory of the Medieval period saw several advances over previous practice both in
regard to tonal material, texture, and rhythm.
Rhythm
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For the duration of the medieval period, most music would be composed primarily in perfect
tempus, with special effects created by sections of imperfect tempus; there is a great current
controversy among musicologists as to whether such sections were performed with a breve of equal
length or whether it changed, and if so, at what proportion. This Ars Nova style remained the
primary rhythmical system until the highly syncopated works of the Ars subtilior at the end of the
14th century, characterized by extremes of notational and rhythmic complexity.[30] This sub-genera
pushed the rhythmic freedom provided by Ars Nova to its limits, with some compositions having
different voices written in different tempus signatures simultaneously. The rhythmic complexity
that was realized in this music is comparable to that in the 20th century.[31]
Polyphony
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kind of polyphony influenced all subsequent styles, with the later polyphonic genera of motets
starting as a trope of existing Notre Dame organums.
Another important element of Medieval music theory was the unique tonal system by which pitches
were arranged and understood. During the Middle Ages, this systematic arrangement of a series of
whole steps and half steps, what we now call a scale, was known as a mode. The modal system
worked like the scales of today, insomuch that it provided the rules and material for melodic
writing.[38] The eight church modes are: Dorian, Hypodorian, Phrygian, Hypophrygian, Lydian,
Hypolydian, Mixolydian, and Hypomixolydian.[39] Much of the information concerning these
modes, as well as the practical application of them, was codified in the 11th century by the theorist
Johannes Afflighemensis. In his work he describes three defining elements to each mode. The
finalis, the reciting tone, and the range. The finalis is the tone that serves as the focal point for the
mode. It is also almost always used as the final tone (hence the name). The reciting tone
(sometimes referred to as the tenor or confinalis) is the tone that serves as the primary focal point in
the melody (particularly internally). It is generally also the tone most often repeated in the piece,
and finally the range (or ambitus) is the maximum proscribed tones for a given mode.[40] The eight
modes can be further divided into four categories based on their final (finalis).
Medieval theorists called these pairs maneriae and labeled them according to the Greek ordinal
numbers. Those modes that have d, e, f, and g as their final are put into the groups protus, deuterus,
tritus, and tetrardus respectively.[41] These can then be divided further based on whether the mode
is "authentic" or "plagal." These distinctions deal with the range of the mode in relation to the final.
The authentic modes have a range that is about an octave (one tone above or below is allowed) and
start on the final, whereas the plagal modes, while still covering about an octave, start a perfect
fourth below the authentic.[42] Another interesting aspect of the modal system is the universal
allowance for altering B to Bb no matter what the mode.[43] The inclusion of this tone has several
uses, but one that seems particularly common is in order to avoid melodic difficulties caused, once
again, by the tritone.[44]
These ecclesiastical modes, although they have Greek names, have little relationship to the modes
as set out by Greek theorists. Rather, most of the terminology seems to be a misappropriation on the
part of the medieval theorists[39] Although the church modes have no relation to the ancient Greek
modes, the overabundance of Greek terminology does point to an interesting possible origin in the
liturgical melodies of the Byzantine tradition. This system is called oktoechos and is also divided
into eight categories, called echoi.[45]
For specific medieval music theorists, see also: Isidore of Seville, Aurelian of Rme, Odo of
Cluny, Guido of Arezzo, Hermannus Contractus, Johannes Cotto (Johannes Afflighemensis),
Johannes de Muris, Franco of Cologne, Johannes de Garlandia (Johannes Gallicus), Anonymous
IV, Marchetto da Padova (Marchettus of Padua), Jacques of Lige, Johannes de Grocheo, Petrus de
Cruce (Pierre de la Croix), and Philippe de Vitry.
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others. Attribution of monophonic music of the medieval period is not always reliable. Surviving
manuscripts from this period include the Musica Enchiriadis, Codex Calixtinus of Santiago de
Compostela, the Magnus Liber, and the Winchester Troper.
For information about specific composers or poets writing during the early medieval period, see
Pope Gregory I, St. Godric, Hildegard of Bingen, Hucbald, Notker Balbulus, Odo of Arezzo, Odo
of Cluny, and Tutilo.
