Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byEaster Reynolds Modified over 9 years ago
1
Polyphony in the Middle Ages
2
What is “Organum”? Polyphonic music based on monophonic chant Developed in the 11 th century as a way to decorate chant Uses between 2 and 4 voices
3
How is organum created? Often use a chant as the principal voice- the “melody” Other voices are called the organal voices- the “harmony” Originally written in parallel motion- voices remain at a constant interval Organal voices can be above or below the principal voice
4
Types of Organum Florid Organum- Organal voices sing four or more notes per note of the principal voice Discant Organum- Organal voices sing one to three notes per note of the principal voice Organum Duplum- Two voices Organum Quadruplum- Four Voices
5
The Notre Dame School Not a “school” in the physical sense A style of writing organum developed by composers at the Notre Dame cathedral in Paris Earliest surviving polyphony that is composed and read from notation and contains more than two voices Two famous composers came from this school- Léonin and his student Pérotin
6
Léonin Credited with compiling the Magnus Liber Organi- The Great Book of Polyphony Uses all styles of Organum Florid sections sound like a series of drones with elaborate passages on top Uses discant organum where the chant is most melismatic Changes organum style where the original chant changed it’s style
7
Alleluia Pascha Nostrum Uses Florid Organum and plainchant Hear the drone-like sounds underneath the organal voices How many voices do you hear? Only a few dissonances heard through out the piece
8
Pérotin Wrote Organum Duplum, triplum, and quadruplum Organal voices are very rhythmic Used techniques such as voice exchange where voices trade phrases Longer and grander than Léonin’s pieces, but served the same purpose
9
Sederunt More rhythmic Long Drone notes underneath Voice exchange prominent throughout- probably can only tell from looking at the music Portion of a longer piece What happens at the end? Is it still polyphonic?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.