Music of The Medieval Period (700 - 1400)
Music of The Medieval Period (700 - 1400)
Music of The Medieval Period (700 - 1400)
Medieval Period
(700 - 1400)
Learning Objectives:
• Listen perceptively to selected vocal and instrumental
music of Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque periods;
• Explain the performance practice (setting, composition,
role of composers/performers and audience) of
Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque Periods;
• Relate Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque music to its
historical and cultural background through dramatization;
and
• Sing selections of medieval chants, troubadour songs,
madrigals, and oratorios with correct pitch, rythm,
expression and style.
The Gregorian Chants:
• is the central tradition
of Western
plainchant, a form of
monophonic,
unaccompanied
sacred song of the
western Roman
Catholic Church.
Who wrote the Gregorian
Chant?
• This chant was probably named after
Pope Gregory the Great. When
Charlemagne had become Holy Roman
Emperor he made everyone in Europe use
this Gregorian chant.
Characteristics of the Gregorian
Chants:
• Monophonic
- consisting of a single musical line,
without accompaniment.
• Free meter
- is NO regular repeating rhythm.
• Usually based on Latin liturgy
• Use of Neume notation
What is your favorite boy band?
Did you know that ....
- during the latter part of the Medieval
Period, secular music which was not
bound by Catholic traditions emerged.
Most of these songs were performed
across Europe by groups of musicians
called Troubadours.
The Troubadour
• Usually monophonic
• Sometimes with
improvised
accompaniment
• Tells of chivalry and courtly
love
• Originated in France
• Written in French language
Works Adam de la halle:
ADAM DE LA HALLE
France
(1237 - 1288)
Music of the
Renaissance Period
(1400 - 1600)
FYI:
• the term "Renaissance" comes from the
word "renaitre" which means REBIRTH,
REVIVAL, and REDISCOVERY.
• music became as entertainment and
activity for amateurs and the educated.
• influence of the RCC become to decline
as the new music genre arose.
• "golden age" of a capella choral music.
Characteristics of Renaissance
Music:
• Mostly polyphonic.
• Imitation among the voices is common.
• Use of word painting in texts and music.
• Melodic lines move in a flowing manner.
• Melodies are easier to perform because
these move along a scale with a few large
leaps.
Vocal Music of the Renaissance
Period:
1.Mass - is a form of sacred musical
composition that sets texts of the
Eucharistic liturgy into music.
Nicolaus Copernicus
Martin Luther
Reflection:
1. Which music are you familiar with? Why?
Giovanni Pierluigi da
Palestrina
Rome
1525 - February 2, 1594
Famous Composers of the
Renaissance Period
Thomas Morley
England
1557 - 1602
Reflection:
• Which madrigal did you enjoy more?
Why?