Liturgical drama
Another musical tradition of Europe originating during the early Middle Ages was the liturgical
drama. In its original form, it may represent a survival of Roman drama with Christian stories mainly the Gospel, the Passion, and the lives of the saints - grafted on. Every part of Europe had
some sort of tradition of musical or semi-musical drama in the Middle Ages, involving acting,
speaking, singing and instrumental accompaniment in some combination. These dramas were
probably performed by travelling actors and musicians. Many have been preserved sufficiently to
allow modern reconstruction and performance (for example the Play of Daniel, which has been
recently recorded).
Goliards
The Goliards were itinerant poet-musicians of Europe from the tenth to the middle of the thirteenth
century. Most were scholars or ecclesiastics, and they wrote and sang in Latin. Although many of
the poems have survived, very little of the music has. They were possibly influential even
decisively so on the troubadour-trouvre tradition which was to follow. Most of their poetry is
secular and, while some of the songs celebrate religious ideals, others are frankly profane, dealing
with drunkenness, debauchery and lechery. One of the most important extant sources of Goliards
chansons is the Carmina Burana.
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rhythmic values than the tenor, the triplum (the line above the duplum) having smaller rhythmic
values than the duplum, and so on. As time went by, the texts of the voces organales became
increasingly secular in nature and had less and less overt connection to the liturgical text in the
tenor line.[47]
The Petronian motet is a highly complex genre, given its mixture of several semibreve breves with
rhythmic modes and sometimes (with increasing frequency) substitution of secular songs for chant
in the tenor. Indeed, ever-increasing rhythmic complexity would be a fundamental characteristic of
the 14th century, though music in France, Italy, and England would take quite different paths during
that time.
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survive into the thirteenth century unaffected by the Albigensian Crusade. Most of the more than
two thousand surviving trouvre songs include music, and show a sophistication as great as that of
the poetry it accompanies.
The Minnesinger tradition was the Germanic counterpart to the activity of the troubadours and
trouvres to the west. Unfortunately, few sources survive from the time; the sources of Minnesang
are mostly from two or three centuries after the peak of the movement, leading to some controversy
over the accuracy of these sources. Among the Minnesingers with surviving music are Wolfram
von Eschenbach, Walther von der Vogelweide, and Niedhart von Reuenthal.
Trovadorismo
In the Middle Ages, Galician-Portuguese was the language used in nearly all of Iberia for lyric
poetry. From this language derive both modern Galician and Portuguese. The Galician-Portuguese
school, which was influenced to some extent (mainly in certain formal aspects) by the Occitan
troubadours, is first documented at the end of the twelfth century and lasted until the middle of the
fourteenth.
The earliest extant composition in this school is usually agreed to be Ora faz ost' o senhor de
Navarra by the Portuguese Joo Soares de Paiva, usually dated just before or after 1200. The
troubadours of the movement, not to be confused with the Occitan troubadours (who frequented
courts in nearby Len and Castile), wrote almost entirely cantigas. Beginning probably around the
middle of the thirteenth century, these songs, known also as cantares or trovas, began to be
compiled in collections known as cancioneiros (songbooks). Three such anthologies are known: the
Cancioneiro da Ajuda, the Cancioneiro Colocci-Brancuti (or Cancioneiro da Biblioteca Nacional de
Lisboa), and the Cancioneiro da Vaticana. In addition to these there is the priceless collection of
over 400 Galician-Portugues cantigas in the Cantigas de Santa Maria, which tradition attributes to
Alfonso X.
The Galician-Portuguese cantigas can be divided into three basic genres: male-voiced love poetry,
called cantigas de amor (or cantigas d'amor) female-voiced love poetry, called cantigas de amigo
(cantigas d'amigo); and poetry of insult and mockery called cantigas d'escarnho e de mal dizer. All
three are lyric genres in the technical sense that they were strophic songs with either musical
accompaniment or introduction on a stringed instrument. But all three genres also have dramatic
elements, leading early scholars to characterize them as lyric-dramatic.
The origins of the cantigas d'amor are usually traced to Provenal and Old French lyric poetry, but
formally and rhetorically they are quite different. The cantigas d'amigo are probably rooted in a
native song tradition (Lang 1894, Michalis 1904), though this view has been contested. The
cantigas d'escarnho e maldizer may also (according to Lang) have deep local roots. The latter two
genres (totalling around 900 texts) make the Galician-Portuguese lyric unique in the entire
panorama of medieval Romance poetry.
