Music in the Middle Ages
domingo, 19 de abril de 2015
Objectives for this proyect
At the beginning of this project we were willing to learn about troubadours, distinguish how Medieval music sounds like and about instruments that stand out from this period. In the end, we ended up knowing almost everything about Medieval music; including the most relevant events from this period, its main characteristics, most of the instruments used and important composers too! So if you want to learn about Medieval music too, have a look at our blog!
Main instruments of the Middle Ages
STRING FAMILY
Plucked string instruments
Plucked string instruments
- Lyres: similar in appearance to a small harp but with distinct differences, and it is known for its use in Greek classical antiquity and later.
- Gittern:Small gut strung round-backed instrument that first appears in literature, similar to a modern guitar.
- Harp: Instrument which has a number of individual strings running at an angle to its soundboard, which are plucked with the fingers.
- Lute: Instrument having the strings running in a plane parallel to the sound table. It is of Arabic origin, and normally has 5 or 6 strings.
- Psaltery: It is a cross between a harp and a lyre.
- Cittern: Its flat-back design was simpler and cheaper to construct than the lute. It was also easier to play, smaller, less delicate and more portable. Played by all classes, the cittern was a premier instrument of casual music-making much as is the guitar.
- Rebec: It is a type of medieval fiddle that has a round body that tapers into the neck and culminates in a peg box or disk.
- Fidel: Instrument with oval shape body with 3 or 5 strings.
- Vielle: European instrument, similar to a modern violin but with a somewhat longer and deeper body, five strings, and a leaf-shaped pegbox with frontal tuning pegs, sometimes with a figure-8 shaped body.
- Hurdy-gurdy: Instrument with 4 strings played by rubbing a wheel over them. In Spain they are also called chifonías or zanfonas.
Flutes
- Pan pipes:Group of musical instruments based on the principle of the closed tube, consisting of multiple pipes of gradually increasing length (and occasionally girth).
- Files: It is a small, high-pitched, transverse flute, that is similar to the piccolo, but louder and shriller due to its narrower bore.
- Oboe: It is a musical instrument that is shaped like a tube and that is played by blowing into a small, thin piece at the top of the tube. It is soprano.
- Chirimia: It is a primitive oboe.
- Dulcimer: It is similar to the crumhorn and rauschpfeife, in having a windcap over the reed; unlike those instruments, it has a single reed (like a clarinet), resulting in a different timbre. It is a kind of Galician bagpipe.
- Bladder pipe or platerspiel: It is a loud instrument which has a reed which is enclosed by an animal bladder. It is a simplified bagpipe bladder for air and a horn with 6 holes.
- Bombard: It is a woodwind instrument, and a member of the oboe family, but with a more powerful sound than the oboe.
- Cornet: It is a brass instrument very similar to the trumpet, distinguished by its conical bore, compact shape, and mellower tone quality.
- Serpent: It is a distant ancestor of the tuba, with a mouthpiece like a brass instrument but side holes like a woodwind. It is usually a long cone bent into a snakelike shape.
- Straight trumpet: Natural trumpet without finger holes, keys, slides or valves by which the pitch of an instrument might be altered.
- Sackbut: It is a type of trombone.
- Clarin trumpet: It is a valve less trumpet used in the 17th and 18th centuries for playing rapid passages in the high register.
- Horn: It is a brass instrument made of tubing more than 20 feet (6.1 m) long, wrapped into a coil with a flared bell.
- Organ:It is a keyboard instrument of one or more divisions, each played with its own keyboard, played either with the hands or with the feet.
- Portable organ: It is a woodwind instrument, and a member of the oboe family, but with a more powerful sound than the oboe.
- Bedon drums: It is a drum with snares or jingles.
- Cymbals: They consist of thin, normally round plates of various alloys such as bronze or brass. The majority of cymbals are of indefinite pitch.
- Nacarios: It is a type of tymbal. It is formed mainly by a copper cauldron by a membrane.
- Bell sets:
- Darbukas: It is a single head membranophone with a goblet shaped body made of wood or ceramics played against the shoulder.
- Tejoletas: Rudimentary castanets made from pieces of tile.
- Tintirabulum:Type of jingle bell stick, of Roman origin.
- Triangles:
Medieval main composers
There are few composers from the middle ages that are known today, yet we know that music was an important part of the medieval culture. In the following headland the most relevant composers are listed, together to links to one of their compositions:
Born: 1150
Died: 1201
Nationality: French
Léonin was the first known significant composer of polyphonic organum. His most famous composition is the great book for the gradual and antiphonary.
- Magister Leoninus
Born: 1150Died: 1201
Nationality: French
Léonin was the first known significant composer of polyphonic organum. His most famous composition is the great book for the gradual and antiphonary.
- Francesco Landini
Died: 1397
Nationality: French
His most important
compositions
are ecco
la primavera, orsu
and questa
fanciullámor. He was an organist, singer, poet and instrument maker too.
- Philippe de Vitry
Died: 1361
Nationality: French
Some his most famous
compositions
are Aman novi, Heu
Fortuna, Heu
me, tristis
est
anima mea. He was a music theorist, poet, and an acomplished, innovative and influental composer who may have been the author of the Ars Nova treatise.
- Magister Perotin
Died: 1230
Nationality: French
His works
are preserved in the Magnus Liber, the "Great Book" include Viderunt Omnes. He was the most famous member of the Notre Dame school of polyphony and the ars antiqua style.
- Guillaume de Machaut
Died: April 1377
Nationality: French
Some of his compositions
are Esperance qui m'asseure, Je ne cuit pas or Se je me pleing. Machaut was "the last great poet who was also a composer", and he composed in a wide range of styles and forms.
Medieval timeline
Click on the following link in order to have a look at the most important events that took place in the Middle ages, from its beggining to its end:
medievaltimeline.com
medievaltimeline.com
Medieval music characteristics
Medieval music contains
all
the
European
music
composed
during
the
5th and the
15th century.
- Performing medium
During the Medieval period, music was primarily vocal. Instruments were used to accompany vocal lines or to improvise instrumental dances, and very little instrumental music has survived.
- Rhythm
Rhythm was not notated during much of this period, and
traditions regarding the treatment of sacred text, the meter of the text, and
the musical abilities of singers and instrumentalists often determined the
rhythmic complexity and tempo of pieces.
- Melody
Melodic intervals and the range of melodies were generally
small during this era, and sacred melodies were often based on church modes
(modes are notes arranged in a specific scale or pattern of intervals, and were
often used to structure the melody or tonality of a piece).
- Harmony
Harmony and tonality as we know it today were not functional
during the Medieval period. Music appears to have been constructed and heard as
separate lines rather than vertical sonorities. Parallel fifths and octaves
were favored, and triads or thirds were considered dissonant.
- Texture
Monophonic texture was predominantly used during the first part
of this era, and polyphonic texture began to be used in the mid to late
Medieval period. Heterophony may have been heard in performances.
- Form
Popular genres
during this period included the following large forms: sacred vocal music such
as plainchant, conductus, masses, and motets; instrumental estampies; and secular
vocal songs.
- Secular Music
- Vernacular languages of each area
- Main subjects: “courtly love” and knightly spirit
- Vocal music with monodic texture
- Instrumental accompaniment
- Doubling voices
- Makes use of Gregorian modal scales
- Marked rhythm
- Gregorian Chant
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