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Music History Periods: Part I Medieval Renaissance Baroque Classical Romantic Modern
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Medieval Describe the medieval time period What purpose would music serve during this time Medieval Time Period: 476-1400ish Medieval Music: 1150-1400
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Religious Medieval Music Western classical music history Starts with plainchant (also called "Gregorian" chant) Music used a single vocal line approved by the church Plainchant taught by wrote until the early 9th century Limited in pitch range and monophonic (i.e., composed of a single melody with no accompaniment), Sung largely by monks, nuns, and clerics rather than by professional singers. Sung in the Divine Offices, eight daily prayer services using Old Testament texts https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ISs6BaJP4JE
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Secular Medieval Music The earliest major repertory of Western secular (non- religious) music Troubadors and trouveres - French poet-musicians who set their own poems to music Content focused on love often the fictionalized Notated as simple rows of pitches without rhythm Accompanied by instruments, but instrumentation never notated Images of troubadors in medieval manuscripts have offered hints as to what instruments were played https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xk1W22yHLJQ
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Organum 10th and 11th centuries shift to Polyphony (i.e., with more than one melody at the same time). Organum Greatly slowed down an existing plainchant Added a new, more rapidly flowing musical line at a higher pitch (2 voice parts) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fj_jXG7 TqVs
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Motets 13th century, rhythmic passages of organum to which words had been added began to be treated as standalone musical works called motets (literally, "worded"). Three-part & Four-part motets appeared, with a different text sung in each voice Sometimes the texts were in different languages Both music and text ideas are now very complex Started with scared texts and moves to secular texts https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bZxAqWV7a0A
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