Troubadours with surviving melodies
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Aimeric de
Belenoi
Aimeric de
Peguilhan
Aires Nunes
Albertet de
Sestaro
Arnaut Daniel
Arnaut de
Maruoill
Beatritz de Dia
Berenguier de
Palazol
Bernart de
Ventadorn
Bertran de Born
Blacasset
Cadenet
Daude de Pradas
Denis of Portugal
Folquet de
Marselha
Gaucelm Faidit
Gui d'Ussel
Guilhem Ademar
Guilhem Augier
Novella
Guilhem Magret
Guilhem de Saint
Leidier
Guiraut de Bornelh
Guiraut d'Espanha
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Guiraut Riquier
Jaufre Rudel
Joo Soares de
Paiva
Joo Zorro
Jordan Bonel
Marcabru
Martn Codax
Monge de
Montaudon
Peire d'Alvernhe
Peire Cardenal
Peire Raimon de
Tolosa
Peire Vidal
Peirol
Perdigon
Pistoleta
Pons d'Ortaffa
Pons de Capduoill
Raimbaut
d'Aurenga
Raimbaut de
Vaqueiras
Raimon Jordan
Raimon de
Miraval
Rigaut de
Berbezilh
Uc Brunet
Uc de Saint Circ
William IX of
Aquitaine
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The dominant secular genre of the Ars Nova was the chanson, as it would continue to be in France
for another two centuries. These chansons were composed in musical forms corresponding to the
poetry they set, which were in the so-called formes fixes of rondeau, ballade, and virelai. These
forms significantly affected the development of musical structure in ways that are felt even today;
for example, the ouvert-clos rhyme-scheme shared by all three demanded a musical realization
which contributed directly to the modern notion of antecedent and consequent phrases. It was in
this period, too, in which began the long tradition of setting the mass ordinary. This tradition started
around mid-century with isolated or paired settings of Kyries, Glorias, etc., but Machaut composed
what is thought to be the first complete mass conceived as one composition. The sound world of
Ars Nova music is very much one of linear primacy and rhythmic complexity. "Resting" intervals
are the fifth and octave, with thirds and sixths considered dissonances. Leaps of more than a sixth
in individual voices are not uncommon, leading to speculation of instrumental participation at least
in secular performance. Surviving French manuscripts include the Ivrea Codex and the Apt Codex.
For information about specific French composers writing in late medieval era, see Jehan de
Lescurel, Philippe de Vitry, Guillaume de Machaut, Borlet, Solage, and Franois Andrieu.
Italy: Trecento
Most of the music of Ars nova was French in origin; however, the term is often loosely applied to
all of the music of the fourteenth century, especially to include the secular music in Italy. There this
period was often referred to as Trecento. Italian music has alway been known for its lyrical or
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melodic character, and this goes back to the 14th century in many respects. Italian secular music of
this time (what little surviving liturgical music there is, is similar to the French except for
somewhat different notation) featured what has been called the cantalina style, with a florid top
voice supported by two (or even one; a fair amount of Italian Trecento music is for only two
voices) that are more regular and slower moving. This type of texture remained a feature of Italian
music in the popular 15th and 16th century secular genres as well, and was an important influence
on the eventual development of the trio texture that revolutionized music in the 17th.
There were three main forms for secular works in the Trecento. One was the madrigal, not the same
as that of 150250 years later, but with a verse/refrain-like form. Three-line stanzas, each with
different words, alternated with a two-line ritornello, with the same text at each appearance.
Perhaps we can see the seeds of the subsequent late-Renaissance and Baroque ritornello in this
device; it too returns again and again, recognizable each time, in contrast with its surrounding
disparate sections. Another form, the caccia ("chase,") was written for two voices in a canon at the
unison. Sometimes, this form also featured a ritornello, which was occasionally also in a canonic
style. Usually, the name of this genre provided a double meaning, since the texts of caccia were
primarily about hunts and related outdoor activities, or at least action-filled scenes. The third main
form was the ballata, which was roughly equivalent to the French virelai.
Surviving Italian manuscripts include the Squarcialupi Codex and the Rossi Codex. For
information about specific Italian composers writing in the late medieval era, see Francesco
Landini, Gherardello da Firenze, Andrea da Firenze, Lorenzo da Firenze, Giovanni da Firenze (aka
Giovanni da Cascia), Bartolino da Padova, Jacopo da Bologna, Donato da Cascia, Lorenzo Masini,
Niccol da Perugia, and Maestro Piero.
Germany: Geisslerlieder
The Geisslerlieder were the songs of wandering bands of flagellants, who sought to appease the
wrath of an angry God by penitential music accompanied by mortification of their bodies. There
were two separate periods of activity of Geisslerlied: one around the middle of the thirteenth
century, from which, unfortunately, no music survives (although numerous lyrics do); and another
from 1349, for which both words and music survive intact due to the attention of a single priest
who wrote about the movement and recorded its music. This second period corresponds to the
spread of the Black Death in Europe, and documents one of the most terrible events in European
history. Both periods of Geisslerlied activity were mainly in Germany.
There was also French-influenced polyphony written in German areas at this time, but it was
somewhat less sophisticated than its models. In fairness to the mostly anonymous composers of this
repertoire, however, most of the surviving manuscripts seem to have been copied with extreme
incompetence, and are filled with errors that make a truly thorough evaluation of the music's quality
impossible.
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As often seen at the end of any musical era, the end of the
medieval era is marked by a highly manneristic style known as
Ars subtilior. In some ways, this was an attempt to meld the
French and Italian styles. This music was highly stylized, with a
rhythmic complexity that was not matched until the 20th
century. In fact, not only was the rhythmic complexity of this
repertoire largely unmatched for five and a half centuries, with
extreme syncopations, mensural trickery, and even examples of
augenmusik (such as a chanson by Baude Cordier written out in
manuscript in the shape of a heart), but also its melodic material
was quite complex as well, particularly in its interaction with
the rhythmic structures. Already discussed under Ars Nova has
been the practice of isorhythm, which continued to develop
through late-century and in fact did not achieve its highest
The chanson Belle, bonne, sage
degree of sophistication until early in the 15th century. Instead
by Baude Cordier, an Ars
of using isorhythmic techniques in one or two voices, or trading
subtilior piece included in the
them among voices, some works came to feature a pervading
Chantilly Codex
isorhythmic texture which rivals the integral serialism of the
20th century in its systematic ordering of rhythmic and tonal
elements. The term "mannerism" was applied by later scholars,
as it often is, in response to an impression of sophistication being practised for its own sake, a
malady which some authors have felt infected the Ars subtilior.
One of the most important extant sources of Ars Subtilior chansons is the Chantilly Codex. For
information about specific composers writing music in Ars subtilior style, see Anthonello de
Caserta, Philippus de Caserta (aka Philipoctus de Caserta), Johannes Ciconia, Matteo da Perugia,
Lorenzo da Firenze, Grimace, Jacob Senleches, and Baude Cordier.
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periodization issues of the Middle Ages). While there is no consensus, 1400 is a useful marker,
because it was around that time that the Renaissance came into full swing in Italy.
The increasing reliance on the interval of the third as a consonance is one of the most pronounced
features of transition into the Renaissance. Polyphony, in use since the 12th century, became
increasingly elaborate with highly independent voices throughout the 14th century. With John
Dunstaple and other English composers, partly through the local technique of faburden (an
improvisatory process in which a chant melody and a written part predominantly in parallel sixths
above it are ornamented by one sung in perfect fourths below the latter, and which later took hold
on the continent as "fauxbordon"), the interval of the third emerges as an important musical
development; because of this Contenance Angloise ("English countenance"), English composers'
music is often regarded as the first to sound less truly bizarre to 2000s-era audiences who are not
trained in music history.
English stylistic tendencies in this regard had come to fruition and began to influence continental
composers as early as the 1420s, as can be seen in works of the young Dufay, among others. While
the Hundred Years' War continued, English nobles, armies, their chapels and retinues, and therefore
some of their composers, travelled in France and performed their music there; it must also of course
be remembered that the English controlled portions of northern France at this time. English
manuscripts include the Worcester Fragments, the Old St. Andrews Music Book, the Old Hall
Manuscript, and Egerton Manuscript. For information about specific composers who are considered
transitional between the medieval and the Renaissance, see Zacara da Teramo, Paolo da Firenze,
Giovanni Mazzuoli, Antonio da Cividale, Antonius Romanus, Bartolomeo da Bologna, Roy Henry,
Arnold de Lantins, Leonel Power, and John Dunstaple.
An early composer from the Franco-Flemish School of the Renaissance was Johannes Ockeghem
(1410/1425 1497). He was the most famous member of the Franco-Flemish School in the last half
of the 15th century, and is often considered the most influential composer between Dufay and
Josquin des Prez. Ockeghem probably studied with Gilles Binchois, and at least was closely
associated with him at the Burgundian court. Antoine Busnois wrote a motet in honor of
Ockeghem. Ockeghem is a direct link from the Burgundian style to the next generation of
Netherlanders, such as Obrecht and Josquin. A strong influence on Josquin des Prez and the
subsequent generation of Netherlanders, Ockeghem was famous throughout Europe Charles VII for
his expressive music, although he was equally renowned for his technical prowess.[48]
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See also
History of music
List of early music ensembles
List of Medieval composers
Medieval dance
Neo-Medieval music
References
1. Kartomi (1990), p. 124.
2. Hoppin p.256
3. Hoppin (1978) p.57
4. Vanderbilt University Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies
5. Hoppin p.189
6. Yudkin p. 382, 391
7. Yudkin 529
8. Yudkin p. 434
9. Yudkin pg 523
10. Seay (1965), p. 41.
11. Parrish (1957). p. 4.
12. Parrish p. 4
13. Hoppin (1978), p. 58.
14. Parrish (1957), p. 5.
15. Seay (1965), p. 40.
16. Hoppin (1978), pp. 59-60.
17. Hoppin (1978), p. 60.
18. Hoppin (1978), p. 89.
19. Christensen (2002), p. 628.
20. Christensen (2002), pp. 629-30.
21. Ultan (1977), p. 10.
22. Christensen (2002), p. 632.
23. Yudkin (1989), p. 458.
24. Caldwell (1978), p. 160.
25. Christensen (2002), p. 635.
26. Hoppin (1978), pp. 354-5.
27. Ultan (1977), pp. 62-3.
28. Hoppin (1978), p. 355.
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Further reading
Butterfield, Ardis (2002) Poetry and Music in Medieval France, Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Caldwell, John (1978) Medieval Music Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Christensen, Thomas (2002) ed., The Cambridge History of Western Music Theory,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Derrick, Henry (1983) The Listeners Guide to Medieval & Renaissance Music, New York,
NY: Facts on File.
Hindley, Goffrey (1971) ed., The Larousse Encyclopedia of Music, London: The Hamlyn
Publishing Group Limited.
Hoppin, Richard H. (1978) Medieval Music, New York, NY: W. W. Norton.
Kartomi, Margaret J. (1990) On Concepts and Classifications of Musical Instruments Chicago
IL: University of Chicago Press.
McKinnon, James (1990) ed., Antiquity and the Middle Ages Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice
Hall.
Parrish, Carl (1957) The Notation of Medieval Music, London: Faber & Faber.
Pirrotta, Nino (1980) "Medieval" in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed.
Stanley Sadie, vol. 20, London: Macmillan.
Reese, Gustave (1940) Music in the Middle Ages, New York, NY: W. W. Norton.
Seay, Albert (1965) Music in the Medieval World, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
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Ultan, Lloyd (1977) Music Theory: Problems and Practices in the Middle Ages and
Renaissance, Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
Vanderbilt University (199), Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies
(http://people.vanderbilt.edu/~cynthia.cyrus/ORB/orbgloss.htm).
Yudkin, Jeremy (1989) Music in Medieval Europe, Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
External links
Pandora Radio: Medieval Period (http://www.pandora.com
/stations
Wikiquote has
quotations related to:
Medieval music
/029fc71e0bc1d5184727a46abb1a462ee3c751ee3636d9de)
Ancient FM (http://www.ancientfm.com) (online radio featuring medieval and renaissance
music)
The Schyen Collection: Music (http://www.schoyencollection.com/music.html) (scans of
medieval musical notation)
Guide to Medieval and Renaissance Instruments (http://www.music.iastate.edu/antiqua
/instrumt.html) photos, descriptions, and sounds of early musical instruments
Medieval Music & Arts Foundation (http://www.medieval.org/)
Wine, Women, and Song: Mediaeval Latin Students' songs (http://www.gutenberg.org/etext
/18044), trans. John Addington Symons (1884).
Vocational training in medieval music in Germany (http://www.burg-fuersteneck.de
/fortbildung/mittelalter-musik)
Rpertoire International des Sources Musicales (RISM) (http://www.rism.info), a free,
searchable database of worldwide locations for music manuscripts up to ca. 1800
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